Tag Archives: prague spring

The Prague Spring and Détente: How the Soviet Invasion of Czechoslovakia Helped to Reduce Tensions

[And now for Part II of our series on Eastern (Czecho and Hungary… so actually Central?) European reform movements from a U.S. foreign policy context during the Cold War! Apologies again for the Roman numerals; OpenOffice does that automatically for some reason. It’s the second-to-last piece of my undergraduate career (looking forward to posting my senior thesis here… after it’s finally done). I guess I should do something about Poland ’89 after graduation and make a trilogy out of this!]

By the late 1960’s, the lines drawn between NATO and the Warsaw Pact in Europe were static, and the hegemons at the head of either bloc had turned to expanding their influence and power in the third world where young, post-colonial states could be bought with arms and aid. The United States, under the Johnson administration, was mired in the Vietnam War; the Soviet Union, on the other hand, had just undergone a transition of leadership from Khrushchev to Brezhnev in 1964, and memories of Khrushchev’s heavy-handed brinksmanship, particularly in Cuba in 1962, led the new Politburo to toe a more moderate line.i By 1967, Soviet influence in the Middle East, where it had invested considerable energy and resources in building ties with the Arab states, was crumbling under the pressure of a strong Israel following its victory in the Six Day War.ii The United States, however, found itself in a similar situation of declining influence: by the waning years of the decade, there were over 500,000 American troops fighting in Vietnam, and domestic unrest in the United States over the war was at an all-time high.iii Add to the equation domestic economic issues in the U.S.S.R. and the deteriorating ties between the Soviets and the Chinese, which would result in a border war in March 1969 across the Ussuri River,iv and the two superpowers were all but ready to sit down at the negotiating table. A shock came to the Soviets in 1968, though, as their dominance of Eastern Europe was, as before in 1956 in Budapest, threatened by a reform movement in one of their satellites: Alexander Dubček’s so-called “Prague Spring,” a top-down reform movement of the communist system in Czechoslovakia, threatened the stability of the status quo in Europe. Dubček’s reforms, which resulted in press restrictions being lifted and culminated with rumors and talk of multi-party democracy, forced Brezhnev’s hand and triggered the Soviets into action. The ensuing Warsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia and occupation, as well as the declaration of the “Brezhnev Doctrine,” initially threw a wrench in the détente process: the outgoing Johnson administration had little to discuss, and the newly elected Nixon administration was reluctant to deal with the Soviets. Ultimately, however, the fallout from the invasion effectively forced the Soviets to sit down with the U.S., and a war-weary America was more than willing to oblige them.v The Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia was a defining moment in Soviet foreign policy and in the Soviet-American relationship in the 1960’s, and it set the stage for a major reduction in tensions in the following decade by giving the United States an edge at the negotiating table.

In the lead-up to 1968, the United States was plunged knee-deep in the Vietnam War. The war had been escalating consistently under President Johnson since 1964, when the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution effectively gave the president carte blanche to conduct the war as he saw fit. A military coup in South Vietnam in 1963, approved by the CIA and executed by a cabal of South Vietnamese officers mere weeks before President Kennedy’s assassination, allowed a military government with neither a long term strategy nor any working cohesion to come to power in place of Ngo Dinh Diem’s unpopular regime.vi This caused incredible weakness and instability in the South Vietnamese government, and forced the United States to make a much more devoted commitment to prevent its ally’s collapse: by the end of 1965, more than 184,000 American troops were on the ground in South Vietnam with more on the way.vii An arrogant American foreign policy, guided by the assumption that what Johnson’s administration accomplished in the Dominican Republic could be replicated in Southeast Asia, allowed the United States to ratchet up its involvement rapidly.viii Discontent and anti-war sentiments ballooned at home; morale plummeted among American troops and the American people. Until 1968, the administration asserted that victory was not only possible, but also right around the corner. Then, in January 1968, came the Tet Offensive: the resulting fallout caused the Americans to scale back their bombing campaign of the North and rethink their strategy. With discontent so high, President Johnson opted to not seek reelection, and he withdrew from the 1968 presidential race.ix American prestige was reeling.

The Soviet Union was in a similar situation: its humiliation in 1962 from Cuba had led Brezhnev to seek a massive rearmament program and military buildup, but his investment in the Arab states of the Middle East also expanded. The 1967 Six Day War, which was a resounding victory for the Israelis, did not sway the Soviet commitment to the Arab states: they desperately continued to pour money into Syria and Egypt to maintain some influence in the region, and as a result Soviet foreign policy in the Middle East was held hostage by radical Arab nationalists.x At the peak of the Six Day War, the Soviets sent Alexei Kosygin, a member of Brezhnev’s inner circle in the Politburo, to Glassboro, New Jersey to meet with President Johnson. The Americans were, at this time, ready for far-reaching talks to reduce tensions because of their involvement in Indochina, but Kosygin was not prepared for serious talks, especially since Moscow was in the process of building up its nuclear arsenal to reach parity with the United States.xi Coming events would see the Soviets much more eager to return to the table not long after the failed attempt to reach a consensus in Glassboro.

