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You are here : AllRefer.com > Reference > Encyclopedia > Russian, Soviet, And CIS History, Biographies > Mikhail Sergeyevich Gorbachev
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Mikhail Sergeyevich Gorbachev, Russian, Soviet, And CIS History, Biographies

Related Category: Russian, Soviet, And CIS History, Biographies

Mikhail Sergeyevich Gorbachev[mEkhuyEl´ sirgA´yuvich gurbuchof´] Pronunciation Key, 1931–, Soviet political leader. Born in the agricultural region of Stavropol, Gorbachev studied law at Moscow Univ., where in 1953 he married a philosophy student, Raisa Maksimovna Titorenko (1932?–99). Returning to Stavropol, he moved gradually upward in the local Communist party. In 1970, he became Stavropol party leader and was elected to the Supreme Soviet of the USSR. Regarded as a skilled technocrat and a reformer, Gorbachev joined (1978) the Communist party secretariat as agriculture secretary, and in 1980 he joined the politburo as the protEgE of Yuri Andropov. After Andropov's ascension to party leadership, Gorbachev assumed (1983) full responsibility for the economy.

Following the death of Konstantin Chernenko (Andropov's successor) in 1985, Gorbachev was appointed general secretary of the party despite being the youngest member of the politburo. He embarked on a comprehensive program of political, economic, and social liberalization under the slogans of glasnost ("openness") and perestroika ("restructuring"). The nuclear disaster at Chernobyl (1986) forced Gorbachev to allow even greater freedom of expression. The government released political prisoners, allowed increased emigration, attacked corruption, and encouraged the critical reexamination of Soviet history.

In a series of summit talks (1985–88), Gorbachev improved relations with U.S. President Ronald Reagan, with whom he signed an Intermediate Nuclear Forces (INF) arms limitation treaty in 1987. By 1989 he had brought about the end of the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan (see Afghanistan War) and had sanctioned the end of the Communist monopoly on political power in Eastern Europe. For his contributions to reducing East-West tensions, he was awarded the 1990 Nobel Peace Prize. By 1990, however, Gorbachev's perestroika program had failed to deliver significant improvement in the economy, and the elimination of political and social control had released latent ethnic and national tensions in the Baltic states, in the constituent republics of Armenia, Georgia, Ukraine, and Moldova, and elsewhere.

A newly created (1989) Congress of People's Deputies voted in Mar., 1990, to end the Communist party's control over the government and elected Gorbachev executive president. During 1990 and 1991, however, the reform drive stalled, and Gorbachev appeared to be mollifying remaining hardliners, who were disgruntled over the deterioration of the Soviet empire and increasing marginalization of the Communist party. An unsuccessful anti-Gorbachev coup by hardliners in Aug., 1991 (see August Coup), shifted greater authority to the Russian Republic's president, Boris Yeltsin, and greatly accelerated change. Gorbachev dissolved the Communist party, granted the Baltic states independence, and proposed a much looser, chiefly economic federation among the remaining republics. With the formation of the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) on Dec. 8, 1991, the federal government of the Soviet Union became superfluous, and on Dec. 25, Gorbachev resigned as president. Since 1992, Gorbachev has headed international organizations; written several books, including On My Country and the World (tr. 1999), and run unsuccessfully (1996) for the Russian presidency.

See his Memoirs (1996). See also A. Brown, The Gorbachev Factor (1996); S. Kotkin, Armageddon Averted: The Soviet Collapse, 1970–2000 (2001).



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Topics that might be of interest to you:

Afghanistan War
Aleksy II
Yuri Vladimirovich Andropov
Armenia, country, Asia
August Coup
Baltic states
Leonid Ilyich Brezhnev
Konstantin Ustinovich Chernenko
Chernobyl
Commonwealth of Independent States
communism
Communist party, in Russia and the Soviet Union
Crimea
disarmament, nuclear
Estonia
Georgia, country, Asia
Germany
glasnost
Katyn
Leonid Makarovich Kravchuk
Moldova
Orthodox Eastern Church
perestroika
Yevgeny Maksimovich Primakov
Ronald Wilson Reagan
Russia
Russian art and architecture
Aleksandr Vladimirovich Rutskoi
Andrei Dmitriyevich Sakharov
secret police
Eduard Amvrosiyevich Shevardnadze
Siberia
Aleksandr Isayevich Solzhenitsyn
Ukraine
Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
United States
Boris Nikolayevich Yeltsin
Vladimir Volfovich Zhirinovsky
Todor Zhivkov
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