Skip to content

Prague Spring

Phil Carradice

Warsaw Pact Invasion, 1968

Barcode 9781526757005
Paperback

Sold out
Original price £12.84 - Original price £12.84
Original price
£12.84
£12.84 - £12.84
Current price £12.84

Click here to join our rewards scheme and earn points on this purchase!

Availability:
Out of stock

Release Date: 03/07/2019

Genre: Non-Fiction
Sub-Genre: History
Label: Pen & Sword Military
Series: Cold War 1945-1991
Language: English
Publisher: Pen & Sword Books Ltd
Pages: 136

Warsaw Pact Invasion, 1968
Cold War nadir: January 1968 and in Czechoslovakia the new Communist Party leader Alexander Dubcek has made it clear that this is the opportunity to loosen the Soviet stranglehold on the country. As the Prague winter slowly eases into a Prague spring, it really does seem as if Dubcek has judged it right.
Cold War nadir: January 1968 and in Czechoslovakia the new Communist Party leader Alexander Dubcek has made it clear that this is the opportunity to loosen the Soviet stranglehold on the country. As the Prague winter slowly eases into a Prague spring, it really does seem as if Dubcek has judged it right. Reforms in oppressive censorship laws, improved housing, a lessening of totalitarian oppression, Dubcek promises and delivers on it all. The new regime in Czechoslovakia does seek to destroy communism but it does want to choose its own political destiny.And then, on the night of 20/21 August the Prague Spring is crushed by the Warsaw Pact invasion: 200,000 Communist troops, mostly Soviet but also Polish and East German, flood the country. The resulting protests and rallies against the invasion, mostly by young people, are violent and bloody. Hundreds die in clashes; self-immolation, in public and before the eyes of the world, brings home the horror and the depth of feeling in the Czech people.It is the end of the Prague Spring, the reformation of Czechoslovakia having ended in ruins. But despite the brutal crushing of Czech hopes and dreams, the events of 1968 lay the foundations for future change. It will take another two decades but it is, ultimately, where the unravelling of the Communist bloc begins.