With the turmoil unfolding in the third world, Europe, as divided by the Iron Curtain, was relatively quiet. Since 1956, the order established in Europe had remained unchallenged by either side: the Eisenhower administration had learned the hard way what encouraging revolutionary sentiments in Eastern Europe would do to the Soviet Union’s temper. A storm was brewing in Europe’s heart, though, on the eastern frontier of NATO’s border with Czechoslovakia. Czechoslovakia was a unique case in 20th century Europe: it was the last democratic state in Europe east of the Rhine river prior to the Second World War, and it was also the first nation sacrificed to appease Hitler’s appetite in 1938.xii After the war, it was the last Eastern European state to fall to Communism, where the democratic coalition government was forcibly overthrown in 1948 by a coup d’état, and a new constitution was drafted that solidified the dominance of the Communist Party.xiii Through the 1950’s and early 1960’s, the Czechoslovak Communists followed a similar trend as the other European Soviet satellites: they consolidated their power through suppressing dissent and dismantling the opposition through a series of show trials and police crackdowns. In contrast to the rest of the Eastern European satellites, though, the Czechoslovak political system was remarkably stable. Stalinism endured in Czechoslovakia well after Stalin’s death in 1953; the regime in Prague survived revolts in Berlin and Warsaw, as well as a revolution in Hungary, without wavering.xiv By the mid 1960’s, the Czechoslovak government had begun to loosen its grip. A growing desire for change among intellectuals reached a climax in June 1967 at the Congress of Czechoslovak Writers, and at student demonstrations in Prague in October of the same year.xv

The government acknowledged these calls for reform, and on January 5, 1968, Antonin Novotny resigned as First Secretary of the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia after fourteen years in that position.xvi He was replaced by Alexander Dubček, a relatively obscure Slovak politician who had risen to the leadership of the Slovak branch of the party. Novotny further resigned from the Presidency of the Czechoslovak Socialist Republic in March. In April 1968, “The Action Program of the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia” was adopted at the plenary session of the Party’s Central Committee, and was titled “The Czechoslovak Road to Communism.” The Action Program broadly outlined proposed political and economic reforms, and placed an emphasis on the government’s desire to bring Czechoslovakia into the “scientific-technical revolution.” The Program featured a proposal for a complete overhaul of the Czechoslovak legal system, which for the first time since the 1948 coup would guarantee certain rights and safeguards for individuals within the criminal justice system.xvii The Action Program also promised to guarantee the rights to free speech and free press, which were unheard of east of the Iron Curtain. Overall, it shifted the focus away from the Party, which was mentioned briefly and vaguely, and instead concentrated on the state organs, particularly the National Assembly.xviii The Assembly was to become a veritable legislature, rather than a rubber stamp assembly, and it would play a large role in instituting the proposed reforms. From April to June, the government made preliminary steps towards implementing the Action Plan, but public opinion often made demands that went much further than the moderate reforms proposed.xix The Czechoslovak government, with the liberalization of the press, had essentially started rolling a boulder down a mountain: once it gained momentum, it would be very difficult to stop without a great amount of force.

The response in American foreign policy and intelligence circles was noticeably measured: the United States had been burned in 1956, and the lessons learned made them reluctant to rock the boat in 1968. A telegram from Washington to the U.S. embassy in Prague on February 13, before the Action Program was even published, indicated the policy direction that the United States would take:

Since political, social and economic situation in Czechoslovakia still very unclear and obviously in state of flux, believe our posture at moment should in general be one of responsiveness to positive Czech approaches without attempting to precipitate Czech action.xx

This attitude of cautious optimism was guided by the assumption that Dubček would seek a more independent foreign policy from the Soviet Union, which would necessitate warming relations with the West. A month later, on March 21, Walter Stoessel, then Deputy Assistant Secretary for European Affairs, met with Dr. Karel Duda, the Czechoslovak Ambassador to the United States. At this meeting, Ambassador Duda foreshadowed the Action Program that would be unveiled at the Central Committee Plenum on March 28, and briefly mentioned some anticipated reforms: he specifically mentioned that, despite the Vietnam conflict, the new leadership in Prague would, as expected, “wish to improve relations with the United States.”xxi The ambassador also brushed away concerns over intervention from the Soviets. A later telegram from Prague to Washington explicitly stated that they “hoped that lessons were learned on all sides from 1956,” and the embassy staff in Prague assured the State Department in Washington that they trusted the Czechoslovak government to remain cool, and to not undertake drastic changes that might provoke the ire of the Soviets.xxii

