Puzanov also had a diplomatic career. He served as the Ambassador of the Soviet Union to
North Korea from 1957 to 1962, to
Yugoslavia from 1962 to 1967, to
Bulgaria from 1967 to 1972 and to Afghanistan from 1972 to 1979.
North Korea In February 1957, Puzanov arrived to North Korea to assume ambassadorship, by which time North Korean leader
Kim Il Sung had largely consolidated power. During this time, Soviet leader
Nikita Khrushchev promoted the concept of
collective leadership, and the Soviet embassy in North Korea started advising Kim to either give up his position as
Workers' Party of Korea leader or as
premier. Kim wanted to retain both positions, but was prepared to yield one of the positions to a close ally; he recommended
Choe Yong-gon to the Soviet embassy. However, by 1957, Kim started to advise the Soviet embassy against appointing Choe. Kim also proposed
Kim Il, who had little political independence. Over the following months, Kim Il Sung and his allies
Nam Il and
Pak Chong-ae started investigating the degree of the demands by the Soviet embassy. Puzanov did not push hard on the issue of division of powers, not giving meaningful answers when North Korea pressed on the issue. On 3 September 1957, Kim Il Sung visited the Soviet embassy, proposing to Puzanov that he should remain as premier for "two years or so" and that Choe Yong-gon was a poor candidate for the post. Puzanov gave no advice, only writing on his journal that "I got the impression that Kim Il-sung himself also does not want to quit the premier’s office". He wrote "I offered no opinion on the subject" regarding the position of the premier. He also offered no opinion when Nam Il informed him that it was the opinion of the entire Central Committee Presidium that Kim Il Sung should stay.
Afghanistan In October 1972, Puzanov was appointed as the Soviet ambassador to North Korea. During this time, the country was a semi-constitutional monarchy ruled by King
Mohammed Zahir Shah, who was overthrown in the
1973 Afghan coup d'état which led to the establishment of the
republic. In April 1978, the
Democratic Republic of Afghanistan was established following the
Saur Revolution. Puzanov encouraged intervention to his superiors in the Soviet Union, including by filing a report portraying Afghan leader
Hafizullah Amin as a tyrant. He was recalled back to the Soviet Union in 1979 in the anticipation of a Soviet military intervention on Afghanistan. The reports contributed to the Soviet Union authorizing the
Operation Storm-333, which led to the start of the
Soviet–Afghan War. ==References==