Moscow Protocol ( Czech : Moskevský protokol and Slovak : Moskovský protokol , officially Protocol of the negotiations of the ČSSR and USSR delegations ) was a document signed by Czechoslovak political leaders in Moscow , after the Prague Spring . The negotiations took place from 23 to 26 August 1968. The main signatories were President Ludvík Svoboda , First Secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia Alexander Dubček , Prime Minister Oldřich Černík , Chairman of the National Assembly Josef Smrkovský and most of the ministers and Communist Party leaders ( Gustáv Husák among them). The only person present at the negotiations who declined to sign was František Kriegel .
3-686: The document included among its many expectations, promises to protect socialism in Czechoslovakia, to act upon the promises made in the Bratislava Declaration , to denounce the 14th Party Congress and its resolutions, to restrain critical Czechoslovak media, and to reject any interference in the Eastern Bloc by the United Nations Security Council . This Czechoslovakia -related article
6-518: Is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . This article related to a treaty is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Bratislava Declaration The Bratislava Declaration was the result of the conference held in Bratislava on 3 August 1968 by the representatives of the Communist and Worker's parties of Bulgaria , Hungary , East Germany , Poland ,
9-625: The USSR , and Czechoslovakia . The declaration was a response to the Prague Spring . It affirmed an unshakable fidelity to Marxism–Leninism and proletarian internationalism, and declared an implacable struggle against "bourgeois" ideology and all "anti-socialist" forces. The Soviet Union also expressed its intention to intervene in any Warsaw Pact country if a "bourgeois" system—a pluralist system of several political parties—were ever established. The Bratislava Declaration and Roadmap of 2016
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