Czech Republic
Czechoslovakia was created in 1918
from territory that had previously been part of the
Austro-Hungarian Empire.
Background Note: Czech
Republic
| Tyn Cathedral in Prague, Czech Republic, April 5, 2004. [© AP
Images] |
![[Country Map]](http://www.state.gov/cms_images/czechrepublic_map_2007-worldfactbook.jpg)
PROFILE
OFFICIAL NAME:
Czech Republic
Geography
Area: 78,864 sq. kilometers; about the size of Virginia.
Cities: Capital--Prague (pop. 1.16 million). Other cities--Brno
(376,172), Ostrava (314,744), Plzen (165,529).
Terrain: Low mountains to the north and south, hills in the west.
Climate: Temperate.
People
Nationality: Noun and adjective--Czech(s).
Population (est.): 10.2 million.
Annual growth rate: 0.1%.
Ethnic groups: Czech (90.4% or 9.25 million); Moravian (more than 380,000);
Slovak (193,000); Roma (171,000); Silesian (11,000); Polish (52,000); German
(39,000); Ukrainian (22,000); and Vietnamese (18,000).
Religions: Roman Catholic, Protestant.
Language: Czech.
Education: Literacy--99.8%.
Health: Life expectancy--males 72.3 yrs., females 78.5 yrs.
Work force (5.17 million): Industry, construction, and commerce--40%;
government and other services--56%; agriculture--4%.
Government
Type: Parliamentary republic.
Independence: The Czech Republic was established January 1, 1993 (former
Czechoslovak state established 1918).
Constitution: Signed December 16, 1992.
Branches: Executive--president (chief of state), prime minister (head
of government), cabinet. Legislative--Chamber of Deputies, Senate.
Judicial--Supreme Court, Constitutional Court.
Political parties (June 2006 election): Civic Democratic Party (ODS), 81
seats; Czech Social Democratic Party (CSSD), 74 seats; Communist Party of
Bohemia and Moravia (KSCM), 26 seats; Christian and Democratic
Union-Czechoslovak Peoples Party (KDU-CSL), 13 seats; Green Party (SZ), 6
seats.
Suffrage: Universal at 18.
Administrative subdivisions: Two regions--Bohemia and Moravia; 13
administrative districts and Prague.
Economy
GDP (2006): $141.7 billion.
Per capital income: $13,710.
Natural resources: Coal, coke, timber, lignite, uranium, magnesite.
Agriculture: Products--wheat, rye, oats, corn, barley, hops,
potatoes, sugar beets, hogs, cattle, horses.
Industry: Types--motor vehicles, machinery and equipment, iron,
steel, cement, sheet glass, armaments, chemicals, ceramics, wood, paper
products, and footwear.
Trade (2006): Exports--$94.8 billion (est.): motor vehicles,
machinery, iron, steel, chemicals, raw materials, consumer goods. Imports--$92.9
billion (est.). Trading partners--Germany (32%), Slovakia, Poland,
France, Austria, Italy, the Netherlands, Russia, U.K., China, United States.
PEOPLE
The majority of the 10.2 million inhabitants of the Czech Republic are
ethnically and linguistically Czech (95%). Other ethnic groups include
Germans, Roma, and Poles. After the 1993 division of the Czech and Slovak
Federal Republic, some Slovaks remained in the Czech Republic and comprise
roughly 3% of the current population. The border between the Czech Republic
and Slovakia is open for citizens of the former Czechoslovakia. Laws
establishing religious freedom were passed shortly after the revolution of
1989, lifting oppressive regulations enacted by the former communist regime.
Major denominations and their estimated percentage populations are Roman
Catholic (39%) and Protestant (3%). A large percentage of the Czech
population claim to be atheists (40%), and 16% describe themselves as
uncertain. The Jewish community numbers a few thousand today; a synagogue in
Prague memorializes the names of more than 80,000 Czechoslovak Jews who
perished in World War II.
HISTORY
The Czech Republic was the western part of the Czech and Slovak Federal
Republic. Formed into a common state after World War I (October 28, 1918),
the Czechs, Moravians, and Slovaks remained united for almost 75 years. On
January 1, 1993, the two republics split to form two separate states.