As the reforms progressed, Brezhnev watched them nervously. The free press and democratic reforms in the Czechoslovak Socialist Republic were quickly becoming an existential threat to the Soviet Union’s hegemony over Eastern Europe; Brezhnev’s Politburo viewed the growing reform movement in Prague as a major challenge to the stability of Communism in the East, just as the Hungarian Revolution had been in 1956. The reforms in Prague were a revolution from the top-down, though, and there was no violence or strife: where the Hungarian Revolution was an explosion of popular passions, the Prague Spring was characterized more as an intellectual exercise driven by writers and students. Ambassador Duda had dismissed concerns of an intervention in his March meeting with Stoessel, but he had acknowledged that, in the event of strife or violence, an intervention would not be inconceivable.xxiii While there was no civil strife, and the divisions that existed within the Czechoslovak government between reformers and hardliners were relatively tame, it would not keep the Soviets from finding strife to “help” alleviate. By May there were already signals showing: reports from Poland and East Germany told of massive Soviet troop movements towards the Czechoslovak border on May 9, 1968.xxiv Prague publicly brushed this off as a military exercise that it had been alerted to beforehand, but the message from Moscow was received loud and clear around the world: shots had been fired across Prague’s bow. The U.S. government continued to keep a close eye on the situation, but it refrained from giving any real encouragement or assistance to the Czechoslovakians. A dispatch from the U.S. embassy in Moscow on July 11 described that Dubček’s government was coming under intense Soviet pressure to contain their “democratization” because of fears from Brezhnev that the Czechoslovak reforms could spill into not only the other Eastern European satellites, but also into the Soviet Union itself. Brezhnev publicly protested any interference in internal Czech affairs, but the embassy staff pointed out that a harsh media campaign by the Soviet government against Czechoslovak liberalization was in full swing.xxv A memorandum written on July 22 recorded a conversation between Secretary of State Dean Rusk, Deputy Under Secretary of State Charles E. Bohlen, and Soviet Ambassador Anatoliy Dobrynin. During their conversation, Ambassador Dobrynin insinuated that the U.S. was involving itself in the “Czech situation” in a NATO plot involving the CIA. Rusk denounced the accusations, and went on to say that “no one knew better” than the members of the Soviet Union’s diplomatic mission to the U.S. the restraint that the American government had exercised regarding the situation in Czechoslovakia. The report made special mention that Dobrynin appeared considerably worried, unlike his “usual genial self.”xxvi

Although the United States had firmly followed a wait-and-see strategy regarding Dubček’s reforms, Brezhnev was fearful that a Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia would provoke NATO into a war in Europe, and he hoped to utilize political options to pressure Dubček to back down before it was too late. Brezhnev’s own allies in Poland and East Germany, Gomulka and Ulbricht respectively, pushed for an invasion because they feared instabilities in their own countries that might be triggered by Czechoslovak reforms. On the 26th and 27th of July, the Soviet Politburo set a provisional plan for the invasion of Czechoslovakia with the understanding that negotiations would continue until they were exhausted. Their attempts failed, though, and on the 21st of August, 1968, the Kremlin gave the order: the Red Army, along with forces from other Warsaw Pact states (with the notable exception of Romania) were unleashed on Czechoslovakia.xxvii Still the 20th of August in Washington, an emergency meeting of the National Security Council was called at 10:15 p.m. to address the crisis: all around the table, the Soviets’ actions were met with surprise.xxviii President Johnson remarked that he called the meeting after being informed personally by Ambassador Dobrynin that the Soviet Union was intervening in Czechoslovakia “at the request of the Czechoslovak government.”xxix On the night of the invasion, the NSC, at the suggestion of Secretary of State Dean Rusk, decided to immediately summon the Soviet ambassador again to clarify the situation. President Johnson also decided to consult with NATO allies that night, and the next day the UN Security Council convened to discuss the invasion.xxx A statement released by President Johnson on the 21st condemned the “tragic news from Czechoslovakia,” and urged a Soviet pullout, but otherwise did not make demands nor urge the Czechoslovak people to action.xxxi Even at the peak of the crisis, the United States pursued a non-confrontational route for fear of provoking the Soviets to repeat the bloodbath that was Budapest.

The invasion was luckily, by comparison to Hungary in 1956, relatively bloodless. The invading Warsaw Pact armies did not meet armed resistance from Czechoslovak forces, who were ordered by the government not to resist.xxxii The citizenry were encouraged by their government to engage in passive and non-violent resistance. Aside from strong vocal opposition to Soviet aggression, the West was noticeably silent, whereas in Hungary they had goaded the revolutionaries to take to the streets with Molotov cocktails and submachine guns. There were some casualties, but they were mostly students gunned down by Soviet conscripts who had lost their nerve or were inexperienced with crowd control; Czech and Slovak blood spilled on the streets of Prague did unite the nation in hate, though, and the month long occupation was epitomized by the Soviet soldiers not receiving the warm welcome they had been promised by their superiors. Morale among the invading troops was low as the Czechs and Slovaks rejected them outright rather than welcoming them as liberators as had been expected.xxxiii The reaction in the West was just as careful and measured after the invasion as it had been before: apart from discussion at the United Nations, the U.S. government remained publicly more or less silent on the issue. It would be some time after the invasion that the Americans would reap the benefits of the corner that the Soviets had backed themselves into.

