Fraternal contacts expand and multiply the possibilities of every socialist country. The participants in the conference expressed their firm resolve to do everything in their power for deepening all-round cooperation of their countries on the basis of... Czechoslovakia and the Brezhnev Doctrine - Page 33by United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Government Operations. Subcommittee on National Security and International Operations - 1969 - 61 pagesFull view - About this book
| 1968 - 556 pages
...solve with mutual help and support," and defined as the basis for the cooperation of the signatories "the principles of equality, respect for sovereignty...and national independence, territorial integrity, and fraternal mutual assistance and solidarity" — with the words here italicized taking the place... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Foreign Relations - 1967 - 818 pages
...participants in the conference expressed their firm resolve to do everything in their power to deepen the all-round cooperation of their countries on the basis...and national independence, territorial integrity, and fraternal mutual assistance and solidarity. The further improvement of the activity of CEMA and... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate. Foreign Relations - 1968 - 52 pages
...participants in the conference expressed their firm resolve to do everything in their power to deepen the all-round cooperation of their countries on the basis...and national independence, territorial integrity, and fraternal mutual assistance and solidarity. The Communist and workers parties attach primary importance... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Government Operations - 1969 - 1326 pages
...five of its Warsaw Pact allies led by the Soviet Union, joined in a communique at Bratislava stating their firm resolve to do everything in their power...respect for sovereignty and national independence, (and) territorial integrity . . . Yet, seventeen days later, on August 20, suddenly, during the night,... | |
| Jarom¡r Navr til - 1998 - 656 pages
...The participants in the conference expressed a firm desire to do everything they can to improve the all-round cooperation of their countries on the basis...integrity, fraternal mutual assistance, and solidarity." The communist and workers' parties attach unusual significance to the effective use of the huge natural... | |
| Ikechi Mgbeoji - 2003 - 204 pages
...case of Czechoslovakia. Seventeen days after the Warsaw Pact, which bound the members to cooperate on the basis of "the principles of equality, respect for sovereignty and national independence," came into effect, those same members invaded the country on the pretext that there was an internal... | |
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