Anonymous ID: 00adb9 Feb. 19, 2018, 11:42 a.m. No.432470   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2517 >>2539

Zbigniew Brzezinski

 

Spouse(s)

Emilie Benes (m. 1961)

 

Children

Ian

Mark

Mika

 

Parents

Tadeusz Brzeziński

Leonia Roman Brzezińska

 

Relatives

Matthew Brzezinski (nephew)

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Children:

Ian Joseph Brzezinski (born December 23, 1963) is an American foreign policy and military affairs expert.

 

He served as Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Europe and NATO Policy in 2001–2005, under President George W. Bush.

 

https:// en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ian_Brzezinski

 

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Mark Francis Brzezinski (born April 7, 1965) is an American lawyer who served as the United States Ambassador to Sweden from 2011–2015.

Brzezinski was a corporate and securities associate at Hogan & Hartson LLP in Washington, D.C. from 1996-1999. From 1999-2001, Brzezinski served in the Clinton administration as a director of Russian/Eurasian affairs and director of Southeast European affairs of the National Security Council at the White House. In that capacity, he was White House coordinator for U.S. democracy and rule of law assistance programs for the region.

 

Brzezinski was a foreign policy advisor to the presidential campaign of Barack Obama,[1] and was later appointed Ambassador to Sweden by Obama.[2

==

 

Matthew Brzezinski (born October 71965) is an American writer and journalist.

 

Brzezinski was born in Canada[1] and is of Polish heritage. He graduated from McGill University in 1991.[citation needed] Brzezinski began working as a journalist in the early 1990s in Warsaw, writing for publications including The New York Times, The Economist, and The Guardian (UK). He was a Wall Street Journal staff reporter in Moscow and Kiev in the late 1990s.[1] Relocating to the US, he became a contributing writer for The New York Times Magazine, covering counterterrorism in the aftermath of 9/11.[2] His work has also appeared in many other publications including The Washington Post Magazine,[3] the Los Angeles Times,[4] and Mother Jones.[5]

 

Matthew Brzezinski is the nephew of former National Security Adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski and his wife Emilie Anna Benešová. Brzezinski is the cousin of television anchor Mika Brzezinski, military affairs expert Ian Joseph Brzezinski and Mark Brzezinski.

 

Matthew Brzezinski lives in Manchester-by-the-sea, Massachusetts with his wife and three children.[citation needed]

 

Brzezinski is the author of four nonfiction books:

 

His first book, Casino Moscow (Free Press, 2001)[6] is a first-person account of the "Wild East" atmosphere prevailing in Russia in the 1990s.[7]

 

Brzezinski's second book, Fortress America (Bantam, 2004)[2] addresses the new technology, laws, tactics, and persistent vulnerabilities of the post-9/11 era.

 

Matthew Brzezinski's third book, Red Moon Rising (Holt, 2007)[8] is a work of narrative nonfiction that tells the story of the race to space culminating in the Sputnik launch by the USSR on October 4, 1957, drawing on previously classified Soviet documents.[9] Red Moon Rising is now in development to become a miniseries.[10]

 

Matthew Brzezinski's fourth book, Isaac's Army[1] (Random House, 2012) is set in World War II. A work of narrative nonfiction, Isaac's Army tells the story of a group of young Polish Jews and the Polish Jewish underground, from its earliest acts of defiance in 1939 to the survivors' exodus to Palestine in 1946. The book draws on interviews with surviving Resistance members and unpublished memoirs, as well as Polish-language sources and established academic works on the subject of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising.[11] "Isaac's Army" was named as a 2012 finalist for the National Jewish Book Awards.[12]

 

Mathew was also a good friend of Montreal’s own Steven Stern, a Canadian businessman

 

https:// en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_Brzezinski

Anonymous ID: 00adb9 Feb. 19, 2018, 11:52 a.m. No.432546   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Tadeusz Brzeziński

Brzeziński was born in the town of Złoczów, in what was then the Austro-Hungarian Empire (today Zolochiv, Lviv Oblast, Ukraine). He received his university education in Lwów (now Lviv), and in Vienna. As a volunteer in the Polish independence movement from 1918 to 1920, Brzeziński saw action in the Battle of Lwów during the Polish-Ukrainian War and against Soviet forces in the final Warsaw campaign of 1920. He entered the diplomatic-consular service of the new Polish Republic, serving in Essen, Germany; Lille, France; Leipzig, Germany; Kharkov, in the Soviet Ukraine, and Montreal, where he lived after the Communist takeover in Poland after World War II.

 

While in Leipzig, Germany, before World War II, Brzeziński became involved in efforts to rescue European Jews from Nazi concentration camps. In 1978, his efforts on behalf of the Jewish people were recognized by Israeli Prime Minister, Menachem Begin.

 

Brzeziński was consul general from 1938 until the Communist takeover of Poland at the end of World War II. He served as president of the Canadian Polish Congress from 1952 to 1962, and in 1975 helped create the World Polish Congress. Until his retirement, he worked for the Quebec province Ministry of Culture, setting up French-language centres in small towns.

 

Brzeziński died of pneumonia in Montreal at the age of 93. He was survived by his two sons: Zbigniew Brzezinski, President Jimmy Carter's national security advisor; and Lech Brzeziński, an engineer also living in Montreal.[1][2][3][4] His grandsons are foreign policy expert Ian Brzezinski, lawyer and former Ambassador to Sweden Mark Brzezinski, and journalist Matthew Brzezinski. His granddaughter Mika Brzezinski is a political commentator and host of Morning Joe.