Mr. No goes to Russia
Václav Klaus's remarks for the 60th anniversary of the end of
World War II were written in code but weren't difficult to decrypt.
On the surface, he was giving credit to the Soviet Union for
liberating Czechoslovakia and was warning against revisionist
efforts to confuse the victims of the war with the instigators.
Below the surface, though, he was reminding the Communists
that he's their president too, and he was standing up for Russia
(where he will be today) at a time when it's fashionable to
condemn it for undemocratic behavior. It was Europe he
indirectly accused of undemocratic behavior, by warning that the
same kinds of dangers that led to World War II exist today. It
was, after all, an attempt at the forced integration of parts of
Europe that brought on the war and that threatened the very
existence of the Czechs and other peoples of Europe. [Czech
Republic European constitutional treaty Moscow USSR Soviets
Two Second democracy]
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