In the autumn following the invasion, the Soviet Union announced the Brezhnev Doctrine: Brezhnev declared in November 1968 that it was the right and duty of the Soviet Union to intervene in any state where the Marxist-Leninist system was imperiled by the threat of a new capitalist system taking over.xxxiv The invasion itself had, at least outwardly, appeared to be a resounding success: even American policymakers, specifically Secretary of Defense Clark Clifford, were impressed by the efficiency and swiftness with which the Soviet military had secured Prague and the surrounding countryside, and they discussed how this indicated a rising Soviet military strength in Eastern Europe.xxxv The invasion was not a success, though; it was a massive gamble on the part of Moscow, and the Soviets would pay the price. The rising schism between China and the Soviet Union was exacerbated by the intervention, and it painfully strained the once monolithic force of world Communism that now appeared to be crumbling. Rising discontent in Romania and Yugoslavia against the Soviets also became more pronounced, and even on Red Square itself there was a historic protest against the invasion.xxxvi Brezhnev had hoped that the invasion would stifle the yearning in Eastern Europe for reform and democracy; while it did so forcefully, the spillover of liberal ideas from Czechoslovakia had, as he had feared, been even worse than from the revolutions in Poland and Hungary in 1956.xxxvii It was obvious to the Kremlin that these forces of dissidence were still at work under the surface, and that the invasion of Czechoslovakia could not possibly stamp it out completely. The Brezhnev Doctrine was a brave facade to portray the Soviet Union as strong and secure in its position in Eastern Europe, but the Soviet leadership was well aware of the reality of the price they would have to pay if they were forced to implement it again.xxxviii Considering the need to avoid further conflict, and the loss of Chinese support, the foreign policy directive of the Soviet Union in the 1970s was to avoid at all costs implementing the Brezhnev Doctrine again. This meant improving relations with the United States and NATO was imperative in order to avoid economic sanctions and instability in Europe; this meant détente could proceed.xxxix

As in 1956, the Soviet police action in Czechoslovakia came in the run-up to an American presidential election. The 1968 election was a landslide victory for Republican Richard Nixon, who was ushered into office on a wave of anti-Vietnam War fervor. Notably, Nixon was Eisenhower’s Vice President at the time of the Soviet invasion of Hungary, which put a special distaste in his mouth for the intervention in Czechoslovakia: in 1970, Nixon was reluctant to deal with Brezhnev with the fallout of 1968 in recent memory. His opportunity to make his move came before he took office, when in 1969 shots were fired across the Sino-Soviet border. In 1971, Nixon’s National Security Advisor Henry Kissinger traveled to China secretly; Nixon followed publicly in 1972.xl By opening relations with Beijing, Nixon hoped to play the two Communist powers against one another in an attempt to permit a graceful American exit from Vietnam. In the meantime, his warming with China put additional pressure on the Soviets, who had by this time reached parity in strategic weapons stockpiles with the United States. Early in his presidency, Nixon had announced the development of a new anti-ballistic missile program in response to the growing Soviet arsenal.xli With these factors in play, the Soviets had no choice but to sit down at the table and resume talks regarding arms reduction: the SALT I agreement was signed in 1972, and with it came an underlying principle of the détente process that would characterize Nixon’s administration: that neither side would attempt to take a unilateral advantage over the other.xlii Curiously, Nixon proceeded to do just this, and he moved to press his advantages with his relations with China and Iran, among other states, to secure an advantage for the United States while maintaining an atmosphere of cooperation with the Soviets. The steps had been made in the right direction, though, towards developing mutual trust, and the foundation was laid for a further reduction in tensions between the two superpowers.

Ultimately, the Prague Spring and ensuing Soviet intervention did nothing to change the status quo in Europe, but the events in Czechoslovakia in 1968 did much to give momentum to the détente process and to influence the course of the Cold War in the following decade. While both superpowers were receptive to negotiations prior to the Soviet invasion, the Soviets were more hesitant than the Americans to commit to serious talks. The loss of prestige that the Soviets suffered as a result of their aggressive attempt to roll back liberal reforms in their sphere of influence had a major impact on their ability to negotiate from an advantageous position. By 1970, a new administration was in power in Washington, and its priority was withdrawal from the conflict in Vietnam. American prestige had been wounded by the Vietnam conflict, but Nixon’s administration had fresh political capital to play with and Henry Kissinger’s realpolitik to guide policy. With these assets, Nixon was able to position the United States in a way that made the Soviets, already suffering from loss of influence in the third world and teetering on shaky ground in their own backyard, unable to refuse rapprochement with America. The newly minted Brezhnev Doctrine, retroactively applied to Hungary 1956, was built on lies and bluffs: the Soviets could not possibly afford to invade another one of their satellites, especially within what was supposed to be their inner ring of buffer states. While their military might had reached both conventional and strategic parity with the United States, the Soviets were unable to exercise that might without risking either an all-out war or a dramatic disintegration of their bloc. Soviet relations with the Chinese were also crumbling, and were made worse by their invasion of Czechoslovakia. With the loss of their largest land border as a friend, the Soviets had little choice but to warm up to the West or risk economic repercussions in response to their aggressive containment policy. Brezhnev, in 1972, went on to give credit to his invasion of Czechoslovakia: “Without [the invasion of] Czechoslovakia – there would have been no Brandt in Germany, no Nixon in Moscow, no détente.”xliii While his reasoning for giving credit to the intervention was more an exoneration of himself as the executioner of Czechoslovakia rather than a public acknowledgment of a weakened Soviet position, his assertion was true. The Soviet intervention in Czechoslovakia was a calculated risk by the Kremlin to stem the tide against the disintegration of their sphere of influence in Eastern Europe; while they were successful in containing the spillover into their other satellites and border territories, the Soviets expended immense political capital and sacrificed a large amount of prestige to do so. The new administration in Washington, under the direction of Nixon and Kissinger, pounced at the opportunity to press their advantage and to create a new balance of power in the Cold War.