The Czechs lost their national independence to the Hapsburgs Empire in
1620 at the Battle of White Mountain and for the next 300 years were ruled
by the Austrian Monarchy. With the collapse of the monarchy at the end of
World War I, the independent country of Czechoslovakia was formed,
encouraged by, among others, U.S. President Woodrow Wilson.
Despite cultural differences, the Slovaks shared with the Czechs similar
aspirations for independence from the Hapsburg state and voluntarily united
with the Czechs. For historical reasons, Slovaks were not at the same level
of economic and technological development as the Czechs, but the freedom and
opportunity found in Czechoslovakia enabled them to make strides toward
overcoming these inequalities. However, the gap never was fully bridged, and
the discrepancy played a continuing role throughout the 75 years of the
union.
Although Czechoslovakia was the only east European country to remain a
parliamentary democracy from 1918 to 1938, it was plagued with minority
problems, the most important of which concerned the country's large German
population. Constituting more than 22% of the interwar state's population
and largely concentrated in the Bohemian and Moravian border regions (the
Sudetenland), members of this minority, including some who were sympathetic
to Nazi Germany, undermined the new Czechoslovak state. Internal and
external pressures culminated in September 1938, when France and the United
Kingdom yielded to Nazi pressures at Munich and agreed to force
Czechoslovakia to cede the Sudetenland to Germany.
Fulfilling Hitler's aggressive designs on all of Czechoslovakia, Germany
invaded what remained of Bohemia and Moravia in March 1939, establishing a
German "protectorate." By this time, Slovakia had already declared
independence and had become a puppet state of the Germans. Hitler’s
occupation of the Czech lands was a clear betrayal of the Munich Pact and
still stirs passions in modern-day Czech society, but at the time it was met
by muted resistance; the brunt of Nazi aggression was felt by Czech Jews and
other minorities who were rounded up and deported to concentration camps in
systematic waves. Over 100,000 Jews lived in the Czech lands in 1939. Only
several thousand remained or returned after the Holocaust in 1945.
At the close of World War II, Soviet troops overran all of Slovakia,
Moravia, and much of Bohemia, including Prague. In May 1945, U.S. forces
liberated the city of Plzen and most of western Bohemia. A civilian uprising
against the German garrison took place in Prague in May 1945. Following
Germany's surrender, some 2.9 million ethnic Germans were expelled from
Czechoslovakia with Allied approval under the Benes Decrees.
Reunited after the war, the Czechs and Slovaks set national elections for
the spring of 1946. The democratic elements, led by President Eduard Benes,
hoped the Soviet Union would allow Czechoslovakia the freedom to choose its
own form of government and aspired to a Czechoslovakia that would act as a
bridge between East and West. The Czechoslovak Communist Party, which won
38% of the vote, held most of the key positions in the government and
gradually managed to neutralize or silence the anti-communist forces.
Although the communist-led government initially intended to participate in
the Marshall Plan, it was forced by Moscow to back out. Under the cover of
superficial legality, the Communist Party seized power in February 1948.
After extensive purges modeled on the Stalinist pattern in other east
European states, the Communist Party tried 14 of its former leaders in
November 1952 and sentenced 11 to death. For more than a decade thereafter,
the Czechoslovak communist political structure was characterized by the
orthodoxy of the leadership of party chief Antonin Novotny.
The 1968 Soviet Invasion
The communist leadership allowed token reforms in the early 1960s, but
discontent arose within the ranks of the Communist Party central committee,
stemming from dissatisfaction with the slow pace of the economic reforms,
resistance to cultural liberalization, and the desire of the Slovaks within
the leadership for greater autonomy for their republic. This discontent
expressed itself with the removal of Novotny from party leadership in
January 1968 and from the presidency in March. He was replaced as party
leader by a Slovak, Alexander Dubcek.
After January 1968, the Dubcek leadership took practical steps toward
political, social, and economic reforms. In addition, it called for
politico-military changes in the Soviet-dominated Warsaw Pact and Council
for Mutual Economic Assistance. The leadership affirmed its loyalty to
socialism and the Warsaw Pact but also expressed the desire to improve
relations with all countries of the world regardless of their social
systems.
