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Mikhail Gorbachev

Mikhail Sergeyevich Gorbachev[f] (2 March 1931 – 30 August 2022) was a Soviet and Russian politician who served as the last leader of the Soviet Union from 1985 to the country's dissolution in 1991. He served as General Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union from 1985 and additionally as head of state beginning in 1988, as Chairman of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet from 1988 to 1989, Chairman of the Supreme Soviet from 1989 to 1990 and the only President of the Soviet Union from 1990 to 1991. Ideologically, Gorbachev initially adhered to Marxism–Leninism but moved towards social democracy by the early 1990s.[dubious ]

Mikhail Gorbachev
Михаил Горбачёв
Gorbachev in 1987
General Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union
In office
11 March 1985 – 24 August 1991[a]
Premier
DeputyVladimir Ivashko
Preceded byKonstantin Chernenko
Succeeded byVladimir Ivashko (acting)
President of the Soviet Union
In office
15 March 1990 – 25 December 1991[b]
Vice PresidentGennady Yanayev[c]
Preceded byOffice established;
Succeeded byOffice abolished[d]
Chairman of the Supreme Soviet of the Soviet Union
In office
25 May 1989 – 15 March 1990
DeputyAnatoly Lukyanov
Preceded by
Chairman of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the Soviet Union
In office
1 October 1988 – 25 May 1989
Preceded byAndrei Gromyko
Succeeded by
Himself as Chairman of the Supreme Soviet
Additional positions
Co-Chairman of the Union of Social Democrats
In office
11 March 2000[e] – 15 November 2017
Preceded byParty established
Succeeded byParty disestablished
Acting Second Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union
In office
9 February 1984 – 10 March 1985
Preceded byKonstantin Chernenko
Succeeded byYegor Ligachyov
Personal details
Born(1931-03-02)2 March 1931
Privolnoye, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union
Died30 August 2022(2022-08-30) (aged 91)
Moscow, Russia
Resting placeNovodevichy Cemetery, Moscow
Political party
Spouse
(m. 1953; died 1999)
Children1
Alma materMoscow State University (LLB)
AwardsNobel Peace Prize (1990)
Signature
WebsiteOfficial website
Central institution membership

Other offices held
Leader of the Soviet Union

Gorbachev was born in Privolnoye, Russian SFSR, to a poor peasant family of Russian and Ukrainian heritage. Growing up under the rule of Joseph Stalin, in his youth, he operated combine harvesters on a collective farm before joining the Communist Party, which then governed the Soviet Union as a one-party state. Studying at Moscow State University, he married fellow student Raisa Titarenko in 1953 and received his law degree in 1955. Moving to Stavropol, he worked for the Komsomol youth organization and, after Stalin's death, became a keen proponent of the de-Stalinization reforms of Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev. He was appointed the First Party Secretary of the Stavropol Regional Committee in 1970, overseeing the construction of the Great Stavropol Canal. In 1978, he returned to Moscow to become a Secretary of the party's Central Committee; he joined the governing Politburo (25th term) as a non-voting member in 1979 and a voting member in 1980. Three years after the death of Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev—following the brief tenures of Yuri Andropov and Konstantin Chernenko—in 1985, the Politburo elected Gorbachev as general secretary, the de facto leader.

Although committed to preserving the Soviet state and its Marxist–Leninist ideals, Gorbachev believed significant reform was necessary for its survival. He withdrew troops from the Soviet–Afghan War and embarked on summits with United States president Ronald Reagan to limit nuclear weapons and end the Cold War. Domestically, his policy of glasnost ("openness") allowed for enhanced freedom of speech and press, while his perestroika ("restructuring") sought to decentralize economic decision-making to improve its efficiency. His democratization measures and formation of the elected Congress of People's Deputies undermined the one-party state. Gorbachev declined to intervene militarily when various Warsaw Pact countries abandoned Marxist–Leninist governance in 1989. Internally, Gorbachev wanted to transform the Soviet Union into a less centralized federation but moved towards supporting a loose confederation by April 1991, proposing the New Union Treaty.[4] Growing nationalist sentiment within constituent republics threatened to break up the Soviet Union, leading the hardliners within the Communist Party to launch the unsuccessful coup against Gorbachev in August 1991. In the coup's wake, the Soviet Union dissolved against Gorbachev's wishes. After resigning from the presidency, he launched the Gorbachev Foundation, became a vocal critic of Russian presidents Boris Yeltsin and Vladimir Putin, and campaigned for Russia's social-democratic movement.

Gorbachev is considered one of the most significant figures of the second half of the 20th century. The recipient of a wide range of awards, including the Nobel Peace Prize, he is praised for his role in ending the Cold War, introducing new political and economic freedoms in the Soviet Union, and tolerating both the fall of Marxist–Leninist administrations in eastern and central Europe and the German reunification. In Russia, he is often derided for facilitating the dissolution of the Soviet Union—an event which weakened Russia's global influence and precipitated an economic collapse in Russia and other states.

Early life and education edit

1931–1950: childhood edit

Gorbachev was born on 2 March 1931 in the village of Privolnoye, then in the North Caucasus Krai of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic, Soviet Union.[5] At the time, Privolnoye was divided almost evenly between ethnic Russians and ethnic Ukrainians.[6] Gorbachev's paternal family were ethnic Russians and had moved to the region from Voronezh several generations before; his maternal family were of ethnic Ukrainian heritage and had migrated from Chernihiv.[7] His parents named him Viktor at birth, but at the insistence of his mother—a devout Orthodox Christian—he had a secret baptism, where his grandfather christened him Mikhail.[8] His relationship with his father, Sergey Andreyevich Gorbachev, was close; his mother, Maria Panteleyevna Gorbacheva (née Gopkalo), was colder and punitive.[9] His parents were poor,[10] and lived as peasants.[11] They had married as teenagers in 1928,[12] and in keeping with local tradition had initially resided in Sergey's father's house, an adobe-walled hut, before a hut of their own could be built.[13]

 
Gorbachev and his Ukrainian maternal grandparents, late 1930s

The Soviet Union was a one-party state governed by the Communist Party, and during Gorbachev's childhood was under the leadership of Joseph Stalin. Stalin had initiated a project of mass rural collectivization which, in keeping with his Marxist–Leninist ideas, he believed would help convert the country into a socialist society.[14] Gorbachev's maternal grandfather joined the Communist Party and helped form the village's first kolkhoz (collective farm) in 1929, becoming its chair.[15] This farm was 19 kilometres (12 mi) outside Privolnoye village and when he was three years old, Gorbachev left his parental home and moved into the kolkhoz with his maternal grandparents.[16]

The country was then experiencing the famine of 1930–1933, in which two of Gorbachev's paternal uncles and an aunt died.[17] This was followed by the Great Purge, in which individuals accused of being "enemies of the people", including those sympathetic to rival interpretations of Marxism like Trotskyism, were arrested and interned in labor camps, if not executed. Both of Gorbachev's grandfathers were arrested (his maternal in 1934 and his paternal in 1937) and spent time in Gulag labor camps before being released.[18] After his December 1938 release, Gorbachev's maternal grandfather discussed having been tortured by the secret police, an account that influenced the young boy.[19]

Following on from the outbreak of the Second World War in 1939, in June 1941 the German Army invaded the Soviet Union. German forces occupied Privolnoye for four and a half months in 1942.[20] Gorbachev's father had joined the Red Army and fought on the frontlines; he was wrongly declared dead during the conflict and fought in the Battle of Kursk before returning to his family, injured.[21] After Germany was defeated, Gorbachev's parents had their second son, Aleksandr, in 1947; he and Mikhail would be their only children.[12]

The village school was closed during much of the war but re-opened in autumn 1944.[22] Gorbachev did not want to return but when he did he excelled academically.[23] He read voraciously, moving from the Western novels of Thomas Mayne Reid to the works of Vissarion Belinsky, Alexander Pushkin, Nikolai Gogol, and Mikhail Lermontov.[24] In 1946, he joined the Komsomol, the Soviet political youth organization, becoming leader of his local group and then being elected to the Komsomol committee for the district.[25] From primary school he moved to the high school in Molotovskoye; he stayed there during the week while walking the 19 km (12 mi) home during weekends.[26] As well as being a member of the school's drama society,[27] he organized sporting and social activities and led the school's morning exercise class.[28] Over the course of five consecutive summers from 1946 onward he returned home to assist his father in operating a combine harvester, during which they sometimes worked 20-hour days.[29] In 1948, they harvested over 8,000 centners of grain, a feat for which Sergey was awarded the Order of Lenin and his son the Order of the Red Banner of Labour.[30]

1950–1955: university edit

I would consider it a high honour to be a member of the highly advanced, genuinely revolutionary Communist Party of Bolsheviks. I promise to be faithful to the great cause of Lenin and Stalin, to devote my entire life to the party's struggle for Communism.

— Gorbachev's letter requesting membership of the Communist Party, 1950[31]

In June 1950, Gorbachev became a candidate member of the Communist Party.[31] He also applied to study at the law school of Moscow State University (MSU), then the most prestigious university in the country. They accepted him without asking for an exam, likely because of his worker-peasant origins and his possession of the Order of the Red Banner of Labour.[32] His choice of law was unusual; it was not a well-regarded subject in Soviet society at that time.[33] At age 19, he traveled by train to Moscow, the first time he had left his home region.[34]

In Moscow, Gorbachev resided with fellow MSU students at a dormitory in the Sokolniki District.[35] He and other rural students felt at odds with their Muscovite counterparts, but he soon came to fit in.[36] Fellow students recall him working especially hard, often late into the night.[37] He gained a reputation as a mediator during disputes[38] and was also known for being outspoken in class, although he would reveal some of his views only privately; for instance, he confided in some students his opposition to the Soviet jurisprudential norm that a confession proved guilt, noting that confessions could have been forced.[39] During his studies, an antisemitic campaign spread through the Soviet Union, culminating in the Doctors' plot; Gorbachev publicly defended Volodya Liberman, a Jewish student who was accused of disloyalty to the country by one of his fellows.[40]

At MSU, Gorbachev became the Komsomol head of his entering class, and then Komsomol's deputy secretary for agitation and propaganda at the law school.[41] One of his first Komsomol assignments in Moscow was to monitor the election polling in Presnensky District to ensure the government's desire for near-total turnout; Gorbachev found that most of those who voted did so "out of fear".[42] In 1952, he was appointed a full member of the Communist Party.[43] As a party and Komsomol member, he was tasked with monitoring fellow students for potential subversion; some of his fellow students said that he did so only minimally and that they trusted him to keep confidential information secret from the authorities.[44] Gorbachev became close friends with Zdeněk Mlynář, a Czechoslovak student who later became a primary ideologist of the 1968 Prague Spring. Mlynář recalled that the duo remained committed Marxist–Leninists despite their growing concerns about the Stalinist system.[45] After Stalin died in March 1953, Gorbachev and Mlynář joined the crowds massing to see Stalin's body lying in state.[46]

At MSU, Gorbachev met Raisa Titarenko, who was studying in the university's philosophy department.[47] She was engaged to another man, but after that engagement fell apart, she began a relationship with Gorbachev;[48] together they went to bookstores, museums, and art exhibits.[49] In early 1953, he took an internship at the procurator's office in Molotovskoye district, but he was angered by the incompetence and arrogance of those working there.[50] That summer, he returned to Privolnoye to work with his father on the harvest; the money earned allowed him to pay for a wedding.[51] On 25 September 1953 he and Raisa registered their marriage at Sokolniki Registry Office[51] and in October moved in together at the Lenin Hills dormitory.[52] Raisa discovered that she was pregnant and although the couple wanted to keep the child she fell ill and required a life-saving abortion.[53]

In June 1955, Gorbachev graduated with a distinction;[54] his final paper had been on the advantages of "socialist democracy" (the Soviet political system) over "bourgeois democracy" (liberal democracy).[55] He was subsequently assigned to the Soviet Procurator's office, which was then focusing on the rehabilitation of the innocent victims of Stalin's purges, but found that they had no work for him.[56] He was then offered a place on an MSU graduate course specializing in kolkhoz law, but declined.[57] He had wanted to remain in Moscow, where Raisa was enrolled in a PhD program, but instead gained employment in Stavropol; Raisa abandoned her studies to join him there.[58]

Early CPSU career edit

1955–1969: Stavropol Komsomol edit

In August 1955, Gorbachev started work at the Stavropol regional procurator's office, but disliked the job and used his contacts to get a transfer to work for Komsomol,[59] becoming deputy director of Komsomol's agitation and propaganda department for that region.[60] In this position, he visited villages in the area and tried to improve the lives of their inhabitants; he established a discussion circle in Gorkaya Balka village to help its peasant residents gain social contacts.[61]

Mikhail Gorbachev and his wife Raisa initially rented a small room in Stavropol,[62] taking daily evening walks around the city and on weekends hiking in the countryside.[63] In January 1957, Raisa gave birth to a daughter, Irina,[64] and in 1958 they moved into two rooms in a communal apartment.[65] In 1961, Gorbachev pursued a second degree, in agricultural production; he took a correspondence course from the local Stavropol Agricultural Institute, receiving his diploma in 1967.[66] His wife had also pursued a second degree, attaining a PhD in sociology in 1967 from the Moscow State Pedagogical University;[67] while in Stavropol she too joined the Communist Party.[68]

Stalin was ultimately succeeded as Soviet leader by Nikita Khrushchev, who denounced Stalin and his cult of personality in a speech given in February 1956, after which he launched a de-Stalinization process throughout Soviet society.[69] Later biographer William Taubman suggested that Gorbachev "embodied" the "reformist spirit" of the Khrushchev era.[70] Gorbachev was among those who saw themselves as "genuine Marxists" or "genuine Leninists" in contrast to what they regarded as the perversions of Stalin.[71] He helped spread Khrushchev's anti-Stalinist message in Stavropol, but encountered many who continued to regard Stalin as a hero or who praised the Stalinist purges as just.[72]

Gorbachev rose steadily through the ranks of the local administration.[73] The authorities regarded him as politically reliable,[74] and he would flatter his superiors, for instance gaining favor with prominent local politician Fyodor Kulakov.[75] With an ability to outmanoeuvre rivals, some colleagues resented his success.[76] In September 1956, he was promoted First Secretary of the Stavropol city's Komsomol, placing him in charge of it;[77] in April 1958 he was made deputy head of the Komsomol for the entire region.[78] At this point he was given better accommodation: a two-room flat with its own private kitchen, toilet, and bathroom.[79] In Stavropol, he formed a discussion club for youths,[80] and helped mobilize local young people to take part in Khrushchev's agricultural and development campaigns.[81]

 
Gorbachev on a visit to East Germany in 1966

In March 1961, Gorbachev became First Secretary of the regional Komsomol,[82] in which position he went out of his way to appoint women as city and district leaders.[83] In 1961, Gorbachev played host to the Italian delegation for the World Youth Festival in Moscow;[84] that October, he also attended the 22nd Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union.[85] In January 1963, Gorbachev was promoted to personnel chief for the regional party's agricultural committee,[86] and in September 1966 became First Secretary of the Stavropol City Party Organization ("Gorkom").[87] By 1968 he was increasingly frustrated with his job—in large part because Khrushchev's reforms were stalling or being reversed—and he contemplated leaving politics to work in academia.[88] However, in August 1968, he was named Second Secretary of the Stavropol Kraikom, making him the deputy of First Secretary Leonid Yefremov and the second most senior figure in the Stavrapol region.[89] In 1969, he was elected as a deputy to the Supreme Soviet of the Soviet Union and made a member of its Standing Commission for the Protection of the Environment.[90]

Cleared for travel to Eastern Bloc countries, in 1966 he was part of a delegation which visited East Germany, and in 1969 and 1974 visited Bulgaria.[91] In August 1968 the Soviet Union led an invasion of Czechoslovakia to put an end to the Prague Spring, a period of political liberalization in the Marxist–Leninist country. Although Gorbachev later stated that he had had private concerns about the invasion, he publicly supported it.[92] In September 1969 he was part of a Soviet delegation sent to Czechoslovakia, where he found the Czechoslovak people largely unwelcoming to them.[93] That year, the Soviet authorities ordered him to punish Fagim B. Sadykov [ru], a philosophy professor of the Stavropol agricultural institute whose ideas were regarded as critical of Soviet agricultural policy; Gorbachev ensured that Sadykov was fired from teaching but ignored calls for him to face tougher punishment.[94] Gorbachev later related that he was "deeply affected" by the incident; "my conscience tormented me" for overseeing Sadykov's persecution.[95]

1970–1977: heading the Stavropol region edit

In April 1970, Yefremov was promoted to a higher position in Moscow and Gorbachev succeeded him as the First Secretary of the Stavropol kraikom. This granted Gorbachev significant power over the Stavropol region.[96] He had been personally vetted for the position by senior Kremlin leaders and was informed of their decision by the Soviet leader, Leonid Brezhnev.[97] Aged 39, he was considerably younger than his predecessors in the position.[98] As head of the Stavropol region, he automatically became a member of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union (24th term) in 1971.[99] According to biographer Zhores Medvedev, Gorbachev "had now joined the Party's super-elite".[100] As regional leader, Gorbachev initially attributed economic and other failures to "the inefficiency and incompetence of cadres, flaws in management structure or gaps in legislation", but eventually concluded that they were caused by an excessive centralization of decision making in Moscow.[101] He began reading translations of restricted texts by Western Marxist authors such as Antonio Gramsci, Louis Aragon, Roger Garaudy, and Giuseppe Boffa, and came under their influence.[101]

 
Part of the Great Stavropol Canal constructed under Gorbachev's regional leadership

Gorbachev's main task as regional leader was to raise agricultural production levels, a task hampered by severe droughts in 1975 and 1976.[102] He oversaw the expansion of irrigation systems through construction of the Great Stavropol Canal.[103] For overseeing a record grain harvest in Ipatovsky district, in March 1972 he was awarded the Order of the October Revolution by Brezhnev in a Moscow ceremony.[104] Gorbachev always sought to maintain Brezhnev's trust;[105] as regional leader, he repeatedly praised Brezhnev in his speeches, for instance referring to him as "the outstanding statesman of our time".[106] Gorbachev and his wife holidayed in Moscow, Leningrad, Uzbekistan, and resorts in the North Caucasus;[107] he holidayed with the head of the KGB, Yuri Andropov, who was favorable towards him and who became an important patron.[108] Gorbachev also developed good relationships with senior figures including the Soviet prime minister, Alexei Kosygin,[109] and the longstanding senior party member Mikhail Suslov.[110]

The government considered Gorbachev sufficiently reliable that he was sent as part of Soviet delegations to Western Europe; he made five trips there between 1970 and 1977.[111] In September 1971 he was part of a delegation that traveled to Italy, where they met with representatives of the Italian Communist Party; Gorbachev loved Italian culture but was struck by the poverty and inequality he saw in the country.[112] In 1972, he visited Belgium and the Netherlands, and in 1973 West Germany.[113] Gorbachev and his wife visited France in 1976 and 1977, on the latter occasion touring the country with a guide from the French Communist Party.[114] He was surprised by how openly West Europeans offered their opinions and criticized their political leaders, something absent from the Soviet Union, where most people did not feel safe speaking so openly.[115] He later related that for him and his wife, these visits "shook our a priori belief in the superiority of socialist over bourgeois democracy".[116]

Gorbachev had remained close to his parents; after his father became terminally ill in 1974, Gorbachev traveled to be with him in Privolnoe shortly before his death.[117] His daughter, Irina, married fellow student Anatoly Virgansky in April 1978.[118] In 1977, the Supreme Soviet appointed Gorbachev to chair the Standing Commission on Youth Affairs due to his experience with mobilizing young people in Komsomol.[119]

Secretary of the Central Committee of CPSU edit

 
Gorbachev was skeptical of the deployment of Soviet troops in Afghanistan (pictured here in 1986).

In November 1978, Gorbachev was appointed a Secretary of the Central Committee.[120] His appointment had been approved unanimously by the Central Committee's members.[121] To fill this position, Gorbachev and his wife moved to Moscow, where they were initially given an old dacha outside the city. They then moved to another, at Sosnovka, before finally being allocated a newly built brick house.[122] He was also given an apartment inside the city, but gave that to his daughter and son-in-law; Irina had begun work at Moscow's Second Medical Institute.[123] As part of the Moscow political elite, Gorbachev and his wife now had access to better medical care and to specialized shops; they were also given cooks, servants, bodyguards, and secretaries, although many of these were spies for the KGB.[124] In his new position, Gorbachev often worked twelve to sixteen hour days.[124] He and his wife socialized little, but liked to visit Moscow's theaters and museums.[125]

In 1978, Gorbachev was appointed to the Central Committee's Secretariat for Agriculture (25th term), replacing his old patron Kulakov, who had died of a heart attack.[126] Gorbachev concentrated his attentions on agriculture: the harvests of 1979, 1980, and 1981 were all poor, due largely to weather conditions,[127] and the country had to import increasing quantities of grain.[128] He had growing concerns about the country's agricultural management system, coming to regard it as overly centralized and requiring more bottom-up decision making;[129] he raised these points at his first speech at a Central Committee Plenum, given in July 1978.[130] He began to have concerns about other policies too. In December 1979, the Soviets sent the armed forces into neighbouring Afghanistan to support its Soviet-aligned government against Islamist insurgents; Gorbachev privately thought it a mistake.[131] At times he openly supported the government position; in October 1980 he for instance endorsed Soviet calls for Poland's Marxist–Leninist government to crack down on growing internal dissent in that country.[131] That same month, he was promoted from a candidate member to a full member of the Politburo (25th term), the highest decision-making authority in the Communist Party.[132] At the time, he was the Politburo's youngest member.[132]

After Brezhnev's death in November 1982, Andropov succeeded him as General Secretary of the Communist Party, the de facto leader in the Soviet Union. Gorbachev was enthusiastic about the appointment.[133] However, although Gorbachev hoped that Andropov would introduce liberalizing reforms, the latter carried out only personnel shifts rather than structural change.[134] Gorbachev became Andropov's closest ally in the Politburo;[135] with Andropov's encouragement, Gorbachev sometimes chaired Politburo meetings.[136] Andropov encouraged Gorbachev to expand into policy areas other than agriculture, preparing him for future higher office.[137] In April 1983, in a sign of growing ascendancy, Gorbachev delivered the annual speech marking the birthday of the Soviet founder Vladimir Lenin;[138] this required him re-reading many of Lenin's later writings, in which the latter had called for reform in the context of the New Economic Policy of the 1920s, and encouraged Gorbachev's own conviction that reform was needed.[139] In May 1983, Gorbachev was sent to Canada, where he met Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau and spoke to the Canadian Parliament.[140] There, he met and befriended the Soviet ambassador, Aleksandr Yakovlev, who later became a key political ally.[141]

In February 1984, Andropov died; on his deathbed he indicated his desire that Gorbachev succeed him.[142] Many in the Central Committee nevertheless thought the 53-year-old Gorbachev was too young and inexperienced.[143] Instead, Konstantin Chernenko—a longstanding Brezhnev ally—was appointed general secretary, but he too was in very poor health.[144] Chernenko was often too sick to chair Politburo meetings, with Gorbachev stepping in last minute.[145] Gorbachev continued to cultivate allies both in the Kremlin and beyond,[146] and also gave the main speech at a conference on Soviet ideology, where he angered party hardliners by implying that the country required reform.[147]

In April 1984, Gorbachev was appointed chair of the Foreign Affairs Committee of the Soviet legislature, a largely honorific position.[148] In June he traveled to Italy as a Soviet representative for the funeral of Italian Communist Party leader Enrico Berlinguer,[149] and in September to Sofia, Bulgaria to attend celebrations of the fortieth anniversary of its liberation from the Nazis by the Red Army.[150] In December, he visited Britain at the request of its prime minister Margaret Thatcher; she was aware that he was a potential reformer and wanted to meet him.[151] At the end of the visit, Thatcher said: "I like Mr. Gorbachev. We can do business together".[152] He felt that the visit helped to erode Andrei Gromyko's dominance of Soviet foreign policy while at the same time sending a signal to the United States government that he wanted to improve Soviet–US relations.[153]

General Secretary of the CPSU edit

 
Gorbachev in 1985 at a summit in Geneva, Switzerland

On 10 March 1985, Chernenko died.[154] Gromyko proposed Gorbachev as the next general secretary; as a longstanding party member, Gromyko's recommendation carried great weight among the Central Committee.[155] Gorbachev expected much opposition to his nomination as general secretary, but ultimately the rest of the Politburo supported him.[156] Shortly after Chernenko's death, the Politburo unanimously elected Gorbachev as his successor; they wanted him rather than another elderly leader.[157] He thus became the eighth leader of the Soviet Union.[11] Few in the government imagined that he would be as radical a reformer as he proved.[158] Although he was not a well-known figure to the Soviet public, there was widespread relief that the new leader was not elderly and ailing.[159] Gorbachev's first public appearance as leader was at Chernenko's Red Square funeral, held on 14 March.[160] Two months after being elected, he left Moscow for the first time, traveling to Leningrad, where he spoke to assembled crowds.[161] In June he traveled to Ukraine, in July to Belarus, and in September to Tyumen Oblast, urging party members in these areas to take more responsibility for fixing local problems.[162]

1985–1986: early years edit

Gorbachev's leadership style differed from that of his predecessors. He would stop to talk to civilians on the street, forbade the display of his portrait at the 1985 Red Square holiday celebrations, and encouraged frank and open discussions at Politburo meetings.[163] To the West, Gorbachev was seen as a more moderate and less threatening Soviet leader; some Western commentators however believed this an act to lull Western governments into a false sense of security.[164] His wife was his closest adviser, and took on the unofficial role of a "first lady" by appearing with him on foreign trips; her public visibility was a breach of standard practice and generated resentment.[165] His other close aides were Georgy Shakhnazarov and Anatoly Chernyaev.[166]

Gorbachev was aware that the Politburo could remove him from office, and that he could not pursue more radical reform without a majority of supporters in the Politburo.[167] He sought to remove several older members from the Politburo, encouraging Grigory Romanov, Nikolai Tikhonov, and Viktor Grishin into retirement.[168] He promoted Gromyko to head of state, a largely ceremonial role with little influence, and moved his own ally, Eduard Shevardnadze, to Gromyko's former post in charge of foreign policy.[169] Other allies whom he saw promoted were Yakovlev, Anatoly Lukyanov, and Vadim Medvedev.[170] Another of those promoted by Gorbachev was Boris Yeltsin, who was made a Secretary of the Central Committee (26th term) in July 1985.[171] Most of these appointees were from a new generation of well-educated officials who had been frustrated during the Brezhnev era.[172] In his first year, 14 of the 23 heads of department in the Secretariat were replaced.[173] Doing so, Gorbachev secured dominance in the Politburo within a year, faster than either Stalin, Khrushchev, or Brezhnev had achieved.[174]

Domestic policies edit

 
Gorbachev at the Brandenburg Gate in 1986 during a visit to East Germany

Gorbachev recurrently employed the term perestroika, first used publicly in March 1984.[175] He saw perestroika as encompassing a complex series of reforms to restructure society and the economy.[176] He was concerned by the country's low productivity, poor work ethic, and inferior quality goods;[177] like several economists, he feared this would lead to the country becoming a second-rate power.[178] The first stage of Gorbachev's perestroika was uskoreniye ("acceleration"), a term he used regularly in the first two years of his leadership.[179] The Soviet Union was behind the United States in many areas of production,[180] but Gorbachev claimed that it would accelerate industrial output to match that of the US by 2000.[181] The Five Year Plan of 1985–1990 was targeted to expand machine building by 50 to 100%.[182] To boost agricultural productivity, he merged five ministries and a state committee into a single entity, Agroprom, although by late 1986 he acknowledged this merger as a failure.[183]

The purpose of reform was to prop up the centrally planned economy—not to transition to market socialism. Speaking in late summer 1985 to the secretaries for economic affairs of the central committees of the East European communist parties, Gorbachev said: "Many of you see the solution to your problems in resorting to market mechanisms in place of direct planning. Some of you look at the market as a lifesaver for your economies. But, comrades, you should not think about lifesavers but about the ship, and the ship is socialism."[184] Gorbachev's perestroika also[185] entailed attempts to move away from technocratic management of the economy by increasingly involving the labor force in industrial production.[186] He was of the view that once freed from the strong control of central planners, state-owned enterprises would act as market agents.[187] Gorbachev and other Soviet leaders did not anticipate opposition to the perestroika reforms; according to their interpretation of Marxism, they believed that in a socialist society like the Soviet Union there would not be "antagonistic contradictions".[188] However, there would come to be a public perception in the country that many bureaucrats were paying lip service to the reforms while trying to undermine them.[189] He also initiated the concept of gospriyomka (state acceptance of production) during his time as leader,[190] which represented quality control.[191] In April 1986, he introduced an agrarian reform which linked salaries to output and allowed collective farms to sell 30% of their produce directly to shops or co-operatives rather than giving it all to the state for distribution.[192] In a September 1986 speech, he embraced the idea of reintroducing market economics to the country alongside limited private enterprise, citing Lenin's New Economic Policy as a precedent; he nevertheless stressed that he did not regard this as a return to capitalism.[192]

In the Soviet Union, alcohol consumption had risen steadily between 1950 and 1985.[193] By the 1980s, drunkenness was a major social problem and Andropov had planned a major campaign to limit alcohol consumption. Encouraged by his wife, Gorbachev—who believed the campaign would improve health and work efficiency—oversaw its implementation.[194] Alcohol production was reduced by around 40%, the legal drinking age rose from 18 to 21, alcohol prices were increased, stores were banned from selling it before 2 pm, and tougher penalties were introduced for workplace or public drunkenness and home production of alcohol.[195] The All-Union Voluntary Society for the Struggle for Temperance was formed to promote sobriety; it had over 14 million members within three years.[196] As a result, crime rates fell and life expectancy grew slightly between 1986 and 1987.[197] However, bootleg liquor production rose considerably,[198] and the reform imposed large costs on the Soviet economy, resulting in losses of up to US$100 billion between 1985 and 1990.[199] Gorbachev later considered the campaign to have been an error,[200] and it was terminated in October 1988.[201] After it ended, it took several years for production to return to previous levels, after which alcohol consumption soared in Russia between 1990 and 1993.[202]

 
Gorbachev's visit to Vilnius in 1990 in an attempt to stop Lithuania's declaration of independence, which passed two months later.

