Lionized in the West, a pariah at home
But while he was lionized in the West, Gorbachev came to be seen as a pariah at home. It is often forgotten now that his goal wasn't necessarily to dismantle the communist Soviet Union. In many ways, his hand was forced by decades of economic decay in the communist system and the draining impact of a nuclear arms race with the West. But in trying to save the system, he set off forces that destroyed it. Far from heralding the "end of history" as was often said at the time, his influence caused consequences that could still be felt on the day he died, with Moscow and the West again at loggerheads in a Cold War-style chill. At home, Gorbachev had two overarching ideas, glasnost (openness) and perestroika (restructuring). The swift collapse of the Soviet Union, which perestroika caused to splinter, brought extreme economic conditions, disorder and a blow to national pride. All of this added up to the circumstances that eventually made a strongman like Putin attractive to many Russians. At the moment when Gorbachev refused to send the Red Army into Eastern Europe to save the communist bloc, Putin was stationed with the KGB in East Germany and felt the sting of Moscow's desertion. He came to see the demise of the Soviet Empire as a disaster of history; and once Putin gained power, he set about restoring wounded Russian national prestige.Now the world is saddled with a leader in the Kremlin, who unlike Gorbachev is ready to remake the map of Europe by force — even if a restoration of the Warsaw Pact is beyond his reach, with millions in Eastern Europe now effectively living out Gorbachev's legacy in democratic, free societies. Gorbachev's rule was not without blemishes from a Western point of view. He sent tanks into Lithuania to crush independence hopes in the Baltic states in 1991, months before leaving power. And he was banned from Ukraine for five years after saying he supported Putin's annexation of Crimea. But to the end of his days, Gorbachev decried Putin's excesses and traveled the globe warning of the peril of the plunge in relations between the world's two top nuclear powers. That he will be remembered as a giant in the West and a pariah at home speaks to the gulf in understanding and experience that again poisons East-West relations.
Gorbachev never stopped mourning his beloved wife, Raisa, who died of leukemia in 1999. Now, he's followed her and his contemporaries from a remarkable moment in history — Reagan, Thatcher, President George H.W. Bush, German Chancellor Helmut Kohl and French President François Mitterrand -- to the grave.
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