Students protested as Warsaw Pact armor entered Prague. |
The winds of
change were blowing strong in 1968 and they weren’t confined to the volatile United States where Vietnam War protests and urban Black rebellion seemed for a moment to
ready to change everything. Student and
student/worker alliance rebellions swept Western
Europe, particularly France and
the Federal Republic of Germany.
Change was also
coming, inevitably, to the countries behind the Iron Curtain where the Soviet
Union had maintained rigid control since the 1956 Hungarian Uprising. It began
in Yugoslavia where Tito had earlier begun to chart an
independent course in international relations and where a unique movement for worker’s control of factories was
challenging traditional authority. But
nowhere did the flowers of emerging change bloom more promisingly than in Czechoslovakia where a reform minded Communist, Alexander Dubček, inaugurated the change hailed by the
world as the Prague Spring.
It all came to an end on the night of August 20,
1968 when 200,000 Warsaw Pact troops
from the USSR, Bulgaria, Poland and Hungary with more than 2000 heavy tanks
invaded the wayward republic.
The first whiff of change had come in 1967 from a
minority of members of the official Czechoslovak
Writer’s Union who supported a radical socialist critique of the staid and
calcified Soviet style economic system dependent on central command control
that had put the once brisk Czech economy into a long tail spin. They supported reforms along the workers’ self management models and
mixed market economy emerging in Yugoslavia. In the process, they had to advocate greater
freedom of expression to air their views in the columns of the Union newspaper Literární noviny and other publications.
President Antonín Novotný and Party leaders, including those who would
soon become reformers, quickly squelched the movement, but the cat was out of
the bag.
There was also pressure
for some sort of autonomy for the ethnic regions that made up the polyglot Czechoslovak Socialist Republic—Bohemia, Moravia, and Slovakia. The Bohemians—Czecks—had long dominated the
country and were resented by the Slovaks in particular, who were far less
industrialized and modernized than the Czecks.
Despite backing from Moscow, Novotný was rapidly losing support even on the party
Central Committee. Dubček, First Secretary of Communist Party of Slovakia, and economist Ota Šik openly challenged Novotný for
leadership. Alarmed, the President and
Party boss appealed to Soviet Premier
Leonid Brezhnev for support. But
when Brezhnev visited Prague and gauged how deeply unpopular Novotný was among the Party faithful, he
signaled that the USSR would not oppose a change at the top.
Dubček replaced Novotný as First Secretary on
January 5 1968 and on March 22 Novotný resigned the presidency and was replaced
by Ludvík Svoboda. Soon after taking power, perhaps to reassure
the nervous Soviets, Dubček
repeatedly re-affirmed Party orthodoxy and the Party’s unchallenged leadership,
“…to build an advanced socialist society on sound economic
foundations ... a socialism that corresponds to the historical
democratic traditions of Czechoslovakia, in accordance with the experience of other
communist parties …”
Despite the tough rhetoric, Dubček began to
implement reforms in April when he announced the Action Program of liberalizations, which included increasing
freedom of the press, freedom of speech, and freedom of movement, with economic
emphasis on scarce consumer goods
and even the distant possibility of a multiparty government. It called for a ten year transition period to
free and open elections that would embody a new model of democratic socialism. The
plan also re-affirmed the alliance with Moscow, but set improved
relations—including trade—with the West as a goal. Finally, it transformed the country into a Federation of partly autonomous Czech
and Slovak Republics. The minority Moravians found themselves mostly in
the Czech Republic.
The program proved immediately and immensely
popular at home, just as it alarmed the Kremlin. Despite
Dubček’s claims that it was only a logical outgrowth of traditional
Communist doctrine adapted to modern demands and his insistence that the Party
retain tight control over the transaction process and period, public pressure
rapidly mounted to move quickly to the ultimate goals and Party supremacy was
soon openly challenged.
Social Democrats
openly began to organize an opposition party and political clubs of various ideologies quickly sprouted each with their own
demands—often contradictory demands—for change.
At the Presidium
of the Party in April, Dubček painted his proposed reforms as socialism with a human face. In May, he
announced that the Fourteenth Party
Congress would convene in September to implement the Action Program, draft
a federalization law, and elect a new Central
Committee.
Despite these signals of progress, dissidents
demanded more. On June 27 Ludvík Vaculík, published the manifesto
The Two Thousand Words which
expressed concern about conservative elements within the Communist Party and
the influence of “foreign forces,” a none too subtle reference to the
Soviets. He called for popular action by
the people for the immediate implementation of the reform program. Dubcek and Party leaders denounced the
manifesto.
Brezhnev, Soviet Party leaders, and the nervous
leaders of adjacent Warsaw Pact nations fearful that reform was contagious,
looked on the developments with mounting horror. Brezhnev and Dubček entered
into bi-lateral talks in July that resulted in an agreement that the Czecks
would curb dissent, prevent the establishment of the Social Democratic Party,
and bring reforms back under strict Party control.
For his part Brezhnev promised to withdraw the
remaining Soviet military force in the country and allow the reformist Party
Congress to go on as planned in September.
The agreement was signed by both parties on August 3.
But the Soviets declared their intention to
intervene if signs of an emerging bourgeois
democracy continued. They withdrew
the troops as scheduled, but held them in readiness on the border.
If Dubček thought he had bought time, he was
mistaken. His compromises were met by
outrage at home and he was slow to execute the promised clamp down. But the streets were calm and there were no
obvious immediate triggers when the Soviets decided to enforce what they were
now calling the Brezhnev Doctrine allowing for armed
intervention in Eastern Block states
who placed their national interests
above those of the alliance as a whole.
Brezhnev, with the enthusiastic support of party bosses in subservient
states, ordered the occupation of Czechoslovakia to begin on August 20.