In the second year of his leadership, Gorbachev began speaking of glasnost, or "openness".[203] According to Doder and Branson, this meant "greater openness and candour in government affairs and for an interplay of different and sometimes conflicting views in political debates, in the press, and in Soviet culture".[204] Encouraging reformers into prominent media positions, he brought in Sergei Zalygin as head of Novy Mir magazine and Yegor Yakovlev as editor-in-chief of Moscow News.[205] He made the historian Yury Afanasyev dean of the State Historical Archive Faculty, from where Afansiev could press for the opening of secret archives and the reassessment of Soviet history.[172] Prominent dissidents like Andrei Sakharov were freed from internal exile or prison.[206] Gorbachev saw glasnost as a necessary measure to ensure perestroika by alerting the Soviet populace to the nature of the country's problems in the hope that they would support his efforts to fix them.[207] Particularly popular among the Soviet intelligentsia, who became key Gorbachev supporters,[208] glasnost boosted his domestic popularity but alarmed many Communist Party hardliners.[209] For many Soviet citizens, this newfound level of freedom of speech and press—and its accompanying revelations about the country's past—was uncomfortable.[210]

Some in the party thought Gorbachev was not going far enough in his reforms; a prominent liberal critic was Yeltsin. He had risen rapidly since 1985, attaining the role of party secretary in Moscow.[211] Like many members of the government, Gorbachev was skeptical of Yeltsin, believing that he engaged in too much self-promotion.[212] Yeltsin was also critical of Gorbachev, regarding him as patronizing.[211] In early 1986, Yeltsin began sniping at Gorbachev in Politburo meetings.[212] At the Twenty-Seventh Party Congress in February, Yeltsin called for more far-reaching reforms than Gorbachev was initiating and criticized the party leadership, although he did not cite Gorbachev by name, claiming that a new cult of personality was forming. Gorbachev then opened the floor to responses, after which attendees publicly criticized Yeltsin for several hours.[213] After this, Gorbachev also criticized Yeltsin, claiming that he cared only for himself and was "politically illiterate".[214] Yeltsin then resigned both as Moscow party secretary and as a member of the Politburo.[214] From this point, tensions between the two men developed into a mutual hatred.[215]

In April 1986 the Chernobyl disaster occurred.[216] In the immediate aftermath, officials fed Gorbachev incorrect information to downplay the incident. As the scale of the disaster became apparent, 336,000 people were evacuated from the area around Chernobyl.[217] Taubman noted that the disaster marked "a turning point for Gorbachev and the Soviet regime".[218] Several days after it occurred, he gave a televised report to the nation.[219] He cited the disaster as evidence for what he regarded as widespread problems in Soviet society, such as shoddy workmanship and workplace inertia.[220] Gorbachev later described the incident as one which made him appreciate the scale of incompetence and cover-ups in the Soviet Union.[218] From April to the end of the year, Gorbachev became increasingly open in his criticism of the Soviet system, including food production, state bureaucracy, the military draft, and the large size of the prison population.[221]

Foreign policy edit

 
US president Reagan and Gorbachev meeting in Iceland, 1986

In a May 1985 speech given to the Soviet Foreign Ministry—the first time a Soviet leader had directly addressed his country's diplomats—Gorbachev spoke of a "radical restructuring" of foreign policy.[222] A major issue facing his leadership was Soviet involvement in the Afghan Civil War, which had then been going on for over five years.[223] Over the course of the war, the Soviet Army took heavy casualties and there was much opposition to Soviet involvement among both the public and military.[223] On becoming leader, Gorbachev saw withdrawal from the war as a key priority.[224] In October 1985, he met with Afghan Marxist leader Babrak Karmal, urging him to acknowledge the lack of widespread public support for his government and pursue a power sharing agreement with the opposition.[224] That month, the Politburo approved Gorbachev's decision to withdraw combat troops from Afghanistan, although the last troops did not leave until February 1989.[225]

Gorbachev had inherited a renewed period of high tension in the Cold War.[226] He believed strongly in the need to sharply improve relations with the United States; he was appalled at the prospect of nuclear war, was aware that the Soviet Union was unlikely to win the arms race and thought that the continued focus on high military spending was detrimental to his desire for domestic reform.[226] US president Ronald Reagan publicly appeared to not want a de-escalation of tensions, having scrapped détente and arms controls, initiating a military build-up, and calling the Soviet Union the "evil empire".[227]

Both Gorbachev and Reagan wanted a summit to discuss the Cold War, but each faced some opposition to such a move within their respective governments.[228] They agreed to hold a summit in Geneva, Switzerland, in November 1985.[229] In the buildup to this, Gorbachev sought to improve relations with the US's NATO allies, visiting France in October 1985 to meet with President François Mitterrand.[230] At the Geneva summit, discussions between Gorbachev and Reagan were sometimes heated, and Gorbachev was initially frustrated that his US counterpart "does not seem to hear what I am trying to say".[231] As well as discussing the Cold War proxy conflicts in Afghanistan and Nicaragua and human rights issues, the pair discussed the US's Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI), to which Gorbachev was strongly opposed.[232] The duo's wives also met and spent time together at the summit.[233] The summit ended with a joint commitment to avoiding nuclear war and to meet for two further summits: in Washington, DC, in 1986 and in Moscow in 1987.[232] Following the conference, Gorbachev traveled to Prague to inform other Warsaw Pact leaders of developments.[234]

 
Gorbachev with Erich Honecker of East Germany. Privately, Gorbachev told Chernyaev that Honecker was a "scumbag".[235]

In January 1986, Gorbachev publicly proposed a three-stage programme for abolishing the world's nuclear weapons by the end of the 20th century.[236] An agreement was then reached to meet with Reagan in Reykjavík, Iceland, in October 1986. Gorbachev wanted to secure guarantees that SDI would not be implemented, and in return was willing to offer concessions, including a 50% reduction in Soviet long range nuclear missiles.[237] Both leaders agreed with the shared goal of abolishing nuclear weapons, but Reagan refused to terminate the SDI program and no deal was reached.[238] After the summit, many of Reagan's allies criticized him for going along with the idea of abolishing nuclear weapons.[239] Gorbachev meanwhile told the Politburo that Reagan was "extraordinarily primitive, troglodyte, and intellectually feeble".[239]

In his relations with the developing world, Gorbachev found many of its leaders professing revolutionary socialist credentials or a pro-Soviet attitude—such as Libya's Muammar Gaddafi and Syria's Hafez al-Assad—frustrating, and his best personal relationship was instead with India's prime minister, Rajiv Gandhi.[223] He thought that the "socialist camp" of Marxist–Leninist governed states—the Eastern Bloc countries, North Korea, Vietnam, and Cuba—were a drain on the Soviet economy, receiving a far greater amount of goods from the Soviet Union than they collectively gave in return.[240] He sought improved relations with China, a country whose Marxist government had severed ties with the Soviets in the Sino-Soviet split and had since undergone its own structural reform. In June 1985 he signed a US$14 billion five-year trade agreement with the country and in July 1986, he proposed troop reductions along the Soviet-Chinese border, hailing China as "a great socialist country".[241] He made clear his desire for Soviet membership of the Asian Development Bank and for greater ties to Pacific countries, especially China and Japan.[242]

1987–1989: further reforms edit

 
Gorbachev in 1987

Domestic reforms edit

In January 1987, Gorbachev attended a Central Committee plenum where he talked about perestroika and democratization while criticizing widespread corruption.[243] He considered putting a proposal to allow multi-party elections into his speech, but decided against doing so.[244] After the plenum, he focused his attentions on economic reform, holding discussions with government officials and economists.[245] Many economists proposed reducing ministerial controls on the economy and allowing state-owned enterprises to set their own targets; Ryzhkov and other government figures were skeptical.[246] In June, Gorbachev finished his report on economic reform. It reflected a compromise: ministers would retain the ability to set output targets but these would not be considered binding.[247] That month, a plenum accepted his recommendations and the Supreme Soviet passed a "law on enterprises" implementing the changes.[248] Economic problems remained: by the late 1980s there were still widespread shortages of basic goods, rising inflation, and declining living standards.[249] These stoked a number of miners' strikes in 1989.[250]

By 1987, the ethos of glasnost had spread through Soviet society: journalists were writing increasingly openly,[251] many economic problems were being publicly revealed,[252] and studies appeared that critically reassessed Soviet history.[253] Gorbachev was broadly supportive, describing glasnost as "the crucial, irreplaceable weapon of perestroika".[251] He nevertheless insisted that people should use the newfound freedom responsibly, stating that journalists and writers should avoid "sensationalism" and be "completely objective" in their reporting.[254] Nearly two hundred previously restricted Soviet films were publicly released, and a range of Western films were also made available.[255] In 1989, Soviet responsibility for the 1940 Katyn massacre was finally revealed.[256]

In September 1987, the government stopped jamming the signal of the British Broadcasting Corporation and Voice of America.[257] The reforms also included greater tolerance of religion;[258] an Easter service was broadcast on Soviet television for the first time and the millennium celebrations of the Russian Orthodox Church were given media attention.[259] Independent organizations appeared, most supportive of Gorbachev, although the largest, Pamyat, was ultra-nationalist and antisemitic in nature.[260] Gorbachev also announced that Soviet Jews wishing to migrate to Israel would be allowed to do so, something previously prohibited.[261]

In August 1987, Gorbachev holidayed in Nizhnyaya Oreanda in Oreanda, Crimea, there writing Perestroika: New Thinking for Our Country and Our World[262] at the suggestion of US publishers.[263] For the 70th anniversary of the October Revolution of 1917—which brought Lenin and the Communist Party to power—Gorbachev produced a speech on "October and Perestroika: The Revolution Continues". Delivered to a ceremonial joint session of the Central Committee and the Supreme Soviet in the Kremlin Palace of Congresses, it praised Lenin but criticized Stalin for overseeing mass human rights abuses.[264] Party hardliners thought the speech went too far; liberalisers thought it did not go far enough.[265]

In March 1988, the magazine Sovetskaya Rossiya published an open letter by the teacher Nina Andreyeva. It criticized elements of Gorbachev's reforms, attacking what she regarded as the denigration of the Stalinist era and arguing that a reformer clique—whom she implied were mostly Jews and ethnic minorities—were to blame.[266] Over 900 Soviet newspapers reprinted it and anti-reformists rallied around it; many reformers panicked, fearing a backlash against perestroika.[267] On returning from Yugoslavia, Gorbachev called a Politburo meeting to discuss the letter, at which he confronted those hardliners supporting its sentiment. Ultimately, the Politburo arrived at a unanimous decision to express disapproval of Andreyeva's letter and publish a rebuttal in Pravda.[268] Yakovlev and Gorbachev's rebuttal claimed that those who "look everywhere for internal enemies" were "not patriots" and presented Stalin's "guilt for massive repressions and lawlessness" as "enormous and unforgiveable".[269]

Forming the Congress of People's Deputies edit

Although the next party congress was not scheduled until 1991, Gorbachev convened the 19th Party Conference in its place in June 1988. He hoped that by allowing a broader range of people to attend than at previous conferences, he would gain additional support for his reforms.[270] With sympathetic officials and academics, Gorbachev drafted plans for reforms that would shift power away from the Politburo and towards the soviets. While the soviets had become largely powerless bodies that rubber-stamped Politburo policies, he wanted them to become year-round legislatures. He proposed the formation of a new institution, the Congress of People's Deputies, whose members were to be elected in a largely free vote.[271] This congress would in turn elect a USSR Supreme Soviet, which would do most of the legislating.[272]

 
Gorbachev and his wife Raisa on a trip to Poland in 1988

These proposals reflected Gorbachev's desire for more democracy; however, in his view there was a major impediment in that the Soviet people had developed a "slave psychology" after centuries of Tsarist autocracy and Marxist–Leninist authoritarianism.[273] Held at the Kremlin Palace of Congresses, the conference brought together 5,000 delegates and featured arguments between hardliners and liberalisers. The proceedings were televised, and for the first time since the 1920s, voting was not unanimous.[274] In the months following the conference, Gorbachev focused on redesigning and streamlining the party apparatus; the Central Committee staff—which then numbered around 3,000—was halved, while various Central Committee departments were merged to cut down the overall number from twenty to nine.[275]

In March and April 1989, elections to the new Congress were held.[276] Of the 2,250 legislators to be elected, one hundred—termed the "Red Hundred" by the press—were directly chosen by the Communist Party, with Gorbachev ensuring many were reformists.[277] Although over 85% of elected deputies were party members,[278] many of those elected—including Sakharov and Yeltsin—were liberalisers.[279] Gorbachev was happy with the result, describing it as "an enormous political victory under extraordinarily difficult circumstances".[280] The new Congress convened in May 1989.[281] Gorbachev was then elected its chair—the new de facto head of state—with 2,123 votes in favor to 87 against.[282] Its sessions were televised live,[282] and its members elected the new Supreme Soviet.[283] At the Congress, Sakharov spoke repeatedly, exasperating Gorbachev with his calls for greater liberalization and the introduction of private property.[284] When Sakharov died shortly after, Yeltsin became the figurehead of the liberal opposition.[285]

Relations with China and Western states edit

 
Gorbachev in one-to-one discussions with Reagan at a summit in Geneva, Switzerland, 1985

Gorbachev tried to improve relations with the UK, France, and West Germany;[286] like previous Soviet leaders, he was interested in pulling Western Europe away from US influence.[287] Calling for greater pan-European co-operation, he publicly spoke of a "Common European Home" and of a Europe "from the Atlantic to the Urals".[288] In March 1987, Thatcher visited Gorbachev in Moscow; despite their ideological differences, they liked one another.[289] In April 1989 he visited London, lunching with Elizabeth II.[290] In May 1987, Gorbachev again visited France, and in November 1988 Mitterrand visited him in Moscow.[291] The West German chancellor, Helmut Kohl, had initially offended Gorbachev by comparing him to Nazi propagandist Joseph Goebbels, although he later informally apologized and in October 1988 visited Moscow.[292] In June 1989 Gorbachev then visited Kohl in West Germany.[293] In November 1989 he also visited Italy, meeting with Pope John Paul II.[294] Gorbachev's relationships with these West European leaders were typically far warmer than those he had with their Eastern Bloc counterparts.[295]

Gorbachev continued to pursue good relations with China to heal the Sino-Soviet Split. In May 1989 he visited Beijing and there met its leader Deng Xiaoping; Deng shared Gorbachev's belief in economic reform but rejected calls for democratization.[296] Pro-democracy students had massed in Tiananmen Square during Gorbachev's visit but after he left were massacred by troops. Gorbachev did not condemn the massacre publicly but it reinforced his commitment not to use violent force in dealing with pro-democracy protests in the Eastern Bloc.[297]

Following the failures of earlier talks with the US, in February 1987, Gorbachev held a conference in Moscow, titled "For a World without Nuclear Weapons, for Mankind's Survival", which was attended by various international celebrities and politicians.[298] By publicly pushing for nuclear disarmament, Gorbachev sought to give the Soviet Union the moral high ground and weaken the West's self-perception of moral superiority.[299] Aware that Reagan would not budge on SDI, Gorbachev focused on reducing "Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces", to which Reagan was receptive.[300] In April 1987, Gorbachev discussed the issue with US secretary of state George P. Shultz in Moscow; he agreed to eliminate the Soviets' SS-23 rockets and allow US inspectors to visit Soviet military facilities to ensure compliance.[301] There was hostility to such compromises from the Soviet military, but following the May 1987 Mathias Rust incident—in which a West German teenager was able to fly undetected from Finland and land in Red Square—Gorbachev fired many senior military figures for incompetence.[302] In December 1987, Gorbachev visited Washington, DC, where he and Reagan signed the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty.[303] Taubman called it "one of the highest points of Gorbachev's career".[304]

 
Reagan and Gorbachev with wives (Nancy and Raisa, respectively) attending a dinner at the Soviet Embassy in Washington, 1987

A second US–Soviet summit occurred in Moscow in May–June 1988, which Gorbachev expected to be largely symbolic.[305] Again, he and Reagan criticized each other's countries—Reagan raising Soviet restrictions on religious freedom; Gorbachev highlighting poverty and racial discrimination in the US, but Gorbachev related that they spoke "on friendly terms".[306] They reached an agreement on notifying each other before conducting ballistic missile tests and made agreements on transport, fishing, and radio navigation.[307] At the summit, Reagan told reporters that he no longer considered the Soviet Union an "evil empire" and the two revealed that they considered themselves friends.[308]

The third summit was held in New York City in December.[309] Arriving there, Gorbachev gave a speech to the United Nations General Assembly where he announced a unilateral reduction in the Soviet armed forces by 500,000; he also announced that 50,000 troops would be withdrawn from Central and Eastern Europe.[310] He then met with Reagan and President-elect George H. W. Bush, following which he rushed home, skipping a planned visit to Cuba, to deal with the Armenian earthquake.[311] On becoming US president, Bush appeared interested in continuing talks with Gorbachev but wanted to appear tougher on the Soviets than Reagan had to allay criticism from the right wing of his Republican Party.[312] In December 1989, Gorbachev and Bush met at the Malta Summit.[313] Bush offered to assist the Soviet economy by suspending the Jackson–Vanik amendment and repealing the Stevenson and Baird Amendments.[314] There, they agreed to a joint press conference, the first time that a US and Soviet leader had done so.[315] Gorbachev also urged Bush to normalize relations with Cuba and meet its president, Fidel Castro, although Bush refused to do so.[316]

Nationality question and the Eastern Bloc edit

 
Gorbachev meeting the Romanian Marxist–Leninist leader Nicolae Ceaușescu in 1985. According to Taubman, Ceaușescu was Gorbachev's "favorite punching bag".[223]

On taking power, Gorbachev found some unrest among different national groups within the Soviet Union. In December 1986, riots broke out in several Kazakh cities after a Russian was appointed head of the region.[317] In 1987, Crimean Tatars protested in Moscow to demand resettlement in Crimea, the area from which they had been deported on Stalin's orders in 1944. Gorbachev ordered a commission, headed by Gromyko, to examine their situation. Gromyko's report opposed calls for assisting Tatar resettlement in Crimea.[318] By 1988, the Soviet "nationality question" was increasingly pressing.[319] In February, the administration of the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast officially requested that it be transferred from the Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist Republic to the Armenian Soviet Socialist Republic; the majority of the region's population were ethnically Armenian and wanted unification with other majority Armenian areas.[320] As rival Armenian and Azerbaijani demonstrations took place in Nagorno-Karabakh, Gorbachev called an emergency meeting of the Politburo.[321] Ultimately, Gorbachev promised greater autonomy for Nagorno-Karabakh but refused the transfer, fearing that it would set off similar ethnic tensions and demands throughout the Soviet Union.[322]

That month, in the Azerbaijani city of Sumgait, Azerbaijani gangs began killing members of the Armenian minority. Local troops tried to quell the unrest but were attacked by mobs.[323] The Politburo ordered additional troops into the city, but in contrast to those like Ligachev who wanted a massive display of force, Gorbachev urged restraint. He believed that the situation could be resolved through a political solution, urging talks between the Armenian and Azerbaijani Communist Parties.[324] Further anti-Armenian violence broke out in Baku in January 1990, followed by the Soviet Army killing about 150 Azeris.[325] Problems also emerged in the Georgian Soviet Socialist Republic; in April 1989, Soviet troops crushed Georgian pro-independence demonstrations in Tbilisi, resulting in various deaths.[326] Independence sentiment was also rising in the Baltic states; the Supreme Soviets of the Estonian, Lithuanian, and Latvian Soviet Socialist Republics declared their economic "autonomy" from the Soviet central government and introduced measures to restrict Russian immigration.[327] In August 1989, protesters formed the Baltic Way, a human chain across the three countries to symbolize their wish to restore independence.[328] That month, the Lithuanian Supreme Soviet ruled the 1940 Soviet annexation of their country to be illegal;[329] in January 1990, Gorbachev visited the republic to encourage it to remain part of the Soviet Union.[330]

 
Berlin Wall, Thank you, Gorbi!, October 1990

Gorbachev rejected the Brezhnev Doctrine, the idea that the Soviet Union had the right to intervene militarily in other Marxist–Leninist countries if their governments were threatened.[331] In December 1987 he announced the withdrawal of 500,000 Soviet troops from Central and Eastern Europe.[332] While pursuing domestic reforms, he did not publicly support reformers elsewhere in the Eastern Bloc.[333] Hoping instead to lead by example, he later related that he did not want to interfere in their internal affairs, but he may have feared that pushing reform in Central and Eastern Europe would have angered his own hardliners too much.[334] Some Eastern Bloc leaders, like Hungary's János Kádár and Poland's Wojciech Jaruzelski, were sympathetic to reform; others, like Romania's Nicolae Ceaușescu, were hostile to it.[335] In May 1987 Gorbachev visited Romania, where he was appalled by the state of the country, later telling the Politburo that there "human dignity has absolutely no value".[336] He and Ceaușescu disliked each other, and argued over Gorbachev's reforms.[337]

In August 1989, the Pan-European Picnic, which Otto von Habsburg planned as a test of Gorbachev, resulted in a large mass exodus of East German refugees. According to the "Sinatra Doctrine", the Soviet Union did not interfere and the media-informed Eastern European population realized that on the one hand their rulers were increasingly losing power and on the other hand the Iron Curtain was falling apart as a bracket for the Eastern Bloc.[338][339][340]

Unraveling of the USSR edit

In the Revolutions of 1989, most of the Marxist–Leninist states of Central and Eastern Europe held multi-party elections resulting in regime change.[341] In most countries, like Poland and Hungary, this was achieved peacefully, but in Romania, the revolution turned violent, and led to Ceaușescu's overthrow and execution.[341] Gorbachev was too preoccupied with domestic problems to pay much attention to these events.[342] He believed that democratic elections would not lead Eastern European countries into abandoning their commitment to socialism.[343] In 1989, he visited East Germany for the fortieth anniversary of its founding;[344] shortly after, in November, the East German government allowed its citizens to cross the Berlin Wall, a decision Gorbachev praised. Over the following years, much of the wall was demolished.[345] Neither Gorbachev nor Thatcher or Mitterrand wanted a swift reunification of Germany, aware that it would likely become the dominant European power. Gorbachev wanted a gradual process of German integration but Kohl began calling for rapid reunification.[346] With German reunification in 1990, many observers declared the Cold War over.[347]

1990–1991: presidency of the Soviet Union edit

 
Gorbachev addressing the United Nations General Assembly in 1988. During the speech, he dramatically announced deep unilateral cuts in Soviet military forces in Eastern Europe.

In February 1990, both liberalisers and Marxist–Leninist hardliners intensified their attacks on Gorbachev.[348] A liberalizer march took place in Moscow criticizing Communist Party rule,[349] while at a Central Committee meeting, the hardliner Vladimir Brovikov accused Gorbachev of reducing the country to "anarchy" and "ruin" and of pursuing Western approval at the expense of the Soviet Union and the Marxist–Leninist cause.[350] Gorbachev was aware that the Central Committee could still oust him as general secretary, and so decided to reformulate the role of head of government to a presidency from which he could not be removed.[351] He decided that the presidential election should be held by the Congress of People's Deputies. He chose this over a public vote because he thought the latter would escalate tensions and feared that he might lose it;[352] a spring 1990 poll nevertheless still showed him as the most popular politician in the country.[353]

In March, the Congress of People's Deputies held the first (and only) Soviet presidential election, in which Gorbachev was the only candidate. He secured 1,329 in favor to 495 against; 313 votes were invalid or absent. He therefore became the first executive President of the Soviet Union.[354] A new 18-member Presidential Council de facto replaced the Politburo.[355] At the same Congress meeting, he presented the idea of repealing Article 6 of the Soviet constitution, which had ratified the Communist Party as the "ruling party" of the Soviet Union. The Congress passed the reform, undermining the de jure nature of the one-party state.[356]

In the 1990 elections for the Russian Supreme Soviet, the Communist Party faced challengers from an alliance of liberalisers known as "Democratic Russia"; the latter did particularly well in urban centers.[357] Yeltsin was elected the parliament's chair, something Gorbachev was unhappy about.[358] That year, opinion polls showed Yeltsin overtaking Gorbachev as the most popular politician in the Soviet Union.[353] Gorbachev struggled to understand Yeltsin's growing popularity, commenting: "he drinks like a fish ... he's inarticulate, he comes up with the devil knows what, he's like a worn-out record".[359] The Russian Supreme Soviet was now out of Gorbachev's control;[359] in June 1990, it declared that in the Russian Republic, its laws took precedence over those of the Soviet central government.[360] Amid a growth in Russian nationalist sentiment, Gorbachev had reluctantly allowed the formation of a Communist Party of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic as a branch of the larger Soviet Communist Party. Gorbachev attended its first congress in June, but soon found it dominated by hardliners who opposed his reformist stance.[361]

German reunification and the Gulf War edit

In January 1990, Gorbachev privately agreed to permit East German reunification with West Germany, but rejected the idea that a unified Germany could retain West Germany's NATO membership.[362] His compromise that Germany might retain both NATO and Warsaw Pact memberships did not attract support.[363] On 9 February 1990 in a phone conversation with James Baker, then the US secretary of state, he set out his position that "a broadening of the NATO zone is not acceptable" to which Baker agreed. Scholars are puzzled why Gorbachev never pursued a written pledge.[364] In May 1990, he visited the US for talks with President Bush;[365] there, he agreed that an independent Germany would have the right to choose its international alliances.[363] Ultimately he acquiesced to the reunification on the condition that NATO troops not be posted to the territory of Eastern Germany.[366] There remains some confusion over whether US secretary of state James Baker led Gorbachev to believe that NATO would not expand into other countries in Eastern Europe as well. There was no oral or written US promise that explicitly said so. Gorbachev himself has stated that he was only made such a promise regarding East Germany and that it was kept.[367][368] In July, Kohl visited Moscow and Gorbachev informed him that the Soviets would not oppose a reunified Germany being part of NATO.[369] Domestically, Gorbachev's critics accused him of betraying the national interest;[370] more broadly, they were angry that Gorbachev had allowed the Eastern Bloc to move away from direct Soviet influence.[371]

 
In September 1990, Gorbachev met repeatedly with US president George Bush at the Helsinki Summit.

