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Foreword
I
INTRODUCTION AND HISTORICAL CONTEXT
1
Introduction
Günter Bischof, Stefan Karner, and Peter Ruggenthaler
2
The Prague Spring and the Soviet Invasion in Historical Perspective
Mark Kramer
II
CZECHOSLOVAKIA, THE SOVIET UNION, AND THE “PRAGUE SPRING”
3
Reforms in the Communist Party: The Prague Spring and Apprehension about a Soviet Invasion
Oldřich Tůma
4
Soviet Society in the 1960s
Vladislav Zubok
5
Politburo Decision-Making on the Czechoslovak Crisis in 1968
Mikhail Prozumenshchikov
6
The KGB and the Czechoslovak Crisis of 1968: Preconditions for the Soviet Invasion and Occupation of Czechoslovakia
Nikita Petrov
7
The Moscow “Negotiations”: “Normalizing Relations” between the Soviet Leadership and the Czechoslovak Delegation after the Invasion
Peter Ruggenthaler and Harald Knoll
III
THE GREAT POWERS AND THE YEAR OF CRISIS IN 1968
8
The Johnson Administration, the Vietnam War, and the American South’s Response to the Vietnam War
Mark Carson
9
“No Action”: The Johnson Administration and the Warsaw Pact Invasion of Czechoslovakia in August 1968
Günter Bischof
10
Strategic Warning: The CIA and the Soviet Invasion of Czechoslovakia
Donald P. Steury
11
Defense and Détente: Britain, the Soviet Union, and the 1968 Czech Crisis
Saki Ruth Dockrill
12
Paris and the Prague Spring
Georges-Henri Soutou
13
France, Italy, the Western Communists, and the Prague Spring
Alessandro Brogi
IV
EUROPEAN NEIGHBORS DURING THE PRAGUE SPRING
14
The USSR, the Federal Republic of Germany, and the Czechoslovak Crisis of 1968
Aleksei Filitov
15
Ulbricht, East Germany, and the Prague Spring
Manfred Wilke
16
Hungary and the Prague Spring
Csaba Békés
17
Tito, the Bloc-Free Movement, and the Prague Spring
Tvrtko Jakovina
18
Austria and the End of the Prague Spring: Neutrality in the Crucible?
Stefan Karner and Peter Ruggenthaler
PHOTOGRAPHS
APPENDICES
Appendix 1
“Counterrevolution” in Prague
Appendix 2
“We Are Ready at Any Time… to Assist the Czechoslovak People Together with the Armies… of the Warsaw Pact”
Appendix 3
“Secret” Memorandum: Eugene V. Rostow to Dean Rusk, 10 May 1968
Appendix 4
On the Results of the Warsaw Meeting of the Delegations of Communist Parties and Workers’ Parties from Socialist Countries
Appendix 5
CC Urging the United States to Halt “Hostile U.S. Media Campaign” against the Soviet Union
Appendix 6
“Secret” Memorandum by Nathaniel Davis, “Czechoslovak Contingencies”
Appendix 7
Memorandum from Ambassador McGhee to the Secretary of State, 21 August 1968
Appendix 8
Svoboda about Dubček: “If He Were to Resign from His Post, It Would Be Better for All of Us”
Appendix 9
“Secret” and “Top Secret” Secretary of Defense Staff Meetings, 1968
Appendix 10
“U.S. Propaganda Strengthening NATO”
About the Contributors
THE HARVARD COLD WAR STUDIES BOOK SERIES
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