Forty years ago today Warsaw Pact troops marched into Prague and put an end to "Prague Spring", the attempt at reform in Czechoslovakia. Helsingin Sanomat newspaper links the events of 1968 to politics in Europe today. "Not an enemy country, but an allied state was occupied, the belief in 'socialism with a human face' and the future of the entire 'socialist community' was endangered. ... The occupation was a shock for the ... rest of Europe. .. The Western defence alliance NATO saw no chance to take countermeasures. ... The Warsaw Pact no longer exists today, but NATO was not disbanded. On the contrary, it began to expand to the East. ... NATO has even shown itself ready to cooperate with Russia, however developments in European security are at odds with the agenda of the Russian leadership. ... Russia's new foreign policy strategy is a repetition of the hostile attitude to NATO expansion. ... In 1968 the Soviet Union proclaimed its right to push through its own interpretation of socialism, and now Russia has given itself the right to defend its population from bellicose developments in neighbouring countries. The difference between ... the two attitudes is alarmingly small." (21/08/2008)
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