In August 1990, Saddam Hussein's Iraqi government invaded Kuwait; Gorbachev endorsed President Bush's condemnation of it.[372] This brought criticism from many in the Soviet state apparatus, who saw Hussein as a key ally in the Persian Gulf and feared for the safety of the 9,000 Soviet citizens in Iraq, although Gorbachev argued that the Iraqis were the clear aggressors in the situation.[373] In November the Soviets endorsed a UN Resolution permitting force to be used in expelling the Iraqi Army from Kuwait.[374] Gorbachev later called it a "watershed" in world politics, "the first time the superpowers acted together in a regional crisis".[375] However, when the US announced plans for a ground invasion, Gorbachev opposed it, urging instead a peaceful solution.[376] In October 1990, Gorbachev was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize; he was flattered but acknowledged "mixed feelings" about the accolade.[377] Polls indicated that 90% of Soviet citizens disapproved of the award, which was widely seen as a Western and anti-Soviet accolade.[378]

With the Soviet budget deficit climbing and no domestic money markets to provide the state with loans, Gorbachev looked elsewhere.[379] Throughout 1991, Gorbachev requested sizable loans from Western countries and Japan, hoping to keep the Soviet economy afloat and ensure the success of perestroika.[380] Although the Soviet Union had been excluded from the G7, Gorbachev secured an invitation to its London summit in July 1991.[381] There, he continued to call for financial assistance; Mitterrand and Kohl backed him,[382] while Thatcher—no longer in office—also urged Western leaders to agree.[383] Most G7 members were reluctant, instead offering technical assistance and proposing the Soviets receive "special associate" status—rather than full membership—of the World Bank and International Monetary Fund.[384] Gorbachev was frustrated that the US would spend $100 billion on the Gulf War but would not offer his country loans.[385] Other countries were more forthcoming; West Germany had given the Soviets DM60 billion by mid-1991.[386] Bush visited Moscow in late July, when he and Gorbachev concluded ten years of negotiations by signing the START I treaty, a bilateral agreement on the reduction and limitation of strategic offensive arms.[387]

August coup and government crises edit

 
President of the Soviet Union Mikhail Gorbachev, October 1991

At the 28th Communist Party Congress in July 1990, hardliners criticized the reformists, but Gorbachev was re-elected party leader with the support of three-quarters of delegates, and his choice of deputy general secretary, Vladimir Ivashko, was also elected.[388] Seeking compromise with the liberalizers, Gorbachev assembled a team of both his own and Yeltsin's advisers to come up with an economic reform package: the result was the "500 Days" programme. This called for further decentralization and some privatization.[389] Gorbachev described the plan as "modern socialism" rather than a return to capitalism but had many doubts about it.[390] In September, Yeltsin presented the plan to the Russian Supreme Soviet, which backed it.[391] Many in the Communist Party and state apparatus warned against it, arguing that it would create marketplace chaos, rampant inflation, and unprecedented levels of unemployment.[392] The 500 Days plan was abandoned.[393] At this, Yeltsin railed against Gorbachev in an October speech, claiming that Russia would no longer accept a subordinate position to the Soviet government.[394]

By mid-November 1990, much of the press was calling for Gorbachev to resign and predicting civil war.[395] Hardliners were urging Gorbachev to disband the presidential council and arrest vocal liberals in the media.[396] In November, he addressed the Supreme Soviet where he announced an eight-point program, which included governmental reforms, among them the abolition of the presidential council.[397] By this point, Gorbachev was isolated from many of his former close allies and aides.[398] Yakovlev had moved out of his inner circle and Shevardnadze had resigned.[399] His support among the intelligentsia was declining,[400] and by the end of 1990 his approval ratings had plummeted.[401]

Amid growing dissent in the Baltics, especially Lithuania, in January 1991 Gorbachev demanded that the Lithuanian Supreme Council rescind its pro-independence reforms.[402] Soviet troops occupied several Vilnius buildings and attacked protesters,[403] 15 of whom were killed.[404] Gorbachev was widely blamed by liberalizers, with Yeltsin calling for his resignation.[405] Gorbachev denied sanctioning the military operation, although some in the military claimed that he had; the truth of the matter was never clearly established.[406] Fearing more civil disturbances, that month Gorbachev banned demonstrations and ordered troops to patrol Soviet cities alongside the police. This further alienated the liberalizers but was not enough to win over hardliners.[407] Wanting to preserve the Union, in April Gorbachev and the leaders of nine Soviet republics jointly pledged to prepare a treaty that would renew the federation under a new constitution; but six of the republics—Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Moldova, Georgia, and Armenia—did not endorse this.[408] A referendum on the issue brought 76.4% in favor of continued federation but the six rebellious republics had not taken part.[409] Negotiations took place to decide what form the new constitution would take, again bringing together Gorbachev and Yeltsin in discussion; it was planned to be formally signed in August.[410]

 
Tens of thousands of anti-coup protesters surrounding the White House, Moscow

In August, Gorbachev and his family holidayed at their dacha, "Zarya" ('Dawn') in Foros, Crimea.[411] Two weeks into his holiday, a group of senior Communist Party figures—the "Gang of Eight"—calling themselves the State Committee on the State of Emergency launched a coup d'état to seize control of the Soviet Union.[412] The phone lines to his dacha were cut and a group arrived, including Boldin, Shenin, Baklanov, and General Varennikov, informing him of the take-over.[413] The coup leaders demanded that Gorbachev formally declare a state of emergency in the country, but he refused.[414] Gorbachev and his family were kept under house arrest in their dacha.[415] The coup plotters publicly announced that Gorbachev was ill and thus Vice President Yanayev would take charge of the country.[416]

Yeltsin, now President of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic, went inside the Moscow White House. Tens of thousands of protesters massed outside it to prevent troops storming the building to arrest him.[417] Outside of the White House, Yeltsin, atop a tank, gave a memorable speech condemning the coup.[418] Gorbachev feared that the coup plotters would order him killed, so had his guards barricade his dacha.[419] However, the coup's leaders realized that they lacked sufficient support and ended their efforts. On 21 August, Vladimir Kryuchkov, Dmitry Yazov, Oleg Baklanov, Anatoly Lukyanov, and Vladimir Ivashko arrived at Gorbachev's dacha to inform him that they were doing so.[419]

That evening, Gorbachev returned to Moscow, where he thanked Yeltsin and the protesters for helping to undermine the coup.[420] At a subsequent press conference, he pledged to reform the Soviet Communist Party.[421] Two days later, he resigned as its general secretary and called on the Central Committee to dissolve.[422][423] Several members of the coup committed suicide; others were fired.[424] Gorbachev attended a session of the Russian Supreme Soviet on 23 August, where Yeltsin aggressively criticized him for having appointed and promoted many of the coup members to start with.[425]

Final days and collapse edit

After the coup, the Supreme Soviet indefinitely suspended all Communist Party activity, effectively ending communist rule in the Soviet Union.[426][427] From then on, the country collapsed with dramatic speed.

 
Leaders of the Soviet Republics sign the Belovezha Accords, which eliminated the USSR and established the Commonwealth of Independent States, 1991.

On 30 October, Gorbachev attended a conference in Madrid trying to revive the Israeli–Palestinian peace process. The event was co-sponsored by the US and Soviet Union, one of the first examples of such cooperation between the two countries. There, he again met with Bush.[428] En route home, he traveled to France where he stayed with Mitterrand at the latter's home near Bayonne.[429]

To keep unity within the country, Gorbachev continued to pursue plans for a new union treaty but found increasing opposition to the idea of a continued federal state as the leaders of various Soviet republics bowed to growing nationalist pressure.[430] Yeltsin stated that he would veto any idea of a unified state, instead favoring a confederation with little central authority.[431] Only the leaders of Kazakhstan and Kirghizia supported Gorbachev's approach.[432] The referendum in Ukraine on 1 December with a 90% turnout for secession from the Union was a fatal blow; Gorbachev had expected Ukrainians to reject independence.[433]

 
Changes in national boundaries after the end of the Cold War and the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991

Without Gorbachev's knowledge, Yeltsin met with Ukrainian president Leonid Kravchuk and Belarusian president Stanislav Shushkevich in Belovezha Forest, near Brest, Belarus, on 8 December and signed the Belavezha Accords, which declared the Soviet Union had ceased to exist and formed the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) as its successor.[434] Gorbachev only learned of this development when Shushkevich phoned him; Gorbachev was furious.[435] He desperately looked for an opportunity to preserve the Soviet Union, hoping in vain that the media and intelligentsia might rally against the idea of its dissolution.[436] Ukrainian, Belarusian, and Russian Supreme Soviets then ratified the establishment of the CIS.[437] On 9 December, Gorbachev issued a statement calling the CIS agreement "illegal and dangerous".[438][439] On 20 December, the leaders of 11 of the 12 remaining republics—all except Georgia—met in Kazakhstan and signed the Alma-Ata Protocol, agreeing to dismantle the Soviet Union and formally establish the CIS. They also provisionally accepted Gorbachev's resignation as president of what remained of the Soviet Union. Accepting the fait accompli of the Soviet Union's dissolution, Gorbachev revealed that he would resign as soon as he saw that the CIS was a reality.[440][441]

Gorbachev reached a deal with Yeltsin that called for Gorbachev to formally announce his resignation as Soviet president and Commander-in-Chief on 25 December, before vacating the Kremlin by 29 December.[442] Yakovlev, Chernyaev and Shevardnadze joined Gorbachev to help him write a resignation speech.[440] Gorbachev then gave his speech in the Kremlin in front of television cameras, allowing for international broadcast.[443] In it, he announced, "I hereby discontinue my activities at the post of President of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics." He expressed regret for the breakup of the Soviet Union but cited what he saw as the achievements of his administration: political and religious freedom, the end of totalitarianism, the introduction of democracy and a market economy, and an end to the arms race and Cold War.[444] Gorbachev was the third out of eight Soviet leaders, after Malenkov and Khrushchev, not to die in office.[445][446] The following day, 26 December, the Soviet of the Republics, the upper house of the Supreme Soviet of the Soviet Union, formally voted the country out of existence.[447] As of 31 December 1991, all Soviet institutions that had not been taken over by Russia ceased to function.[448][449]

Post-USSR life edit

1991–1999: initial years edit

 
Gorbachev visiting Reagan, at Rancho del Cielo in 1992
 
Gorbachev giving a speech at the Legislative Yuan in Taiwan, 1994

Out of office, Gorbachev had more time to spend with his wife and family.[450] He and Raisa initially lived in their dilapidated dacha on Rublevskoe Shosse, and were also allowed to privatize their smaller apartment on Kosygin Street.[450] He focused on establishing his International Foundation for Socio-Economic and Political Studies, or "Gorbachev Foundation", launched in March 1992;[451] Yakovlev and Revenko were its first vice presidents.[452] Its initial tasks were in analyzing and publishing material on the history of perestroika, as well as defending the policy from what it called "slander and falsifications". The foundation also tasked itself with monitoring and critiquing life in post-Soviet Russia, presenting alternative development forms to those pursued by Yeltsin.[452]

To finance his foundation, Gorbachev began lecturing internationally, charging large fees to do so.[452] On a visit to Japan, he was well received and given multiple honorary degrees.[453] In 1992, he toured the US in a Forbes private jet to raise money for his foundation. During the trip he met up with the Reagans for a social visit.[453] From there he went to Spain, where he attended the Expo '92 world fair in Seville and met with Prime Minister Felipe González, who had become a friend of his.[454] He further visited Israel and Germany, where he was received warmly by many politicians who praised his role in facilitating German reunification.[455] To supplement his lecture fees and book sales, Gorbachev appeared in commercials such as a television advertisement for Pizza Hut, another for the ÖBB[456] and photograph advertisements for Apple Computer[457] and Louis Vuitton, enabling him to keep the foundation afloat.[458][459] With his wife's assistance, Gorbachev worked on his memoirs, which were published in Russian in 1995 and in English the following year.[460] He also began writing a monthly syndicated column for The New York Times.[461]

In 1993, Gorbachev launched Green Cross International, which focused on encouraging sustainable futures, and then the World Political Forum.[462] In 1995, he initiated the World Summit of Nobel Peace Laureates.[463]

External videos
  Booknotes interview with Gorbachev on his memoirs, 24 November 1996, C-SPAN

Gorbachev had promised to refrain from criticizing Yeltsin while the latter pursued democratic reforms, but soon the two men were publicly criticizing each other again.[464] After Yeltsin's decision to lift price caps generated massive inflation and plunged many Russians into poverty, Gorbachev openly criticized him, comparing the reform to Stalin's policy of forced collectivization.[464] After pro-Yeltsin parties did poorly in the 1993 legislative election, Gorbachev called on him to resign.[465] In 1995, his foundation held a conference on "The Intelligentsia and Perestroika". It was there that Gorbachev proposed to the Duma a law that would reduce many of the presidential powers established by Yeltsin's 1993 constitution.[466] Gorbachev continued to defend perestroika but acknowledged that he had made tactical errors as Soviet leader.[462] While he still believed that Russia was undergoing a process of democratization, he concluded that it would take decades rather than years, as he had previously thought.[467]

 
Gorbachev with Argentine president Carlos Menem in 1999

In contrast to her husband's political activities, Raisa had focused on campaigning for children's charities.[468] In 1997, she founded a sub-division of the Gorbachev Foundation known as Raisa Maksimovna's Club to focus on improving women's welfare in Russia.[469] The Foundation had initially been housed in the former Social Science Institute building, but Yeltsin introduced limits to the number of rooms it could use there;[470] the American philanthropist Ted Turner then donated over $1 million to enable the foundation to build new premises on the Leningradsky Prospekt.[471] In 1999, Gorbachev made his first visit to Australia, where he gave a speech to the country's parliament.[472] Shortly after, in July, Raisa was diagnosed with leukemia. With the assistance of German chancellor Gerhard Schröder, she was transferred to a cancer center in Münster, Germany, and there underwent chemotherapy.[473] In September she fell into a coma and died.[224] After Raisa's passing, Gorbachev's daughter Irina and his two granddaughters moved into his Moscow home to live with him.[474] When questioned by journalists, he said that he would never remarry.[461]

 
Gorbachev, daughter Irina and his wife's sister Lyudmila at the funeral of Raisa, 1999

1996 presidential campaign edit

The Russian presidential elections were scheduled for June 1996, and although his wife and most of his friends urged him not to run, Gorbachev decided to do so.[475] He hated the idea that the election would result in a run-off between Yeltsin and Gennady Zyuganov, the Communist Party of the Russian Federation candidate whom Yeltsin saw as a Stalinist hardliner. He never expected to win outright but thought a centrist bloc could be formed around either himself or one of the other candidates with similar views, such as Grigory Yavlinsky, Svyatoslav Fyodorov, or Alexander Lebed.[476] After securing the necessary one million signatures of nomination, he announced his candidacy in March.[477] Launching his campaign, he traveled across Russia giving rallies in twenty cities.[477] He repeatedly faced anti-Gorbachev protesters, while some pro-Yeltsin local officials tried to hamper his campaign by banning local media from covering it or by refusing him access to venues.[478] In the election, Gorbachev came seventh with approximately 386,000 votes, or around 0.5% of the total.[479] Yeltsin and Zyuganov went through to the second round, where the former was victorious.[479]

1999–2008: promoting social democracy in Putin's Russia edit

 
Gorbachev attended the inauguration of Vladimir Putin in May 2000.

In December 1999, Yeltsin resigned and was succeeded by his deputy, Vladimir Putin, who then won the March 2000 presidential election.[480] Gorbachev attended Putin's inauguration ceremony in May, the first time he had entered the Kremlin since 1991.[481] Gorbachev initially welcomed Putin's rise, seeing him as an anti-Yeltsin figure.[462] Although he spoke out against some of the Putin government's actions, Gorbachev also had praise for the new government; in 2002, he said: "I've been in the same skin. That's what allows me to say that what [Putin] has done is in the interest of the majority."[482] At the time, he believed Putin to be a committed democrat who nevertheless had to use "a certain dose of authoritarianism" to stabilize the economy and rebuild the state after the Yeltsin era.[481] At Putin's request, Gorbachev became co-chair of the "Petersburg Dialogue" project between high-ranking Russians and Germans.[480]

In 2000, Gorbachev helped form the Russian United Social Democratic Party.[483] In June 2002, he participated in a meeting with Putin, who praised the venture, suggesting that a center-left party could be good for Russia and that he would be open to working with it.[482] In 2003, Gorbachev's party merged with the Social Democratic Party to form the Social Democratic Party of Russia[483]—which, however, faced much internal division and failed to gain traction with voters.[483] Gorbachev resigned as party leader in May 2004 following a disagreement with the party's chairman over the direction taken in the 2003 election campaign. The party was later banned in 2007 by the Supreme Court of the Russian Federation due to its failure to establish local offices with at least 500 members in the majority of Russian regions, which is required by Russian law for a political organization to be listed as a party.[484] Later that year, Gorbachev founded a new movement, the Union of Social Democrats. Stating that it would not contest the forthcoming elections, Gorbachev declared: "We are fighting for power, but only for power over people's minds".[485]

Gorbachev was critical of US hostility to Putin, arguing that the US government "doesn't want Russia to rise" again as a global power and wants "to continue as the sole superpower in charge of the world".[486] More broadly, Gorbachev was critical of US policy following the Cold War, arguing that the West had attempted to "turn [Russia] into some kind of backwater".[487] He rejected the idea—expressed by Bush—that the US had "won" the Cold War, arguing that both sides had cooperated to end the conflict.[487] He declared that since the fall of the Soviet Union, the US, rather than cooperating with Russia, had conspired to build a "new empire headed by themselves".[488] He was critical of how the US had expanded NATO right up to Russia's borders despite their initial assurances that they would not do so, citing this as evidence that the US government could not be trusted.[487][489] He spoke out against the 1999 NATO bombing of Yugoslavia because it lacked UN backing, as well as the 2003 invasion of Iraq led by the US.[487] In June 2004, Gorbachev nevertheless attended Reagan's state funeral,[490] and in 2007 visited New Orleans to see the damage caused by Hurricane Katrina.[491]

2008–2022: growing criticism of Putin and foreign policy remarks edit

Barred by the constitution from serving more than two consecutive terms as president, Putin stood down in 2008 and was succeeded by his chosen successor, Dmitry Medvedev, who reached out to Gorbachev in ways that Putin had not.[486] In September 2008, Gorbachev and business oligarch Alexander Lebedev announced they would form the Independent Democratic Party of Russia,[492] and in May 2009 Gorbachev announced that the launch was imminent.[493] After the outbreak of the Russo-Georgian War between Russia and South Ossetian separatists on one side and Georgia on the other, Gorbachev spoke out against US support for Georgian president Mikheil Saakashvili and for moving to bring the Caucasus into the sphere of its national interest.[494][495] Gorbachev nevertheless remained critical of Russia's government and criticized the 2011 parliamentary elections as being rigged in favor of the governing party, United Russia, and called for them to be re-held.[496] After protests broke out in Moscow over the election, Gorbachev praised the protesters.[496]

 
Gorbachev (right) being introduced to US president Barack Obama by US vice president Joe Biden, March 2009. US ambassador to Russia Michael McFaul is pictured in the background.

In 2009, Gorbachev released Songs for Raisa, an album of Russian romantic ballads, sung by him and accompanied by musician Andrei Makarevich, to raise money for a charity devoted to his late wife.[497] That year, he also met with US president Barack Obama in efforts to "reset" strained US–Russian relations,[498] and attended an event in Berlin commemorating the twentieth anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall.[499] In 2011, an eightieth birthday gala for him was held at London's Royal Albert Hall, featuring tributes from Shimon Peres, Lech Wałęsa, Michel Rocard, and Arnold Schwarzenegger. Proceeds from the event went to the Raisa Gorbachev Foundation.[500] That year, Medvedev awarded him the Order of St Andrew the Apostle the First-Called.[496]

After Putin announced his intention to run for president in the 2012 election, Gorbachev was opposed to the idea.[501][502][503] He complained that Putin's new measures had "tightened the screws" on Russia and that the president was trying to "completely subordinate society", adding that United Russia now "embodied the worst bureaucratic features of the Soviet Communist party".[501]

In 2015, Gorbachev ceased his frequent international traveling.[504] He continued to speak out on issues affecting Russia and the world. In 2014, he defended the Crimean status referendum and Russia's annexation of Crimea that began the Russo-Ukrainian War.[487] In his judgment, while Crimea was transferred from Russia to Ukraine in 1954, when both were part of the Soviet Union, the Crimean people had not been asked at the time, whereas in the 2014 referendum they had.[505] After sanctions were placed on Russia as a result of the annexation, Gorbachev spoke out against them.[506] His comments led to Ukraine banning him from entering the country for five years.[507]

Russia can succeed only through democracy. Russia is ready for political competition, a real multiparty system, fair elections and regular rotation of government. This should define the role and responsibility of the president.

– Gorbachev, 2017[508]

At a November 2014 event marking 25 years since the fall of the Berlin Wall, Gorbachev warned that the ongoing war in Donbas had brought the world to the brink of a new Cold War, and he accused Western powers, particularly the US, of adopting an attitude of "triumphalism" towards Russia.[509][510] In December 2014, he said that both sides in the war in Donbas "have been violating the terms of the ceasefire; both sides are guilty of using dangerous types of weapons and violating human rights",[511] adding that Minsk agreements "form the basis for the settlement" of the conflict.[512] In 2016, he said that "Politicians who think that problems and disputes can be solved by using military force—even as a last resort—should be rejected by society, they should clear the political stage."[513] In July 2016, Gorbachev criticized NATO for deploying more troops to Eastern Europe amid escalating tensions between the military alliance and Russia.[514] In June 2018, he welcomed the Russia–United States summit in Helsinki between Putin and US president Donald Trump,[515] although in October criticized Trump's threat to withdraw from the 1987 Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty, saying the move "is not the work of a great mind". He added: "all agreements aimed at nuclear disarmament and the limitation of nuclear weapons must be preserved, for the sake of life on Earth".[516]

Following the death of former president George H. W. Bush in 2018, a critical partner and friend of his time in office, Gorbachev stated that the work they had both accomplished led directly to the end of the Cold War and the nuclear arms race, and that he "deeply appreciated the attention, kindness and simplicity typical of George, Barbara and their large, friendly family".[517]

After the January 6 United States Capitol attack, Gorbachev declared, "The storming of the capitol was clearly planned in advance, and it's obvious by whom." He did not clarify to whom he was referring. Gorbachev also stated that the attack "called into question the future fate of the United States as a nation".[518]

In an interview with Russian news agency TASS on 20 January 2021, Gorbachev said that relations between the United States and Russia are of "great concern", and called on US president Joe Biden to begin talks with the Kremlin to make the two countries' "intentions and actions clearer" and "in order to normalize relations".[519] On 24 December 2021, Gorbachev said that the United States "grew arrogant and self-confident" after the collapse of the Soviet Union, resulting in "a new empire. Hence the idea of NATO expansion". He also endorsed the upcoming security talks between the United States and Russia, saying, "I hope there will be a result."[520]

Gorbachev made no personal comment publicly on the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, although his Gorbachev Foundation stated on 26 February that "[they] affirm the need for an early cessation of hostilities and immediate start of peace negotiations. There is nothing more precious in the world than human lives."[521] At the end of July 2022, Gorbachev's close friend, journalist Alexei Venediktov, said that Gorbachev was very upset when he found out that Putin had launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine. According to Venediktov, Gorbachev believed that Putin "destroyed his life's work".[522] Gorbachev's interpreter, Pavel Palazhchenko, also stated that Gorbachev was psychologically traumatized by the invasion in the months preceding his death.[523][524]

Political ideology edit

Even before he left office, Gorbachev had become a kind of social democrat—believing in, as he later put it, equality of opportunity, publicly supported education and medical care, a guaranteed minimum of social welfare, and a "socially oriented market economy"—all within a democratic political framework. Exactly when this transformation occurred is hard to say, but surely by 1989 or 1990 it had taken place.

— Gorbachev biographer William Taubman, 2017[483]

According to his university friend Zdeněk Mlynář, in the early 1950s "Gorbachev, like everyone else at the time, was a Stalinist".[525] Mlynář noted, however, that unlike most other Soviet students, Gorbachev did not view Marxism simply as "a collection of axioms to be committed to memory".[526] Biographers Doder and Branson related that after Stalin's death, Gorbachev's "ideology would never be doctrinal again",[527] but noted that he remained "a true believer" in the Soviet system.[528] Doder and Branson noted that at the Twenty-Seventh Party Congress in 1986, Gorbachev was seen to be an orthodox Marxist–Leninist;[529] that year, the biographer Zhores Medvedev stated that "Gorbachev is neither a liberal nor a bold reformist".[530]

By the mid-1980s, when Gorbachev took power, many analysts were arguing that the Soviet Union was declining to the status of a Third World country.[531] In this context, Gorbachev argued that the Communist Party had to adapt and engage in creative thinking much as Lenin had creatively interpreted and adapted the writings of Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels to the situation of early 20th century Russia.[532] For instance, he thought that rhetoric about global revolution and overthrowing the bourgeoisie—which had been integral to Leninist politics—had become too dangerous in an era where nuclear warfare could obliterate humanity.[533] He began to move away from the Marxist–Leninist belief in class struggle as the engine of political change, instead viewing politics as a way of coordinating the interests of all classes.[534] However, as Gooding noted, the changes that Gorbachev proposed were "expressed wholly within the terms of Marxist-Leninist ideology".[535]

According to Doder and Branson, Gorbachev also wanted to "dismantle the hierarchical military society at home and abandon the grand-style, costly, imperialism abroad".[536] However, Jonathan Steele argued that Gorbachev failed to appreciate why the Baltic nations wanted independence and "at heart he was, and remains, a Russian imperialist".[537] Gooding thought that Gorbachev was "committed to democracy", something marking him out as different from his predecessors.[538] Gooding also suggested that when in power, Gorbachev came to see socialism not as a place on the path to communism, but a destination in itself.[539]

Gorbachev's political outlook was shaped by the 23 years he served as a party official in Stavropol.[540] Doder and Branson thought that throughout most of his political career prior to becoming general secretary, "his publicly expressed views almost certainly reflected a politician's understanding of what should be said, rather than his personal philosophy. Otherwise he could not have survived politically."[541] Like many Russians, Gorbachev sometimes thought of the Soviet Union as being largely synonymous with Russia and in various speeches described it as "Russia"; in one incident he had to correct himself after calling the USSR "Russia" while giving a speech in Kiev.[540]

McCauley noted that perestroika was "an elusive concept", one which "evolved and eventually meant something radically different over time".[542] McCauley stated that the concept originally referred to "radical reform of the economic and political system" as part of Gorbachev's attempt to motivate the labor force and make management more effective.[543] It was only after initial measures to achieve this proved unsuccessful that Gorbachev began to consider market mechanisms and co-operatives, albeit with the state sector remaining dominant.[543] The political scientist John Gooding suggested that had the perestroika reforms succeeded, the Soviet Union would have "exchanged totalitarian controls for milder authoritarian ones" although not become "democratic in the Western sense".[538] With perestroika, Gorbachev had wanted to improve the existing Marxist–Leninist system but ultimately ended up destroying it.[544] In this, he brought an end to state socialism in the Soviet Union and paved the way for a transition to liberal democracy.[545]

Taubman nevertheless thought Gorbachev remained a socialist.[546] He described Gorbachev as "a true believer—not in the Soviet system as it functioned (or didn't) in 1985 but in its potential to live up to what he deemed its original ideals".[546] He added that "until the end, Gorbachev reiterated his belief in socialism, insisting that it wasn't worthy of the name unless it was truly democratic".[547] As Soviet leader, Gorbachev believed in incremental reform rather than a radical transformation;[548] he later referred to this as a "revolution by evolutionary means".[548] Doder and Branson noted that over the course of the 1980s, his thought underwent a "radical evolution".[549] Taubman noted that by 1989 or 1990, Gorbachev had transformed into a social democrat.[483] McCauley suggested that by at least June 1991 Gorbachev was a "post-Leninist", having "liberated himself" from Marxism–Leninism.[550] After the fall of the Soviet Union, the newly formed Communist Party of the Russian Federation would have nothing to do with him.[551] However, in 2006, he expressed his continued belief in Lenin's ideas: "I trusted him then and I still do".[546] He claimed that "the essence of Lenin" was a desire to develop "the living creative activity of the masses".[546] Taubman believed that Gorbachev identified with Lenin on a psychological level.[552]

Personal life edit

 
The official Soviet portrait of Gorbachev. Many official photographs and visual depictions of Gorbachev removed the port-wine birthmark from his head.[553]

By 1955, his hair was thinning,[554] and by the late 1960s he was bald,[555] revealing a distinctive port-wine stain on the top of his head.[556] Gorbachev reached an adult height of 5 foot 9 inches (1.75 m).[557] Throughout the 1960s, he struggled against obesity and dieted to control the problem;[88] Doder and Branson characterized him as "stocky but not fat".[557] He spoke in a southern Russian accent,[558] and was known to sing both folk and pop songs.[559]

Throughout his life, he tried to dress fashionably.[560] Having an aversion to hard liquor,[561] he drank sparingly and did not smoke.[562] He was protective of his private life and avoided inviting people to his home.[116] Gorbachev cherished his wife,[563] who in turn was protective of him.[107] He was an involved parent and grandparent.[564] He sent his daughter, his only child, to a local school in Stavropol rather than to a school set aside for the children of party elites.[565] Unlike many of his contemporaries in the Soviet administration, he was not a womanizer and was known for treating women respectfully.[83]

Gorbachev was baptized Russian Orthodox and when he was growing up, his grandparents had been practicing Christians.[566] In 2008, there was some press speculation that he was a practicing Christian after he visited the tomb of St Francis of Assisi, to which he publicly clarified that he was an atheist.[567] Since studying at university, Gorbachev considered himself an intellectual;[36] Doder and Branson thought that "his intellectualism was slightly self-conscious",[568] noting that unlike most Russian intelligentsia, Gorbachev was not closely connected "to the world of science, culture, the arts, or education".[569] When living in Stavropol, he and his wife collected hundreds of books.[570] Among his favorite authors were Arthur Miller, Dostoevsky, and Chinghiz Aitmatov, while he also enjoyed reading detective fiction.[571] He enjoyed going for walks,[572] having a love of natural environments,[573] and was also a fan of association football.[574] He favored small gatherings where the assembled discussed topics like art and philosophy rather than the large, alcohol-fueled parties common among Soviet officials.[575]

Personality edit

Gorbachev's university friend, Mlynář, described him as "loyal and personally honest".[576] He was self-confident,[577] polite,[562] and tactful;[562] he had a happy and optimistic temperament.[578] He used self-deprecating humor,[579] and sometimes profanities,[579] and often referred to himself in the third person.[580] He was a skilled manager,[83] and had a good memory.[581] A hard worker or workaholic,[582] as general secretary, he would rise at 7:00 or 8:00 in the morning and not go to bed until 1:00 or 2:00.[583] He commuted from the western suburbs between 9 and 10 in the morning and returned home around 8 in the evening.[584] Taubman called him "a remarkably decent man";[563] he thought Gorbachev to have "high moral standards".[585]

 
Gorbachev at the Western Wall in Jerusalem, 1992

Zhores Medvedev thought him a talented orator, in 1986 stating that "Gorbachev is probably the best speaker there has been in the top Party echelons" since Leon Trotsky.[586] Medvedev also considered Gorbachev "a charismatic leader", something Brezhnev, Andropov, and Chernenko had not been.[587] Doder and Branson called him "a charmer capable of intellectually seducing doubters, always trying to co-opt them, or at least blunt the edge of their criticism".[588] McCauley thought Gorbachev displayed "great tactical skill" in maneuvering successfully between hardline Marxist–Leninists and liberalisers for most of his time as leader, adding, though, that he was "much more skilled at tactical, short-term policy than strategic, long-term thinking", in part because he was "given to making policy on the hoof".[589]

Doder and Branson thought Gorbachev "a Russian to the core, intensely patriotic as only people living in the border regions can be".[540] Taubman also noted that the former Soviet leader has a "sense of self-importance and self-righteousness" as well as a "need for attention and admiration" which grated on some of his colleagues.[585] He was sensitive to personal criticism and easily took offense.[590] Colleagues were often frustrated that he would leave tasks unfinished,[591] and sometimes also felt underappreciated and discarded by him.[592] Biographers Doder and Branson thought that Gorbachev was "a puritan" with "a proclivity for order in his personal life".[593] Taubman noted that he was "capable of blowing up for calculated effect".[594] He also thought that by 1990, when his domestic popularity was waning, Gorbachev had become "psychologically dependent on being lionized abroad", a trait for which he was criticized in the Soviet Union.[595] McCauley was of the view that "one of his weaknesses was an inability to foresee the consequences of his actions".[596]

Death edit

Gorbachev died at the Central Clinical Hospital in Moscow on 30 August 2022,[597] at the age of 91.[598] He died after a "severe and prolonged illness," according to the hospital.[599][600][601]

Preceding deterioration of health edit

 
Gorbachev in Moscow, 2019, receiving assistance in walking

For a number of years before his death, Gorbachev suffered from severe diabetes and underwent several surgeries and hospital stays.[602] In April 2011, Gorbachev underwent complex spinal surgery in Germany, at the Munich clinic Schön Klinik München Harlaching.[603] On 11 June 2013, it was reported that Gorbachev was hospitalized for a routine examination. Two months earlier, he had not come to the funeral of Margaret Thatcher for health reasons.[602] On 22 October 2013, it became known that Gorbachev was undergoing another examination in a German clinic.[604] He was also hospitalized in the Central Clinical Hospital on 9 October 2014.[605] Also in 2014, Gorbachev underwent oral surgery.[496] Gorbachev was briefly hospitalized in May 2015 as well.[606] In November 2016, Gorbachev had a pacemaker installed at the Moscow Central Clinical Hospital.[607] Also in 2016, he underwent surgery to replace his lenses due to cataracts.[608]

The length of his hospital visits increased in 2019, with Gorbachev hospitalized in December with pneumonia.[609][610] At the beginning of 2020, Gorbachev was placed under the continuous supervision of doctors.[600][601] Gorbachev's condition deteriorated even further in July 2022 as he developed kidney problems, which led to him being transferred for hemodialysis.[611] Shortly before his death, Gorbachev underwent four more operations, lost 40 kilograms of weight, and could no longer walk.[612] In interviews given shortly before his death, Gorbachev had complained about health and appetite problems.[613] Gorbachev was receiving palliative care, but was allowed to leave the hospital for short periods of time. On 29 August 2022, Gorbachev arrived at the Central Clinical Hospital for another hemodialysis, where he died on 30 August at approximately 10:00 p.m. Moscow time.

