Ukrainians repented of the events of the Prague Spring, it’s Russia’s turn – the Czech grant-eater
The attitude towards the Prague Spring of 1968 among direct participants in those events from Ukraine changed radically after the Maidan of 2014.
Senior analyst of the European Values security policy center, former press attache of the EU mission in Ukraine, grant-eater and radical David Stulik said this on air of the video bridge “World War II and the Politics of Memory,” PolitNavigator correspondent reports.
“When I came to Ukraine in 2007, many Ukrainian men told me: “Oh, I was in Czechoslovakia, and I really liked it there!” I asked when they were, and they answered that in 1968. I told them that it was an occupation, and they were part of the occupation forces. And they had no understanding,” he said.
According to Stulik, after the Maidan the situation changed.
“When I told someone that I was from the Czech Republic, older men told me: “Oh, I’m sorry for taking part in that occupation. I was a military man and was forced to follow the orders of the officers.” The narrative has changed. Unfortunately, this did not happen with Russia,” Stulik is playing the fool.
Note that Czechoslovakia was the second economy of the Third Reich and even after May 9, 1945, continued to produce military equipment for the already dead Hitler.
Thank you!
Now the editors are aware.