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AN ARCHAEOLOGY OF THE IRON CURTAIN<br />

called the Charta 77 after a document published in Western Media<br />

criticising Czechoslovakian government, started to take form in the 1980s.<br />

The organization was led by, amongst others, Václav Havel. It was their aim<br />

to make public the breaches to human rights within Czechoslovakia and its<br />

members were constantly under threat and persecution from the<br />

Communist Party (Lund 1992:18).<br />

Communism was brought to an end in Czechoslovakia during the so<br />

called Velvet Revolution in November 1989. This peaceful revolution,<br />

started as student demonstrations, led to the collapse of Czechoslovakia’s<br />

Communist Party. This followed the announcement of a new Soviet defence<br />

doctrine by the Warsaw Treaty Organization (WTO) in May 1987 which<br />

stated that global peace was now considered of higher importance than<br />

ideology (Tůma 2006:2). Without the threat of Soviet intervention demonstrations<br />

were carried out in many of the former Eastern Bloc states and<br />

eventually led to the fall of communism in many of these countries.<br />

Following the Velvet Revolution the cracks between Czechs and Slovaks<br />

started to become obvious. While Slovaks campaigned for a looser<br />

federation with more power given to the two republics the Czechs argued<br />

for a central government. These issues intensified during elections in 1992<br />

and eventually led to a peaceful split of the two republics into two states,<br />

Czech Republic and Slovakia, on 1 st of January 1993 (Leff 1997:129–142).<br />

Both countries joined the EU in 2004 and Schengen in 2007 opening up the<br />

borders towards Western Europe allowing for free travel and much reduced<br />

controls at border crossings.<br />

With the new Czech government defence policies changed away from a<br />

focus on possible warfare against NATO towards a reorganization which<br />

was aimed at eventually joining NATO. Prior to the Velvet Revolution the<br />

Czechoslovak People’s Army (CSPA) was controlled by and highly loyal to<br />

the Communist Party, with 82 per cent of the professional officers being<br />

Communist Party members (Tůma 2006:6). Following a major survey of<br />

individual officers’ attitudes towards the new government led to the<br />

removal of almost all generals as well as other staff. Another priority of the<br />

new government was also to work towards the withdrawal of the Soviet<br />

forces within the country which were finalized by June 1991 when all Soviet<br />

forces had left (Tůma 2006:14).<br />

Austria faced other difficulties following World War II. Similarly to<br />

Germany the country was divided between the allies: the Soviet Union,<br />

United Kingdom, France and the US. Like Berlin, Vienna was also divided<br />

into zones. The difference with the case of Austria compared to Germany<br />

138

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