i Vladislav Zubok, A Failed Empire (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2007), 193-95

ii Ibid. 200

iii John Lewis Gaddis, The Cold War: A New History (New York: Penguin Books, 2005), 144

iv Ibid. 149

v Ibid. 153

vi Ibid. 133

vii Ibid.

viii Stephen E. Ambrose and Douglas G. Brinkley, Rise to Globalism, 9th ed. (New York: Penguin Books, 2011), 206

ix Ibid. 221-23

x Zubok 200

xi Ibid.

xii Harold Gordon Skilling, Czechoslovakia’s Interrupted Revolution (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1976), 10

xiii Ibid. 11

xiv Zbyněk Zeman, Prague Spring (New York: Hill and Wang, 1969), 13

xv Philip Bergmann, Self Determination: The case of Czechoslovakia 1968-1969 (Lugano-Bellinzona: Istituto Editoriale Ticinese, 1972), 19

xvi Ibid. 20

xvii Ibid. 21-22

xviii Skilling 221

xix Ibid. 225

xx Telegram From the DoS to the Embassy in Czechoslovakia: 13 February 1968 <http://history.state.gov/historicaldocuments/frus1964-68v17/d55&gt;

xxi Memorandum of Conversation between Dr. Karel Duda and Mr. Walter J. Stoessel: 21 March 1968 <http://history.state.gov/historicaldocuments/frus1964-68v17/d56&gt;

xxii Telegram from the Embassy in Czechoslovakia to the Department of State: 25 March 1968 <http://history.state.gov/historicaldocuments/frus1964-68v17/d57&gt;

xxiii Memorandum of Conversation between Dr. Karel Duda and Mr. Walter J. Stoessel: 21 March 1968

xxiv Harry Schwartz, Prague’s 200 Days (New York: Frederick A. Praeger, 1969), 142

xxv Telegram from the Embassy in the Soviet Union to the Department of State: 11 July 1968 <http://history.state.gov/historicaldocuments/frus1964-68v17/d65&gt;

xxvi Memorandum of Conversation between Anatoliy F. Dobrynin, Secretary of State Dean Rusk, and Deputy Under Secretary Charles E. Bohlen <http://history.state.gov/historicaldocuments/frus1964-68v17/d70&gt;

xxvii Zubok 208

xxviii Notes of Emergency Meeting of the National Security Council: 20 August 1968 <http://history.state.gov/historicaldocuments/frus1964-68v17/d81&gt;

xxix Summary of Meeting between President Johnson, Anatoliy Dobrynin, and Walt Rostow: 20 August 1968 <http://history.state.gov/historicaldocuments/frus1964-68v17/d80&gt;

xxx Notes of Emergency Meeting of the National Security Council: 20 August 1968

xxxi Statement by President Johnson on Czechoslovakia: 21 August 1968 <http://www.foia.cia.gov/sites/default/files/document_conversions/19/1968-08-21g.pdf&gt;

xxxii Bergmann 34

xxxiii Schwartz 212-13

xxxiv Gaddis 150

xxxv Summary of Meeting of Johnson Cabinet: 23 August 1968 <http://history.state.gov/historicaldocuments/frus1964-68v17/d85&gt;

xxxvi Gaddis 153

xxxvii Zubok 209

xxxviii Gaddis 153

xxxix Ibid.

xl Gaddis 151

xli Ambrose 230

xlii Ibid. 231-32

xliii Zubok 209

Top-Down Revolution: The Buildup to the Invasion of Czechoslovakia

[This is a primary-source analysis/research piece I wrote for my Cold War history class this past semester. The subject was a series of declassified Soviet communiques regarding the invasion of Czechoslovakia. I could have written much more as there were quite a few documents I didn’t get a chance to cover, but I was limited to seven pages in print. I may revisit it for fun at a later date.]