Funeral and burial edit

 
Body of Gorbachev lying in state at the House of Unions

A funeral for Gorbachev was held on 3 September 2022 from 10 a.m. to 12 noon in the Column Hall of the House of Unions. The ceremony included an honor guard, but was not an official state funeral.[614] The service included rites administered by a Russian Orthodox priest.[615][616] Russian president Vladimir Putin bid an official farewell to Gorbachev on 1 September 2022 during a visit to the Central Clinical Hospital, where he laid flowers at his coffin.[617][618] His press secretary Dmitry Peskov said that the "tight schedule of the president" would not allow him to be present at the funeral, as he was scheduled to visit Kaliningrad.[617][619] Gorbachev was buried on the same day at Moscow's Novodevichy Cemetery, in the same grave as his wife Raisa, as requested by his will.[427]

Reactions edit

Russian president Vladimir Putin expressed his condolences on the death of Gorbachev,[620] and paid tribute to him at the Moscow hospital where the ex-president had died but, according to spokesman Dmitry Peskov, had no time to attend his funeral due to a busy work schedule. Putin also sent a telegram to Gorbachev's family, calling him "a politician and statesman who had a huge impact on the course of world history".[621] Russian prime minister Mikhail Mishustin called Gorbachev an "outstanding statesman".[622] Other reactions were less positive, with the leader of Russia's Communist Party, Gennady Zyuganov, stating that Gorbachev was a leader whose rule brought "absolute sadness, misfortune and problems" for "all the peoples of our country".[623] Naina Yeltsina, widow of former Russian president Boris Yeltsin, said that Gorbachev "sincerely wanted to change the Soviet system" and transform the USSR into a "free and peaceful state".[624]

European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen paid tribute to him on Twitter, as did the UK's prime minister Boris Johnson, former US secretary of state Condoleezza Rice and Ireland's Taoiseach Micheál Martin.[625]

United Nations secretary-general António Guterres said Gorbachev was a "one-of-a-kind statesman who changed the course of history and a towering global leader, committed multilateralist, and tireless advocate for peace", as former US secretary of state James Baker III stated that "history will remember Mikhail Gorbachev as a giant who steered his great nation towards democracy" in the context of the Cold War's conclusion. Queen Elizabeth II, in her condolence and in one of her last public messages,[g] stated that "through his courage and vision, he gained the admiration, affection and respect of the British people".[627] Canadian prime minister Justin Trudeau said "He helped bring an end to the Cold War, embraced reforms in the Soviet Union, and reduced the threat of nuclear weapons. He leaves behind an important legacy",[628] while former Canadian prime minister Brian Mulroney said that "he was a very pleasant man to deal with" and "history will remember him as a transformational leader".[629] French president Emmanuel Macron called Gorbachev "a man of peace whose choices opened up a path of liberty for Russians". US president Joe Biden called Gorbachev "a man of remarkable vision".[630] Polish foreign minister Zbigniew Rau stated that Gorbachev had "increased the scope of freedom of the enslaved peoples of the Soviet Union in an unprecedented way, giving them hope for a more dignified life".[631] Lithuanian foreign minister Gabrielius Landsbergis said that Lithuanians would not glorify Gorbachev or forget about the 1991 January Events.[403][185][h]

The 14th Dalai Lama wrote to the Gorbachev Foundation to express his "condolences to his daughter, Irina Virganskaya and members of his family, his friends and supporters".[633] Japan's prime minister Fumio Kishida said Gorbachev had "left behind great [accomplishments] as a world leader supporting the abolishment of nuclear weapons".[634] Germany's former chancellor Angela Merkel, who grew up in East Germany, said he completely changed her life and the world while current German chancellor Olaf Scholz hailed Gorbachev's role in reuniting Germany.[635]

Reception and legacy edit

Opinions on Gorbachev are deeply divided.[580] According to a 2017 survey carried out by the independent institute Levada Center, 46% of Russian citizens have a negative opinion towards Gorbachev, 30% are indifferent, while only 15% have a positive opinion.[636] Many, particularly in Western countries, see him as the greatest statesman of the second half of the 20th century.[637] US press referred to the presence of "Gorbymania" in Western countries during the late 1980s and early 1990s, as represented by large crowds that turned out to greet his visits,[638] with Time naming him its "Man of the Decade" in the 1980s.[639] In the Soviet Union itself, opinion polls indicated that Gorbachev was the most popular politician from 1985 through to late 1989.[640] For his domestic supporters, Gorbachev was seen as a reformer trying to modernise the Soviet Union,[641] and to build a form of democratic socialism.[642] Taubman characterized Gorbachev as "a visionary who changed his country and the world—though neither as much as he wished".[643] Taubman regarded Gorbachev as being "exceptional ... as a Russian ruler and a world statesman", highlighting that he avoided the "traditional, authoritarian, anti-Western norm" of both predecessors like Brezhnev and successors like Putin.[644] McCauley thought that in allowing the Soviet Union to move away from Marxism–Leninism, Gorbachev gave the Soviet people "something precious, the right to think and manage their lives for themselves", with all the uncertainty and risk that that entailed.[645]

Gorbachev succeeded in destroying what was left of totalitarianism in the Soviet Union; he brought freedom of speech, of assembly, and of conscience to people who had never known it, except perhaps for a few chaotic months in 1917. By introducing free elections and creating parliamentary institutions, he laid the groundwork for democracy. It is more the fault of the raw material he worked with than of his own real shortcomings and mistakes that Russian democracy will take much longer to build than he thought.

— Gorbachev biographer William Taubman, 2017[643]

External videos
  Q&A interview with William Taubman on Gorbachev: His Life and Times, October 15, 2017, C-SPAN

Gorbachev's negotiations with the US helped bring an end to the Cold War and reduced the threat of nuclear conflict.[643] His decision to allow the Eastern Bloc to break apart prevented significant bloodshed in Central and Eastern Europe; as Taubman noted, this meant that the "Soviet Empire" ended in a far more peaceful manner than the British Empire several decades before.[643] Similarly, under Gorbachev, the Soviet Union broke apart without falling into civil war, as happened during the breakup of Yugoslavia at the same time.[646] McCauley noted that in facilitating the merger of East and West Germany, Gorbachev was "a co-father of German unification", assuring him long-term popularity among the German people.[647] However, he remains a controversial figure in former Soviet-occupied and administered countries such as the Baltic States, Ukraine, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan and Poland, after violent repressions against the local populations who sought independence. Locals have stated that they consider western veneration of the man an injustice and have said they do not understand his positive legacy in the west, with a group of Lithuanians having pursued legal action against him.[648]

He also faced domestic criticism during his rule. During his career, Gorbachev attracted the admiration of some colleagues, but others came to hate him.[585] Across society more broadly, his inability to reverse the decline in the Soviet economy brought discontent.[649] Liberals thought he lacked the radicalism to really break from Marxism–Leninism and establish a free market liberal democracy.[650] Conversely, many of his Communist Party critics thought his reforms were reckless and threatened the survival of Soviet socialism;[651] some believed he should have followed the example of China's Communist Party and restricted himself to economic rather than governmental reforms.[652] Many Russians saw his emphasis on persuasion rather than force as a sign of weakness.[547]

For much of the Communist Party nomenklatura, the Soviet Union's dissolution was disastrous as it resulted in their loss of power.[653] In Russia, he is widely despised for his role in the collapse of the Soviet Union and the ensuing economic collapse in the 1990s.[580] General Varennikov, one of those who orchestrated the 1991 coup attempt against Gorbachev, for instance called him "a renegade and traitor to your own people".[466] Many of his critics attacked him for allowing the Marxist–Leninist governments across Eastern Europe to fall,[654] and for allowing a reunited Germany to join NATO, something they deem to be contrary to Russia's national interest.[655]

The historian Mark Galeotti stressed the connection between Gorbachev and his predecessor, Andropov. In Galeotti's view, Andropov was "the godfather of the Gorbachev revolution", because—as a former head of the KGB—he was able to put forward the case for reform without having his loyalty to the Soviet cause questioned, an approach that Gorbachev was able to build on and follow through with.[656] According to McCauley, Gorbachev "set reforms in motion without understanding where they could lead. Never in his worst nightmare could he have imagined that perestroika would lead to the destruction of the Soviet Union".[657]

According to The New York Times, "Few leaders in the 20th century, indeed in any century, have had such a profound effect on their time. In little more than six tumultuous years, Mr. Gorbachev lifted the Iron Curtain, decisively altering the political climate of the world."[658]

Awards and honors edit

 
Former US president Ronald Reagan awards the first Ronald Reagan Freedom Award to Gorbachev at the Reagan Library, 1992.

In 1988, India awarded Gorbachev the Indira Gandhi Prize for Peace, Disarmament and Development;[659] in 1990, he was given the Nobel Peace Prize for "his leading role in the peace process which today characterizes important parts of the international community".[660] Out of office he continued to receive honors. In 1992, he was the first recipient of the Ronald Reagan Freedom Award,[661] and in 1994 was given the Grawemeyer Award by the University of Louisville, Kentucky.[662] In 1995, he was awarded the Grand-Cross of the Order of Liberty by Portuguese president Mário Soares,[663] and in 1998 the Freedom Award from the National Civil Rights Museum in Memphis, Tennessee.[664] In 2000, he was presented with the Golden Plate Award of the American Academy of Achievement at an awards ceremony at Hampton Court Palace near London.[665] In 2002, Gorbachev received the Freedom of the City of Dublin from Dublin City Council.[666]

In 2002, Gorbachev was awarded the Charles V Prize by the European Academy of Yuste Foundation.[667] Gorbachev, together with Bill Clinton and Sophia Loren, were awarded the 2004 Grammy Award for Best Spoken Word Album for Children for their recording of Sergei Prokofiev's 1936 Peter and the Wolf for Pentatone.[668] In 2005, Gorbachev was awarded the Point Alpha Prize for his role in supporting German reunification.[669]

Bibliography edit

Year Title Co-author Publisher
1987 PERESTROIKA - New Thinking for Our Country and the World Harper & Row
1996 Memoirs Doubleday
2005 Moral Lessons of the Twentieth Century: Gorbachev and Ikeda on Buddhism and Communism Daisaku Ikeda I. B. Tauris
2016 The New Russia Polity
2018 In a Changing World
2020 What Is at Stake Now: My Appeal for Peace and Freedom Polity

In popular culture edit

In 2020/2021, the Theatre of Nations in Moscow, in collaboration with Latvian director Alvis Hermanis, staged a production called Gorbachev.[670] Yevgeny Mironov and Chulpan Khamatova played the roles of Gorbachev and his wife Raisa respectively. It was a play focusing on their personal relationship.[671]

Gorbachev was portrayed by Matthew Marsh in the 2023 film Tetris.[672]

See also edit

Explanatory notes edit

  1. ^ On 14 March 1990, the provision on the CPSU monopoly on power was removed from Article 6 of the Constitution of the USSR. Thus, in the Soviet Union, a multi-party system was officially allowed, and the CPSU ceased to be part of the state apparatus.
  2. ^ Briefly suspended from 19 to 21 August 1991 during the August Coup.
  3. ^ De facto until 21 August 1991; de jure until 4 September.
  4. ^ This post was abolished on 25 December 1991 and powers were transferred to Boris Yeltsin, the President of Russia. Functions of the presidency were succeeded by the Council of Heads of State and the Executive Secretary of the Commonwealth of Independent States.
  5. ^ Himself as the Chairman of the United Social Democratic Party of Russia until 24 November 2001, and the Chairman of the Social Democratic Party of Russia until 20 October 2007
  6. ^ UK: /ˈɡɔːrbəɒf, ˌɡɔːrbəˈɒf/, US: /-ɔːf, -ɛf/;[1][2][3] Russian: Михаил Сергеевич Горбачёв, tr. Mikhail Sergeyevich Gorbachyov, IPA: [mʲɪxɐˈil sʲɪrˈɡʲejɪvʲɪdʑ ɡərbɐˈtɕɵf]
  7. ^ The Queen died only nine days after Gorbachev.[626]
  8. ^ Gorbachev at the time asserted that no one in Moscow gave orders to start the violent confrontations of the so-called January Events in Lithuania that cost the lives of 14 civilians.[632]

