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Prague Spring
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Prague Spring

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A bystander watches a Soviet tank drive down a Prague street in 1968. In August, Warsaw Pact forces had come to crush the liberal regime of the Czechoslovak communist party leader Alexander Dubček. His reforms, which were known as the Prague Spring or ‘socialism with a human face’, were for the most part reversed by new leaders installed by Soviet Russia.

The 1968 programme of liberalization, begun under a new Communist Party leader in Czechoslovakia. In August 1968 Soviet tanks invaded Czechoslovakia and entered the capital Prague to put down the liberalization movement initiated by the prime minister Alexander Dubček, who had earlier sought to assure the Soviets that his planned reforms would not threaten socialism. Dubček was arrested but released soon afterwards. Most of the Prague Spring reforms were reversed. See also Czechoslovakia, Prague Spring.



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The sculpture, by Ales Vesely, looks like a combination of a skeleton, a giant emaciated crow and a crown of thorns or barbed wire; it was, the inscription explained, "symbolically placed above the memorial of Jan Palach and Jan Zajic," two students who immolated themselves in 1969 to protest the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia and the destruction of the
Weather forecasting was far from timely and accurate, the great gales of 1635 and 1815 were buried in history, and Hitler's invasion of Czechoslovakia dominated the news.
; for much of 1969, there had been military skirmishes along the long Soviet-Chinese border; and at home the government of Premier Leonid Brezhnev had been cracking down on intellectuals protesting the invasion of Czechoslovakia.
 
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