January 1968 brought a breath of fresh air to the Czech and Slovak peoples as it marked the election of Alexander Dubček as First Secretary of the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia. Dubček announced his intentions to move along with extensive reforms within Czechoslovakia. These reforms brought about what was to be known as the Prague Spring, where Dubček’s government attempted to implement a policy he termed as “socialism with a human face.” The ultimate intended result of the Prague Spring was to be a moderate liberalization of political life in Czechoslovakia, as well as a decentralization of power from Prague. The news was very well received with the Czechoslovak people, as well as with reformist and intellectual elements within the Czechoslovak Communist Party. Dubček, who had been seen as a compromise upon which both reformist and more orthodox party members could agree, was proving himself to be an effective force of change within Czechoslovakia. It is well known, however, how the Prague Spring ultimately ended: on an August night the armies of the Warsaw Pact surged across their borders to “help” the Czechoslovakians suppress subversive elements. The invasion resulted from a buildup of distrust and disapproval from the Soviet hegemon and her satellites: the Prague Spring was the largest threat to Soviet authority east of the Iron Curtain since the Hungarian Revolution of 1956. The reality of that threat was the fact that unlike the Hungarian Revolution, the Prague Spring was a revolution from the top down: it was initiated by the Communist Party in Czechoslovakia. Because of this, it shook the legitimacy of the Soviet government along with its other satellites, which feared that liberalization in Czechoslovakia would lead to similar demands in their own nations. The buildup of tensions is apparent in a collection of declassified documents published by the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars in its Cold War International History Project’s Digital Archive. This collection of documents, ranging from the end of February 1968 up until the autumn after the invasion, is a series of reports and correspondences, mostly from within the Ukrainian wing of the Soviet Communist Party, discussing the events in Czechoslovakia. The documents dealing with the lead up to the invasion, from February until the night of the invasion, show firsthand the paranoia exhibited on the part of the powers that were in control in the face of what they saw as a direct challenge to their authority and ability to rule.

The first of the documents, dated 28 February 1968, is a short correspondence from Petro Shelest, First Secretary of the Communist Party in the Ukrainian SSR, to the CPSU Central Committee. In it, Shelest reports that an “unknown person” who identified himself as a Czech diplomat from the consulate in Kiev, in a drunken state, struck up a conversation with two Soviet train conductors about the Soviet hockey team. He “asserted that Soviet hockey players do not know how to play and will lose again next year, all things being equal.”1 The translator notes underneath that the hockey rivalry between the USSR and CSSR often took on a nationalistic or political overtone, as evidenced by the “diplomat’s” next statement: “…The Czechs would be better off doing business with the West than with the Soviet Union. The Soviet people have us by the neck. … You Communists are worse than the imperialists.”2 The man was confirmed to be the Czechoslovak Consul-General in Kiev, Josef Gorak, who was a frequent recipient of Shelest’s criticism.

This example was only the first event which foreshadowed future troubles in Czechoslovakia’s relations with its Communist brethren, despite Dubček’s best efforts to stay in their favor. On March 18, 1968, Secretary of the Ukrainian Transcarpathian Oblast Yuri Ilnytskyi met with Jan Koscelanský, First Secretary of the KSC’s East Slovakia regional committee, one-on-one at the Ukrainian-Czechoslovak border. Koscelanský described to him the troubles within the KSC’s Central Committee, where “sharp criticism was directed against the old methods of leadership, which had given rise to a cult of Novotny.” The report explains that the Czechs under Dubček sought to establish “free” (but still single party) democracy and eliminate censorship and repression within the CSSR.3 These revelations likely alarmed the central Soviet party apparatus, whose power would have been threatened by such reforms in a neighboring Communist country. Koscelanský had to assure Ilnytskyi that it was “not a repetition of the events of 1956 in Hungary,” because the reforms were instituted by the KSC Central Committee, rather than through a popular uprising against the Party: he clarified that the masses supported the Party in instituting reforms. Koscelanský, however, also felt the need to emphasize that, “beginning with Comrade Dubček and going through every rank-and-file Communist, they will do everything possible to strengthen friendship with the Soviet Union and to advance the cause of socialism on the basis of the principles of Marxism-Leninism.”4 Koscelanský appeared to try to placate Soviet concerns over the reforms within his country by playing up the CSSR’s friendship with the USSR: he could doubtlessly see for himself the growing dilemma that his country was finding itself in.

Josef Gorak, meanwhile, was again immortalized in official Soviet records as he had a meeting on April 23 with B. Baklanov, Third Secretary of the Ukrainian Foreign Ministry. During the conversation, the Consul-General played up his relationship with Dubček, and mentioned that he (Gorak) was to take over as head of the Soviet Department in the CSSR Foreign Ministry.5 This likely did not bode well for the perception of Comrade Dubček in Moscow, considering Shelest’s previous report on Gorak’s drunken encounter with two train conductors. During their conversation, Gorak further told Baklanov that the KSC would be adopting a similar outlook as the Italian and French Communist parties, as the CSSR wished to assume leadership of the industrialized, Central European Communist countries, which were closer culturally to the Western nations.6

