Description
In the summer of 1989, composer Michael Kocáb, along with journalist Michal Horáček, founded the initiative MOST, which aimed to facilitate negotiations between the communist authorities and representatives of independent opposition groups. What initially seemed partly like audacity and partly like political naivety turned out in November of that year to be primarily civic courage and foresight, when the then Prime Minister Ladislav Adamec sat down at the negotiating table with representatives of students, the Civic Forum, and Public Against Violence, led by Václav Havel. Kocáb describes all the crucial negotiations with the communist rulers, with the general staff of both the Czechoslovak and Soviet armies, and with the Soviet party, including representatives of the KGB, which he led or participated in on behalf of the MOST initiative or the Civic Forum. The course of the Velvet Revolution is described against the backdrop of the planned operation Intervention, which the military forces, in cooperation with the StB, tried to prevent democratic changes by force. The autobiographical text reads somewhat like a political thriller. The author describes how the situation changed day by day, hour by hour, and shows that politics is a creative and often improvisational activity, in which it is sometimes not out of place to take on 'brazen' responsibility. In the second part…
Information
Author: Kocáb Michael
Publication date: November 14, 2022
Manufacturer: Euromedia Group, a.s.
Genres: Non-fiction literature, Specialized and technical literature, Books, History and facts
Type: Audiobooks on mp3 cd
ISBN/EAN: 8596434014376

