Mikhail Gorbachev, last Soviet leader, dead at 91

MOSCOW   -   Mikhail Gorbachev, the last leader of the Soviet Union, has died in Mos­cow aged 91, Russian news agencies report­ed on Tuesday.

“Mikhail Sergeyevich Gorbachev died this evening after a serious and long illness,” the Central Clinical Hospital in Moscow said, quoted by the Interfax, TASS and RIA Novosti news agencies. Gorbachev, who was in power be­tween 1985 and 1991 and helped bring US-Soviet rela­tions out of a deep freeze, was the last sur­viving Cold War leader.

He spent much of the past two decades on the political periphery, intermittently calling for the Kremlin and the White House to mend ties as tensions soared to Cold War levels since Russia annexed Crimea in 2014 and launched an offensive in Ukraine ear­lier this year. Gorbachev spent the twilight years of his life in and out of hospital with increas­ingly fragile health and observed self-quaran­tine during the pan­demic as a precaution against the coronavirus. 

Gorbachev was re­garded fondly in the West, where he was af­fectionately referred to by the nickname Gorby and best known for de­fusing US-Soviet nuclear tensions in the 1980s as well as bringing Eastern Europe out from be­hind the Iron Curtain. He won a Nobel Peace Prize in 1990 for nego­tiating a historic nucle­ar arms pact.

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