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ "Gorbachev" 2 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine. Random House Webster's Unabridged Dictionary.
  2. ^ "Gorbachev, Mikhail" 13 May 2019 at the Wayback Machine, Oxford Dictionaries. Retrieved 4 February 2019
  3. ^ "Gorbachev". Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary. Retrieved 4 February 2019.
  4. ^ Breslauer, George (2002). Gorbachev and Yeltsin as leaders. Cambridge University Press. p. 126. ISBN 9780521892445.
  5. ^ Medvedev 1986, p. 22; Doder & Branson 1990, p. 1; McCauley 1998, p. 15; Taubman 2017, p. 7.
  6. ^ Taubman 2017, p. 10.
  7. ^ McCauley 1998, p. 15; Taubman 2017, p. 10.
  8. ^ Doder & Branson 1990, p. 4; McCauley 1998, p. 15; Taubman 2017, p. 7.
  9. ^ Taubman 2017, pp. 8–9.
  10. ^ Taubman 2017, p. 9.
  11. ^ a b Medvedev 1986, p. 22.
  12. ^ a b Taubman 2017, p. 16.
  13. ^ Taubman 2017, pp. 16, 17.
  14. ^ Doder & Branson 1990, p. 1; Taubman 2017, p. 7.
  15. ^ McCauley 1998, p. 15; Taubman 2017, pp. 12–13.
  16. ^ Taubman 2017, p. 14.
  17. ^ McCauley 1998, p. 16; Taubman 2017, p. 7.
  18. ^ McCauley 1998, pp. 15–16; Taubman 2017, pp. 7, 8.
  19. ^ Taubman 2017, pp. 18–19.
  20. ^ Doder & Branson 1990, pp. 5–6; McCauley 1998, p. 17; Taubman 2017, pp. 7, 20–22.
  21. ^ Doder & Branson 1990, p. 5; McCauley 1998, p. 17; Taubman 2017, pp. 8, 26–27.
  22. ^ Taubman 2017, p. 27.
  23. ^ Taubman 2017, pp. 9, 27–28.
  24. ^ Taubman 2017, pp. 29–30.
  25. ^ Taubman 2017, pp. 8, 28–29.
  26. ^ Taubman 2017, p. 30.
  27. ^ Doder & Branson 1990, p. 7; McCauley 1998, p. 18; Taubman 2017, p. 32.
  28. ^ Taubman 2017, p. 32.
  29. ^ McCauley 1998, p. 18; Taubman 2017, p. 34.
  30. ^ Doder & Branson 1990, p. 6; McCauley 1998, p. 18; Taubman 2017, pp. 8, 34.
  31. ^ a b Taubman 2017, p. 42.
  32. ^ Doder & Branson 1990, p. 6, 8; McCauley 1998, p. 18; Taubman 2017, pp. 40–41.
  33. ^ Medvedev 1986, p. 35.
  34. ^ Taubman 2017, p. 43.
  35. ^ Taubman 2017, p. 50.
  36. ^ a b Taubman 2017, p. 44.
  37. ^ Doder & Branson 1990, p. 14; Taubman 2017, p. 48.
  38. ^ Taubman 2017, p. 53.
  39. ^ Taubman 2017, p. 52.
  40. ^ McCauley 1998, p. 19; Taubman 2017, pp. 45, 52.
  41. ^ Doder & Branson 1990, p. 10; McCauley 1998, p. 19; Taubman 2017, p. 46.
  42. ^ Taubman 2017, p. 46.
  43. ^ McCauley 1998, p. 19; Taubman 2017, p. 46.
  44. ^ Taubman 2017, p. 47.
  45. ^ Medvedev 1986, pp. 36–37; Doder & Branson 1990, p. 11; McCauley 1998, p. 19; Taubman 2017, pp. 45, 53, 56–57.
  46. ^ McCauley 1998, p. 20; Taubman 2017, pp. 57–58.
  47. ^ Doder & Branson 1990, p. 15; Taubman 2017, pp. 59, 63.
  48. ^ Taubman 2017, pp. 59–63.
  49. ^ Taubman 2017, p. 66.
  50. ^ Taubman 2017, pp. 72–73.
  51. ^ a b McCauley 1998, p. 20; Taubman 2017, p. 68.
  52. ^ Taubman 2017, p. 70.
  53. ^ Taubman 2017, pp. 70–71.
  54. ^ Medvedev 1986, p. 42; McCauley 1998, p. 20.
  55. ^ McCauley 1998, p. 20.
  56. ^ McCauley 1998, pp. 20–21; Taubman 2017, pp. 73–74.
  57. ^ McCauley 1998, p. 20; Taubman 2017, p. 74.
  58. ^ McCauley 1998, pp. 20–21; Taubman 2017, p. 75.
  59. ^ McCauley 1998, p. 21; Taubman 2017, p. 77.
  60. ^ Doder & Branson 1990, p. 31; Taubman 2017, p. 78.
  61. ^ Taubman 2017, p. 95.
  62. ^ McCauley 1998, p. 210; Taubman 2017, pp. 81–83.
  63. ^ Taubman 2017, p. 81.
  64. ^ Doder & Branson 1990, p. 19; McCauley 1998, p. 23; Taubman 2017, p. 86.
  65. ^ McCauley 1998, p. 23; Taubman 2017, p. 89.
  66. ^ Medvedev 1986, pp. 56, 62; Doder & Branson 1990, p. 19; McCauley 1998, p. 29; Taubman 2017, pp. 115–116.
  67. ^ Medvedev 1986, p. 63; Doder & Branson 1990, p. 19; McCauley 1998, p. 29; Taubman 2017, pp. 111–113.
  68. ^ Taubman 2017, p. 86.
  69. ^ Taubman 2017, pp. 90–91.
  70. ^ Taubman 2017, p. 90.
  71. ^ Taubman 2017, p. 91.
  72. ^ McCauley 1998, p. 22; Taubman 2017, pp. 96–98.
  73. ^ Taubman 2017, p. 78.
  74. ^ Taubman 2017, p. 80.
  75. ^ Medvedev 1986, p. 74; Doder & Branson 1990, p. 32; McCauley 1998, p. 25; Taubman 2017, pp. 105–106.
  76. ^ Taubman 2017, pp. 103, 105.
  77. ^ Medvedev 1986, p. 47; Doder & Branson 1990, p. 31; McCauley 1998, p. 23; Taubman 2017, p. 98.
  78. ^ McCauley 1998, p. 23; Taubman 2017, p. 100.
  79. ^ Taubman 2017, p. 89.
  80. ^ McCauley 1998, p. 23; Taubman 2017, p. 99.
  81. ^ Taubman 2017, p. 100.
  82. ^ Medvedev 1986, p. 49; McCauley 1998, p. 23.
  83. ^ a b c Taubman 2017, p. 102.
  84. ^ Taubman 2017, p. 149.
  85. ^ Medvedev 1986, p. 50; Doder & Branson 1990, p. 24; McCauley 1998, p. 24.
  86. ^ Taubman 2017, p. 107.
  87. ^ Medvedev 1986, p. 61; McCauley 1998, p. 26.
  88. ^ a b Taubman 2017, p. 116.
  89. ^ Medvedev 1986, p. 63; Doder & Branson 1990, p. 32; McCauley 1998, p. 28; Taubman 2017, p. 119.
  90. ^ Medvedev 1986, p. 64.
  91. ^ McCauley 1998, p. 30.
  92. ^ Taubman 2017, pp. 123–124.
  93. ^ Medvedev 1986, pp. 64–65; McCauley 1998, p. 30; Taubman 2017, p. 124.
  94. ^ McCauley 1998, pp. 28–29; Taubman 2017, p. 125.
  95. ^ Taubman 2017, pp. 125–126.
  96. ^ Medvedev 1986, p. 65; Doder & Branson 1990, p. 32; McCauley 1998, p. 29; Taubman 2017, p. 120.
  97. ^ Taubman 2017, pp. 121–122.
  98. ^ Taubman 2017, p. 121.
  99. ^ Medvedev 1986, p. 73; Taubman 2017, p. 121.
  100. ^ Medvedev 1986, p. 65.
  101. ^ a b Taubman 2017, p. 127.
  102. ^ Taubman 2017, p. 129.
  103. ^ McCauley 1998, pp. 31–32; Taubman 2017, p. 130.
  104. ^ McCauley 1998, p. 33; Taubman 2017, pp. 131–132.
  105. ^ Taubman 2017, p. 123.
  106. ^ Taubman 2017, pp. 128–129.
  107. ^ a b Taubman 2017, p. 157.
  108. ^ Doder & Branson 1990, pp. 35–36; Taubman 2017, pp. 138–139.
  109. ^ McCauley 1998, p. 35; Taubman 2017, pp. 145–146.
  110. ^ Medvedev 1986, pp. 108, 113; McCauley 1998, p. 35.
  111. ^ Medvedev 1986, p. 78; Taubman 2017, p. 149.
  112. ^ Taubman 2017, pp. 149–150.
  113. ^ McCauley 1998, p. 30; Taubman 2017, pp. 150–151.
  114. ^ Taubman 2017, pp. 151–152.
  115. ^ Taubman 2017, p. 152.
  116. ^ a b Taubman 2017, p. 153.
  117. ^ Taubman 2017, pp. 153–154.
  118. ^ Taubman 2017, p. 156.
  119. ^ Medvedev 1986, p. 77.
  120. ^ Medvedev 1986, p. 92; McCauley 1998, p. 36; Taubman 2017, p. 157.
  121. ^ Taubman 2017, p. 161.
  122. ^ Taubman 2017, pp. 164–175.
  123. ^ Taubman 2017, pp. 165, 166.
  124. ^ a b Taubman 2017, p. 165.
  125. ^ McCauley 1998, p. 40; Taubman 2017, p. 166.
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mikhail, gorbachev, gorbachev, redirects, here, other, people, with, surname, gorbachev, surname, this, name, that, follows, eastern, slavic, naming, conventions, patronymic, sergeyevich, family, name, gorbachev, mikhail, sergeyevich, gorbachev, march, 1931, a. Gorbachev redirects here For other people with the surname see Gorbachev surname In this name that follows Eastern Slavic naming conventions the patronymic is Sergeyevich and the family name is Gorbachev Mikhail Sergeyevich Gorbachev f 2 March 1931 30 August 2022 was a Soviet and Russian politician who served as the last leader of the Soviet Union from 1985 to the country s dissolution in 1991 He served as General Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union from 1985 and additionally as head of state beginning in 1988 as Chairman of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet from 1988 to 1989 Chairman of the Supreme Soviet from 1989 to 1990 and the only President of the Soviet Union from 1990 to 1991 Ideologically Gorbachev initially adhered to Marxism Leninism but moved towards social democracy by the early 1990s dubious discuss Mikhail GorbachevMihail GorbachyovGorbachev in 1987General Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet UnionIn office 11 March 1985 24 August 1991 a PremierNikolai Ryzhkov Valentin Pavlov Ivan SilayevDeputyVladimir IvashkoPreceded byKonstantin ChernenkoSucceeded byVladimir Ivashko acting President of the Soviet UnionIn office 15 March 1990 25 December 1991 b Vice PresidentGennady Yanayev c Preceded byOffice established Himself as Chairman of the Supreme SovietSucceeded byOffice abolished d Chairman of the Supreme Soviet of the Soviet UnionIn office 25 May 1989 15 March 1990DeputyAnatoly LukyanovPreceded byHimself as Chairman of the Presidium of the Supreme SovietChairman of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the Soviet UnionIn office 1 October 1988 25 May 1989Preceded byAndrei GromykoSucceeded byHimself as Chairman of the Supreme SovietAdditional positionsCo Chairman of the Union of Social DemocratsIn office 11 March 2000 e 15 November 2017Preceded byParty establishedSucceeded byParty disestablishedActing Second Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet UnionIn office 9 February 1984 10 March 1985Preceded byKonstantin ChernenkoSucceeded byYegor LigachyovPersonal detailsBorn 1931 03 02 2 March 1931Privolnoye Russian SFSR Soviet UnionDied30 August 2022 2022 08 30 aged 91 Moscow RussiaResting placeNovodevichy Cemetery MoscowPolitical partyCPSU 1952 1991 Independent 1991 2000 ROSDP 2000 2001 SDPR 2001 2007 USD 2007 2013 Independent from 2013 SpouseRaisa Titarenko m 1953 died 1999 wbr Children1Alma materMoscow State University LLB AwardsNobel Peace Prize 1990 SignatureWebsiteOfficial websiteMikhail Gorbachev s voice source source track Recorded November 2012Central institution membership 1980 1991 Member 25th 26th 27th 28th Politburo1979 1980 Candidate 25th Politburo1978 1991 Member 25th 26th 27th 28th Secretariat1971 1991 Member 24th 25th 26th 27th 28th Central Committee Other offices held 2001 2004 Chairman Social Democratic Party of Russia1985 1991 Chairman Defense Council1970 1978 First Secretary Stavropol Regional CommitteeLeader of the Soviet Union Chernenko None last holder Gorbachev was born in Privolnoye Russian SFSR to a poor peasant family of Russian and Ukrainian heritage Growing up under the rule of Joseph Stalin in his youth he operated combine harvesters on a collective farm before joining the Communist Party which then governed the Soviet Union as a one party state Studying at Moscow State University he married fellow student Raisa Titarenko in 1953 and received his law degree in 1955 Moving to Stavropol he worked for the Komsomol youth organization and after Stalin s death became a keen proponent of the de Stalinization reforms of Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev He was appointed the First Party Secretary of the Stavropol Regional Committee in 1970 overseeing the construction of the Great Stavropol Canal In 1978 he returned to Moscow to become a Secretary of the party s Central Committee he joined the governing Politburo 25th term as a non voting member in 1979 and a voting member in 1980 Three years after the death of Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev following the brief tenures of Yuri Andropov and Konstantin Chernenko in 1985 the Politburo elected Gorbachev as general secretary the de facto leader Although committed to preserving the Soviet state and its Marxist Leninist ideals Gorbachev believed significant reform was necessary for its survival He withdrew troops from the Soviet Afghan War and embarked on summits with United States president Ronald Reagan to limit nuclear weapons and end the Cold War Domestically his policy of glasnost openness allowed for enhanced freedom of speech and press while his perestroika restructuring sought to decentralize economic decision making to improve its efficiency His democratization measures and formation of the elected Congress of People s Deputies undermined the one party state Gorbachev declined to intervene militarily when various Warsaw Pact countries abandoned Marxist Leninist governance in 1989 Internally Gorbachev wanted to transform the Soviet Union into a less centralized federation but moved towards supporting a loose confederation by April 1991 proposing the New Union Treaty 4 Growing nationalist sentiment within constituent republics threatened to break up the Soviet Union leading the hardliners within the Communist Party to launch the unsuccessful coup against Gorbachev in August 1991 In the coup s wake the Soviet Union dissolved against Gorbachev s wishes After resigning from the presidency he launched the Gorbachev Foundation became a vocal critic of Russian presidents Boris Yeltsin and Vladimir Putin and campaigned for Russia s social democratic movement Gorbachev is considered one of the most significant figures of the second half of the 20th century The recipient of a wide range of awards including the Nobel Peace Prize he is praised for his role in ending the Cold War introducing new political and economic freedoms in the Soviet Union and tolerating both the fall of Marxist Leninist administrations in eastern and central Europe and the German reunification In Russia he is often derided for facilitating the dissolution of the Soviet Union an event which weakened Russia s global influence and precipitated an economic collapse in Russia and other states Contents 1 Early life and education 1 1 1931 1950 childhood 1 2 1950 1955 university 2 Early CPSU career 2 1 1955 1969 Stavropol Komsomol 2 2 1970 1977 heading the Stavropol region 3 Secretary of the Central Committee of CPSU 4 General Secretary of the CPSU 4 1 1985 1986 early years 4 1 1 Domestic policies 4 1 2 Foreign policy 4 2 1987 1989 further reforms 4 2 1 Domestic reforms 4 2 2 Forming the Congress of People s Deputies 4 2 3 Relations with China and Western states 4 2 4 Nationality question and the Eastern Bloc 5 Unraveling of the USSR 5 1 1990 1991 presidency of the Soviet Union 5 1 1 German reunification and the Gulf War 5 1 2 August coup and government crises 5 2 Final days and collapse 6 Post USSR life 6 1 1991 1999 initial years 6 1 1 1996 presidential campaign 6 2 1999 2008 promoting social democracy in Putin s Russia 6 3 2008 2022 growing criticism of Putin and foreign policy remarks 7 Political ideology 8 Personal life 8 1 Personality 9 Death 9 1 Preceding deterioration of health 9 2 Funeral and burial 9 3 Reactions 10 Reception and legacy 11 Awards and honors 12 Bibliography 13 In popular culture 14 See also 15 Explanatory notes 16 References 16 1 Citations 16 2 Sources 17 Further reading 18 External linksEarly life and education edit1931 1950 childhood edit Gorbachev was born on 2 March 1931 in the village of Privolnoye then in the North Caucasus Krai of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic Soviet Union 5 At the time Privolnoye was divided almost evenly between ethnic Russians and ethnic Ukrainians 6 Gorbachev s paternal family were ethnic Russians and had moved to the region from Voronezh several generations before his maternal family were of ethnic Ukrainian heritage and had migrated from Chernihiv 7 His parents named him Viktor at birth but at the insistence of his mother a devout Orthodox Christian he had a secret baptism where his grandfather christened him Mikhail 8 His relationship with his father Sergey Andreyevich Gorbachev was close his mother Maria Panteleyevna Gorbacheva nee Gopkalo was colder and punitive 9 His parents were poor 10 and lived as peasants 11 They had married as teenagers in 1928 12 and in keeping with local tradition had initially resided in Sergey s father s house an adobe walled hut before a hut of their own could be built 13 nbsp Gorbachev and his Ukrainian maternal grandparents late 1930sThe Soviet Union was a one party state governed by the Communist Party and during Gorbachev s childhood was under the leadership of Joseph Stalin Stalin had initiated a project of mass rural collectivization which in keeping with his Marxist Leninist ideas he believed would help convert the country into a socialist society 14 Gorbachev s maternal grandfather joined the Communist Party and helped form the village s first kolkhoz collective farm in 1929 becoming its chair 15 This farm was 19 kilometres 12 mi outside Privolnoye village and when he was three years old Gorbachev left his parental home and moved into the kolkhoz with his maternal grandparents 16 The country was then experiencing the famine of 1930 1933 in which two of Gorbachev s paternal uncles and an aunt died 17 This was followed by the Great Purge in which individuals accused of being enemies of the people including those sympathetic to rival interpretations of Marxism like Trotskyism were arrested and interned in labor camps if not executed Both of Gorbachev s grandfathers were arrested his maternal in 1934 and his paternal in 1937 and spent time in Gulag labor camps before being released 18 After his December 1938 release Gorbachev s maternal grandfather discussed having been tortured by the secret police an account that influenced the young boy 19 Following on from the outbreak of the Second World War in 1939 in June 1941 the German Army invaded the Soviet Union German forces occupied Privolnoye for four and a half months in 1942 20 Gorbachev s father had joined the Red Army and fought on the frontlines he was wrongly declared dead during the conflict and fought in the Battle of Kursk before returning to his family injured 21 After Germany was defeated Gorbachev s parents had their second son Aleksandr in 1947 he and Mikhail would be their only children 12 The village school was closed during much of the war but re opened in autumn 1944 22 Gorbachev did not want to return but when he did he excelled academically 23 He read voraciously moving from the Western novels of Thomas Mayne Reid to the works of Vissarion Belinsky Alexander Pushkin Nikolai Gogol and Mikhail Lermontov 24 In 1946 he joined the Komsomol the Soviet political youth organization becoming leader of his local group and then being elected to the Komsomol committee for the district 25 From primary school he moved to the high school in Molotovskoye he stayed there during the week while walking the 19 km 12 mi home during weekends 26 As well as being a member of the school s drama society 27 he organized sporting and social activities and led the school s morning exercise class 28 Over the course of five consecutive summers from 1946 onward he returned home to assist his father in operating a combine harvester during which they sometimes worked 20 hour days 29 In 1948 they harvested over 8 000 centners of grain a feat for which Sergey was awarded the Order of Lenin and his son the Order of the Red Banner of Labour 30 1950 1955 university edit I would consider it a high honour to be a member of the highly advanced genuinely revolutionary Communist Party of Bolsheviks I promise to be faithful to the great cause of Lenin and Stalin to devote my entire life to the party s struggle for Communism Gorbachev s letter requesting membership of the Communist Party 1950 31 In June 1950 Gorbachev became a candidate member of the Communist Party 31 He also applied to study at the law school of Moscow State University MSU then the most prestigious university in the country They accepted him without asking for an exam likely because of his worker peasant origins and his possession of the Order of the Red Banner of Labour 32 His choice of law was unusual it was not a well regarded subject in Soviet society at that time 33 At age 19 he traveled by train to Moscow the first time he had left his home region 34 In Moscow Gorbachev resided with fellow MSU students at a dormitory in the Sokolniki District 35 He and other rural students felt at odds with their Muscovite counterparts but he soon came to fit in 36 Fellow students recall him working especially hard often late into the night 37 He gained a reputation as a mediator during disputes 38 and was also known for being outspoken in class although he would reveal some of his views only privately for instance he confided in some students his opposition to the Soviet jurisprudential norm that a confession proved guilt noting that confessions could have been forced 39 During his studies an antisemitic campaign spread through the Soviet Union culminating in the Doctors plot Gorbachev publicly defended Volodya Liberman a Jewish student who was accused of disloyalty to the country by one of his fellows 40 At MSU Gorbachev became the Komsomol head of his entering class and then Komsomol s deputy secretary for agitation and propaganda at the law school 41 One of his first Komsomol assignments in Moscow was to monitor the election polling in Presnensky District to ensure the government s desire for near total turnout Gorbachev found that most of those who voted did so out of fear 42 In 1952 he was appointed a full member of the Communist Party 43 As a party and Komsomol member he was tasked with monitoring fellow students for potential subversion some of his fellow students said that he did so only minimally and that they trusted him to keep confidential information secret from the authorities 44 Gorbachev became close friends with Zdenek Mlynar a Czechoslovak student who later became a primary ideologist of the 1968 Prague Spring Mlynar recalled that the duo remained committed Marxist Leninists despite their growing concerns about the Stalinist system 45 After Stalin died in March 1953 Gorbachev and Mlynar joined the crowds massing to see Stalin s body lying in state 46 At MSU Gorbachev met Raisa Titarenko who was studying in the university s philosophy department 47 She was engaged to another man but after that engagement fell apart she began a relationship with Gorbachev 48 together they went to bookstores museums and art exhibits 49 In early 1953 he took an internship at the procurator s office in Molotovskoye district but he was angered by the incompetence and arrogance of those working there 50 That summer he returned to Privolnoye to work with his father on the harvest the money earned allowed him to pay for a wedding 51 On 25 September 1953 he and Raisa registered their marriage at Sokolniki Registry Office 51 and in October moved in together at the Lenin Hills dormitory 52 Raisa discovered that she was pregnant and although the couple wanted to keep the child she fell ill and required a life saving abortion 53 In June 1955 Gorbachev graduated with a distinction 54 his final paper had been on the advantages of socialist democracy the Soviet political system over bourgeois democracy liberal democracy 55 He was subsequently assigned to the Soviet Procurator s office which was then focusing on the rehabilitation of the innocent victims of Stalin s purges but found that they had no work for him 56 He was then offered a place on an MSU graduate course specializing in kolkhoz law but declined 57 He had wanted to remain in Moscow where Raisa was enrolled in a PhD program but instead gained employment in Stavropol Raisa abandoned her studies to join him there 58 Early CPSU career edit1955 1969 Stavropol Komsomol edit In August 1955 Gorbachev started work at the Stavropol regional procurator s office but disliked the job and used his contacts to get a transfer to work for Komsomol 59 becoming deputy director of Komsomol s agitation and propaganda department for that region 60 In this position he visited villages in the area and tried to improve the lives of their inhabitants he established a discussion circle in Gorkaya Balka village to help its peasant residents gain social contacts 61 Mikhail Gorbachev and his wife Raisa initially rented a small room in Stavropol 62 taking daily evening walks around the city and on weekends hiking in the countryside 63 In January 1957 Raisa gave birth to a daughter Irina 64 and in 1958 they moved into two rooms in a communal apartment 65 In 1961 Gorbachev pursued a second degree in agricultural production he took a correspondence course from the local Stavropol Agricultural Institute receiving his diploma in 1967 66 His wife had also pursued a second degree attaining a PhD in sociology in 1967 from the Moscow State Pedagogical University 67 while in Stavropol she too joined the Communist Party 68 Stalin was ultimately succeeded as Soviet leader by Nikita Khrushchev who denounced Stalin and his cult of personality in a speech given in February 1956 after which he launched a de Stalinization process throughout Soviet society 69 Later biographer William Taubman suggested that Gorbachev embodied the reformist spirit of the Khrushchev era 70 Gorbachev was among those who saw themselves as genuine Marxists or genuine Leninists in contrast to what they regarded as the perversions of Stalin 71 He helped spread Khrushchev s anti Stalinist message in Stavropol but encountered many who continued to regard Stalin as a hero or who praised the Stalinist purges as just 72 Gorbachev rose steadily through the ranks of the local administration 73 The authorities regarded him as politically reliable 74 and he would flatter his superiors for instance gaining favor with prominent local politician Fyodor Kulakov 75 With an ability to outmanoeuvre rivals some colleagues resented his success 76 In September 1956 he was promoted First Secretary of the Stavropol city s Komsomol placing him in charge of it 77 in April 1958 he was made deputy head of the Komsomol for the entire region 78 At this point he was given better accommodation a two room flat with its own private kitchen toilet and bathroom 79 In Stavropol he formed a discussion club for youths 80 and helped mobilize local young people to take part in Khrushchev s agricultural and development campaigns 81 nbsp Gorbachev on a visit to East Germany in 1966In March 1961 Gorbachev became First Secretary of the regional Komsomol 82 in which position he went out of his way to appoint women as city and district leaders 83 In 1961 Gorbachev played host to the Italian delegation for the World Youth Festival in Moscow 84 that October he also attended the 22nd Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union 85 In January 1963 Gorbachev was promoted to personnel chief for the regional party s agricultural committee 86 and in September 1966 became First Secretary of the Stavropol City Party Organization Gorkom 87 By 1968 he was increasingly frustrated with his job in large part because Khrushchev s reforms were stalling or being reversed and he contemplated leaving politics to work in academia 88 However in August 1968 he was named Second Secretary of the Stavropol Kraikom making him the deputy of First Secretary Leonid Yefremov and the second most senior figure in the Stavrapol region 89 In 1969 he was elected as a deputy to the Supreme Soviet of the Soviet Union and made a member of its Standing Commission for the Protection of the Environment 90 Cleared for travel to Eastern Bloc countries in 1966 he was part of a delegation which visited East Germany and in 1969 and 1974 visited Bulgaria 91 In August 1968 the Soviet Union led an invasion of Czechoslovakia to put an end to the Prague Spring a period of political liberalization in the Marxist Leninist country Although Gorbachev later stated that he had had private concerns about the invasion he publicly supported it 92 In September 1969 he was part of a Soviet delegation sent to Czechoslovakia where he found the Czechoslovak people largely unwelcoming to them 93 That year the Soviet authorities ordered him to punish Fagim B Sadykov ru a philosophy professor of the Stavropol agricultural institute whose ideas were regarded as critical of Soviet agricultural policy Gorbachev ensured that Sadykov was fired from teaching but ignored calls for him to face tougher punishment 94 Gorbachev later related that he was deeply affected by the incident my conscience tormented me for overseeing Sadykov s persecution 95 1970 1977 heading the Stavropol region edit In April 1970 Yefremov was promoted to a higher position in Moscow and Gorbachev succeeded him as the First Secretary of the Stavropol kraikom This granted Gorbachev significant power over the Stavropol region 96 He had been personally vetted for the position by senior Kremlin leaders and was informed of their decision by the Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev 97 Aged 39 he was considerably younger than his predecessors in the position 98 As head of the Stavropol region he automatically became a member of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union 24th term in 1971 99 According to biographer Zhores Medvedev Gorbachev had now joined the Party s super elite 100 As regional leader Gorbachev initially attributed economic and other failures to the inefficiency and incompetence of cadres flaws in management structure or gaps in legislation but eventually concluded that they were caused by an excessive centralization of decision making in Moscow 101 He began reading translations of restricted texts by Western Marxist authors such as Antonio Gramsci Louis Aragon Roger Garaudy and Giuseppe Boffa and came under their influence 101 nbsp Part of the Great Stavropol Canal constructed under Gorbachev s regional leadershipGorbachev s main task as regional leader was to raise agricultural production levels a task hampered by severe droughts in 1975 and 1976 102 He oversaw the expansion of irrigation systems through construction of the Great Stavropol Canal 103 For overseeing a record grain harvest in Ipatovsky district in March 1972 he was awarded the Order of the October Revolution by Brezhnev in a Moscow ceremony 104 Gorbachev always sought to maintain Brezhnev s trust 105 as regional leader he repeatedly praised Brezhnev in his speeches for instance referring to him as the outstanding statesman of our time 106 Gorbachev and his wife holidayed in Moscow Leningrad Uzbekistan and resorts in the North Caucasus 107 he holidayed with the head of the KGB Yuri Andropov who was favorable towards him and who became an important patron 108 Gorbachev also developed good relationships with senior figures including the Soviet prime minister Alexei Kosygin 109 and the longstanding senior party member Mikhail Suslov 110 The government considered Gorbachev sufficiently reliable that he was sent as part of Soviet delegations to Western Europe he made five trips there between 1970 and 1977 111 In September 1971 he was part of a delegation that traveled to Italy where they met with representatives of the Italian Communist Party Gorbachev loved Italian culture but was struck by the poverty and inequality he saw in the country 112 In 1972 he visited Belgium and the Netherlands and in 1973 West Germany 113 Gorbachev and his wife visited France in 1976 and 1977 on the latter occasion touring the country with a guide from the French Communist Party 114 He was surprised by how openly West Europeans offered their opinions and criticized their political leaders something absent from the Soviet Union where most people did not feel safe speaking so openly 115 He later related that for him and his wife these visits shook our a priori belief in the superiority of socialist over bourgeois democracy 116 Gorbachev had remained close to his parents after his father became terminally ill in 1974 Gorbachev traveled to be with him in Privolnoe shortly before his death 117 His daughter Irina married fellow student Anatoly Virgansky in April 1978 118 In 1977 the Supreme Soviet appointed Gorbachev to chair the Standing Commission on Youth Affairs due to his experience with mobilizing young people in Komsomol 119 Secretary of the Central Committee of CPSU edit nbsp Gorbachev was skeptical of the deployment of Soviet troops in Afghanistan pictured here in 1986 In November 1978 Gorbachev was appointed a Secretary of the Central Committee 120 His appointment had been approved unanimously by the Central Committee s members 121 To fill this position Gorbachev and his wife moved to Moscow where they were initially given an old dacha outside the city They then moved to another at Sosnovka before finally being allocated a newly built brick house 122 He was also given an apartment inside the city but gave that to his daughter and son in law Irina had begun work at Moscow s Second Medical Institute 123 As part of the Moscow political elite Gorbachev and his wife now had access to better medical care and to specialized shops they were also given cooks servants bodyguards and secretaries although many of these were spies for the KGB 124 In his new position Gorbachev often worked twelve to sixteen hour days 124 He and his wife socialized little but liked to visit Moscow s theaters and museums 125 In 1978 Gorbachev was appointed to the Central Committee s Secretariat for Agriculture 25th term replacing his old patron Kulakov who had died of a heart attack 126 Gorbachev concentrated his attentions on agriculture the harvests of 1979 1980 and 1981 were all poor due largely to weather conditions 127 and the country had to import increasing quantities of grain 128 He had growing concerns about the country s agricultural management system coming to regard it as overly centralized and requiring more bottom up decision making 129 he raised these points at his first speech at a Central Committee Plenum given in July 1978 130 He began to have concerns about other policies too In December 1979 the Soviets sent the armed forces into neighbouring Afghanistan to support its Soviet aligned government against Islamist insurgents Gorbachev privately thought it a mistake 131 At times he openly supported the government position in October 1980 he for instance endorsed Soviet calls for Poland s Marxist Leninist government to crack down on growing internal dissent in that country 131 That same month he was promoted from a candidate member to a full member of the Politburo 25th term the highest decision making authority in the Communist Party 132 At the time he was the Politburo s youngest member 132 After Brezhnev s death in November 1982 Andropov succeeded him as General Secretary of the Communist Party the de facto leader in the Soviet Union Gorbachev was enthusiastic about the appointment 133 However although Gorbachev hoped that Andropov would introduce liberalizing reforms the latter carried out only personnel shifts rather than structural change 134 Gorbachev became Andropov s closest ally in the Politburo 135 with Andropov s encouragement Gorbachev sometimes chaired Politburo meetings 136 Andropov encouraged Gorbachev to expand into policy areas other than agriculture preparing him for future higher office 137 In April 1983 in a sign of growing ascendancy Gorbachev delivered the annual speech marking the birthday of the Soviet founder Vladimir Lenin 138 this required him re reading many of Lenin s later writings in which the latter had called for reform in the context of the New Economic Policy of the 1920s and encouraged Gorbachev s own conviction that reform was needed 139 In May 1983 Gorbachev was sent to Canada where he met Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau and spoke to the Canadian Parliament 140 There he met and befriended the Soviet ambassador Aleksandr Yakovlev who later became a key political ally 141 In February 1984 Andropov died on his deathbed he indicated his desire that Gorbachev succeed him 142 Many in the Central Committee nevertheless thought the 53 year old Gorbachev was too young and inexperienced 143 Instead Konstantin Chernenko a longstanding Brezhnev ally was appointed general secretary but he too was in very poor health 144 Chernenko was often too sick to chair Politburo meetings with Gorbachev stepping in last minute 145 Gorbachev continued to cultivate allies both in the Kremlin and beyond 146 and also gave the main speech at a conference on Soviet ideology where he angered party hardliners by implying that the country required reform 147 In April 1984 Gorbachev was appointed chair of the Foreign Affairs Committee of the Soviet legislature a largely honorific position 148 In June he traveled to Italy as a Soviet representative for the funeral of Italian Communist Party leader Enrico Berlinguer 149 and in September to Sofia Bulgaria to attend celebrations of the fortieth anniversary of its liberation from the Nazis by the Red Army 150 In December he visited Britain at the request of its prime minister Margaret Thatcher she was aware that he was a potential reformer and wanted to meet him 151 At the end of the visit Thatcher said I like Mr Gorbachev We can do business together 152 He felt that the visit helped to erode Andrei Gromyko s dominance of