Mets closer Díaz hoping to hear Timmy Trumpet sound off

Former Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, who played a central role in ending the Cold War, died Tuesday

Mets closer Díaz hoping to hear Timmy Trumpet sound off

at the age of 91. Russian media reported his death, citing the hospital that was treating him as 

Mets closer Díaz hoping to hear Timmy Trumpet sound off

saying he died of a "serious and protracted disease," without providing more information. Gorbachev's 

Mets closer Díaz hoping to hear Timmy Trumpet sound off

trademark policies of glasnost and perestroika helped open up the Soviet economy and liberalize society 

Mets closer Díaz hoping to hear Timmy Trumpet sound off

trademark policies of glasnost and perestroika helped open up the Soviet economy and liberalize society 

Mets closer Díaz hoping to hear Timmy Trumpet sound off

in the late 1980s, confront its past and engage with Western leaders on arms control. He also oversaw the 

Mets closer Díaz hoping to hear Timmy Trumpet sound off

withdrawal of Soviet troops from about a decadelong military campaign in Afghanistan, as well 

Mets closer Díaz hoping to hear Timmy Trumpet sound off

as the USSR's handling of Chernobyl. Awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1990, he was seen by many 

Mets closer Díaz hoping to hear Timmy Trumpet sound off

abroad, including President Ronald Reagan, as a visionary. But his legacy is complicated at home, 

Mets closer Díaz hoping to hear Timmy Trumpet sound off

where many viewed him as the man who engineered the collapse of the Soviet Union. He felt he belonged to