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"...we are for a socialism that is proper to a highly developed country and is devoid of those repulsive features imposed upon our country by a handful of narrow-minded, dogmatic, power-hungry careerists and unscrupulous despots. We have no reason to assume an anti-Soviet attitude insofar as the Soviet Union's internal policy is concerned. We object only to brutal interference in affairs of other nations."

This passage reflects the attitude of________.
A. a Czech dissident in 1969
B. a German communist in 1929
C. a Spanish anarchist in 1936
D. a British Tory in 1937

1 Answer

1 vote

Answer:

This passage reflects the attitude of: A) a Czech dissident in 1969

Step-by-step explanation:

In 1968 when Czechoslovakia was a nation (it included actual Slovakia and Czech republic), the Prague spring took place. Political reforms that will give Czech citizens additional rights, economic decentralization and democratization (promoted by Alexander Dubcek being first secretary of the Czech communist party) weren't well received by Soviet Union. After failed negotiations trying to stops those reforms, Soviet Union and countries of the Warsaw pact decided to invade militarily Czechoslovakia to suppress reforms. More than a six hundred thousand of troops and tanks were moved to occupy the country.

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