Ludvík Svoboda
Ludvík Svoboda | |
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8th President of Czechoslovakia | |
In office 30 March 1968 – 28 May 1975 | |
Preceded by | Antonín Novotný |
Succeeded by | Gustáv Husák |
Personal details | |
Born | Hroznatín, Moravia, Austria Hungary | 25 November 1895
Died | 20 September 1979 83) Prague, Czechoslovakia (now Czech Republic) | (aged
Political party | Communist Party of Czechoslovakia |
Spouse(s) | Irena Svobodová (1901–1980) |
Signature | |
Military service | |
Allegiance | Austria-Hungary Czechoslovakia |
Service/branch | Austro-Hungarian Army Czechoslovak Legions Czechoslovak Army |
Years of service | 1915 (Austria-Hungary) 1916 – 1920, 1921 – 1950 (Czechoslovakia) |
Rank | Army General |
Commands | I Corps |
Ludvík Svoboda (25 November 1895 – 20 September 1979) was a Czechoslovak general and politician. He fought in both World Wars, for which he is regarded as a national hero,[1][2][3] and he later served as President of Czechoslovakia from 1968 to 1975.
Early life
Svoboda was born in Hroznatín, Moravia. In 1915, Svoboda joined Austro-Hungarian army and was captured later that year on the Eastern Front. Following his release, he fought for the Czechoslovak Legions in Russia. He took part in the legendary battles of Zborov and Bakhmach and returned home through the famous "Siberian anabasis". He then worked at his father's estate before launching his military career in the Czechoslovak army in 1921.
In the early 1930s Svoboda taught at a military academy. After the German occupation in the spring 1939 he became a member of a secret underground organization Obrana národa ("Defence of the nation"). It is supposed that at the same time he established connection with the Soviet intelligence. In June 1939 he fled to Poland, forming an initial Czechoslovak military unit in Kraków, before falling into Soviet captivity during the Soviet invasion of Poland, however escaping a certain death after – as he related it after the war – asking his captors to call a phone number in Moscow where they could obtain a personal information about him; this worked. After the outbreak of the German offensive against the USSR Svoboda became head of the Czechoslovak military units on Eastern front. The unit fought the Germans for the first time in March 1943 near Battle of Sokolovo in Ukraine. As a commander he also led troops of the 1st Czechoslovak Army Corps in the Battle of the Dukla Pass in the fall of 1944 when, after a very heavy fighting, this unit managed to cross the Czechoslovak state border for the first time. Svoboda's charismatic leadership and personal bravery was highly valued by his commanding officer at the time, Soviet marshal Ivan Konev. Trusted by Klement Gottwald´s exile leadership and Soviet functionaries, he quickly climbed the military ranks becoming army general in August 1945.
Post-war political career
In World War II a substantial part of Czechoslovakia was liberated by the Red Army and the 1st Czechoslovak Army Corps under the leadership of Svoboda. Svoboda was appointed Minister of Defense while being welcomed as a hero of the Eastern Front. The Soviet Union enjoyed a great popularity among the population and in the elections of 1946 the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia won 38% of the vote nationwide.
On 22 February 1948, nearly all of the non-Communist cabinet ministers resigned in protest of the practices of Gottwald and the other Communists. Svoboda was one of the few who remained in office. The Communist-dominated Trade Union Congress voted unanimously to replace the 12 departed ministers with Communists. As armed workers and the People's Militias took to the streets, Svoboda refused to quell the insurrection with military force, saying "the army will not march against the people". Two days later (and one day after a general strike in which 2.5 million citizens participated), President Edvard Beneš gave in to growing pressure from Gottwald and appointed a government dominated by Communists and pro-Soviet Social Democrats. The takeover was completely bloodless. Svoboda, whose label had been that of an "apolitical" minister since the first days of his term, then joined the Communist Party whose de facto Trojan horse he had been all the time and was elected a deputy to the National Assembly.
Svoboda was forced out of the army (in which he had reached the rank of Army General November 1945) in 1950 under pressure from Joseph Stalin. He was named deputy Prime Minister from 1950 to 1951. In the purges which followed Svoboda was imprisoned and "recommended" to save his image by committing suicide, but eventually released and stripped of all offices. His return to public life took place upon a personal wish of Khrushchev, whom Svoboda had met during the war, and he subsequently headed the Klement Gottwald Military Academy.
In 1946 he was awarded the title People's Hero of Yugoslavia. Svoboda was also awarded the title Hero of the Soviet Union (on 24 November 1965[4]), and Hero of the Czechoslovak Socialist Republic (being awarded the latter title again in 1970 and 1975). He was awarded the Lenin Peace Prize (1970).
Presidency
After the ending of the Antonín Novotný regime, in the period known as the Prague Spring, Svoboda was elected President of Czechoslovakia on 30 March 1968, on the recommendation of Alexander Dubček, the First Secretary. He was an acceptable candidate both for Czechs and Slovaks plus, as a war hero and a victim of Stalinist purges, he enjoyed a very high esteem among the population.
Svoboda then gave a mild consent to the reform process of the new Party leadership until the Soviet-led intervention in August 1968. Horrified at his experiences in two world wars, he signed an order preventing the Czechoslovak Army from getting involved with the invading Warsaw Pact troops. He traveled to Moscow in order to secure the release of Dubček and the other reform leaders, who had been kidnapped by the invading forces. However, when Svoboda arrived, Leonid Brezhnev demanded that he appoint a "peasant-workers' government" in order to give credence to the planned official line—that hardliners in the KSČ had themselves requested the invasion. Svoboda not only refused, but threatened to put a bullet into his head in the presence of Brezhnev unless Dubček and the other reformists were released.