Soviet foreign policy while at the same time sending a signal to the United States government that he wanted to improve Soviet US relations 153 General Secretary of the CPSU edit nbsp Gorbachev in 1985 at a summit in Geneva SwitzerlandOn 10 March 1985 Chernenko died 154 Gromyko proposed Gorbachev as the next general secretary as a longstanding party member Gromyko s recommendation carried great weight among the Central Committee 155 Gorbachev expected much opposition to his nomination as general secretary but ultimately the rest of the Politburo supported him 156 Shortly after Chernenko s death the Politburo unanimously elected Gorbachev as his successor they wanted him rather than another elderly leader 157 He thus became the eighth leader of the Soviet Union 11 Few in the government imagined that he would be as radical a reformer as he proved 158 Although he was not a well known figure to the Soviet public there was widespread relief that the new leader was not elderly and ailing 159 Gorbachev s first public appearance as leader was at Chernenko s Red Square funeral held on 14 March 160 Two months after being elected he left Moscow for the first time traveling to Leningrad where he spoke to assembled crowds 161 In June he traveled to Ukraine in July to Belarus and in September to Tyumen Oblast urging party members in these areas to take more responsibility for fixing local problems 162 1985 1986 early years edit Gorbachev s leadership style differed from that of his predecessors He would stop to talk to civilians on the street forbade the display of his portrait at the 1985 Red Square holiday celebrations and encouraged frank and open discussions at Politburo meetings 163 To the West Gorbachev was seen as a more moderate and less threatening Soviet leader some Western commentators however believed this an act to lull Western governments into a false sense of security 164 His wife was his closest adviser and took on the unofficial role of a first lady by appearing with him on foreign trips her public visibility was a breach of standard practice and generated resentment 165 His other close aides were Georgy Shakhnazarov and Anatoly Chernyaev 166 Gorbachev was aware that the Politburo could remove him from office and that he could not pursue more radical reform without a majority of supporters in the Politburo 167 He sought to remove several older members from the Politburo encouraging Grigory Romanov Nikolai Tikhonov and Viktor Grishin into retirement 168 He promoted Gromyko to head of state a largely ceremonial role with little influence and moved his own ally Eduard Shevardnadze to Gromyko s former post in charge of foreign policy 169 Other allies whom he saw promoted were Yakovlev Anatoly Lukyanov and Vadim Medvedev 170 Another of those promoted by Gorbachev was Boris Yeltsin who was made a Secretary of the Central Committee 26th term in July 1985 171 Most of these appointees were from a new generation of well educated officials who had been frustrated during the Brezhnev era 172 In his first year 14 of the 23 heads of department in the Secretariat were replaced 173 Doing so Gorbachev secured dominance in the Politburo within a year faster than either Stalin Khrushchev or Brezhnev had achieved 174 Domestic policies edit nbsp Gorbachev at the Brandenburg Gate in 1986 during a visit to East GermanyGorbachev recurrently employed the term perestroika first used publicly in March 1984 175 He saw perestroika as encompassing a complex series of reforms to restructure society and the economy 176 He was concerned by the country s low productivity poor work ethic and inferior quality goods 177 like several economists he feared this would lead to the country becoming a second rate power 178 The first stage of Gorbachev s perestroika was uskoreniye acceleration a term he used regularly in the first two years of his leadership 179 The Soviet Union was behind the United States in many areas of production 180 but Gorbachev claimed that it would accelerate industrial output to match that of the US by 2000 181 The Five Year Plan of 1985 1990 was targeted to expand machine building by 50 to 100 182 To boost agricultural productivity he merged five ministries and a state committee into a single entity Agroprom although by late 1986 he acknowledged this merger as a failure 183 The purpose of reform was to prop up the centrally planned economy not to transition to market socialism Speaking in late summer 1985 to the secretaries for economic affairs of the central committees of the East European communist parties Gorbachev said Many of you see the solution to your problems in resorting to market mechanisms in place of direct planning Some of you look at the market as a lifesaver for your economies But comrades you should not think about lifesavers but about the ship and the ship is socialism 184 Gorbachev s perestroika also 185 entailed attempts to move away from technocratic management of the economy by increasingly involving the labor force in industrial production 186 He was of the view that once freed from the strong control of central planners state owned enterprises would act as market agents 187 Gorbachev and other Soviet leaders did not anticipate opposition to the perestroika reforms according to their interpretation of Marxism they believed that in a socialist society like the Soviet Union there would not be antagonistic contradictions 188 However there would come to be a public perception in the country that many bureaucrats were paying lip service to the reforms while trying to undermine them 189 He also initiated the concept of gospriyomka state acceptance of production during his time as leader 190 which represented quality control 191 In April 1986 he introduced an agrarian reform which linked salaries to output and allowed collective farms to sell 30 of their produce directly to shops or co operatives rather than giving it all to the state for distribution 192 In a September 1986 speech he embraced the idea of reintroducing market economics to the country alongside limited private enterprise citing Lenin s New Economic Policy as a precedent he nevertheless stressed that he did not regard this as a return to capitalism 192 In the Soviet Union alcohol consumption had risen steadily between 1950 and 1985 193 By the 1980s drunkenness was a major social problem and Andropov had planned a major campaign to limit alcohol consumption Encouraged by his wife Gorbachev who believed the campaign would improve health and work efficiency oversaw its implementation 194 Alcohol production was reduced by around 40 the legal drinking age rose from 18 to 21 alcohol prices were increased stores were banned from selling it before 2 pm and tougher penalties were introduced for workplace or public drunkenness and home production of alcohol 195 The All Union Voluntary Society for the Struggle for Temperance was formed to promote sobriety it had over 14 million members within three years 196 As a result crime rates fell and life expectancy grew slightly between 1986 and 1987 197 However bootleg liquor production rose considerably 198 and the reform imposed large costs on the Soviet economy resulting in losses of up to US 100 billion between 1985 and 1990 199 Gorbachev later considered the campaign to have been an error 200 and it was terminated in October 1988 201 After it ended it took several years for production to return to previous levels after which alcohol consumption soared in Russia between 1990 and 1993 202 nbsp Gorbachev s visit to Vilnius in 1990 in an attempt to stop Lithuania s declaration of independence which passed two months later In the second year of his leadership Gorbachev began speaking of glasnost or openness 203 According to Doder and Branson this meant greater openness and candour in government affairs and for an interplay of different and sometimes conflicting views in political debates in the press and in Soviet culture 204 Encouraging reformers into prominent media positions he brought in Sergei Zalygin as head of Novy Mir magazine and Yegor Yakovlev as editor in chief of Moscow News 205 He made the historian Yury Afanasyev dean of the State Historical Archive Faculty from where Afansiev could press for the opening of secret archives and the reassessment of Soviet history 172 Prominent dissidents like Andrei Sakharov were freed from internal exile or prison 206 Gorbachev saw glasnost as a necessary measure to ensure perestroika by alerting the Soviet populace to the nature of the country s problems in the hope that they would support his efforts to fix them 207 Particularly popular among the Soviet intelligentsia who became key Gorbachev supporters 208 glasnost boosted his domestic popularity but alarmed many Communist Party hardliners 209 For many Soviet citizens this newfound level of freedom of speech and press and its accompanying revelations about the country s past was uncomfortable 210 Some in the party thought Gorbachev was not going far enough in his reforms a prominent liberal critic was Yeltsin He had risen rapidly since 1985 attaining the role of party secretary in Moscow 211 Like many members of the government Gorbachev was skeptical of Yeltsin believing that he engaged in too much self promotion 212 Yeltsin was also critical of Gorbachev regarding him as patronizing 211 In early 1986 Yeltsin began sniping at Gorbachev in Politburo meetings 212 At the Twenty Seventh Party Congress in February Yeltsin called for more far reaching reforms than Gorbachev was initiating and criticized the party leadership although he did not cite Gorbachev by name claiming that a new cult of personality was forming Gorbachev then opened the floor to responses after which attendees publicly criticized Yeltsin for several hours 213 After this Gorbachev also criticized Yeltsin claiming that he cared only for himself and was politically illiterate 214 Yeltsin then resigned both as Moscow party secretary and as a member of the Politburo 214 From this point tensions between the two men developed into a mutual hatred 215 In April 1986 the Chernobyl disaster occurred 216 In the immediate aftermath officials fed Gorbachev incorrect information to downplay the incident As the scale of the disaster became apparent 336 000 people were evacuated from the area around Chernobyl 217 Taubman noted that the disaster marked a turning point for Gorbachev and the Soviet regime 218 Several days after it occurred he gave a televised report to the nation 219 He cited the disaster as evidence for what he regarded as widespread problems in Soviet society such as shoddy workmanship and workplace inertia 220 Gorbachev later described the incident as one which made him appreciate the scale of incompetence and cover ups in the Soviet Union 218 From April to the end of the year Gorbachev became increasingly open in his criticism of the Soviet system including food production state bureaucracy the military draft and the large size of the prison population 221 Foreign policy edit nbsp US president Reagan and Gorbachev meeting in Iceland 1986In a May 1985 speech given to the Soviet Foreign Ministry the first time a Soviet leader had directly addressed his country s diplomats Gorbachev spoke of a radical restructuring of foreign policy 222 A major issue facing his leadership was Soviet involvement in the Afghan Civil War which had then been going on for over five years 223 Over the course of the war the Soviet Army took heavy casualties and there was much opposition to Soviet involvement among both the public and military 223 On becoming leader Gorbachev saw withdrawal from the war as a key priority 224 In October 1985 he met with Afghan Marxist leader Babrak Karmal urging him to acknowledge the lack of widespread public support for his government and pursue a power sharing agreement with the opposition 224 That month the Politburo approved Gorbachev s decision to withdraw combat troops from Afghanistan although the last troops did not leave until February 1989 225 Gorbachev had inherited a renewed period of high tension in the Cold War 226 He believed strongly in the need to sharply improve relations with the United States he was appalled at the prospect of nuclear war was aware that the Soviet Union was unlikely to win the arms race and thought that the continued focus on high military spending was detrimental to his desire for domestic reform 226 US president Ronald Reagan publicly appeared to not want a de escalation of tensions having scrapped detente and arms controls initiating a military build up and calling the Soviet Union the evil empire 227 Both Gorbachev and Reagan wanted a summit to discuss the Cold War but each faced some opposition to such a move within their respective governments 228 They agreed to hold a summit in Geneva Switzerland in November 1985 229 In the buildup to this Gorbachev sought to improve relations with the US s NATO allies visiting France in October 1985 to meet with President Francois Mitterrand 230 At the Geneva summit discussions between Gorbachev and Reagan were sometimes heated and Gorbachev was initially frustrated that his US counterpart does not seem to hear what I am trying to say 231 As well as discussing the Cold War proxy conflicts in Afghanistan and Nicaragua and human rights issues the pair discussed the US s Strategic Defense Initiative SDI to which Gorbachev was strongly opposed 232 The duo s wives also met and spent time together at the summit 233 The summit ended with a joint commitment to avoiding nuclear war and to meet for two further summits in Washington DC in 1986 and in Moscow in 1987 232 Following the conference Gorbachev traveled to Prague to inform other Warsaw Pact leaders of developments 234 nbsp Gorbachev with Erich Honecker of East Germany Privately Gorbachev told Chernyaev that Honecker was a scumbag 235 In January 1986 Gorbachev publicly proposed a three stage programme for abolishing the world s nuclear weapons by the end of the 20th century 236 An agreement was then reached to meet with Reagan in Reykjavik Iceland in October 1986 Gorbachev wanted to secure guarantees that SDI would not be implemented and in return was willing to offer concessions including a 50 reduction in Soviet long range nuclear missiles 237 Both leaders agreed with the shared goal of abolishing nuclear weapons but Reagan refused to terminate the SDI program and no deal was reached 238 After the summit many of Reagan s allies criticized him for going along with the idea of abolishing nuclear weapons 239 Gorbachev meanwhile told the Politburo that Reagan was extraordinarily primitive troglodyte and intellectually feeble 239 In his relations with the developing world Gorbachev found many of its leaders professing revolutionary socialist credentials or a pro Soviet attitude such as Libya s Muammar Gaddafi and Syria s Hafez al Assad frustrating and his best personal relationship was instead with India s prime minister Rajiv Gandhi 223 He thought that the socialist camp of Marxist Leninist governed states the Eastern Bloc countries North Korea Vietnam and Cuba were a drain on the Soviet economy receiving a far greater amount of goods from the Soviet Union than they collectively gave in return 240 He sought improved relations with China a country whose Marxist government had severed ties with the Soviets in the Sino Soviet split and had since undergone its own structural reform In June 1985 he signed a US 14 billion five year trade agreement with the country and in July 1986 he proposed troop reductions along the Soviet Chinese border hailing China as a great socialist country 241 He made clear his desire for Soviet membership of the Asian Development Bank and for greater ties to Pacific countries especially China and Japan 242 1987 1989 further reforms edit nbsp Gorbachev in 1987Domestic reforms edit In January 1987 Gorbachev attended a Central Committee plenum where he talked about perestroika and democratization while criticizing widespread corruption 243 He considered putting a proposal to allow multi party elections into his speech but decided against doing so 244 After the plenum he focused his attentions on economic reform holding discussions with government officials and economists 245 Many economists proposed reducing ministerial controls on the economy and allowing state owned enterprises to set their own targets Ryzhkov and other government figures were skeptical 246 In June Gorbachev finished his report on economic reform It reflected a compromise ministers would retain the ability to set output targets but these would not be considered binding 247 That month a plenum accepted his recommendations and the Supreme Soviet passed a law on enterprises implementing the changes 248 Economic problems remained by the late 1980s there were still widespread shortages of basic goods rising inflation and declining living standards 249 These stoked a number of miners strikes in 1989 250 By 1987 the ethos of glasnost had spread through Soviet society journalists were writing increasingly openly 251 many economic problems were being publicly revealed 252 and studies appeared that critically reassessed Soviet history 253 Gorbachev was broadly supportive describing glasnost as the crucial irreplaceable weapon of perestroika 251 He nevertheless insisted that people should use the newfound freedom responsibly stating that journalists and writers should avoid sensationalism and be completely objective in their reporting 254 Nearly two hundred previously restricted Soviet films were publicly released and a range of Western films were also made available 255 In 1989 Soviet responsibility for the 1940 Katyn massacre was finally revealed 256 In September 1987 the government stopped jamming the signal of the British Broadcasting Corporation and Voice of America 257 The reforms also included greater tolerance of religion 258 an Easter service was broadcast on Soviet television for the first time and the millennium celebrations of the Russian Orthodox Church were given media attention 259 Independent organizations appeared most supportive of Gorbachev although the largest Pamyat was ultra nationalist and antisemitic in nature 260 Gorbachev also announced that Soviet Jews wishing to migrate to Israel would be allowed to do so something previously prohibited 261 In August 1987 Gorbachev holidayed in Nizhnyaya Oreanda in Oreanda Crimea there writing Perestroika New Thinking for Our Country and Our World 262 at the suggestion of US publishers 263 For the 70th anniversary of the October Revolution of 1917 which brought Lenin and the Communist Party to power Gorbachev produced a speech on October and Perestroika The Revolution Continues Delivered to a ceremonial joint session of the Central Committee and the Supreme Soviet in the Kremlin Palace of Congresses it praised Lenin but criticized Stalin for overseeing mass human rights abuses 264 Party hardliners thought the speech went too far liberalisers thought it did not go far enough 265 In March 1988 the magazine Sovetskaya Rossiya published an open letter by the teacher Nina Andreyeva It criticized elements of Gorbachev s reforms attacking what she regarded as the denigration of the Stalinist era and arguing that a reformer clique whom she implied were mostly Jews and ethnic minorities were to blame 266 Over 900 Soviet newspapers reprinted it and anti reformists rallied around it many reformers panicked fearing a backlash against perestroika 267 On returning from Yugoslavia Gorbachev called a Politburo meeting to discuss the letter at which he confronted those hardliners supporting its sentiment Ultimately the Politburo arrived at a unanimous decision to express disapproval of Andreyeva s letter and publish a rebuttal in Pravda 268 Yakovlev and Gorbachev s rebuttal claimed that those who look everywhere for internal enemies were not patriots and presented Stalin s guilt for massive repressions and lawlessness as enormous and unforgiveable 269 Forming the Congress of People s Deputies edit Although the next party congress was not scheduled until 1991 Gorbachev convened the 19th Party Conference in its place in June 1988 He hoped that by allowing a broader range of people to attend than at previous conferences he would gain additional support for his reforms 270 With sympathetic officials and academics Gorbachev drafted plans for reforms that would shift power away from the Politburo and towards the soviets While the soviets had become largely powerless bodies that rubber stamped Politburo policies he wanted them to become year round legislatures He proposed the formation of a new institution the Congress of People s Deputies whose members were to be elected in a largely free vote 271 This congress would in turn elect a USSR Supreme Soviet which would do most of the legislating 272 nbsp Gorbachev and his wife Raisa on a trip to Poland in 1988These proposals reflected Gorbachev s desire for more democracy however in his view there was a major impediment in that the Soviet people had developed a slave psychology after centuries of Tsarist autocracy and Marxist Leninist authoritarianism 273 Held at the Kremlin Palace of Congresses the conference brought together 5 000 delegates and featured arguments between hardliners and liberalisers The proceedings were televised and for the first time since the 1920s voting was not unanimous 274 In the months following the conference Gorbachev focused on redesigning and streamlining the party apparatus the Central Committee staff which then numbered around 3 000 was halved while various Central Committee departments were merged to cut down the overall number from twenty to nine 275 In March and April 1989 elections to the new Congress were held 276 Of the 2 250 legislators to be elected one hundred termed the Red Hundred by the press were directly chosen by the Communist Party with Gorbachev ensuring many were reformists 277 Although over 85 of elected deputies were party members 278 many of those elected including Sakharov and Yeltsin were liberalisers 279 Gorbachev was happy with the result describing it as an enormous political victory under extraordinarily difficult circumstances 280 The new Congress convened in May 1989 281 Gorbachev was then elected its chair the new de facto head of state with 2 123 votes in favor to 87 against 282 Its sessions were televised live 282 and its members elected the new Supreme Soviet 283 At the Congress Sakharov spoke repeatedly exasperating Gorbachev with his calls for greater liberalization and the introduction of private property 284 When Sakharov died shortly after Yeltsin became the figurehead of the liberal opposition 285 Relations with China and Western states edit nbsp Gorbachev in one to one discussions with Reagan at a summit in Geneva Switzerland 1985Gorbachev tried to improve relations with the UK France and West Germany 286 like previous Soviet leaders he was interested in pulling Western Europe away from US influence 287 Calling for greater pan European co operation he publicly spoke of a Common European Home and of a Europe from the Atlantic to the Urals 288 In March 1987 Thatcher visited Gorbachev in Moscow despite their ideological differences they liked one another 289 In April 1989 he visited London lunching with Elizabeth II 290 In May 1987 Gorbachev again visited France and in November 1988 Mitterrand visited him in Moscow 291 The West German chancellor Helmut Kohl had initially offended Gorbachev by comparing him to Nazi propagandist Joseph Goebbels although he later informally apologized and in October 1988 visited Moscow 292 In June 1989 Gorbachev then visited Kohl in West Germany 293 In November 1989 he also visited Italy meeting with Pope John Paul II 294 Gorbachev s relationships with these West European leaders were typically far warmer than those he had with their Eastern Bloc counterparts 295 Gorbachev continued to pursue good relations with China to heal the Sino Soviet Split In May 1989 he visited Beijing and there met its leader Deng Xiaoping Deng shared Gorbachev s belief in economic reform but rejected calls for democratization 296 Pro democracy students had massed in Tiananmen Square during Gorbachev s visit but after he left were massacred by troops Gorbachev did not condemn the massacre publicly but it reinforced his commitment not to use violent force in dealing with pro democracy protests in the Eastern Bloc 297 Following the failures of earlier talks with the US in February 1987 Gorbachev held a conference in Moscow titled For a World without Nuclear Weapons for Mankind s Survival which was attended by various international celebrities and politicians 298 By publicly pushing for nuclear disarmament Gorbachev sought to give the Soviet Union the moral high ground and weaken the West s self perception of moral superiority 299 Aware that Reagan would not budge on SDI Gorbachev focused on reducing Intermediate Range Nuclear Forces to which Reagan was receptive 300 In April 1987 Gorbachev discussed the issue with US secretary of state George P Shultz in Moscow he agreed to eliminate the Soviets SS 23 rockets and allow US inspectors to visit Soviet military facilities to ensure compliance 301 There was hostility to such compromises from the Soviet military but following the May 1987 Mathias Rust incident in which a West German teenager was able to fly undetected from Finland and land in Red Square Gorbachev fired many senior military figures for incompetence 302 In December 1987 Gorbachev visited Washington DC where he and Reagan signed the Intermediate Range Nuclear Forces Treaty 303 Taubman called it one of the highest points of Gorbachev s career 304 nbsp Reagan and Gorbachev with wives Nancy and Raisa respectively attending a dinner at the Soviet Embassy in Washington 1987A second US Soviet summit occurred in Moscow in May June 1988 which Gorbachev expected to be largely symbolic 305 Again he and Reagan criticized each other s countries Reagan raising Soviet restrictions on religious freedom Gorbachev highlighting poverty and racial discrimination in the US but Gorbachev related that they spoke on friendly terms 306 They reached an agreement on notifying each other before conducting ballistic missile tests and made agreements on transport fishing and radio navigation 307 At the summit Reagan told reporters that he no longer considered the Soviet Union an evil empire and the two revealed that they considered themselves friends 308 The third summit was held in New York City in December 309 Arriving there Gorbachev gave a speech to the United Nations General Assembly where he announced a unilateral reduction in the Soviet armed forces by 500 000 he also announced that 50 000 troops would be withdrawn from Central and Eastern Europe 310 He then met with Reagan and President elect George H W Bush following which he rushed home skipping a planned visit to Cuba to deal with the Armenian earthquake 311 On becoming US president Bush appeared interested in continuing talks with Gorbachev but wanted to appear tougher on the Soviets than Reagan had to allay criticism from the right wing of his Republican Party 312 In December 1989 Gorbachev and Bush met at the Malta Summit 313 Bush offered to assist the Soviet economy by suspending the Jackson Vanik amendment and repealing the Stevenson and Baird Amendments 314 There they agreed to a joint press conference the first time that a US and Soviet leader had done so 315 Gorbachev also urged Bush to normalize relations with Cuba and meet its president Fidel Castro although Bush refused to do so 316 Nationality question and the Eastern Bloc edit nbsp Gorbachev meeting the Romanian Marxist Leninist leader Nicolae Ceaușescu in 1985 According to Taubman Ceaușescu was Gorbachev s favorite punching bag 223 On taking power Gorbachev found some unrest among different national groups within the Soviet Union In December 1986 riots broke out in several Kazakh cities after a Russian was appointed head of the region 317 In 1987 Crimean Tatars protested in Moscow to demand resettlement in Crimea the area from which they had been deported on Stalin s orders in 1944 Gorbachev ordered a commission headed by Gromyko to examine their situation Gromyko s report opposed calls for assisting Tatar resettlement in Crimea 318 By 1988 the Soviet nationality question was increasingly pressing 319 In February the administration of the Nagorno Karabakh Autonomous Oblast officially requested that it be transferred from the Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist Republic to the Armenian Soviet Socialist Republic the majority of the region s population were ethnically Armenian and wanted unification with other majority Armenian areas 320 As rival Armenian and Azerbaijani demonstrations took place in Nagorno Karabakh Gorbachev called an emergency meeting of the Politburo 321 Ultimately Gorbachev promised greater autonomy for Nagorno Karabakh but refused the transfer fearing that it would set off similar ethnic tensions and demands throughout the Soviet Union 322 That month in the Azerbaijani city of Sumgait Azerbaijani gangs began killing members of the Armenian minority Local troops tried to quell the unrest but were attacked by mobs 323 The Politburo ordered additional troops into the city but in contrast to those like Ligachev who wanted a massive display of force Gorbachev urged restraint He believed that the situation could be resolved through a political solution urging talks between the Armenian and Azerbaijani Communist Parties 324 Further anti Armenian violence broke out in Baku in January 1990 followed by the Soviet Army killing about 150 Azeris 325 Problems also emerged in the Georgian Soviet Socialist Republic in April 1989 Soviet troops crushed Georgian pro independence demonstrations in Tbilisi resulting in various deaths 326 Independence sentiment was also rising in the Baltic states the Supreme Soviets of the Estonian Lithuanian and Latvian Soviet Socialist Republics declared their economic autonomy from the Soviet central government and introduced measures to restrict Russian immigration 327 In August 1989 protesters formed the Baltic Way a human chain across the three countries to symbolize their wish to restore independence 328 That month the Lithuanian Supreme Soviet ruled the 1940 Soviet annexation of their country to be illegal 329 in January 1990 Gorbachev visited the republic to encourage it to remain part of the Soviet Union 330 nbsp Berlin Wall Thank you Gorbi October 1990Gorbachev rejected the Brezhnev Doctrine the idea that the Soviet Union had the right to intervene militarily in other Marxist Leninist countries if their governments were threatened 331 In December 1987 he announced the withdrawal of 500 000 Soviet troops from Central and Eastern Europe 332 While pursuing domestic reforms he did not publicly support reformers elsewhere in the Eastern Bloc 333 Hoping instead to lead by example he later related that he did not want to interfere in their internal affairs but he may have feared that pushing reform in Central and Eastern Europe would have angered his own hardliners too much 334 Some Eastern Bloc leaders like Hungary s Janos Kadar and Poland s Wojciech Jaruzelski were sympathetic to reform others like Romania s Nicolae Ceaușescu were hostile to it 335 In May 1987 Gorbachev visited Romania where he was appalled by the state of the country later telling the Politburo that there human dignity has absolutely no value 336 He and Ceaușescu disliked each other and argued over Gorbachev s reforms 337 In August 1989 the Pan European Picnic which Otto von Habsburg planned as a test of Gorbachev resulted in a large mass exodus of East German refugees According to the Sinatra Doctrine the Soviet Union did not interfere and the media informed Eastern European population realized that on the one hand their rulers were increasingly losing power and on the other hand the Iron Curtain was falling apart as a bracket for the Eastern Bloc 338 339 340 Unraveling of the USSR editIn the Revolutions of 1989 most of the Marxist Leninist states of Central and Eastern Europe held multi party elections resulting in regime change 341 In most countries like Poland and Hungary this was achieved peacefully but in Romania the revolution turned violent and led to Ceaușescu s overthrow and execution 341 Gorbachev was too preoccupied with domestic problems to pay much attention to these events 342 He believed that democratic elections would not lead Eastern European countries into abandoning their commitment to socialism 343 In 1989 he visited East Germany for the fortieth anniversary of its founding 344 shortly after in November the East German government allowed its citizens to cross the Berlin Wall a decision Gorbachev praised Over the following years much of the wall was demolished 345 Neither Gorbachev nor Thatcher or Mitterrand wanted a swift reunification of Germany aware that it would likely become the dominant European power Gorbachev wanted a gradual process of German integration but Kohl began calling for rapid reunification 346 With German reunification in 1990 many observers declared the Cold War over 347 1990 1991 presidency of the Soviet Union edit nbsp Gorbachev addressing the United Nations General Assembly in 1988 During the speech he dramatically announced deep unilateral cuts in Soviet military forces in Eastern Europe In February 1990 both liberalisers and Marxist Leninist hardliners intensified their attacks on Gorbachev 348 A liberalizer march took place in Moscow criticizing Communist Party rule 349 while at a Central Committee meeting the hardliner Vladimir Brovikov accused Gorbachev of reducing the country to anarchy and ruin and of pursuing Western approval at the expense of the Soviet Union and the Marxist Leninist cause 350 Gorbachev was aware that the Central Committee could still oust him as general secretary and so decided to reformulate the role of head of government to a presidency from which he could not be removed 351 He decided that the presidential election should be held by the Congress of People s Deputies He chose this over a public vote because he thought the latter would escalate tensions and feared that he might lose it 352 a spring 1990 poll nevertheless still showed him as the most popular politician in the country 353 In March the Congress of People s Deputies held the first and only Soviet presidential election in which Gorbachev was the only candidate He secured 1 329 in favor to 495 against 313 votes were invalid or absent He therefore became the first executive President of the Soviet Union 354 A new 18 member Presidential Council de facto replaced the Politburo 355 At the same Congress meeting he presented the idea of repealing Article 6 of the Soviet constitution which had ratified the Communist Party as the ruling party of the Soviet Union The Congress passed the reform undermining the de jure nature of the one party state 356 In the 1990 elections for the Russian Supreme Soviet the Communist Party faced challengers from an alliance of liberalisers known as Democratic Russia the latter did particularly well in urban centers 357 Yeltsin was elected the parliament s chair something Gorbachev was unhappy about 358 That year opinion polls showed Yeltsin overtaking Gorbachev as the most popular politician in the Soviet Union 353 Gorbachev struggled to understand Yeltsin s growing popularity commenting he drinks like a fish he s inarticulate he comes up with the devil knows what he s like a worn out record 359 The Russian Supreme Soviet was now out of Gorbachev s control 359 in June 1990 it declared that in the Russian Republic its laws took precedence over those of the Soviet central government 360 Amid a growth in Russian nationalist sentiment Gorbachev had reluctantly allowed the formation of a Communist Party of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic as a branch of the larger Soviet Communist Party Gorbachev attended its first congress in June but soon found it dominated by hardliners who opposed his reformist stance 361 German reunification