A program adopted in April 1968 set guidelines for a modern, humanistic
socialist democracy that would guarantee, among other things, freedom of
religion, press, assembly, speech, and travel; a program that, in Dubcek's
words, would give socialism "a human face." After 20 years of little public
participation, the population gradually started to take interest in the
government, and Dubcek became a truly popular national figure.
The internal reforms and foreign policy statements of the Dubcek
leadership created great concern among some other Warsaw Pact governments.
On the night of August 20, 1968, Soviet, Hungarian, Bulgarian, East German,
and Polish troops invaded and occupied Czechoslovakia. The Czechoslovak
Government immediately declared that the troops had not been invited into
the country and that their invasion was a violation of socialist principles,
international law, and the UN Charter.
The principal Czechoslovak reformers were forcibly and secretly taken to
the Soviet Union. Under obvious Soviet duress, they were compelled to sign a
treaty that provided for the "temporary stationing" of an unspecified number
of Soviet troops in Czechoslovakia. Dubcek was removed as party First
Secretary on April 17, 1969, and replaced by another Slovak, Gustav Husak.
Later, Dubcek and many of his allies within the party were stripped of their
party positions in a purge that lasted until 1971 and reduced party
membership by almost one-third.
The 1970s and 1980s became known as the period of "normalization," in
which the apologists for the 1968 Soviet invasion prevented, as best they
could, any opposition to their conservative regime. Political, social, and
economic life stagnated. The population, cowed by the "normalization," was
quiet.
The Velvet Revolution
The roots of the 1989 Civic Forum movement that came to power during the
"Velvet Revolution" lie in human rights activism. On January 1, 1977, more
than 250 human rights activists signed a manifesto called the Charter 77,
which criticized the government for failing to implement human rights
provisions of documents it had signed, including the state's own
constitution; international covenants on political, civil, economic, social,
and cultural rights; and the Final Act of the Conference for Security and
Cooperation in Europe. Although not organized in any real sense, the
signatories of Charter 77 constituted a citizens' initiative aimed at
inducing the Czechoslovak Government to observe formal obligations to
respect the human rights of its citizens.
On November 17, 1989, the communist police violently broke up a peaceful
pro-democracy demonstration and brutally beat many student participants. In
the days that followed, Charter 77 and other groups united to become the
Civic Forum, an umbrella group championing bureaucratic reform and civil
liberties. Its leader was the dissident playwright Vaclav Havel.
Intentionally eschewing the label "party," a word given a negative
connotation during the previous regime, Civic Forum quickly gained the
support of millions of Czechs, as did its Slovak counterpart, Public Against
Violence.
Faced with an overwhelming popular repudiation, the Communist Party all
but collapsed. Its leaders, Husak and party chief Milos Jakes, resigned in
December 1989, and Havel was elected President of Czechoslovakia on December
29. The astonishing quickness of these events was in part due to the
unpopularity of the communist regime and changes in the policies of its
Soviet guarantor as well as to the rapid, effective organization of these
public initiatives into a viable opposition.
A coalition government, in which the Communist Party had a minority of
ministerial positions, was formed in December 1989. The first free elections
in Czechoslovakia since 1946 took place in June 1990 without incident and
with more than 95% of the population voting. As anticipated, Civic Forum and
Public Against Violence won landslide victories in their respective
republics and gained a comfortable majority in the federal parliament. The
parliament undertook substantial steps toward securing the democratic
evolution of Czechoslovakia. It successfully moved toward fair local
elections in November 1990, ensuring fundamental change at the county and
town level.
Civic Forum found, however, that although it had successfully completed
its primary objective--the overthrow of the communist regime--it was
ineffectual as a governing party. The demise of Civic Forum was viewed by
most as necessary and inevitable.
By the end of 1990, unofficial parliamentary "clubs" had evolved with
distinct political agendas. Most influential was the Civic Democratic Party,
headed by Vaclav Klaus, who later became Prime Minister. Other notable
parties that came to the fore after the split were the Czech Social
Democratic Party, Civic Movement, and Civic Democratic Alliance.
By 1992, Slovak calls for greater autonomy effectively blocked the daily
functioning of the federal government. In the election of June 1992, Klaus's
Civic Democratic Party won handily in the Czech lands on a platform of
economic reform. Vladimir Meciar's Movement for a Democratic Slovakia
emerged as the leading party in Slovakia, basing its appeal on fairness to
Slovak demands for autonomy. Federalists, like Havel, were unable to contain
the trend toward the split. In July 1992, President Havel resigned. In the
latter half of 1992, Klaus and Meciar hammered out an agreement that the two
republics would go their separate ways by the end of the year.
Members of the federal parliament, divided along national lines, barely
cooperated enough to pass the law officially separating the two nations. The
law was passed on December 27, 1992. On January 1, 1993, the Czech Republic
and the Republic of Slovakia were simultaneously and peacefully founded.
Relationships between the two states, despite occasional disputes about
the division of federal property and governing of the border, have been
peaceful. Both states attained immediate recognition from the U.S. and their
European neighbors.
GOVERNMENT AND POLITICAL CONDITIONS
The President of the Czech Republic is Vaclav Klaus. He was elected on
February 28, 2003 and sworn into office on March 7, 2003. As formal head of
state, the president is granted specific powers such as the right to
nominate Constitutional Court judges, dissolve parliament under certain
conditions, and enact a veto on legislation. Presidents are elected by the
parliament for 5-year terms.
The legislature is bicameral, with a Chamber of Deputies (200 seats) and
a Senate (81 seats). With the split of the former Czechoslovakia, the powers
and responsibilities of the now-defunct federal parliament were transferred
to the Czech National Council, which renamed itself the Chamber of Deputies.
Chamber delegates are elected from 14 regions--including the capital,
Prague--for 4-year terms, on the basis of proportional representation. The
Czech Senate is patterned after the U.S. Senate and was first elected in
1996; its members serve for 6-year terms with one-third being elected every
2 years.
The country's highest court of appeal is the Supreme Court. The
Constitutional Court, which rules on constitutional issues, is appointed by
the president. Its members serve 10-year terms.
The June 2-3, 2006 general election resulted in the Chamber of Deputies'
200 seats being evenly divided 100-100 between three center-right parties
and two parties on the left, with neither side able to form a majority
government. The impasse led to months of protracted negotiations during
which Prime Minister Mirek Topolanek formed a three-party coalition with the
Christian Democrats (KDU-CSL) and the Greens (SZ). The coalition lost its
first vote of confidence 96-99 on October 4, 2006. But some seven months
after the election, on January 19, 2007, the coalition succeeded in its
second attempt when two renegade parliamentarians from the opposition Social
Democrats (CSSD) abstained.
Principal Government Officials
President--Vaclav Klaus
Prime Minister--Mirek Topolanek (ODS)
Foreign Minister--Karel Schwarzenberg (nominated by the Green Party, though
not a member)
Ambassador to the U.S.--Petr Kolar
The Czech Republic maintains an
embassy at 3900 Spring of Freedom Street, NW, Washington, DC 20008,
(tel. 202-274-9101).
ECONOMY
Of the former communist countries in central and eastern Europe, the Czech
Republic has one of the most developed and industrialized economies. Its
strong industrial tradition dates to the 19th century, when Bohemia and
Moravia were the industrial heartland of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. The
Czech Republic has a well-educated population and a well-developed
infrastructure. The country's strategic location in Europe, low-cost
structure, and skilled work force have attracted strong inflows of foreign
direct investment (FDI). This investment is rapidly modernizing its
industrial base and increasing productivity.
The principal industries are motor vehicles, machine-building, iron and
steel production, metalworking, chemicals, electronics, transportation
equipment, textiles, glass, brewing, china, ceramics, and pharmaceuticals.
The main agricultural products are sugar beets, fodder roots, potatoes,
wheat, and hops. As a small, open economy in the heart of Europe, economic
growth is strongly influenced by demand for Czech exports and flows of
foreign direct investment.
At the time of the 1948 communist takeover, Czechoslovakia had a balanced
economy and one of the higher levels of industrialization on the continent.
In 1948, however, the government began to stress heavy industry over
agricultural and consumer goods and services. Many basic industries and
foreign trade, as well as domestic wholesale trade, had been nationalized
before the communists took power. Nationalization of most of the retail
trade was completed in 1950-51.
Heavy industry received major economic support during the 1950s, but
central planning resulted in waste and inefficient use of industrial
resources. Although the labor force was traditionally skilled and efficient,
inadequate incentives for labor and management contributed to high labor
turnover, low productivity, and poor product quality. Economic failures
reached a critical stage in the 1960s, after which various reform measures
were sought with no satisfactory results.
Hope for wide-ranging economic reform came with Alexander Dubcek's rise
in January 1968. Despite renewed efforts, however, Czechoslovakia could not
come to grips with inflationary forces, much less begin the immense task of
correcting the economy's basic problems.
The economy saw growth during the 1970s but then stagnated between
1978-82. Attempts at revitalizing it in the 1980s with management and worker
incentive programs were largely unsuccessful. The economy grew after 1982,
achieving an annual average output growth of more than 3% between 1983-85.
Imports from the West were curtailed, exports boosted, and hard currency
debt reduced substantially. New investment was made in the electronic,
chemical, and pharmaceutical sectors, which were industry leaders in eastern
Europe in the mid-1980s.
The "Velvet Revolution" in 1989 offered a chance for profound and
sustained economic reform. Signs of economic resurgence began to appear in
the wake of the shock therapy that the International Monetary Fund (IMF)
labeled the "big bang" of January 1991. Since then, astute economic
management has led to the elimination of 95% of all price controls, large
inflows of foreign investment, increasing domestic consumption and
industrial production, and a stable exchange rate. Exports to former
communist economic bloc markets have shifted to western Europe. Thanks to
foreign investment, the country enjoys a positive balance-of-payments
position. Despite a general trend over the last 10 years toward rising
budget deficits, the Czech Government's domestic and foreign indebtedness
remains relatively low.
The Czech koruna (crown) became fully convertible for most business
purposes in late 1995. Following a currency crisis and recession in 1998-99,
the crown exchange rate was allowed to float. Recently, strong capital
inflows have resulted in a steady increase in the value of the crown against
the euro and the dollar. The strong crown helped to keep inflation low. In
2004, inflation was about 2.8%, mainly due to increases in value added tax
rates and higher fuel costs, and dropped to 1.9% in 2005. It hovered around
2.5% in 2006. The Ministry of Finance forecasts a rate of 2.4% for 2007. The
Czech Republic will not adopt the euro earlier than 2012.
The Czech Republic is gradually reducing its dependence on highly
polluting low-grade brown coal as a source of energy, in part because of EU
environmental requirements. In 2005, according to the Czech Statistical
Office, 65.4% of electricity was produced in steam, combined, and combustion
power plants; 30% in nuclear plants; and 4.6% from renewable sources,
including hydropower. Russia (via pipelines through Ukraine) and, to a
lesser extent, Norway (via pipelines through Germany) supply the Czech
Republic with liquid and natural gas.
The government has offered investment incentives in order to enhance the
Czech Republic's natural advantages, thereby attracting foreign partners and
stimulating the economy. Shifting emphasis from the East to the West has
necessitated adjustment of commercial laws and accounting practices to fit
Western standards. Formerly state-owned banks have all been privatized into
the hands of west European banks and oversight by the central bank has
improved. The telecommunications infrastructure has been upgraded and the
sector is privatized. The Czech Republic has made significant progress
toward creating a stable and attractive climate for investment, although
continuing reports of corruption are troubling to investors.
Its success allowed the Czech Republic to become the first post-communist
country to receive an investment-grade credit rating by international credit
institutions. Successive Czech governments have welcomed U.S. investment in
addition to the strong economic influence of Western Europe and increasing
investment from Asian auto manufacturers. Inflows of foreign direct
investment in 2005 were $11.7 billion, more than double the previous year.
In 2006, FDI dropped back to previous levels at roughly $6 billion. By U.S.
Embassy estimates, the United States is among the top five investors in the
Czech Republic since the revolution.
The Czech Republic boasts a flourishing consumer production sector. In
the early 1990s most state-owned industries were privatized through a
voucher privatization system. Every citizen was given the opportunity to
buy, for a moderate price, a book of vouchers that he or she could exchange
for shares in state-owned companies. State ownership of businesses was
estimated to be about 97% under communism. The non-private sector is less
than 20% today.
Unemployment declined to 7.7% in 2006. Rates of unemployment are higher
in the coal and steel producing regions of Northern Moravia and Northern
Bohemia, and among less-skilled and older workers.
The economy grew 6.1% in 2005 and experienced similar growth in 2006. The
current right-of-center coalition government has committed itself to
reducing the deficit to 3% of GDP by 2008, from 4.7% in 2006. Planned
reforms involving reduction of currently mandatory expenditures to meet
Maastricht criteria for adoption of the euro will prepare the Czech Republic
for accession to the euro zone in 2012 at the earliest.
The Czech Republic became a European Union (EU) member on May 1, 2004.
Most barriers to trade in industrial goods with the EU fell in the course of
the accession process. The process of accession had a positive impact on
reform in the Czech Republic, and new EU directives and regulations continue
to shape the business environment. Free trade in services and agricultural
goods, as well as stronger regulation and rising labor costs, will mean
tougher competition for Czech producers. Future levels of EU structural
funding and agricultural supports were key issues in the accession
negotiations. Even before accession, policy set in Brussels had a strong
influence on Czech domestic and foreign policy, particularly in the area of
trade.
The Czech Republic’s economic transformation is not yet complete. The
government still faces serious challenges in completing industrial
restructuring, increasing transparency in capital market transactions,
transforming the housing sector, reforming the pension and health care
systems, and solving serious environmental problems.
NATIONAL SECURITY
The Czech Republic has made a significant contribution to the War on
Terrorism relative to its size. It deployed a nuclear/biological/chemical
(NBC) defense unit in support of Operation Enduring Freedom (OEF) and a
field hospital in support of the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF)
in Afghanistan. When the U.S. intervened in Iraq, the Czechs moved their
field hospital from Afghanistan to Basra and deployed an NBC unit to Kuwait.
Both the field hospital and the NBC unit have left Iraq. In April 2004, the
Czech Government deployed a Special Forces unit to OEF in Afghanistan, and a
group of specialists to ISAF. The Special Forces unit returned to the Czech
Republic in September 2004. In March 2005, the Czechs deployed military
reconnaissance troops to serve with a German-led Provincial Reconstruction
Team under ISAF.
The parliament has approved the following 2007 deployments of over 1,000
troops in missions to Iraq, Afghanistan, the Balkans, and Lebanon, as well
as additional troops to the NATO Response Force.
Iraq: 99 soldiers at a multinational force (MNF) base close to the
City of Basra where they conduct police training.
Five soldiers are also serving at the International Command of the NATO
Training Mission in Baghdad.
Afghanistan: 148 deployed; roughly 150 more could be deployed in
2007. Sixty-six are in Kabul where the Czechs have command of the
International Airport (KAIA), under the NATO-led ISAF. Another 82 soldiers
are in Faizabad province serving the multinational Provincial Reconstruction
Team (PRT). At the 2006 NATO summit in Riga, President Klaus announced plans
for the deployment of an additional 70 soldiers, including 35 military
police for operations in the south, 10 additional chem-bio troops, and 25
reinforcements for the PRT in Faizabad.
In February 2007, the Senate and the Chamber of Deputies approved the
deployment of a 70-man field hospital, which began deployment in March 2007.
They also approved an additional deployment of a specially trained police
unit to operate in support of U.K. forces in southern Afghanistan. This
deployment occurred in spring 2007.
Kosovo: The Czech Republic has had troops in Kosovo since 1999.
The 10th rotation of troops arrived in January 2007. There are currently 394
soldiers doing peacekeeping under NATO KFOR. The biggest element of this
group comes from the 42nd Mechanized Battalion at Tabor.
Bosnia and Herzegovina: 52 troops under an EU mission: 48 at a
base in Tuzla, 4 in Sarajevo.
Lebanon: Authorization for 10 troops to join the UNIFIL mission.
The Czech Republic became a member of the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization (NATO) on March 12, 1999. A major overhaul of the Czechoslovak
defense forces began in 1990 and continues in the Czech Republic. Czech
forces are being downsized from 200,000 to approximately 35,000, and at the
same time reoriented toward a more mobile, deployable force structure. The
Czechs have made good progress in reforming the military personnel
structure, and a strong commitment to English-language training is paying
off. Compulsory military service ended in December 2004. Public support for
NATO membership remains around 50%-60%. The Czech Government currently
spends slightly less than 2% of GDP on defense. This puts Czech defense
spending on a par with the European NATO average.
The Czech Republic has good to excellent relations with all of its
neighbors, and none of its borders are in question. The Czech Republic is a
member of the UN and OSCE and has contributed to numerous peacekeeping
operations, including IFOR/SFOR in Bosnia and KFOR in Kosovo, as well as
Desert Shield/Desert Storm and Enduring Freedom.
FOREIGN RELATIONS
From 1948 until 1989, the foreign policy of Czechoslovakia followed that
of the Soviet Union. Since independence, the Czechs have made integration
into Western institutions their chief foreign policy objective.
The Czech Republic became a member of the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization, along with Poland and Hungary, on March 12, 1999. The Czech
Republic became a full member of the European Union on May 1, 2004. Both
events are milestones in the country's foreign policy and security
orientation. The Czech Republic is scheduled to host the rotating EU
Presidency during the first half of 2009.
The Czech Republic is a member of the United Nations and participates in
its specialized agencies. It is a member of the World Trade Organization. It
maintains diplomatic relations with more than 85 countries, of which 80 have
permanent representation in Prague.
U.S.-CZECH RELATIONS
Millions of Americans have their roots in Bohemia and Moravia, and a large
community in the United States has strong cultural and familial ties with
the Czech Republic. President Woodrow Wilson and the United States played a
major role in the establishment of the original Czechoslovak state on
October 28, 1918. President Wilson's 14 Points, including the right of
ethnic groups to form their own states, were the basis for the union of the
Czechs and Slovaks. Tomas Masaryk, the father of the state and its first
President, visited the United States during World War I and worked with U.S.
officials in developing the basis of the new country. Masaryk used the U.S.
Constitution as a model for the first Czechoslovak constitution.
After World War II, and the return of the Czechoslovak Government in
exile, normal relations continued until 1948, when the communists seized
power. Relations cooled rapidly. The Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia in
August 1968 further complicated U.S.-Czechoslovak relations. The United
States referred the matter to the UN Security Council as a violation of the
UN Charter, but no action was taken against the Soviets.
Since the "Velvet Revolution" of 1989, bilateral relations have improved
immensely. Dissidents once sustained by U.S. encouragement and human rights
policies reached high levels in the government. President Havel, in his
first official visit as head of Czechoslovakia, addressed the U.S. Congress
and was interrupted 21 times by standing ovations. In 1990, on the first
anniversary of the revolution, President George H.W. Bush, in front of an
enthusiastic crowd on Prague's Wenceslas Square, pledged U.S. support in
building a democratic Czechoslovakia. Toward this end, the U.S. Government
has actively encouraged political and economic transformation.
The U.S. Government was originally opposed to the idea of Czechoslovakia
forming two separate states, due to concerns that a split might aggravate
existing regional political tensions. However, the U.S. recognized both the
Czech Republic and Slovakia on January 1, 1993. Since then, U.S.-Czech
relations have remained strong economically, politically, and culturally.
Relations between the U.S. and the Czech Republic are excellent and
reflect the common approach both have to the many challenges facing the
world at present. The U.S. looks to the Czech Republic as a partner in
issues ranging from Afghanistan to the Balkans, and seeks opportunities to
continue to deepen this relationship.
Principal U.S. Embassy Officials
Ambassador--Richard
Graber
Deputy Chief of Mission--Mary Thompson-Jones
Political-Economic Officer--Michael Dodman
Commercial Officer--Greg O’Connor
Consular Officer--Stuart Hatcher
Management Officer--Martin Hohe
Regional Security Officer--Jim Pelphrey
Public Affairs Officer--Michael Hahn
The U.S. Embassy in Prague is
located at Trziste 15, 11801 Prague 1, Czech Republic; tel: 420-257-022-000;
emergency after hours 420-257022-352.