Nevertheless, Svoboda could do nothing to prevent Brezhnev from forcing the Czechoslovak representatives to sign the notorious Moscow protocols,[5] which meant a factual capitulation as they were kept secret and provided the Warsaw Pact armies with a factual licence to a "temporary stay" (as it was called later at an October parliamentary session) in Czechoslovakia. The protocols also obliged the Party leadership to promote political, cultural and other changes to stop the reform process. Svoboda also supported Minister of Defence Martin Dzúr, who ordered the Czechoslovak army to not show any resistance. Given the public outrage and resistance, Svoboda's arbitrary action was in fact in accord with Brezhnev's intent.
Normalisation period
Svoboda survived the removal of reformist Communists in Czechoslovakia in the aftermath of the Prague Spring, while passively witnessing the purges and the suffocation of the civil liberties that had briefly been restored. He even helped muzzle the press and also contributed to Dubček's replacement with Gustáv Husák in April 1969. To the day he died, he believed and maintained that his submissive conduct before Brezhnev helped save thousands of lives from "immense consequences"; and he defended this policy by invoking his own memories of the horrors of war.
Svoboda resisted Husák's attempts to oust him from the presidency until 1975, when he was forced to retire through a constitutional act (paragraph 64 Nr.143/1968 Sb.). This act stated that if the incumbent president was unable to carry out his office's duties for a year or more, the Federal Assembly had the right to elect a permanent successor. In Svoboda's case, he had been in ill health for some time, making the act relevant.
Despite being misused by politicians for their goals several times, Svoboda still enjoys a high credit among Czechs and Slovaks, probably due to his brave stance and fortitude on several occasions during crucial moments of Czechoslovak history. Squares and streets in both the Czech Republic and Slovakia continue to bear his name, while those of most other Communist-era leaders were removed after the Velvet Revolution. His attitude can be perhaps explained by his own words: "All I have ever done must be measured by my intention to serve best my people and my country."
Honours and awards
- Czechoslovakia (1920–1939)
- Order of the Falcon, with swords
- Order of King Charles IV
- Order of M. R. Štefánik[1]
- Czechoslovakia
- Gold Star Hero of the Czechoslovak Socialist Republic, three times (24 November 1965, 30 April 1970, 30 May 1975)
- Order of Klement Gottwald, three times (1959, 1970, 1975)
- Military Order of the White Lion "For Victory", 1st class (1945)
- Order of the Slovak National Uprising, 1st class
- Czechoslovak War Cross 1939–1945, three times
- Czechoslovak Medal "for bravery before the enemy" (1945)
- Czechoslovak Medal "For Merit" a degree of
- Commemorative medal of the second national resistance
- Allied victory Medal
- Zborovskaya commemorative medal
- Bahmachskaya commemorative medal
- Commemorative medals en. community for 1918–1919 dobrovolecke (badge)
- Medal cs.dobrovolnika 1918–1919 (crisis)
- Commemorative medals: 3rd Infantry Regiment Jan Žižka; 4th Rifle Regiment Prokop the Great; 5th Rifle Regiment T. G. M.; 6th Rifle Regiment Hanácké; 9th Rifle Regiment K.H. Borovsky; 10th Rifle Regiment P. J. Kozina; 21st Rifle Regiment terronskeho; 30th Infantry Regiment A. Jirasek; 1st Motorised Regiment John Sparks of Brandys; Artillery troops in Russia; machine building company separate traffic workshop of train troops in Russia; dobrovoleckeho Corps in Italy 1918–1948
- Memorial Cross, Russian Legion 2nd Regiment
- Štefánikův commemorative badge
- Military commemorative medals with the label of the USSR (1945)
- Dukelskaya commemorative medal
- Sokolovskaya commemorative medal
- Honour Field Squadron pilot cs. Army
- Honour Czechoslovak military pilot
- Badge cs. guerrilla
- Commemorative Medal of the second national resistance
- Honorary Medal for Fighter against fascism, 1st class
- Commander of the Order of the Czechoslovak Sokol TCH CS Vojensky Rad Bileho Lva 1st (1945)
- Czechoslovak War Cross 1918
- Order of 25 February, 1st class
- Order Wins the February
- Czechoslovak Cross of Valour 1914-1918
- Russian Empire
- Cross of St George, 3rd and 4th classes (1917)
- Soviet Union
- Hero of the Soviet Union (24 November 1965)
- Two Orders of Lenin (1943, 1965)
- Order of the October Revolution (1970)
- Order of Suvorov, 1st (1945) and 2nd (1943) classes
- Medal "For the Victory over Germany in the Great Patriotic War 1941–1945" (1945)
- Medal "For the Liberation of Prague" (1945)
- Lenin Peace Prize "for peace between nations" (1970)
- Poland
- Virtuti Militari, 1st class(1947)
- Cross of Grunwald, 1st class (1948)
- Order of Polonia Restituta, 1st class (1969)
- Military Cross (1944)
- Medal "for Warsaw 1939–1945"
- Medal "For the Odra, Nisus, and the Baltic Sea"
- Medal of Victory and Freedom 1945
- Other
- Order of the People's Hero (Yugoslavia, 1946)
- Order "For Service to the people", 1st class (Yugoslavia)
- Order of Red Banner (Hungary)
- Order "For Merit", 1st class (Hungary, 1950)
- Grand Officer of the Legion of Honour (France)
- Croix de guerre 1939–1945 (France)
- Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath (United Kingdom)
- Legion of Merit, Commander (United States, 1945)
- Commemorative Medal of the 2500th Anniversary of the founding of the Persian Empire (14/10/1971).[6]
See also
References
External links
Government offices | ||
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Preceded by Jan Syrový (before World War II) |
Minister of Defence of Czechoslovakia 1945–1950 |
Succeeded by Alexej Čepička |
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