Operation Danube Reconsidered | The International Aspects of the Czechoslovak 1968 Crisis | ISBN 9783838215549

Operation Danube Reconsidered

The International Aspects of the Czechoslovak 1968 Crisis

Vorwort von Peter Bielik, herausgegeben von Jakub Drábik
Mitwirkende
Herausgegeben vonJakub Drábik
Vorwort vonPeter Bielik
Beiträge vonLjubodarg Dimić
Beiträge vonJakub Drábik
Beiträge vonMihail Gruev
Beiträge vonSlavomír Michálek
Beiträge vonMiklós Mitrovits
Beiträge vonJacques Rupnik
Beiträge vonAlexander Stykalin
Beiträge vonMirosław Szumiło
Beiträge vonMichal Štefanský
Buchcover Operation Danube Reconsidered  | EAN 9783838215549 | ISBN 3-8382-1554-0 | ISBN 978-3-8382-1554-9
Inhaltsverzeichnis

„The publication is a contribution to Czechoslovak history in 1968 and its deep international context, revealing the character of the Soviet bloc and the essence of relations between its countries, and the Western and Eastern bloc, too. It is very valuable for both professional historians and for general readers.“—Miroslav Lysý, Comenius University Bratislava
„The aim of each article in this collection is to bring new knowledge, interpretations, and evaluation of the current state of research. And the authors succeed in that goal admirably.“—Norbert Kmeť, Institute of Political Science of the Slovak Academy of Sciences

Operation Danube Reconsidered

The International Aspects of the Czechoslovak 1968 Crisis

Vorwort von Peter Bielik, herausgegeben von Jakub Drábik
Mitwirkende
Herausgegeben vonJakub Drábik
Vorwort vonPeter Bielik
Beiträge vonLjubodarg Dimić
Beiträge vonJakub Drábik
Beiträge vonMihail Gruev
Beiträge vonSlavomír Michálek
Beiträge vonMiklós Mitrovits
Beiträge vonJacques Rupnik
Beiträge vonAlexander Stykalin
Beiträge vonMirosław Szumiło
Beiträge vonMichal Štefanský
At 11 o´clock in the evening of 20th August 1968, the armies of four Warsaw Pact countries, the Soviet Union, Poland, Bulgaria, and Hungary, crossed the borders of Czechoslovakia, starting the “Operation Danube”. Literally overnight the Czechoslovak experiment with Alexander Dubček´s liberalization reforms was transformed from living reality into history. Although the Soviet Union’s action successfully halted the pace of reform in Czechoslovakia, it had unintended consequences for both the unity of the communist bloc and the establishment of the new Soviet foreign doctrine. This book brings the international context of the 1968 crisis in Czechoslovakia to the center of attention. It brought together experts from within as well as from without Central Europe with the hope of igniting, or, perhaps better, re-igniting an international discussion on the Prague spring, its origins, its unfolding, its aftermath, and, most importantly, the international context.


The volume’s contributors are: Ljubodarg Dimić, Jakub Drábik, Mihail Gruev, Slavomír Michálek, Miklós Mitrovits, Jackques Rupnik, Alexander Stykalin, Mirosław Szumiło, Michal Štefanský, and Virgiliu Tarau