Left without a job due to an oversupply of lawyers, following graduation from Moscow State, “and this in the planned society of the 1950s USSR”, as he recalls with irony in his memoire, Chikvaidze soon returned to Georgia, and was offered a succession of fairly boring, as he recalls,
Komsomol jobs, in April 1956 as secretary of the Komsomol committee of Tbilisi Airport, in May 1956 as secretary of the Komsomol committee of Tbilisi Agricultural Institute and then, in June 1956, as Head of the student department of Ordzhonikidze district Komsomol committee in Tbilisi, followed by a promotion in 1961 to the post of first secretary of the Tbilisi city Komsomol committee. Following his postgraduate studies at the Soviet Academy of Social Sciences in Moscow in 1964–1966, Chikvaidze briefly returned to Tbilisi to his old job at the central committee of the
Communist Party of Georgia, but soon thereafter in 1967, he left with his family for his first posting abroad – his true calling and interest – as vice consul in charge of cultural affairs at the Soviet consulate general in Bombay, India. In early 1969, for good work and due to the health of his family, Chikvaidze was transferred as First Secretary of the USSR Embassy in London, in charge of cultural affairs and public diplomacy. He returned to Tbilisi in September 1972 and was appointed in early 1973 to head the Department of Administrative and Commercial Authority of the Tbilisi city committee of the Communist Party. was followed in December by the
Soviet invasion of Afghanistan and the final demise of
US-Soviet détente that had marked the beginning of the 1970s. Despite this new spike in the
Cold War, when Chikvaidze's tour of duty came to an end in 1983, he was given a farewell lunch by the City of San Francisco aboard the
USS Coral Sea, a venerable aircraft carrier, known as ‘San Francisco’s Own’. In 1983, Chikvaidze was promoted to the rank of Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary and assigned as the
Soviet ambassador to Kenya and Permanent Representative of the USSR to the
United Nations Environment Programme and to the
United Nations Centre for Human Settlements (Habitat) where he served until 1985, In February 1992, Chikvaidze was appointed Vice Prime Minister and
Minister of Foreign Affairs of Georgia by acting Prime Minister
Tengiz Sigua. From 1992 through 1995 Chikvaidze served as Minister of Foreign Affairs of Georgia. In 1996, Georgian president
Eduard Shevardnadze reassigned Chikvaidze as Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of Georgia to
Greece and, then, in 2002, as Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of Georgia to
Switzerland, to the
Holy See and as Permanent Representative of Georgia to the
United Nations Office and other International Organizations in Geneva. ==Role of chess in his career and life==