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- <text id=93CT1664>
- <title>
- Czech Republic--History
- </title>
- <history>
- Compact ALMANAC--CIA Factbook
- Europe
- Czech Republic
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>CIA World Factbook</source>
- <hdr>
- History
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>[Note: Czechoslovakia divided to become The Czech Republic and
- Slovakia in January 1993.]
- </p>
- <p> The Czechs lost their national independence to Austria in
- 1620 at the Battle of White Mountain and, for the next 300
- years, were ruled by the Austrian monarchy. With the collapse of
- the monarchy at the end of World War I, an independent country
- of Czechoslovakia was formed with the assistance of President
- Woodrow Wilson. The Slovaks, ruled by the Hungarians for 1,000
- years, joined in the common country with the Czechs. The Slovaks
- were not at the same level of economic and technological
- development as the Czechs, but the freedom and opportunity found
- in the new Czechoslovak Republic enabled them to make rapid
- strides toward overcoming these differences.
- </p>
- <p> Although Czechoslovakia was the only East European country
- that remained an effective parliamentary democracy throughout
- 1918-38, it was plagued with minority problems, the most
- important stemming from the country's large German population.
- Constituting more than 22% of the population and largely
- concentrated in the Bohemian and Moravian border regions (the
- Sudetenland), this minority was encouraged to reject
- Czech-German reconciliation in the new Czechoslovak country by
- nationalistic elements urged on in large part by Nazi Germany.
- Internal and external pressures culminated in September 1938,
- when, at Munich, France, Italy, and the United Kingdom acceded
- to Nazi pressure and agreed to force Czechoslovakia to cede the
- Sudetenland to Germany. Fulfilling Hitler's aggressive designs
- on all of Czechoslovakia, Germany invaded what remained of
- Bohemia and Moravia in March 1939, established a German
- "protectorate," and created a puppet state out of Slovakia.
- </p>
- <p> With the support of Slovak communists, Slovak democratic
- forces engineered a revolt in the summer of 1944. It failed
- because of German military action and the Soviet refusal to
- intervene or to permit more than token U.S. and British help
- (including a U.S. Air Force airlift of supplies and an Office of
- Strategic Services mission). Soviet troops overran all of
- Slovakia and Moravia and much of Bohemia, including Prague,
- were overrun in the winter and spring of 1944-45. U.S. forces
- liberated the city of Plzen and most of western Bohemia in May
- 1945. In Prague, a civilian uprising against the German
- garrison had taken place in early May 1945. Following Germany's
- surrender, some 2.5 million ethnic Germans were expelled from
- Czechoslovakia.
- </p>
- <p> From May 1945 until the spring elections of 1946, the country
- was ruled by a coalition government that included Communist
- Party members. The democratic elements, led by President Eduard
- Benes, hoped the Soviet Union would allow Czechoslovakia freedom
- to choose its own form of government, and aspired to a
- Czechoslovakia that would act as a bridge between East and West.
- This objective was sustained by Czechoslovakia's highly
- developed economy, its strong democratic traditions, and its
- readiness to accept considerable socialization of the economic
- system. The Communist Party, however, which won 38% of the vote
- in the 1946 election, held most of the key positions and
- gradually managed to neutralize or silence anticommunist forces.
- Although the Benes government initially hoped to participate in
- the Marshall Plan, it was forced by Moscow to back out. Under
- the cover of superficial legality, the communists seized power
- in February 1948.
- </p>
- <p> After extensive purges modeled on the Stalinist pattern in
- other East European states, the communist Party tried 14 of its
- former leaders in November 1952 and sentenced 11 to death. For
- more than a decade thereafter, the Czechoslovak communist
- leadership was characterized by its stability of tenure under
- the leadership of party chief Antonin Novotny.
- </p>
- <p>The 1968 Soviet Invasion
- </p>
- <p> The communist leadership allowed only a little relaxation in
- the early 1960s. However, in the mid-1960s, discontent arose
- within the ranks of the Communist Party Central Committee
- because of the slow pace of economic reform, resistance to
- cultural liberalization, and the desire of Slovaks within the
- leadership for a larger share of the country's investment
- resources.
- </p>
- <p> The discontent culminated with the removal of Novotny from
- party leadership in January 1968 and from the presidency of the
- republic in March. He was replaced as party leader by a
- longtime, Soviet-educated party activist of Slovak origin,
- Alexander Dubcek, and as president by Gen. Ludvik Svoboda, a
- military hero of both world wars. In addition to Novotny, many
- other orthodox communists were subsequently forced from party
- and government positions.
- </p>
- <p> After January 1968, the Dubcek leadership began practical
- steps toward political, economic, and social reforms that
- promised a better life for the Czechoslovak people. In
- addition, it called for politico-military changes in the
- Soviet-dominated Warsaw Pact and Council for Mutual Economic
- Assistance (CEMA). The leadership affirmed its loyalty to
- socialism and the Warsaw Pact but also expressed the desire to
- improve relations with all countries of the world regardless of
- their social systems.
- </p>
- <p> A program adopted in April 1968 set guidelines for a modern,
- humanistic-socialist democracy that would guarantee freedom of
- religion, speech, press, assembly, and travel; insulate the
- government from the Communist Party; create independent courts;
- introduce multiple-choice, secret-ballot elections; and effect
- economic reforms. After 20 years of little participation, the
- public gradually began to take an interest in the government and
- leadership. Dubcek became a popular national figure and the
- first Czechoslovak communist leader to enjoy broad public
- support.
- </p>
- <p> Internal reforms and foreign policy statements of the Dubcek
- leadership created great concern among some of the other Warsaw
- Pact communist government and parties. On the night of August
- 20, 1968, Soviet, Bulgarian, Hungarian, Polish, and East German
- troops invaded and occupied Czechoslovakia. The Czechoslovak
- Party and Government immediately declared that the invading
- troops had not been invited into the country and that their
- invasion was in violation of socialist principles,
- international law, and the UN Charter.
