The Telegram (St. John's)

Peter Carington was last survivor of Churchill government

- BY DANICA KIRKA

Peter Carington, a long-serving British politician who was the last survivor of prime minister Winston Churchill’s government, has died, the government said Tuesday. He was 99.

The House of Lords website said he died Monday.

Known for being both refined and personable, Carington served as agricultur­e minister in Churchill’s post-second World War government. He went on to hold several of the top jobs in British politics, including defence secretary and foreign secretary. He also was NATO secretary-general in the mid1980s, when there was a clear thawing in relations between Washington and Moscow.

“There can be few people who have served our country for as long, and with such dedication, as Lord Carrington did — from his gallantry as a tank commander in the Second World War, for which he was awarded the Military Cross, to his service in government under two monarchs and six prime ministers, dating back to Winston Churchill,” Prime Minster Theresa May said.

“He was a much loved and widely respected member of the House of Lords for nearly eight decades, and served with great honour and integrity in government.”

In 1982, Carington resigned as foreign secretary in prime minister Margaret Thatcher’s government after Argentina invaded and occupied the Falkland Islands. Britain won the islands back after a brief war, but he blamed himself in part for failing to foresee the invasion and for not preventing it.

“You have to get things into perspectiv­e,” he would say years later. “I lost my job. Others lost their lives.”

He garnered admiration for resigning on a point of principle and in 1984 he was appointed secretary-general of NATO. He served in that role for four years, during which U.S. president Ronald Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev started bringing an end to the Cold War.

In the early 1990s, he served as the European Union negotiator as diplomats tried to broker a deal to end the civil war in Yugoslavia.

In Britain, he is perhaps best remembered for his role in ending 14 years of deadlock in the former British colony of Rhodesia, steering it to independen­ce as black-ruled Zimbabwe in 1980.

A hereditary peer, his title was Lord Carrington — with a double r, though his surname only had one.

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO ?? NATO secretary general Lord Carrington (left) and U.S. president Ronald Reagan pose for photograph­ers in the Rose Garden prior to talks at the White House in Washington, D.C., in September 1984.
AP FILE PHOTO NATO secretary general Lord Carrington (left) and U.S. president Ronald Reagan pose for photograph­ers in the Rose Garden prior to talks at the White House in Washington, D.C., in September 1984.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada