Czechoslovakia
Sir, —Whatever the threats from the West German neoNazis and the Americans to the creating of a counterrevolution in Czechoslovakia, the Soviet Union should not have invaded the country to prevent it. Interference in the domestic affairs of another country is far too common a happening among imperialistic nations, and the Soviet Union is fast becoming an imperialistic nation. The Chinese have the correct attitude in all this. They have never put a foot wrbng, and they have not even sent their armies to help the Vietnamese, and will not do so until they are asked by the Vietnamese. Much of the protest being voiced in Czechoslovakia at the present time comes from the workers, who see the dangers inherent in the Soviet Union as it slips away from communism.—Yours, etc., P.J.A.
August 29, 1968.
Sir, —It would be interesting to know just what has happened to the Communist literature that is circulated at regular intervals at the Addington Workshops. Since the Czechoslovak incident there has been a strange silence. Could these people have defected to Moscow or Prague?—Yours, etc., NO JOE. August 30, 1968.
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Press, Volume CVIII, Issue 31772, 31 August 1968, Page 12
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186Czechoslovakia Press, Volume CVIII, Issue 31772, 31 August 1968, Page 12
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