and the Gulf War edit In January 1990 Gorbachev privately agreed to permit East German reunification with West Germany but rejected the idea that a unified Germany could retain West Germany s NATO membership 362 His compromise that Germany might retain both NATO and Warsaw Pact memberships did not attract support 363 On 9 February 1990 in a phone conversation with James Baker then the US secretary of state he set out his position that a broadening of the NATO zone is not acceptable to which Baker agreed Scholars are puzzled why Gorbachev never pursued a written pledge 364 In May 1990 he visited the US for talks with President Bush 365 there he agreed that an independent Germany would have the right to choose its international alliances 363 Ultimately he acquiesced to the reunification on the condition that NATO troops not be posted to the territory of Eastern Germany 366 There remains some confusion over whether US secretary of state James Baker led Gorbachev to believe that NATO would not expand into other countries in Eastern Europe as well There was no oral or written US promise that explicitly said so Gorbachev himself has stated that he was only made such a promise regarding East Germany and that it was kept 367 368 In July Kohl visited Moscow and Gorbachev informed him that the Soviets would not oppose a reunified Germany being part of NATO 369 Domestically Gorbachev s critics accused him of betraying the national interest 370 more broadly they were angry that Gorbachev had allowed the Eastern Bloc to move away from direct Soviet influence 371 nbsp In September 1990 Gorbachev met repeatedly with US president George Bush at the Helsinki Summit In August 1990 Saddam Hussein s Iraqi government invaded Kuwait Gorbachev endorsed President Bush s condemnation of it 372 This brought criticism from many in the Soviet state apparatus who saw Hussein as a key ally in the Persian Gulf and feared for the safety of the 9 000 Soviet citizens in Iraq although Gorbachev argued that the Iraqis were the clear aggressors in the situation 373 In November the Soviets endorsed a UN Resolution permitting force to be used in expelling the Iraqi Army from Kuwait 374 Gorbachev later called it a watershed in world politics the first time the superpowers acted together in a regional crisis 375 However when the US announced plans for a ground invasion Gorbachev opposed it urging instead a peaceful solution 376 In October 1990 Gorbachev was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize he was flattered but acknowledged mixed feelings about the accolade 377 Polls indicated that 90 of Soviet citizens disapproved of the award which was widely seen as a Western and anti Soviet accolade 378 With the Soviet budget deficit climbing and no domestic money markets to provide the state with loans Gorbachev looked elsewhere 379 Throughout 1991 Gorbachev requested sizable loans from Western countries and Japan hoping to keep the Soviet economy afloat and ensure the success of perestroika 380 Although the Soviet Union had been excluded from the G7 Gorbachev secured an invitation to its London summit in July 1991 381 There he continued to call for financial assistance Mitterrand and Kohl backed him 382 while Thatcher no longer in office also urged Western leaders to agree 383 Most G7 members were reluctant instead offering technical assistance and proposing the Soviets receive special associate status rather than full membership of the World Bank and International Monetary Fund 384 Gorbachev was frustrated that the US would spend 100 billion on the Gulf War but would not offer his country loans 385 Other countries were more forthcoming West Germany had given the Soviets DM60 billion by mid 1991 386 Bush visited Moscow in late July when he and Gorbachev concluded ten years of negotiations by signing the START I treaty a bilateral agreement on the reduction and limitation of strategic offensive arms 387 August coup and government crises edit Further information 1991 Soviet coup d etat attempt nbsp President of the Soviet Union Mikhail Gorbachev October 1991At the 28th Communist Party Congress in July 1990 hardliners criticized the reformists but Gorbachev was re elected party leader with the support of three quarters of delegates and his choice of deputy general secretary Vladimir Ivashko was also elected 388 Seeking compromise with the liberalizers Gorbachev assembled a team of both his own and Yeltsin s advisers to come up with an economic reform package the result was the 500 Days programme This called for further decentralization and some privatization 389 Gorbachev described the plan as modern socialism rather than a return to capitalism but had many doubts about it 390 In September Yeltsin presented the plan to the Russian Supreme Soviet which backed it 391 Many in the Communist Party and state apparatus warned against it arguing that it would create marketplace chaos rampant inflation and unprecedented levels of unemployment 392 The 500 Days plan was abandoned 393 At this Yeltsin railed against Gorbachev in an October speech claiming that Russia would no longer accept a subordinate position to the Soviet government 394 By mid November 1990 much of the press was calling for Gorbachev to resign and predicting civil war 395 Hardliners were urging Gorbachev to disband the presidential council and arrest vocal liberals in the media 396 In November he addressed the Supreme Soviet where he announced an eight point program which included governmental reforms among them the abolition of the presidential council 397 By this point Gorbachev was isolated from many of his former close allies and aides 398 Yakovlev had moved out of his inner circle and Shevardnadze had resigned 399 His support among the intelligentsia was declining 400 and by the end of 1990 his approval ratings had plummeted 401 Amid growing dissent in the Baltics especially Lithuania in January 1991 Gorbachev demanded that the Lithuanian Supreme Council rescind its pro independence reforms 402 Soviet troops occupied several Vilnius buildings and attacked protesters 403 15 of whom were killed 404 Gorbachev was widely blamed by liberalizers with Yeltsin calling for his resignation 405 Gorbachev denied sanctioning the military operation although some in the military claimed that he had the truth of the matter was never clearly established 406 Fearing more civil disturbances that month Gorbachev banned demonstrations and ordered troops to patrol Soviet cities alongside the police This further alienated the liberalizers but was not enough to win over hardliners 407 Wanting to preserve the Union in April Gorbachev and the leaders of nine Soviet republics jointly pledged to prepare a treaty that would renew the federation under a new constitution but six of the republics Estonia Latvia Lithuania Moldova Georgia and Armenia did not endorse this 408 A referendum on the issue brought 76 4 in favor of continued federation but the six rebellious republics had not taken part 409 Negotiations took place to decide what form the new constitution would take again bringing together Gorbachev and Yeltsin in discussion it was planned to be formally signed in August 410 nbsp Tens of thousands of anti coup protesters surrounding the White House MoscowIn August Gorbachev and his family holidayed at their dacha Zarya Dawn in Foros Crimea 411 Two weeks into his holiday a group of senior Communist Party figures the Gang of Eight calling themselves the State Committee on the State of Emergency launched a coup d etat to seize control of the Soviet Union 412 The phone lines to his dacha were cut and a group arrived including Boldin Shenin Baklanov and General Varennikov informing him of the take over 413 The coup leaders demanded that Gorbachev formally declare a state of emergency in the country but he refused 414 Gorbachev and his family were kept under house arrest in their dacha 415 The coup plotters publicly announced that Gorbachev was ill and thus Vice President Yanayev would take charge of the country 416 Yeltsin now President of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic went inside the Moscow White House Tens of thousands of protesters massed outside it to prevent troops storming the building to arrest him 417 Outside of the White House Yeltsin atop a tank gave a memorable speech condemning the coup 418 Gorbachev feared that the coup plotters would order him killed so had his guards barricade his dacha 419 However the coup s leaders realized that they lacked sufficient support and ended their efforts On 21 August Vladimir Kryuchkov Dmitry Yazov Oleg Baklanov Anatoly Lukyanov and Vladimir Ivashko arrived at Gorbachev s dacha to inform him that they were doing so 419 That evening Gorbachev returned to Moscow where he thanked Yeltsin and the protesters for helping to undermine the coup 420 At a subsequent press conference he pledged to reform the Soviet Communist Party 421 Two days later he resigned as its general secretary and called on the Central Committee to dissolve 422 423 Several members of the coup committed suicide others were fired 424 Gorbachev attended a session of the Russian Supreme Soviet on 23 August where Yeltsin aggressively criticized him for having appointed and promoted many of the coup members to start with 425 Final days and collapse edit Main article Dissolution of the Soviet Union After the coup the Supreme Soviet indefinitely suspended all Communist Party activity effectively ending communist rule in the Soviet Union 426 427 From then on the country collapsed with dramatic speed nbsp Leaders of the Soviet Republics sign the Belovezha Accords which eliminated the USSR and established the Commonwealth of Independent States 1991 On 30 October Gorbachev attended a conference in Madrid trying to revive the Israeli Palestinian peace process The event was co sponsored by the US and Soviet Union one of the first examples of such cooperation between the two countries There he again met with Bush 428 En route home he traveled to France where he stayed with Mitterrand at the latter s home near Bayonne 429 To keep unity within the country Gorbachev continued to pursue plans for a new union treaty but found increasing opposition to the idea of a continued federal state as the leaders of various Soviet republics bowed to growing nationalist pressure 430 Yeltsin stated that he would veto any idea of a unified state instead favoring a confederation with little central authority 431 Only the leaders of Kazakhstan and Kirghizia supported Gorbachev s approach 432 The referendum in Ukraine on 1 December with a 90 turnout for secession from the Union was a fatal blow Gorbachev had expected Ukrainians to reject independence 433 nbsp Changes in national boundaries after the end of the Cold War and the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991Without Gorbachev s knowledge Yeltsin met with Ukrainian president Leonid Kravchuk and Belarusian president Stanislav Shushkevich in Belovezha Forest near Brest Belarus on 8 December and signed the Belavezha Accords which declared the Soviet Union had ceased to exist and formed the Commonwealth of Independent States CIS as its successor 434 Gorbachev only learned of this development when Shushkevich phoned him Gorbachev was furious 435 He desperately looked for an opportunity to preserve the Soviet Union hoping in vain that the media and intelligentsia might rally against the idea of its dissolution 436 Ukrainian Belarusian and Russian Supreme Soviets then ratified the establishment of the CIS 437 On 9 December Gorbachev issued a statement calling the CIS agreement illegal and dangerous 438 439 On 20 December the leaders of 11 of the 12 remaining republics all except Georgia met in Kazakhstan and signed the Alma Ata Protocol agreeing to dismantle the Soviet Union and formally establish the CIS They also provisionally accepted Gorbachev s resignation as president of what remained of the Soviet Union Accepting the fait accompli of the Soviet Union s dissolution Gorbachev revealed that he would resign as soon as he saw that the CIS was a reality 440 441 Gorbachev reached a deal with Yeltsin that called for Gorbachev to formally announce his resignation as Soviet president and Commander in Chief on 25 December before vacating the Kremlin by 29 December 442 Yakovlev Chernyaev and Shevardnadze joined Gorbachev to help him write a resignation speech 440 Gorbachev then gave his speech in the Kremlin in front of television cameras allowing for international broadcast 443 In it he announced I hereby discontinue my activities at the post of President of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics He expressed regret for the breakup of the Soviet Union but cited what he saw as the achievements of his administration political and religious freedom the end of totalitarianism the introduction of democracy and a market economy and an end to the arms race and Cold War 444 Gorbachev was the third out of eight Soviet leaders after Malenkov and Khrushchev not to die in office 445 446 The following day 26 December the Soviet of the Republics the upper house of the Supreme Soviet of the Soviet Union formally voted the country out of existence 447 As of 31 December 1991 all Soviet institutions that had not been taken over by Russia ceased to function 448 449 Post USSR life edit1991 1999 initial years edit nbsp Gorbachev visiting Reagan at Rancho del Cielo in 1992 nbsp Gorbachev giving a speech at the Legislative Yuan in Taiwan 1994Out of office Gorbachev had more time to spend with his wife and family 450 He and Raisa initially lived in their dilapidated dacha on Rublevskoe Shosse and were also allowed to privatize their smaller apartment on Kosygin Street 450 He focused on establishing his International Foundation for Socio Economic and Political Studies or Gorbachev Foundation launched in March 1992 451 Yakovlev and Revenko were its first vice presidents 452 Its initial tasks were in analyzing and publishing material on the history of perestroika as well as defending the policy from what it called slander and falsifications The foundation also tasked itself with monitoring and critiquing life in post Soviet Russia presenting alternative development forms to those pursued by Yeltsin 452 To finance his foundation Gorbachev began lecturing internationally charging large fees to do so 452 On a visit to Japan he was well received and given multiple honorary degrees 453 In 1992 he toured the US in a Forbes private jet to raise money for his foundation During the trip he met up with the Reagans for a social visit 453 From there he went to Spain where he attended the Expo 92 world fair in Seville and met with Prime Minister Felipe Gonzalez who had become a friend of his 454 He further visited Israel and Germany where he was received warmly by many politicians who praised his role in facilitating German reunification 455 To supplement his lecture fees and book sales Gorbachev appeared in commercials such as a television advertisement for Pizza Hut another for the OBB 456 and photograph advertisements for Apple Computer 457 and Louis Vuitton enabling him to keep the foundation afloat 458 459 With his wife s assistance Gorbachev worked on his memoirs which were published in Russian in 1995 and in English the following year 460 He also began writing a monthly syndicated column for The New York Times 461 In 1993 Gorbachev launched Green Cross International which focused on encouraging sustainable futures and then the World Political Forum 462 In 1995 he initiated the World Summit of Nobel Peace Laureates 463 External videos nbsp Booknotes interview with Gorbachev on his memoirs 24 November 1996 C SPANGorbachev had promised to refrain from criticizing Yeltsin while the latter pursued democratic reforms but soon the two men were publicly criticizing each other again 464 After Yeltsin s decision to lift price caps generated massive inflation and plunged many Russians into poverty Gorbachev openly criticized him comparing the reform to Stalin s policy of forced collectivization 464 After pro Yeltsin parties did poorly in the 1993 legislative election Gorbachev called on him to resign 465 In 1995 his foundation held a conference on The Intelligentsia and Perestroika It was there that Gorbachev proposed to the Duma a law that would reduce many of the presidential powers established by Yeltsin s 1993 constitution 466 Gorbachev continued to defend perestroika but acknowledged that he had made tactical errors as Soviet leader 462 While he still believed that Russia was undergoing a process of democratization he concluded that it would take decades rather than years as he had previously thought 467 nbsp Gorbachev with Argentine president Carlos Menem in 1999In contrast to her husband s political activities Raisa had focused on campaigning for children s charities 468 In 1997 she founded a sub division of the Gorbachev Foundation known as Raisa Maksimovna s Club to focus on improving women s welfare in Russia 469 The Foundation had initially been housed in the former Social Science Institute building but Yeltsin introduced limits to the number of rooms it could use there 470 the American philanthropist Ted Turner then donated over 1 million to enable the foundation to build new premises on the Leningradsky Prospekt 471 In 1999 Gorbachev made his first visit to Australia where he gave a speech to the country s parliament 472 Shortly after in July Raisa was diagnosed with leukemia With the assistance of German chancellor Gerhard Schroder she was transferred to a cancer center in Munster Germany and there underwent chemotherapy 473 In September she fell into a coma and died 224 After Raisa s passing Gorbachev s daughter Irina and his two granddaughters moved into his Moscow home to live with him 474 When questioned by journalists he said that he would never remarry 461 nbsp Gorbachev daughter Irina and his wife s sister Lyudmila at the funeral of Raisa 19991996 presidential campaign edit Main article Mikhail Gorbachev 1996 presidential campaign The Russian presidential elections were scheduled for June 1996 and although his wife and most of his friends urged him not to run Gorbachev decided to do so 475 He hated the idea that the election would result in a run off between Yeltsin and Gennady Zyuganov the Communist Party of the Russian Federation candidate whom Yeltsin saw as a Stalinist hardliner He never expected to win outright but thought a centrist bloc could be formed around either himself or one of the other candidates with similar views such as Grigory Yavlinsky Svyatoslav Fyodorov or Alexander Lebed 476 After securing the necessary one million signatures of nomination he announced his candidacy in March 477 Launching his campaign he traveled across Russia giving rallies in twenty cities 477 He repeatedly faced anti Gorbachev protesters while some pro Yeltsin local officials tried to hamper his campaign by banning local media from covering it or by refusing him access to venues 478 In the election Gorbachev came seventh with approximately 386 000 votes or around 0 5 of the total 479 Yeltsin and Zyuganov went through to the second round where the former was victorious 479 1999 2008 promoting social democracy in Putin s Russia edit nbsp Gorbachev attended the inauguration of Vladimir Putin in May 2000 In December 1999 Yeltsin resigned and was succeeded by his deputy Vladimir Putin who then won the March 2000 presidential election 480 Gorbachev attended Putin s inauguration ceremony in May the first time he had entered the Kremlin since 1991 481 Gorbachev initially welcomed Putin s rise seeing him as an anti Yeltsin figure 462 Although he spoke out against some of the Putin government s actions Gorbachev also had praise for the new government in 2002 he said I ve been in the same skin That s what allows me to say that what Putin has done is in the interest of the majority 482 At the time he believed Putin to be a committed democrat who nevertheless had to use a certain dose of authoritarianism to stabilize the economy and rebuild the state after the Yeltsin era 481 At Putin s request Gorbachev became co chair of the Petersburg Dialogue project between high ranking Russians and Germans 480 In 2000 Gorbachev helped form the Russian United Social Democratic Party 483 In June 2002 he participated in a meeting with Putin who praised the venture suggesting that a center left party could be good for Russia and that he would be open to working with it 482 In 2003 Gorbachev s party merged with the Social Democratic Party to form the Social Democratic Party of Russia 483 which however faced much internal division and failed to gain traction with voters 483 Gorbachev resigned as party leader in May 2004 following a disagreement with the party s chairman over the direction taken in the 2003 election campaign The party was later banned in 2007 by the Supreme Court of the Russian Federation due to its failure to establish local offices with at least 500 members in the majority of Russian regions which is required by Russian law for a political organization to be listed as a party 484 Later that year Gorbachev founded a new movement the Union of Social Democrats Stating that it would not contest the forthcoming elections Gorbachev declared We are fighting for power but only for power over people s minds 485 Gorbachev was critical of US hostility to Putin arguing that the US government doesn t want Russia to rise again as a global power and wants to continue as the sole superpower in charge of the world 486 More broadly Gorbachev was critical of US policy following the Cold War arguing that the West had attempted to turn Russia into some kind of backwater 487 He rejected the idea expressed by Bush that the US had won the Cold War arguing that both sides had cooperated to end the conflict 487 He declared that since the fall of the Soviet Union the US rather than cooperating with Russia had conspired to build a new empire headed by themselves 488 He was critical of how the US had expanded NATO right up to Russia s borders despite their initial assurances that they would not do so citing this as evidence that the US government could not be trusted 487 489 He spoke out against the 1999 NATO bombing of Yugoslavia because it lacked UN backing as well as the 2003 invasion of Iraq led by the US 487 In June 2004 Gorbachev nevertheless attended Reagan s state funeral 490 and in 2007 visited New Orleans to see the damage caused by Hurricane Katrina 491 2008 2022 growing criticism of Putin and foreign policy remarks edit Barred by the constitution from serving more than two consecutive terms as president Putin stood down in 2008 and was succeeded by his chosen successor Dmitry Medvedev who reached out to Gorbachev in ways that Putin had not 486 In September 2008 Gorbachev and business oligarch Alexander Lebedev announced they would form the Independent Democratic Party of Russia 492 and in May 2009 Gorbachev announced that the launch was imminent 493 After the outbreak of the Russo Georgian War between Russia and South Ossetian separatists on one side and Georgia on the other Gorbachev spoke out against US support for Georgian president Mikheil Saakashvili and for moving to bring the Caucasus into the sphere of its national interest 494 495 Gorbachev nevertheless remained critical of Russia s government and criticized the 2011 parliamentary elections as being rigged in favor of the governing party United Russia and called for them to be re held 496 After protests broke out in Moscow over the election Gorbachev praised the protesters 496 nbsp Gorbachev right being introduced to US president Barack Obama by US vice president Joe Biden March 2009 US ambassador to Russia Michael McFaul is pictured in the background In 2009 Gorbachev released Songs for Raisa an album of Russian romantic ballads sung by him and accompanied by musician Andrei Makarevich to raise money for a charity devoted to his late wife 497 That year he also met with US president Barack Obama in efforts to reset strained US Russian relations 498 and attended an event in Berlin commemorating the twentieth anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall 499 In 2011 an eightieth birthday gala for him was held at London s Royal Albert Hall featuring tributes from Shimon Peres Lech Walesa Michel Rocard and Arnold Schwarzenegger Proceeds from the event went to the Raisa Gorbachev Foundation 500 That year Medvedev awarded him the Order of St Andrew the Apostle the First Called 496 After Putin announced his intention to run for president in the 2012 election Gorbachev was opposed to the idea 501 502 503 He complained that Putin s new measures had tightened the screws on Russia and that the president was trying to completely subordinate society adding that United Russia now embodied the worst bureaucratic features of the Soviet Communist party 501 In 2015 Gorbachev ceased his frequent international traveling 504 He continued to speak out on issues affecting Russia and the world In 2014 he defended the Crimean status referendum and Russia s annexation of Crimea that began the Russo Ukrainian War 487 In his judgment while Crimea was transferred from Russia to Ukraine in 1954 when both were part of the Soviet Union the Crimean people had not been asked at the time whereas in the 2014 referendum they had 505 After sanctions were placed on Russia as a result of the annexation Gorbachev spoke out against them 506 His comments led to Ukraine banning him from entering the country for five years 507 Russia can succeed only through democracy Russia is ready for political competition a real multiparty system fair elections and regular rotation of government This should define the role and responsibility of the president Gorbachev 2017 508 At a November 2014 event marking 25 years since the fall of the Berlin Wall Gorbachev warned that the ongoing war in Donbas had brought the world to the brink of a new Cold War and he accused Western powers particularly the US of adopting an attitude of triumphalism towards Russia 509 510 In December 2014 he said that both sides in the war in Donbas have been violating the terms of the ceasefire both sides are guilty of using dangerous types of weapons and violating human rights 511 adding that Minsk agreements form the basis for the settlement of the conflict 512 In 2016 he said that Politicians who think that problems and disputes can be solved by using military force even as a last resort should be rejected by society they should clear the political stage 513 In July 2016 Gorbachev criticized NATO for deploying more troops to Eastern Europe amid escalating tensions between the military alliance and Russia 514 In June 2018 he welcomed the Russia United States summit in Helsinki between Putin and US president Donald Trump 515 although in October criticized Trump s threat to withdraw from the 1987 Intermediate Range Nuclear Forces Treaty saying the move is not the work of a great mind He added all agreements aimed at nuclear disarmament and the limitation of nuclear weapons must be preserved for the sake of life on Earth 516 Following the death of former president George H W Bush in 2018 a critical partner and friend of his time in office Gorbachev stated that the work they had both accomplished led directly to the end of the Cold War and the nuclear arms race and that he deeply appreciated the attention kindness and simplicity typical of George Barbara and their large friendly family 517 After the January 6 United States Capitol attack Gorbachev declared The storming of the capitol was clearly planned in advance and it s obvious by whom He did not clarify to whom he was referring Gorbachev also stated that the attack called into question the future fate of the United States as a nation 518 In an interview with Russian news agency TASS on 20 January 2021 Gorbachev said that relations between the United States and Russia are of great concern and called on US president Joe Biden to begin talks with the Kremlin to make the two countries intentions and actions clearer and in order to normalize relations 519 On 24 December 2021 Gorbachev said that the United States grew arrogant and self confident after the collapse of the Soviet Union resulting in a new empire Hence the idea of NATO expansion He also endorsed the upcoming security talks between the United States and Russia saying I hope there will be a result 520 Gorbachev made no personal comment publicly on the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine although his Gorbachev Foundation stated on 26 February that they affirm the need for an early cessation of hostilities and immediate start of peace negotiations There is nothing more precious in the world than human lives 521 At the end of July 2022 Gorbachev s close friend journalist Alexei Venediktov said that Gorbachev was very upset when he found out that Putin had launched a full scale invasion of Ukraine According to Venediktov Gorbachev believed that Putin destroyed his life s work 522 Gorbachev s interpreter Pavel Palazhchenko also stated that Gorbachev was psychologically traumatized by the invasion in the months preceding his death 523 524 Political ideology editEven before he left office Gorbachev had become a kind of social democrat believing in as he later put it equality of opportunity publicly supported education and medical care a guaranteed minimum of social welfare and a socially oriented market economy all within a democratic political framework Exactly when this transformation occurred is hard to say but surely by 1989 or 1990 it had taken place Gorbachev biographer William Taubman 2017 483 According to his university friend Zdenek Mlynar in the early 1950s Gorbachev like everyone else at the time was a Stalinist 525 Mlynar noted however that unlike most other Soviet students Gorbachev did not view Marxism simply as a collection of axioms to be committed to memory 526 Biographers Doder and Branson related that after Stalin s death Gorbachev s ideology would never be doctrinal again 527 but noted that he remained a true believer in the Soviet system 528 Doder and Branson noted that at the Twenty Seventh Party Congress in 1986 Gorbachev was seen to be an orthodox Marxist Leninist 529 that year the biographer Zhores Medvedev stated that Gorbachev is neither a liberal nor a bold reformist 530 By the mid 1980s when Gorbachev took power many analysts were arguing that the Soviet Union was declining to the status of a Third World country 531 In this context Gorbachev argued that the Communist Party had to adapt and engage in creative thinking much as Lenin had creatively interpreted and adapted the writings of Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels to the situation of early 20th century Russia 532 For instance he thought that rhetoric about global revolution and overthrowing the bourgeoisie which had been integral to Leninist politics had become too dangerous in an era where nuclear warfare could obliterate humanity 533 He began to move away from the Marxist Leninist belief in class struggle as the engine of political change instead viewing politics as a way of coordinating the interests of all classes 534 However as Gooding noted the changes that Gorbachev proposed were expressed wholly within the terms of Marxist Leninist ideology 535 According to Doder and Branson Gorbachev also wanted to dismantle the hierarchical military society at home and abandon the grand style costly imperialism abroad 536 However Jonathan Steele argued that Gorbachev failed to appreciate why the Baltic nations wanted independence and at heart he was and remains a Russian imperialist 537 Gooding thought that Gorbachev was committed to democracy something marking him out as different from his predecessors 538 Gooding also suggested that when in power Gorbachev came to see socialism not as a place on the path to communism but a destination in itself 539 Gorbachev s political outlook was shaped by the 23 years he served as a party official in Stavropol 540 Doder and Branson thought that throughout most of his political career prior to becoming general secretary his publicly expressed views almost certainly reflected a politician s understanding of what should be said rather than his personal philosophy Otherwise he could not have survived politically 541 Like many Russians Gorbachev sometimes thought of the Soviet Union as being largely synonymous with Russia and in various speeches described it as Russia in one incident he had to correct himself after calling the USSR Russia while giving a speech in Kiev 540 McCauley noted that perestroika was an elusive concept one which evolved and eventually meant something radically different over time 542 McCauley stated that the concept originally referred to radical reform of the economic and political system as part of Gorbachev s attempt to motivate the labor force and make management more effective 543 It was only after initial measures to achieve this proved unsuccessful that Gorbachev began to consider market mechanisms and co operatives albeit with the state sector remaining dominant 543 The political scientist John Gooding suggested that had the perestroika reforms succeeded the Soviet Union would have exchanged totalitarian controls for milder authoritarian ones although not become democratic in the Western sense 538 With perestroika Gorbachev had wanted to improve the existing Marxist Leninist system but ultimately ended up destroying it 544 In this he brought an end to state socialism in the Soviet Union and paved the way for a transition to liberal democracy 545 Taubman nevertheless thought Gorbachev remained a socialist 546 He described Gorbachev as a true believer not in the Soviet system as it functioned or didn t in 1985 but in its potential to live up to what he deemed its original ideals 546 He added that until the end Gorbachev reiterated his belief in socialism insisting that it wasn t worthy of the name unless it was truly democratic 547 As Soviet leader Gorbachev believed in incremental reform rather than a radical transformation 548 he later referred to this as a revolution by evolutionary means 548 Doder and Branson noted that over the course of the 1980s his thought underwent a radical evolution 549 Taubman noted that by 1989 or 1990 Gorbachev had transformed into a social democrat 483 McCauley suggested that by at least June 1991 Gorbachev was a post Leninist having liberated himself from Marxism Leninism 550 After the fall of the Soviet Union the newly formed Communist Party of the Russian Federation would have nothing to do with him 551 However in 2006 he expressed his continued belief in Lenin s ideas I trusted him then and I still do 546 He claimed that the essence of Lenin was a desire to develop the living creative activity of the masses 546 Taubman believed that Gorbachev identified with Lenin on a psychological level 552 Personal life edit nbsp The official Soviet portrait of Gorbachev Many official photographs and visual depictions of Gorbachev removed the port wine birthmark from his head 553 By 1955 his hair was thinning 554 and by the late 1960s he was bald 555 revealing a distinctive port wine stain on the top of his head 556 Gorbachev reached an adult height of 5 foot 9 inches 1 75 m 557 Throughout the 1960s he struggled against obesity and dieted to control the problem 88 Doder and Branson characterized him as stocky but not fat 557 He spoke in a southern Russian accent 558 and was known to sing both folk and pop songs 559 Throughout his life he tried to dress fashionably 560 Having an aversion to hard liquor 561 he drank sparingly and did not smoke 562 He was protective of his private life and avoided inviting people to his home 116 Gorbachev cherished his wife 563 who in turn was protective of him 107 He was an involved parent and grandparent 564 He sent his daughter his only child to a local school in Stavropol rather than to a school set aside for the children of party elites 565 Unlike many of his contemporaries in the Soviet administration