A report delivered at the April Plenum of the CPSU on the 25th of April, 1968 by Petro Shelest offered a bleak view of the events occurring in Czechoslovakia, and concurrently offered several scapegoats on which to place blame. The section regarding Czechoslovakia opens: “Comrades! The Communists and all workers of our country are especially alarmed about events in Czechoslovakia and the stepped-up activity of revisionist, Zionist, and anti-socialist forces in that country.”7 Shelest blames these elements for being behind a petit bourgeois conspiracy to influence the Czechoslovak leadership to accept, as Shelest puts it, “’unlimited’ democratization.” The language in Shelest’s report tries to paint the situation as one where the Czechoslovak leadership is losing its grip and being misled by a few subversive internal elements, rather than willfully moving towards democracy. As a result, despite a few “negative points,” Shelest points out that Dubček’s public speeches show the KSC leadership understands the “necessity of waging a struggle against anti-socialist forces.”8 Shelest’s report then turns its lens towards the West: he accuses the American and West German imperialists of making an effort to destabilize the internal situation in Czechoslovakia by manipulating nationalist sentiments among the Czech and Slovak peoples. He additionally accuses the West of supporting a gradual, step-by-step dismantling of the Communist infrastructure in Czechoslovakia; Shelest suggests that the imperialists learned from Hungary in 1956 that a sudden, violent attack to seize power would not work, and instead were pursuing a policy of gradual, peaceful change.9 Shelest closes his report by stating that the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia contains “healthy forces,” and that the task of the Soviet Union is to provide “comprehensive assistance” to these forces in order to thwart the efforts of their imperialist enemies. Shelest’s report is a sign that, relatively early on, elements of the Soviet party apparatus were already finding ways to rationalize future action in the defense of Communism in Czechoslovakia, and it is a thinly veiled attempt to shift the attention, and blame, away from the central party in Czechoslovakia.

Four days later, Yuri Ilnytskyi again met with Koscelanský in a one on one meeting at the border as a follow-up to their previous meeting on March 18. At this meeting, Koscelanský inquired about what had been discussed at the April Plenum of the CPSU Central Committee; Ilnytskyi replied that the Plenum had not specifically discussed Czechoslovakia, but had instead briefly brushed upon problems on the international scene regarding unity in the Communist movement. (The translator notes that this statement is not false, as numerous other issues were discussed at the Plenum; however it must be said that P. Shelest’s April 25th report delivered at the Plenum suggests a great deal of concern was given to the “subversive elements” at work in the CSSR).10 Ilnytskyi also reported that Koscelanský discussed developments in Czechoslovakia: mainly that censorship of the press had been totally lifted, and that all leaders within the CSSR were subject to criticism. Ilnytskyi remarks that this is foolish; that he could not imagine why they would allow such “immature people” to spread propaganda.11 At the conclusion of his report, Ilnytskyi declares that, at this meeting, Koscelanský’s behavior had changed: he was no longer as animated or lively. Ilnytskyi cited that he believed Koscelanský, as one of the original proponents of the reforms, had lost faith in how they were being carried out as the CSSR appeared to be drifting more “to the right;” it appears Ilnytskyi was trying to absolve Koscelanský of some of the responsibility for what seemed like the eventual collapse of Czechoslovak Communism.

May was a busy month for the Ukrainian Soviets. On May 12th, Ilnytskyi filed a report regarding the Czechoslovak media to the CPSU CC.12 In it he described a few items he found troubling: the border between West Germany and Czechoslovakia was opened to tourists (who Ilnytskyi referred to as spies, and accused of bringing anti-socialist ideas across the border). Another main point he discusses is, with the lifting of censorship, the Czechoslovak press is reporting on unsavory truths within the CSSR (and, more importantly, within other Communist nations: the Czechoslovak press criticized the weak points of Soviet tank production and released relevant technical data).13 A report filed on the seventeenth of May suggested that, much as they may criticize the handling of the German-Czechoslovak border, the Ukrainians had problems of their own. V. Nikitchenko, Chairman of the Committee on State Security under the Ukrainian SSR, cited “the growing influx of foreigners from capitalist countries” and the “opening of new routes for tourists in automobiles” in a list of matters which required greater attention from counterintelligence assets.14 Nikitchenko’s memorandum requested 208 additional personnel to tackle these issues in the border Oblasts, as the increase in hostile activity was too much for the current staff to keep up with. Five days later, on the 22nd, KGB Chiefs Ivanov and Kozlov issued a report to Petro Shelest regarding the status of the Czechoslovak-Ukrainian border. The border control checkpoints had been especially busy seizing “ideologically harmful literature:” in the first quarter of 1968, they seized 11,833 items. The previous year they had seized 33,570 items total; four years earlier they had seized 1,500 items total.15 Shelest cited these statistics in a memorandum to the Politburo dated on the same day, and echoed Nikitchenko’s earlier request by requesting 1,500 additional border patrol personnel for the Western district and 200 additional KGB operational counterintelligence agents.16 It is apparent here that, with the statistics he cites, Shelest wanted to portray the situation in Czechoslovakia in as negative a light as possible in order to rally support for his cause of securing the border and keeping revolutionary ideas out.