Troops quickly captured the Ruzyně International Airport allowing
for more troops to arrive at the capital by air while forces crossed the border
from multiple directions. Caught by
surprise, Dubček wisely called on
his people not to resist. Czeck armed
forces were quickly confined to barracks and surrounded by troops and tanks to
prevent them from acting. Still, there
was scattered resistance including some rock and bottle throwing and a few
instances of farmers firing with antiquated shotguns, but there was nothing
like the kind of wide spread street fighting that had followed the 1956
Hungarian invasion.
Most resistance was passive. Highway and directional signs were everywhere
removed, defaced or turned the wrong directions. Many towns removed the signs with their names
and replaced them with signs declaring the villages Dubček or Svoboda. Since many of the invading forces came with
no more sophisticated navigation aids than local highway maps, these ruses
actually caused some confusion and brief delays.
During the
attack 72 were killed, 266 severely wounded and another 436 were slightly
injured. No fatalities and few injuries
to the invaders were reported.
Within 24 hours the whole country was essentially occupied.
On the night of the invasion the Czech
Presidium avowed that troops had crossed the border without their knowledge,
approval, or invitation. The Soviet
press countered with an unsigned request for military assistance supposedly
sent by members of the Central Committee.
Subsequent revelations have shown that dissident conservative Party
members had indeed asked for aid.
The hastily
assembled Party Congress met in secret and reiterated that senior Party
leadership was not involved.
Dubček was quickly arrested and original plans
were for him to be immediately replaced.
But Soviet authorities on the ground were alarmed by his continuing
broad support among the people and it was decided to bring him and other
leaders to Moscow for “consultation.”
Under heavy pressure Dubček was
forced to sign the Moscow Declaration
which gave a cover of legitimacy to the invasion. In return he was allowed to remain nominally
in power and some reforms were allowed to go forward—principally the creation
of the semi-autonomous Czech and Slovak Republics. Most political and economic liberalization
measures, however, were abandoned.
Within days hundreds of thousands fled the country
to the West. No real attempt was made to
stop them as authorities regarded most of them as dangerous. Within a few weeks as many as 300,000 left,
including many of the cream of the cultural, academic, and industrial elite who
could afford to move. The loss in a
relatively small country was a catastrophic brain drain that crippled the nation for years.
In April 1969 Dubček was finally ousted from
office and replaced by reliable hard liner Gustáv Husák who rolled back even more reforms. Also he and fellow Czechs who dominated the
Party ran roughshod over smaller and poorer Slovenia, increasing tensions that
would lead to the eventual break-up of the country. Dubček
was allowed to stay free and was given a minor Forestry post.
In 1987 another Soviet leader, Mikhail Gorbachev, began to initiate reforms in the USSR that he frankly admitted
were modeled on Czech “socialism with a human face.” He also loosened the Soviet grip on Eastern
Block nations.
Czechoslovakia
responded with its successful non-violent 1989 Velvet Revolution. Dubček
was elected the Speaker of the Federal
Assembly, founded and led the Social
Democratic Party, and campaigned against the break-up of a united
Czechoslovakia until his death in 1992.
Western
response to the invasion was predictable impotent outrage. Empty resolutions were proposed at the United Nations but later withdrawn at
the request of the now captive Czech government. The United States had its hands full in
Vietnam and had no desire to provoke a confrontation in Europe. Besides, it was looking to Moscow for quiet
support to bring the North Vietnamese
to the bargaining table.
Western
European nations, faced with their own stability problems, were not eager to
provoke a confrontation either. The
biggest reaction may have come within the international Communist movement. Most Western parties bitterly denounced the
invasion and strove to distance themselves from Moscow. Western parties, who had been chaffing at the
bit for years, felt free to strike independent positions and abandon automatic
fealty to Moscow.
In Eastern
Europe Romanian leader Nicolae Ceauşescu, at that time a declared
admirer of the Czech reforms, publicly broke with the Soviets and Warsaw Pact
and denounced the Brezhnev
Doctrine. The Soviet leaning government
of officially neutral Finland was
weakened as popular support in that country swung to pro-Western parties.
In the end, the Soviets, also at odds with the Chinese, found themselves more isolated
in the world than ever and without even the reliable support of sizable Western
European Communist Parties.
In the United States Richard Nixon would use the revived energy of the Captive Nations movement of emigrants
from Soviet Satellites to chip away at traditionally solid support for Democrats of largely blue collar
Eastern European Catholics.
The Prague Spring and its aftermath would have
lasting cultural impact. Protest songs
and lamentations from several countries and in several languages became
popular. Including Karel Kryl
and Luboš Fišer’s Requiem, Karel Husa’s Music for Prague 1968,
the Israeli song Prague,
written by Shalom Hanoch and
performed by Arik Einstein, and They
Can't Stop The Spring a song by Irish
journalist and songwriter John
Waters.
Poet Václav
Havel wrote impassioned
denunciations of the invasion and became a national hero who became the last
President of Czechoslovakia after the Velvet Revolution and the first President
of the independent Czech Republic in 1993.
Milan Kundera’s novel The Unbearable Lightness of Being is considered a contemporary literary
masterpiece and was made into a well received film by director Philip Kaufman starring Daniel Day Lewis, Juliette Binoche, and Lena
Olin.
The real
lasting legacy of the Prague Spring, however, was its inspiration for similar
movements in Eastern Europe and in the Beijing Spring of 1978.
Right wing commentators continue to invoke the movement, but fail to
recognize that it, like many of its imitators, had its roots in left wing
opposition to Party orthodoxy and hegemony, not in a neo-libertarian
pro-capitalist revolt.
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