he was not a womanizer and was known for treating women respectfully 83 Gorbachev was baptized Russian Orthodox and when he was growing up his grandparents had been practicing Christians 566 In 2008 there was some press speculation that he was a practicing Christian after he visited the tomb of St Francis of Assisi to which he publicly clarified that he was an atheist 567 Since studying at university Gorbachev considered himself an intellectual 36 Doder and Branson thought that his intellectualism was slightly self conscious 568 noting that unlike most Russian intelligentsia Gorbachev was not closely connected to the world of science culture the arts or education 569 When living in Stavropol he and his wife collected hundreds of books 570 Among his favorite authors were Arthur Miller Dostoevsky and Chinghiz Aitmatov while he also enjoyed reading detective fiction 571 He enjoyed going for walks 572 having a love of natural environments 573 and was also a fan of association football 574 He favored small gatherings where the assembled discussed topics like art and philosophy rather than the large alcohol fueled parties common among Soviet officials 575 Personality edit Gorbachev s university friend Mlynar described him as loyal and personally honest 576 He was self confident 577 polite 562 and tactful 562 he had a happy and optimistic temperament 578 He used self deprecating humor 579 and sometimes profanities 579 and often referred to himself in the third person 580 He was a skilled manager 83 and had a good memory 581 A hard worker or workaholic 582 as general secretary he would rise at 7 00 or 8 00 in the morning and not go to bed until 1 00 or 2 00 583 He commuted from the western suburbs between 9 and 10 in the morning and returned home around 8 in the evening 584 Taubman called him a remarkably decent man 563 he thought Gorbachev to have high moral standards 585 nbsp Gorbachev at the Western Wall in Jerusalem 1992Zhores Medvedev thought him a talented orator in 1986 stating that Gorbachev is probably the best speaker there has been in the top Party echelons since Leon Trotsky 586 Medvedev also considered Gorbachev a charismatic leader something Brezhnev Andropov and Chernenko had not been 587 Doder and Branson called him a charmer capable of intellectually seducing doubters always trying to co opt them or at least blunt the edge of their criticism 588 McCauley thought Gorbachev displayed great tactical skill in maneuvering successfully between hardline Marxist Leninists and liberalisers for most of his time as leader adding though that he was much more skilled at tactical short term policy than strategic long term thinking in part because he was given to making policy on the hoof 589 Doder and Branson thought Gorbachev a Russian to the core intensely patriotic as only people living in the border regions can be 540 Taubman also noted that the former Soviet leader has a sense of self importance and self righteousness as well as a need for attention and admiration which grated on some of his colleagues 585 He was sensitive to personal criticism and easily took offense 590 Colleagues were often frustrated that he would leave tasks unfinished 591 and sometimes also felt underappreciated and discarded by him 592 Biographers Doder and Branson thought that Gorbachev was a puritan with a proclivity for order in his personal life 593 Taubman noted that he was capable of blowing up for calculated effect 594 He also thought that by 1990 when his domestic popularity was waning Gorbachev had become psychologically dependent on being lionized abroad a trait for which he was criticized in the Soviet Union 595 McCauley was of the view that one of his weaknesses was an inability to foresee the consequences of his actions 596 Death editMain article Death and funeral of Mikhail Gorbachev Gorbachev died at the Central Clinical Hospital in Moscow on 30 August 2022 597 at the age of 91 598 He died after a severe and prolonged illness according to the hospital 599 600 601 Preceding deterioration of health edit nbsp Gorbachev in Moscow 2019 receiving assistance in walkingFor a number of years before his death Gorbachev suffered from severe diabetes and underwent several surgeries and hospital stays 602 In April 2011 Gorbachev underwent complex spinal surgery in Germany at the Munich clinic Schon Klinik Munchen Harlaching 603 On 11 June 2013 it was reported that Gorbachev was hospitalized for a routine examination Two months earlier he had not come to the funeral of Margaret Thatcher for health reasons 602 On 22 October 2013 it became known that Gorbachev was undergoing another examination in a German clinic 604 He was also hospitalized in the Central Clinical Hospital on 9 October 2014 605 Also in 2014 Gorbachev underwent oral surgery 496 Gorbachev was briefly hospitalized in May 2015 as well 606 In November 2016 Gorbachev had a pacemaker installed at the Moscow Central Clinical Hospital 607 Also in 2016 he underwent surgery to replace his lenses due to cataracts 608 The length of his hospital visits increased in 2019 with Gorbachev hospitalized in December with pneumonia 609 610 At the beginning of 2020 Gorbachev was placed under the continuous supervision of doctors 600 601 Gorbachev s condition deteriorated even further in July 2022 as he developed kidney problems which led to him being transferred for hemodialysis 611 Shortly before his death Gorbachev underwent four more operations lost 40 kilograms of weight and could no longer walk 612 In interviews given shortly before his death Gorbachev had complained about health and appetite problems 613 Gorbachev was receiving palliative care but was allowed to leave the hospital for short periods of time On 29 August 2022 Gorbachev arrived at the Central Clinical Hospital for another hemodialysis where he died on 30 August at approximately 10 00 p m Moscow time Funeral and burial edit nbsp Body of Gorbachev lying in state at the House of UnionsA funeral for Gorbachev was held on 3 September 2022 from 10 a m to 12 noon in the Column Hall of the House of Unions The ceremony included an honor guard but was not an official state funeral 614 The service included rites administered by a Russian Orthodox priest 615 616 Russian president Vladimir Putin bid an official farewell to Gorbachev on 1 September 2022 during a visit to the Central Clinical Hospital where he laid flowers at his coffin 617 618 His press secretary Dmitry Peskov said that the tight schedule of the president would not allow him to be present at the funeral as he was scheduled to visit Kaliningrad 617 619 Gorbachev was buried on the same day at Moscow s Novodevichy Cemetery in the same grave as his wife Raisa as requested by his will 427 Reactions edit Russian president Vladimir Putin expressed his condolences on the death of Gorbachev 620 and paid tribute to him at the Moscow hospital where the ex president had died but according to spokesman Dmitry Peskov had no time to attend his funeral due to a busy work schedule Putin also sent a telegram to Gorbachev s family calling him a politician and statesman who had a huge impact on the course of world history 621 Russian prime minister Mikhail Mishustin called Gorbachev an outstanding statesman 622 Other reactions were less positive with the leader of Russia s Communist Party Gennady Zyuganov stating that Gorbachev was a leader whose rule brought absolute sadness misfortune and problems for all the peoples of our country 623 Naina Yeltsina widow of former Russian president Boris Yeltsin said that Gorbachev sincerely wanted to change the Soviet system and transform the USSR into a free and peaceful state 624 European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen paid tribute to him on Twitter as did the UK s prime minister Boris Johnson former US secretary of state Condoleezza Rice and Ireland s Taoiseach Micheal Martin 625 United Nations secretary general Antonio Guterres said Gorbachev was a one of a kind statesman who changed the course of history and a towering global leader committed multilateralist and tireless advocate for peace as former US secretary of state James Baker III stated that history will remember Mikhail Gorbachev as a giant who steered his great nation towards democracy in the context of the Cold War s conclusion Queen Elizabeth II in her condolence and in one of her last public messages g stated that through his courage and vision he gained the admiration affection and respect of the British people 627 Canadian prime minister Justin Trudeau said He helped bring an end to the Cold War embraced reforms in the Soviet Union and reduced the threat of nuclear weapons He leaves behind an important legacy 628 while former Canadian prime minister Brian Mulroney said that he was a very pleasant man to deal with and history will remember him as a transformational leader 629 French president Emmanuel Macron called Gorbachev a man of peace whose choices opened up a path of liberty for Russians US president Joe Biden called Gorbachev a man of remarkable vision 630 Polish foreign minister Zbigniew Rau stated that Gorbachev had increased the scope of freedom of the enslaved peoples of the Soviet Union in an unprecedented way giving them hope for a more dignified life 631 Lithuanian foreign minister Gabrielius Landsbergis said that Lithuanians would not glorify Gorbachev or forget about the 1991 January Events 403 185 h The 14th Dalai Lama wrote to the Gorbachev Foundation to express his condolences to his daughter Irina Virganskaya and members of his family his friends and supporters 633 Japan s prime minister Fumio Kishida said Gorbachev had left behind great accomplishments as a world leader supporting the abolishment of nuclear weapons 634 Germany s former chancellor Angela Merkel who grew up in East Germany said he completely changed her life and the world while current German chancellor Olaf Scholz hailed Gorbachev s role in reuniting Germany 635 Reception and legacy editOpinions on Gorbachev are deeply divided 580 According to a 2017 survey carried out by the independent institute Levada Center 46 of Russian citizens have a negative opinion towards Gorbachev 30 are indifferent while only 15 have a positive opinion 636 Many particularly in Western countries see him as the greatest statesman of the second half of the 20th century 637 US press referred to the presence of Gorbymania in Western countries during the late 1980s and early 1990s as represented by large crowds that turned out to greet his visits 638 with Time naming him its Man of the Decade in the 1980s 639 In the Soviet Union itself opinion polls indicated that Gorbachev was the most popular politician from 1985 through to late 1989 640 For his domestic supporters Gorbachev was seen as a reformer trying to modernise the Soviet Union 641 and to build a form of democratic socialism 642 Taubman characterized Gorbachev as a visionary who changed his country and the world though neither as much as he wished 643 Taubman regarded Gorbachev as being exceptional as a Russian ruler and a world statesman highlighting that he avoided the traditional authoritarian anti Western norm of both predecessors like Brezhnev and successors like Putin 644 McCauley thought that in allowing the Soviet Union to move away from Marxism Leninism Gorbachev gave the Soviet people something precious the right to think and manage their lives for themselves with all the uncertainty and risk that that entailed 645 Gorbachev succeeded in destroying what was left of totalitarianism in the Soviet Union he brought freedom of speech of assembly and of conscience to people who had never known it except perhaps for a few chaotic months in 1917 By introducing free elections and creating parliamentary institutions he laid the groundwork for democracy It is more the fault of the raw material he worked with than of his own real shortcomings and mistakes that Russian democracy will take much longer to build than he thought Gorbachev biographer William Taubman 2017 643 External videos nbsp Q amp A interview with William Taubman on Gorbachev His Life and Times October 15 2017 C SPANGorbachev s negotiations with the US helped bring an end to the Cold War and reduced the threat of nuclear conflict 643 His decision to allow the Eastern Bloc to break apart prevented significant bloodshed in Central and Eastern Europe as Taubman noted this meant that the Soviet Empire ended in a far more peaceful manner than the British Empire several decades before 643 Similarly under Gorbachev the Soviet Union broke apart without falling into civil war as happened during the breakup of Yugoslavia at the same time 646 McCauley noted that in facilitating the merger of East and West Germany Gorbachev was a co father of German unification assuring him long term popularity among the German people 647 However he remains a controversial figure in former Soviet occupied and administered countries such as the Baltic States Ukraine Georgia Kazakhstan Azerbaijan and Poland after violent repressions against the local populations who sought independence Locals have stated that they consider western veneration of the man an injustice and have said they do not understand his positive legacy in the west with a group of Lithuanians having pursued legal action against him 648 He also faced domestic criticism during his rule During his career Gorbachev attracted the admiration of some colleagues but others came to hate him 585 Across society more broadly his inability to reverse the decline in the Soviet economy brought discontent 649 Liberals thought he lacked the radicalism to really break from Marxism Leninism and establish a free market liberal democracy 650 Conversely many of his Communist Party critics thought his reforms were reckless and threatened the survival of Soviet socialism 651 some believed he should have followed the example of China s Communist Party and restricted himself to economic rather than governmental reforms 652 Many Russians saw his emphasis on persuasion rather than force as a sign of weakness 547 For much of the Communist Party nomenklatura the Soviet Union s dissolution was disastrous as it resulted in their loss of power 653 In Russia he is widely despised for his role in the collapse of the Soviet Union and the ensuing economic collapse in the 1990s 580 General Varennikov one of those who orchestrated the 1991 coup attempt against Gorbachev for instance called him a renegade and traitor to your own people 466 Many of his critics attacked him for allowing the Marxist Leninist governments across Eastern Europe to fall 654 and for allowing a reunited Germany to join NATO something they deem to be contrary to Russia s national interest 655 The historian Mark Galeotti stressed the connection between Gorbachev and his predecessor Andropov In Galeotti s view Andropov was the godfather of the Gorbachev revolution because as a former head of the KGB he was able to put forward the case for reform without having his loyalty to the Soviet cause questioned an approach that Gorbachev was able to build on and follow through with 656 According to McCauley Gorbachev set reforms in motion without understanding where they could lead Never in his worst nightmare could he have imagined that perestroika would lead to the destruction of the Soviet Union 657 According to The New York Times Few leaders in the 20th century indeed in any century have had such a profound effect on their time In little more than six tumultuous years Mr Gorbachev lifted the Iron Curtain decisively altering the political climate of the world 658 Awards and honors edit nbsp Former US president Ronald Reagan awards the first Ronald Reagan Freedom Award to Gorbachev at the Reagan Library 1992 In 1988 India awarded Gorbachev the Indira Gandhi Prize for Peace Disarmament and Development 659 in 1990 he was given the Nobel Peace Prize for his leading role in the peace process which today characterizes important parts of the international community 660 Out of office he continued to receive honors In 1992 he was the first recipient of the Ronald Reagan Freedom Award 661 and in 1994 was given the Grawemeyer Award by the University of Louisville Kentucky 662 In 1995 he was awarded the Grand Cross of the Order of Liberty by Portuguese president Mario Soares 663 and in 1998 the Freedom Award from the National Civil Rights Museum in Memphis Tennessee 664 In 2000 he was presented with the Golden Plate Award of the American Academy of Achievement at an awards ceremony at Hampton Court Palace near London 665 In 2002 Gorbachev received the Freedom of the City of Dublin from Dublin City Council 666 In 2002 Gorbachev was awarded the Charles V Prize by the European Academy of Yuste Foundation 667 Gorbachev together with Bill Clinton and Sophia Loren were awarded the 2004 Grammy Award for Best Spoken Word Album for Children for their recording of Sergei Prokofiev s 1936 Peter and the Wolf for Pentatone 668 In 2005 Gorbachev was awarded the Point Alpha Prize for his role in supporting German reunification 669 Bibliography editYear Title Co author Publisher1987 PERESTROIKA New Thinking for Our Country and the World Harper amp Row1996 Memoirs Doubleday2005 Moral Lessons of the Twentieth Century Gorbachev and Ikeda on Buddhism and Communism Daisaku Ikeda I B Tauris2016 The New Russia Polity2018 In a Changing World 2020 What Is at Stake Now My Appeal for Peace and Freedom PolityIn popular culture editIn 2020 2021 the Theatre of Nations in Moscow in collaboration with Latvian director Alvis Hermanis staged a production called Gorbachev 670 Yevgeny Mironov and Chulpan Khamatova played the roles of Gorbachev and his wife Raisa respectively It was a play focusing on their personal relationship 671 Gorbachev was portrayed by Matthew Marsh in the 2023 film Tetris 672 See also editIndex of Soviet Union related articles List of peace activists List of Nobel Peace Prize laureatesExplanatory notes edit On 14 March 1990 the provision on the CPSU monopoly on power was removed from Article 6 of the Constitution of the USSR Thus in the Soviet Union a multi party system was officially allowed and the CPSU ceased to be part of the state apparatus Briefly suspended from 19 to 21 August 1991 during the August Coup De facto until 21 August 1991 de jure until 4 September This post was abolished on 25 December 1991 and powers were transferred to Boris Yeltsin the President of Russia Functions of the presidency were succeeded by the Council of Heads of State and the Executive Secretary of the Commonwealth of Independent States Himself as the Chairman of the United Social Democratic Party of Russia until 24 November 2001 and the Chairman of the Social Democratic Party of Russia until 20 October 2007 UK ˈ ɡ ɔːr b e tʃ ɒ f ˌ ɡ ɔːr b e ˈ tʃ ɒ f US tʃ ɔː f tʃ ɛ f 1 2 3 Russian Mihail Sergeevich Gorbachyov tr Mikhail Sergeyevich Gorbachyov IPA mʲɪxɐˈil sʲɪrˈɡʲejɪvʲɪdʑ ɡerbɐˈtɕɵf The Queen died only nine days after Gorbachev 626 Gorbachev at the time asserted that no one in Moscow gave orders to start the violent confrontations of the so called January Events in Lithuania that cost the lives of 14 civilians 632 References editCitations edit Gorbachev Archived 2 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine Random House Webster s Unabridged Dictionary Gorbachev Mikhail Archived 13 May 2019 at the Wayback Machine Oxford Dictionaries Retrieved 4 February 2019 Gorbachev Merriam Webster com Dictionary Retrieved 4 February 2019 Breslauer George 2002 Gorbachev and Yeltsin as leaders Cambridge University Press p 126 ISBN 9780521892445 Medvedev 1986 p 22 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 1 McCauley 1998 p 15 Taubman 2017 p 7 Taubman 2017 p 10 McCauley 1998 p 15 Taubman 2017 p 10 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 4 McCauley 1998 p 15 Taubman 2017 p 7 Taubman 2017 pp 8 9 Taubman 2017 p 9 a b Medvedev 1986 p 22 a b Taubman 2017 p 16 Taubman 2017 pp 16 17 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 1 Taubman 2017 p 7 McCauley 1998 p 15 Taubman 2017 pp 12 13 Taubman 2017 p 14 McCauley 1998 p 16 Taubman 2017 p 7 McCauley 1998 pp 15 16 Taubman 2017 pp 7 8 Taubman 2017 pp 18 19 Doder amp Branson 1990 pp 5 6 McCauley 1998 p 17 Taubman 2017 pp 7 20 22 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 5 McCauley 1998 p 17 Taubman 2017 pp 8 26 27 Taubman 2017 p 27 Taubman 2017 pp 9 27 28 Taubman 2017 pp 29 30 Taubman 2017 pp 8 28 29 Taubman 2017 p 30 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 7 McCauley 1998 p 18 Taubman 2017 p 32 Taubman 2017 p 32 McCauley 1998 p 18 Taubman 2017 p 34 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 6 McCauley 1998 p 18 Taubman 2017 pp 8 34 a b Taubman 2017 p 42 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 6 8 McCauley 1998 p 18 Taubman 2017 pp 40 41 Medvedev 1986 p 35 Taubman 2017 p 43 Taubman 2017 p 50 a b Taubman 2017 p 44 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 14 Taubman 2017 p 48 Taubman 2017 p 53 Taubman 2017 p 52 McCauley 1998 p 19 Taubman 2017 pp 45 52 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 10 McCauley 1998 p 19 Taubman 2017 p 46 Taubman 2017 p 46 McCauley 1998 p 19 Taubman 2017 p 46 Taubman 2017 p 47 Medvedev 1986 pp 36 37 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 11 McCauley 1998 p 19 Taubman 2017 pp 45 53 56 57 McCauley 1998 p 20 Taubman 2017 pp 57 58 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 15 Taubman 2017 pp 59 63 Taubman 2017 pp 59 63 Taubman 2017 p 66 Taubman 2017 pp 72 73 a b McCauley 1998 p 20 Taubman 2017 p 68 Taubman 2017 p 70 Taubman 2017 pp 70 71 Medvedev 1986 p 42 McCauley 1998 p 20 McCauley 1998 p 20 McCauley 1998 pp 20 21 Taubman 2017 pp 73 74 McCauley 1998 p 20 Taubman 2017 p 74 McCauley 1998 pp 20 21 Taubman 2017 p 75 McCauley 1998 p 21 Taubman 2017 p 77 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 31 Taubman 2017 p 78 Taubman 2017 p 95 McCauley 1998 p 210 Taubman 2017 pp 81 83 Taubman 2017 p 81 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 19 McCauley 1998 p 23 Taubman 2017 p 86 McCauley 1998 p 23 Taubman 2017 p 89 Medvedev 1986 pp 56 62 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 19 McCauley 1998 p 29 Taubman 2017 pp 115 116 Medvedev 1986 p 63 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 19 McCauley 1998 p 29 Taubman 2017 pp 111 113 Taubman 2017 p 86 Taubman 2017 pp 90 91 Taubman 2017 p 90 Taubman 2017 p 91 McCauley 1998 p 22 Taubman 2017 pp 96 98 Taubman 2017 p 78 Taubman 2017 p 80 Medvedev 1986 p 74 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 32 McCauley 1998 p 25 Taubman 2017 pp 105 106 Taubman 2017 pp 103 105 Medvedev 1986 p 47 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 31 McCauley 1998 p 23 Taubman 2017 p 98 McCauley 1998 p 23 Taubman 2017 p 100 Taubman 2017 p 89 McCauley 1998 p 23 Taubman 2017 p 99 Taubman 2017 p 100 Medvedev 1986 p 49 McCauley 1998 p 23 a b c Taubman 2017 p 102 Taubman 2017 p 149 Medvedev 1986 p 50 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 24 McCauley 1998 p 24 Taubman 2017 p 107 Medvedev 1986 p 61 McCauley 1998 p 26 a b Taubman 2017 p 116 Medvedev 1986 p 63 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 32 McCauley 1998 p 28 Taubman 2017 p 119 Medvedev 1986 p 64 McCauley 1998 p 30 Taubman 2017 pp 123 124 Medvedev 1986 pp 64 65 McCauley 1998 p 30 Taubman 2017 p 124 McCauley 1998 pp 28 29 Taubman 2017 p 125 Taubman 2017 pp 125 126 Medvedev 1986 p 65 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 32 McCauley 1998 p 29 Taubman 2017 p 120 Taubman 2017 pp 121 122 Taubman 2017 p 121 Medvedev 1986 p 73 Taubman 2017 p 121 Medvedev 1986 p 65 a b Taubman 2017 p 127 Taubman 2017 p 129 McCauley 1998 pp 31 32 Taubman 2017 p 130 McCauley 1998 p 33 Taubman 2017 pp 131 132 Taubman 2017 p 123 Taubman 2017 pp 128 129 a b Taubman 2017 p 157 Doder amp Branson 1990 pp 35 36 Taubman 2017 pp 138 139 McCauley 1998 p 35 Taubman 2017 pp 145 146 Medvedev 1986 pp 108 113 McCauley 1998 p 35 Medvedev 1986 p 78 Taubman 2017 p 149 Taubman 2017 pp 149 150 McCauley 1998 p 30 Taubman 2017 pp 150 151 Taubman 2017 pp 151 152 Taubman 2017 p 152 a b Taubman 2017 p 153 Taubman 2017 pp 153 154 Taubman 2017 p 156 Medvedev 1986 p 77 Medvedev 1986 p 92 McCauley 1998 p 36 Taubman 2017 p 157 Taubman 2017 p 161 Taubman 2017 pp 164 175 Taubman 2017 pp 165 166 a b Taubman 2017 p 165 McCauley 1998 p 40 Taubman 2017 p 166 Medvedev 1986 pp 95 96 Doder amp Branson 1990 pp 38 39 Medvedev 1986 pp 7 102 103 106 107 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 40 Galeotti 1997 p 32 Taubman 2017 pp 175 177 Medvedev 1986 p 107 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 40 Taubman 2017 pp 177 78 McCauley 1998 p 34 a b Taubman 2017 p 173 a b Medvedev 1986 p 107 Medvedev 1986 pp 118 121 122 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 43 McCauley 1998 p 41 Taubman 2017 pp 179 180 Taubman 2017 p 180 Medvedev 1986 p 123 Taubman 2017 pp 181 191 Galeotti 1997 p 32 Taubman 2017 p 181 Medvedev 1986 p 123 Galeotti 1997 p 32 Taubman 2017 p 181 Taubman 2017 p 182 Medvedev 1986 p 124 Doder amp Branson 1990 pp 46 47 McCauley 1998 p 31 Taubman 2017 pp 182 185 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 47 McCauley 1998 p 31 Taubman 2017 p 182 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 50 Taubman 2017 pp 190 191 Medvedev 1986 p 138 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 56 Medvedev 1986 pp 138 139 Doder amp Branson 1990 pp 51 52 McCauley 1998 p 43 Taubman 2017 p 192 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 57 McCauley 1998 p 43 Taubman 2017 p 193 Taubman 2017 p 193 Medvedev 1986 pp 158 159 Taubman 2017 pp 193 195 Medvedev 1986 p 142 Taubman 2017 p 196 McCauley 1998 p 44 Taubman 2017 p 195 Medvedev 1986 p 155 Medvedev 1986 p 159 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 59 McCauley 1998 p 44 Taubman 2017 p 196 Medvedev 1986 p 159 McCauley 1998 p 44 Taubman 2017 p 201 Taubman 2017 p 197 Medvedev 1986 p 4 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 62 McCauley 1998 p 45 Taubman 2017 p 204 Doder amp Branson 1990 pp 63 64 McCauley 1998 p 45 Taubman 2017 pp 205 206 Medvedev 1986 p 16 McCauley 1998 p 46 Taubman 2017 pp 211 212 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 69 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 65 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 66 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 87 McCauley 1998 p 59 Taubman 2017 p 213 Medvedev 1986 pp 194 195 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 101 McCauley 1998 p 60 Taubman 2017 p 237 Taubman 2017 p 228 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 76 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 20 Taubman 2017 pp 224 226 McCauley 1998 p 54 Taubman 2017 p 223 McCauley 1998 pp 52 55 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 100 Taubman 2017 pp 219 220 Medvedev 1986 p 177 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 95 McCauley 1998 p 52 Taubman 2017 p 220 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 97 Taubman 2017 p 221 Medvedev 1986 p 177 McCauley 1998 p 53 Taubman 2017 p 222 a b Doder amp Branson 1990 p 94 McCauley 1998 p 54 McCauley 1998 p 52 McCauley 1998 p 50 McCauley 1998 p 55 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 81 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 82 McCauley 1998 pp 51 55 Taubman 2017 p 235 McCauley 1998 pp 50 51 Taubman 2017 p 236 McCauley 1998 p 56 Taubman 2017 pp 236 237 Bialer Seweryn Afferica Joan 1985 The Genesis of Gorbachev s World Foreign Affairs No America and the World 1985 ISSN 0015 7120 Retrieved 28 May 2023 a b Gorbachev s Perestroika as the beginning of the end of the empire UaWarExplained com 29 March 2022 Archived from the original on 30 August 2022 Retrieved 29 March 2022 McCauley 1998 pp 56 57 McCauley 1998 p 57 McCauley 1998 pp 61 62 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 167 McCauley 1998 p 58 Chiesa Giulietto 1991 Time of Change An Insider s View of Russia s Transformation I B Tauris p 30 ISBN 978 1 85043 305 7 Archived from the original on 15 April 2021 Retrieved 24 October 2020 Hosking Geoffrey Alan 1991 The Awakening of the Soviet Union Harvard University Press p 139 ISBN 978 0 674 05551 3 Archived from the original on 15 April 2021 Retrieved 24 October 2020 a b Doder amp Branson 1990 p 166 Tarschys 1993 p 16 Bhattacharya Gathmann amp Miller 2013 p 236 Taubman 2017 pp 232 234 Medvedev 1986 pp 187 188 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 86 Bhattacharya Gathmann amp Miller 2013 p 236 Tarschys 1993 p 19 Bhattacharya Gathmann amp Miller 2013 p 236 Taubman 2017 p 232 Medvedev 1986 p 188 Tarschys 1993 p 20 McCauley 1998 p 62 Taubman 2017 p 233 Taubman 2017 p 233 Tarschys 1993 p 22 Bhattacharya Gathmann amp Miller 2013 p 238 Bhattacharya Gathmann amp Miller 2013 pp 233 238 Doder amp Branson 1990 pp 75 140 142 Doder amp Branson 1990 pp 142 143 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 93 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 172 Taubman 2017 pp 250 251 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 143 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 148 Taubman 2017 p 251 Doder amp Branson 1990 pp 146 147 a b Taubman 2017 p 322 a b Taubman 2017 p 324 McCauley 1998 p 71 Taubman 2017 pp 323 326 328 a b Taubman 2017 p 329 Taubman 2017 p 330 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 129 Taubman 2017 p 240 Taubman 2017 p 240 a b Taubman 2017 p 241 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 134 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 137 Taubman 2017 pp 242 243 Taubman 2017 p 266 a b c d Taubman 2017 p 271 a b c Taubman 2017 p 272 Taubman 2017 pp 272 273 a b Taubman 2017 p 263 Taubman 2017 p 275 Taubman 2017 p 278 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 109 Taubman 2017 p 278 Medvedev 1986 pp 237 238 McCauley 1998 p 142 Taubman 2017 pp 278 279 Taubman 2017 p 285 a b Taubman 2017 p 286 Taubman 2017 pp 289 291 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 114 Taubman 2017 p 484 McCauley 1998 p 80 Taubman 2017 p 291 Doder amp Branson 1990 pp 159 162 McCauley 1998 p 81 Taubman 2017 p 294 McCauley 1998 pp 80 81 Taubman 2017 pp 297 301 a b Taubman 2017 p 304 Taubman 2017 p 267 Doder amp Branson 1990 pp 154 155 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 222 Doder amp Branson 1990 pp 191 192 Taubman 2017 pp 307 309 Taubman 2017 p 308 Taubman 2017 p 310 Taubman 2017 p 311 Taubman 2017 p 312 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 239 Taubman 2017 p 313 McCauley 1998 p 115 Taubman 2017 pp 434 435 449 450 McCauley 1998 p 116 Taubman 2017 p 450 a b Taubman 2017 p 314 Taubman 2017 pp 338 339 Taubman 2017 p 317 Taubman 2017 p 315 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 151 Taubman 2017 p 341 McCauley 1998 p 131 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 217 Taubman 2017 p 397 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 74 Taubman 2017 p 340 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 290 Taubman 2017 p 340 Doder amp Branson 1990 pp 186 187 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 195 Gorbachev Mikhail Sergeevich Perestroika New Thinking for Our Country and the World Doder amp Branson 1990 p 246 Taubman 2017 p 319 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 281 McCauley 1998 p 92 Taubman 2017 pp 320 321 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 282 Taubman 2017 p 321 Doder amp Branson 1990 pp 305 306 McCauley 1998 pp 93 94 Taubman 2017 p 342 Taubman 2017 pp 345 346 McCauley 1998 p 94 Taubman 2017 pp 346 349 Taubman 2017 pp 349 350 Doder amp Branson 1990 pp 192 193 324 McCauley 1998 pp 94 95 Taubman 2017 p 351 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 336 Steele 1996 pp 144 145 Taubman 2017 p 353 McCauley 1998 p 105 Taubman 2017 pp 353 354 Taubman 2017 p 352 Taubman 2017 p 359 McCauley 1998 p 100 Taubman 2017 p 371 McCauley 1998 pp 104 105 Taubman 2017 pp 428 429 McCauley 1998 pp 104 105 Taubman 2017 pp 429 430 McCauley 1998 p 107 Taubman 2017 p 444 McCauley 1998 pp 106 107 Taubman 2017 pp 431 432 Taubman 2017 p 433 Taubman 2017 p 434 a b McCauley 1998 p 108 Taubman 2017 p 442 McCauley 1998 p 109 Taubman 2017 p 444 Taubman 2017 pp 445 448 Taubman 2017 pp 456 457 Taubman 2017 p 387 Taubman 2017 pp 386 387 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 231 McCauley 1998 pp 83 142 Taubman 2017 p 387 Doder amp Branson 1990 pp 217 220 McCauley 1998 p 84 143 Taubman 2017 pp 390 392 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 371 McCauley 1998 p 143 Taubman 2017 pp 475 476 Taubman 2017 pp 387 388 McCauley 1998 p 43 Taubman 2017 pp 388 389 Taubman 2017 pp 476 478 McCauley 1998 p 144 Taubman 2017 p 392 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 364 Taubman 2017 pp 478 479 Taubman 2017 pp 479 480 Doder amp Branson 1990 pp 208 209 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 215 Taubman 2017 pp 393 394 Taubman 2017 pp 394 396 Doder amp Branson 1990 pp 234 237 Taubman 2017 pp 396 397 Doder amp Branson 1990 pp 284 285 McCauley 1998 p 138 Taubman 2017 pp 401 403 Taubman 2017 p 401 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 318 Taubman 2017 pp 411 413 Taubman 2017 p 414 Taubman 2017 p 415 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 320 Taubman 2017 pp 416 417 Taubman 2017 p 419 Doder amp Branson 1990 pp 356 357 McCauley 1998 p 139 Taubman 2017 pp 421 422 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 352 McCauley 1998 p 139 Taubman 2017 pp 422 426 Taubman 2017 pp 467 470 McCauley 1998 pp 140 141 Taubman 2017 pp 494 496 Taubman 2017 pp 496 497 Taubman 2017 p 498 McCauley 1998 p 142 McCauley 1998 pp 74 75 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 268 McCauley 1998 p 76 Taubman 2017 p 367 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 302 Taubman 2017 p 386 Doder amp Branson 1990 pp 267 268 299 300 McCauley 1998 p 119 Taubman 2017 p 368 Taubman 2017 p 368 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 301 Taubman 2017 p 369 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 301 McCauley 1998 p 119 Taubman 2017 pp 369 370 Taubman 2017 p 370 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 413 McCauley 1998 p 159 Taubman 2017 pp 504 505 Tuminez 2003 p 117 McCauley 1998 p 130 Taubman 2017 pp 436 437 Tuminez 2003 p 119 McCauley 1998 pp 126 127 Taubman 2017 p 435 McCauley 1998 p 128 Taubman 2017 p 452 McCauley 1998 p 128 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 412 McCauley 1998 pp 157 158 Taubman 2017 p 503 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 212 McCauley 1998 p 32 Taubman 2017 p 386 Taubman 2017 p 379 Taubman 2017 pp 381 382 383 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 230 Taubman 2017 pp 384 385 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 230 Taubman 2017 p 385 Otmar Lahodynsky Paneuropaisches Picknick Die Generalprobe fur den Mauerfall Pan European picnic the dress rehearsal for the fall of the Berlin Wall German in Profil 9 August 2014 Der 19 August 1989 war ein Test fur Gorbatschows German 19 August 1989 was a test for Gorbachev in FAZ 19 August 2009 Thomas Roser DDR Massenflucht Ein Picknick hebt die Welt aus den Angeln German Mass exodus of the GDR A picnic clears the world in Die Presse 16 August 2018 a b Taubman 2017 p 465 Taubman 2017 pp 465 466 McCauley 1998 p 133 Taubman 2017 p 481 McCauley 1998 pp 35 36 Taubman 2017 pp 484 485 Taubman 2017 pp 462 463 Taubman 2017 pp 488 494 Taubman 2017 p 427 Taubman 2017 p 505 Taubman 2017 pp 505 506 Taubman 2017 pp 506 507 McCauley 1998 pp 160 161 Taubman 2017 p 507 McCauley 1998 p 165 Taubman 2017 pp 508 509 a b Taubman 2017 p 509 McCauley 1998 pp 164 165 Taubman 2017 p 509 McCauley 1998 pp 165 166 Taubman 2017 p 511 Doder amp Branson 1990 p 408 McCauley 1998 p 161 Taubman 2017 pp 510 522 McCauley 1998 p 170 Taubman 2017 p 513 McCauley 1998 p 169 Taubman 2017 pp 513 514 a b Taubman 2017 p 515 McCauley 1998 p 172 McCauley 1998 pp 174 175 Taubman 2017 pp 500 501 515 516 Taubman 2017 p 543 a b Taubman 2017 p 552 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