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    • 21 August 1968

      • On 20–21 August 1968, the Czechoslovak Socialist Republic was jointly invaded by four Warsaw Pact countries: the Soviet Union, the Polish People's Republic, the People's Republic of Bulgaria and the Hungarian People's Republic.
      en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Warsaw_Pact_invasion_of_Czechoslovakia
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  2. Photograph of a Soviet T-54 in Prague during the Warsaw Pact's occupation of Czechoslovakia. Date. 20–21 August 1968. Location. Czechoslovak Socialist Republic. Result. Warsaw Pact victory. Suppression of the reform process within the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia (KSČ) Moscow Protocol.

    • 20–21 August 1968
    • Czechoslavkia Before The Invasion
    • Alexander Dubcek's Reforms Led The Prague Spring
    • Soviet Union Invades in Response to The Dubcek Government Reforms
    • United States Response to The Invasion
    • Creation of The Brezhnev Doctrine to Soviet Power

    Before the Second World War, the nation of Czechoslovakia had been a strong democracy in Central Europe, but beginning in the mid-1930s it faced challenges from both the West and the East. In 1938, the leadership in Great Britain and France conceded the German right to take over the Sudetenland in the Munich Agreement, but the Czech government cond...

    In early 1968, conservative leader Antonin Novotny was ousted as the head of the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia, and he was replaced by Alexander Dubcek. The Dubcek government ended censorship in early 1968, and the acquisition of this freedom resulted in a public expression of broad-based support for reform and a public sphere in which governme...

    The Warsaw Pact invasion of August 20–21 caught Czechoslovakia and much of the Western world by surprise. In anticipation of the invasion, the Soviet Union had moved troops from the Soviet Union, along with limited numbers of troops from Hungary, Poland, East Germany and Bulgaria into place by announcing Warsaw Pact military exercises. When these f...

    The Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia was significant in the sense that it delayed the splintering of Eastern European Communism and was concluded without provoking any direct intervention from the West. Repeated efforts in the UN Security Council to pass a resolution condemning the attacks met with opposition from the Soviet Union, and the effort ...

    There were also long-term consequences. After the invasion, the Soviet leadership justified the use of force in Prague under what would become known as the Brezhnev Doctrine, which stated that Moscow had the right to intervene in any country where a communist government had been threatened. This doctrine, established to justify Soviet action in Cze...

  3. By Todd A. Raffensperger. At 1:30 am on August 21, 1968, Czech authorities at Ruzyne Airport in the capital city of Prague waited to greet a special flight that was flying in directly from Moscow. The authorities were not alarmed.

  4. On August 20, 1968, the Soviet Union led Warsaw Pact troops in an invasion of Czechoslovakia to crack down on reformist trends in Prague. Although the Soviet Union's action successfully halted the pace of reform in Czechoslovakia, it had unintended consequences for the unity of the communist bloc.

  5. Aug 20, 2018 · Prague 1968: The Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia. It's 50 years since the Soviet Union crushed the Prague Spring. Some 250,000 troops stormed into Czechoslovakia to suppress reforms aimed at...

  6. Aug 20, 2018 · August 20, 2018. 27 Photos. In Focus. In 1968, during a period called the “Prague Spring,” Alexander Dubček, the newly elected leader of Czechoslovakia, enacted pro-democracy reforms that...

  7. Aug 26, 2018 · On August 20th and 21st, 1968, fifty years ago this week, hundreds of thousands of Soviet and allied Warsaw Pact troops poured over the Czechoslovak border from surrounding countries in a massive...

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