February 8, 2012

Former Secretary of State Alexander Haig dies at 85

4f1ea0e4fd7e06b4ad286abc92ecf523 Former Secretary of State Alexander Haig dies at 85

Alexander Haig, shown in a 1999 file photo, died Saturday, a hospital spokesman said.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS

* Haig worked under Presidents Nixon, Ford, Reagan
* He was Nixon’s chief of staff after H.R. Haldeman’s resignation
* As secretary of state, Haig wrongly declared “I am in control here” after Reagan was shot
* He unsuccessfully sought the 1988 Republican presidential nomination

Washington (CNN) — Alexander Haig, the former officer, secretary of state and adviser to presidents, has died, a Johns Hopkins Medical Center spokesman said.

Haig, 85, was admitted to the Baltimore, Maryland, hospital on January 28 and died at 1:30 a.m. Saturday, hospital spokesman Gary Stephenson said.

Haig was a top official in the administrations of three presidents — Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford and Ronald Reagan.

As Reagan’s secretary of state, Haig famously (and incorrectly) declared, “As of now, I am in control here, in the , pending the return of the vice president,” he declared shortly after President Reagan was shot on March 30, 1981. Vice President George H.W. Bush was en route from after the shooting in Washington.

Haig served as Nixon’s deputy assistant for national affairs beginning in 1970, then in January 1973 became vice chief of staff of the Army.
Video: Haig: ‘I’m in control’
RELATED TOPICS

* Alexander Haig
* Richard Nixon
* Ronald Reagan
* Department of State

“His departure from the Nixon administration proved to be short lived,” the Nixon Presidential Library and Museum Web site says in a biographical note on Haig. “Four months later, on May 4, 1973, he returned to the White House as chief of staff at the request of the president to fill the vacuum created by H.R. Haldeman’s resignation on April 30.”

Nixon’s resignation came that August.

Haig then became supreme allied commander over forces in until 1979.

He left the military for the private sector, but returned to serve as Reagan’s secretary of state in 1981. He resigned the following year.

TIME: Read why Haig left the Reagan White House

Haig ran an unsuccessful bid for the 1988 Republican presidential nomination.

Alexander Meigs Haig Jr. was born December 2, 1924, in Bala Cynwyd, Pennsylvania, a suburb of Philadelphia. He attended the University of Notre Dame for two years before transferring to the U.S. Military Academy in 1944. After his graduation in 1947, he served in . He later served on Gen. Douglas MacArthur’s staff in during the Korean War.

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