Shelest’s paranoia in the lead up to invasion is also apparent in a series of documents published throughout the rest of May and early June. In them, Shelest requested of the KGB apparatus in Ukraine to report on the activities of the average Ukrainian, as well as his reaction to the events unfolding in the CSSR. The first of these reports is basically gossip collected by both common people residing in the Ukraine and, in the case of the last two examples, statements overheard from Soviet citizens visiting the CSSR. The individuals cited in the first report range from all different professions and ethnic backgrounds: school teachers, factory workers; even a dentist is quoted (it is also specified that said dentist, Jozef Ida-Mois, is a Jew and non-member of the Party).17 Shelest’s interest in the opinions of common folk on the matter, while hardly out of the ordinary in a totalitarian state, is important: considering the concern he had shown towards the situation in the CSSR, Shelest had an interest in keeping the popular sentiments sweeping Czechoslovakia from sweeping his own jurisdiction. Two subsequent reports outline the reactions to the situation by Soviet citizens visiting the CSSR. On May 30, a report was published by Shelest on the activities of Ukrainian journalists who visited the CSSR on a goodwill tour, who reported encountering widespread anti-Soviet sentiments and shocking displays of anti-socialist behaviors.18 The second report was published on the fourth of June, and described a group of Soviet workers who participated in an exchange with the CSSR, and encountered locals who described the situation as having gotten worse with time, rather than better.19

The latter two reports are, more than likely, selective reports of what Shelest wanted to portray: a country in distress, and in need of assistance. It is easy to draw conclusions about Shelest’s intentions from the reports he published, conclusions which could not be drawn from a secondary source: his antipathy towards the reform movement in the CSSR was readily apparent, as was his concern that the movement could spread to his own domain. Fear of losing power, along with losing a valuable ally and buffer in the struggle against the West, pushed Shelest and the other officials within the Soviet Union to work against the tide of reform in Prague. This series of documents illuminates the causes of the Soviet invasion by providing a window through which to peer directly into the internal structures and workings of the CPSU: a perspective a history textbook or second-hand account could not provide. By examining these reports sequentially, the documents in this collection can be strung together in a way that shows the causal links leading up to the ultimate decision to roll back Dubček’s Spring.

Endnotes

1 P. Shelest, Note from P. Shelest to CPSU Central Committee (28 Feb 1968), Wilson Center Cold War International History Project, Soviet Invasion of Czechoslovakia Collection

2 Ibid.

3 Yu. Il’nyts’kyi, Memorandum from the Secretary of the Transcarpathian Oblast, Ukrainian CP about tensions in Czechoslovakia (21 Mar 1968), Wilson Center CWIHP, Soviet Invasion of Czechoslovakia Collection

4 Ibid.

5B. Baklanov, Conversation with the Consul-General of the CSSR in Kyiv, J. Gorak (23 Apr 1968), Wilson Center CWIHP, Soviet Invasion of Czechoslovakia Collection

6 Ibid.

7 P. Shelest, Report by P. Shelest on the April 1968 Plenum of the CC CPSU (25 Apr 1968), Wilson Center CWIHP, Soviet Invasion of Czechoslovakia Collection

8 Ibid.

9 Ibid.

10 Yu. Il’nyts’kyi, Transcarpathian Oblast First Secretary Yu. Il’Nyts’Kyi’s Report to P. Shelest (5 May 1968), Wilson Center CWIHP, Soviet Invasion of Czechoslovakia Collection

11 Ibid.

12 Yu. Il’nyts’kyi, Yu. Il’Nyts’Kyi Reports on Items from the Czechoslovak Media (12 May 1968), Wilson Center CWIHP, Soviet Invasion of Czechoslovakia Collection

13 Ibid.

14 V. Nikitchenko, A Memorandum to the Ukrainian Committee on State Security Regarding Counterintelligence Difficulties (17 May 1968), Wilson Center CWIHP, Soviet Invasion of Czechoslovakia Collection

15 KGB Chiefs Ivanov and Kozlov, KGB Border Report to P. Shelest (22 May 1968), Wilson Center CWIHP, Soviet Invasion of Czechoslovakia Collection

16 P. Shelest, Memorandum to CPSU Politburo on Western District Border Controls (22 May 1968), Wilson Center CWIHP, Soviet Invasion of Czechoslovakia Collection

17 A. Zhabchenko, Summation of Informers from the Transcarpathian Oblast, Ukrainian SSR (25 May 1968), Wilson Center CWIHP, Soviet Invasion of Czechoslovakia Collection

18 P. Shelest, Report on Statements by Ukrainian Journalists in the CSSR (30 May 1968), Wilson Center CWIHP, Soviet Invasion of Czechoslovakia Collection

19 V. Shcherbytskyi, Report on the Trip by a Delegation of Soviet Workers to the CSSR (6 Jun 1968), Wilson Center CWIHP, Soviet Invasion of Czechoslovakia Collection