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with the Soviet Union in Geneva. Shultz died Saturday at the age of 100.
Barry Thumma/AP
Former Secretary of State George P. Shultz, who served in four different Cabinet-level posts and helped guide America out of the Cold War, died Saturday evening at his home in California. He was 100.

One of the key figures of 20th century American politics, Shultz served in Cabinet-level positions under two American presidents. For Richard Nixon, he was U.S. secretary of labor, director of the Office of Management and Budget, and secretary of the treasury.

But it’s his role as U.S. secretary of state for Ronald Reagan for which Shultz is most famous. As secretary of state, Shultz was integral in improving relations with the Soviet Union using the tools of diplomacy.

In the early 1980s, during a time of icy relations between the world’s two remaining superpowers, Shultz pushed for a broader dialogue between the U.S. and the U.S.S.R.

When Mikhail Gorbachev became general secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union in 1985, Shultz was convinced Gorbachev was a new type of leader — one who understood the importance of nuclear arms control.

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“He helped Reagan and Gorbachev to establish an upward spiral of trust by creating positive experiences with each other,” historian Stephan Kieninger wrote for the Hoover Institution at Stanford University around Shultz’s 100th birthday in December.

Those talks eventually led to the signing of the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty, which banned land-launched nuclear weapons capable of reaching targets between 310 and 3,400 miles away. Reagan and Gorbachev signed the agreement in 1987. By June 1991, the two countries had destroyed 2,692 ballistic and cruise missiles.

Shultz believed that agreement was only possible because of the trust that had developed between the two leaders.

“Trust is the coin of the realm,” Shultz wrote in The Washington Post in December. “When trust was in the room, whatever room that was — the family room, the schoolroom, the locker room, the office room, the government room or the military room — good things happened. When trust was not in the room, good things did not happen. Everything else is details.”

“Shultz was a key player, alongside President Ronald Reagan, in changing the direction of history by using the tools of diplomacy to bring the Cold War to an end,” Stanford University’s Hoover Institution said in announcing his death. He was able to “not only imagine things thought impossible but also to bring them to fruition and forever change the course of human events.”

Writing for the Post on Sunday, former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice called Shultz her mentor and friend. “Now, we will have to carry on the work that he challenged us to do: to love freedom, to provide opportunity for all and to never lose a thirst for learning.”

Shultz also had a cheeky side. The Chicago Tribune confirmed in 1987 that he had a tiger tattooed on his rear end — a memento from his college years at Princeton University.

“When the children were young, they used to run up and touch it and he would growl and they would run away,” his wife Helena said.

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George P. Shultz, Giant Of 20th Century American Politics, Dies At 100