gorbachev: Mikhail Gorbachev: The man who tried to free countries


Mikhail Gorbachev‘s life was bookended by Stalinism. In the middle was his attempt to nix it. When he was born in 1931, Joseph Stalin’s ‘collectivisation’ had already led up to the Great Famine of 1930-33.

By the Great Terror of 1937, the tone for life in the Soviet Union was set. When Gorbachev died on Tuesday, a Stalinist in Russia seeking to regain ‘lost glory’ – for which he blames Gorbachev squarely – continued his invasion of an old Soviet republic.

Hindsight, a funny mirror, portrays Gorbachev as the man who ‘suddenly dismantled’ a global power and counterpole to a superpower. But, in 1985, when he took over from the 73-year-old Konstantin Chernenko, the country was already well on the low road to penury, not helped by a bleeding war in Afghanistan.

Chernenko’s predecessor, Yuri Andropov, as KGB chief in 1968, had shared classified data on the conditions of Soviet society with him. So, the 54-year-old already knew there was only one way for his country not to implode: by opening up (glasnost) and restructuring (perestroika).

What followed was a free election in 1989 – not seen since the one after the 1917 revolution the Bolsheviks threw out – which accelerated the unfurling. Gorbachev had overestimated his ability to control a project that almost none in the leadership agreed with.

A little after Gorbachev visited India in 1986 and 1988, and after signing a landmark deal in 1987 with Ronald Reagan to scrap intermediate-range nuclear missiles, back home, asset-stripping was already on.

By Boxing Day 1991, the Soviet Union was gone. As was the Cold War. Gorbachev’s plan was an open, socialist society with ex-Soviet and Warsaw Pact countries free of Stalinism in its various formats. In that, he failed. But not for lack of trying.



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