Colin Powell, ex-U.S Secretary of State dies of COVID -19 complications

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Colin Powell, ex-U.S Secretary of State dies of COVID -19 complications

A former U.S. Secretary of State and Chairman, Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Colin Powell (rtd) has died of COVID-19 complications aged 84.

According to the BBC, the former top military officer died on Monday morning, his family said.

He rose to become the first African-American secretary of state in 2001 under Republican President George W Bush.

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Powell, who was fully vaccinated, later prompted controversy for his role in garnering support for the Iraq War.

“We have lost a remarkable and loving husband, father, grandfather and a great American,” the family said in a statement, thanking the staff at the Walter Reid Medical Center “for their caring treatment”.

George W Bush was among the first to pay tribute to “a great public servant” as well as “a family man and a friend” who “was such a favourite of presidents that he earned the Presidential Medal of Freedom – twice”.

Former UK Prime Minister Tony Blair – who worked closely with Powell during the early years of the Iraq War – said he was someone of “immense capability and integrity” who was “a great companion, with a lovely and self-deprecating sense of humour”.

Mr Powell, a moderate Republican who broke with his party to endorse Barack Obama in 2008, became a trusted military adviser to a number of leading U.S.politicians.

He also saw service and was wounded in Vietnam, an experience that later helped define his own military and political strategies.

However, he would say himself that his own legacy had been damaged by a speech to the United Nations Security Council which used faulty intelligence to back the invasion of Iraq.

“It was painful. It’s painful now,” Mr Powell told ABC News in 2005.

The child of Jamaican immigrants, he became the first black man to rise to the highest positions in U.S. military and diplomacy.

In the 1990s, Powell was one of the few American public figures with appeal that crossed political boundaries – reminiscent of General Dwight D Eisenhower after the Second World War.

Unlike Eisenhower, Powell would not ascend to the presidency – although there were abundant calls for him to run.

Those calls dwindled after the 2003 U.S. invasion of Iraq, a decision Powell later acknowledged was a “blot” on his legacy.

He had staked his reputation on the presence of Iraqi weapons of mass destruction – and his reputation suffered for it.

In his later years, Powell became a different kind of icon.

His drift away from the Republican Party following Donald Trump’s rise to power reflected the dwindling influence of Powell’s moderate, internationalist faction within the American conservative movement.

Powell’s life may be somewhat overshadowed by his cause of death, as he now ranks as the most prominent American to succumb to COVID-19.

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