- </p>
- <p> The principal Czechoslovak leaders were forcibly and secretly
- taken to the Soviet Union. Under obvious Soviet duress, the
- Czechoslovaks engaged in a series of negotiations at Moscow on
- August 23-26, again on October 2-3, and finally at Prague on
- October 16. On that day, Soviet Premier Aleksei Kosygin, acting
- on behalf of all the invading countries, and Czechoslovak
- Premier Oldrich Cernik signed a treaty that provided for the
- "temporary" stationing of an unspecified number of Soviet
- troops in Czechoslovakia.
- </p>
- <p> In November, the troops of the other countries and some of
- the Soviet forces were withdrawn. In addition to accepting the
- "legalization" of stationing Soviet troops in Czechoslovakia,
- Czechoslovak leaders were forced to censor the media and to curb
- virtually all of the reforms that Dubcek had promoted.
- </p>
- <p> Dubcek was removed as party First Secretary on April 17,
- 1969, and was replaced by another Slovak, Gustav Husak. Later,
- Dubcek and many allies within the party were stripped of their
- other party positions in a purge of the Communist Party that
- lasted until 1971 and that reduced party membership by almost
- one-third.
- </p>
- <p> By October 27, 1969, the Soviets had achieved their basic
- objectives: the Czechoslovak liberalization movement was
- dismantled; elements of the orthodox Communist Party were back
- in control; and Soviet troops remained stationed in
- Czechoslovakia. On that date, General Secretary Husak, Prime
- Minister Cernik, and President Svoboda signed a joint
- communique with the Soviets at Moscow that justified the
- invasion, accepted the Brezhnev doctrine of limited sovereignty,
- avowed that stationing Soviet troops in Czechoslovakia was
- essential to the security of Czechoslovakia's western borders,
- and opened the way for the further integration of
- Czechoslovakia's economy with that of the Soviet Union. This
- relationship was further formalized in a 20-year
- Soviet-Czechoslovak Treaty of Friendship, Cooperation, and
- Mutual Assistance signed on May 6, 1970. In May 1975, Gustav
- Husak replaced the ailing Svoboda as president, retaining at the
- same time his position as Communist Party General Secretary.
- Milos Jakes, who presided over the purge of party members after
- the 1968 invasion, succeeded Husak as party general secretary
- in December 1987.
- </p>
- <p>Political Conditions
- </p>
- <p> In November 1989, student protests of police brutality
- ushered in a period of rapid changes that culminated, by year's
- end, in a new, noncommunist government and the election of
- dissident playwright Vaclav Havel as president. The new
- government ended the Communist Party's leading role in
- political life, eliminated restrictions on travel abroad, and
- passed legislation guaranteeing freedom of speech, freedom of
- assembly, and freedom of conscience. All political prisoners
- were freed, and work began in earnest on democratic political
- reform.
- </p>
- <p> After Husak had consolidated the "normalization" of the
- post-1968 period, Czecholslovaks generally had retreated from
- political life. The roots of 1989's Civic Forum movement that
- effected the "gentle revolution" can be found in human rights
- activism. On January 1, 1977, more than 250 people signed a
- manifesto called Charter 77 criticizing the government for
- failure to implement human rights provisions of documents it
- had signed, among which are the constitution; the International
- Covenants on Political and Civil and Economic, Social, and
- Cultural Rights; and the Final Act of the Conference on
- Security and Cooperation in Europe. Although not organized in
- any real sense, Charter 77 constituted something of a citizens'
- initiative aimed at inducing the Czechoslovak Government to
- observe its formal obligations to respect the human rights of
- its citizens.
- </p>
- <p> To stifle opposition, Husak subjected Charter 77 signatories
- and other "dissident" groups to periodic harassment and
- persecution. This included both judicial and nonjudicial
- measures, ranging from loss of job or denial of educational
- opportunities for children to detention, trial, and
- imprisonment. The government also induced or forced human
- rights activists into exile abroad and deprived them of their
- citizenship.
- </p>
- <p> In October 1979, the government staged a "subversion" trial
- of six leading activists of the Committee for the Defense of the
- Unjustly Persecuted as a warning to other "dissidents." As
- political tension in neighboring Poland mounted during 1980-81,
- the government, perhaps fearing a "spillover" effect, became
- increasingly repressive in its treatment of Charter 77 and other
- activists. In March 1987, government efforts to neutralize the
- Jazz Section of the Czech Musicians' Union, which sought to
- promote freedom of cultural expression, resulted in the trial of
- several of the section's leaders after months of detention.
- </p>
- <p> Despite persecution, Charter 77 had grown to at least 1,500
- signatories in 1989. More important, the charter had become only
- one of many independent initiatives critical of the government.
- These new groups helped launch a series of peaceful
- demonstrations by thousands of citizens in Prague in late 1988
- and early 1989 that drew worldwide attention and a strong
- government response. The regime forcibly dispersed a series of
- demonstrations in January 1989 and subsequently imprisoned
- several prominent human rights activists,including Havel who
- served 4 months in prison on charges of incitement.
- </p>
- <p> In the events of November 1989, these disparate groups united
- to become Civic Forum, an umbrella group championing
- bureaucratic reform and civil liberties. Civic Forum quickly
- gained the support of millions of Czechs, as did its Slovak
- counterpart, Public Without Violence. Faced with overwhelming
- repudiation by the population, the Communist Party all but
- collapsed. Its leaders, Husak and party chief Milos Jakes,
- resigned in December 1989.
- </p>
- <p>Source: U.S. Department of State, Bureau of Public Affairs,
- February 1990.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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