Bulgarian memories of Prague Spring: 'We weren't aggressors'
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Saturday, August 9, 2025


Bulgarian memories of Prague Spring: 'We weren't aggressors'
Former Bulgarian soldier Pencho Valkov poses on August 16, 2018 in Sevlievo with portraits of himself as a young soldier during his military service, as he wears a t-shirt bearing a Kalashnikov with a rose emerging from its barrel and the date Prague 1968. Valkov was one of the Bulgarian soldiers who took part in the crushing of the Prague Spring in 1968 under the direction of Moscow. Nikolay DOYCHINOV / AFP.

by Vessela Sergueva



SOFIA (AFP).- Bulgarian soldiers who took part in crushing the 1968 Prague Spring democracy movement under orders from Moscow bristle at being considered aggressors.

"If we were aggressors in Czechoslovakia, having been sent there by the Warsaw Pact, what are our soldiers today who've been sent to Iraq and Afghanistan for NATO?" asks reserve colonel Lyubcho Banov.

His irritation is visible as he recalls commanding a company tasked with protecting Prague's Ruzyne airport as the Czech Republic marks the 50th anniversary of the Soviet crackdown.

"It was a political decision: it was inconceivable that Czechoslovakia would be allowed to escape. As soldiers we carried out our duty, without firing on civilians," Banov says. "We weren't aggressors."

Pencho Valkov, a businessman from the central town of Drianovo, bears a small scar on his chest from where he was scraped by a rebel bullet, fired from a house close to the airport.

"I took cover, we weren't allowed to respond to the shot," he recalls.

Valkov was just 18 at the time and says he did not know why his unit was being deployed when the soldiers were flown from their base near the Turkish border to the then Soviet republic of Ukraine on July 28, 1968.

"We flew very low over the Black Sea, at an altitude of 200-300 metres, to avoid detection by Turkish radar," says Gospodin Chonkov, who led Valkov's unit, tasked with communications.

As Romania was the only Warsaw Pact country not to support the crackdown on the Prague Spring, the troops also had to avoid Romanian airspace.

Chonkov says the men were "surprised" to arrive in western Ukraine.

There they were awakened at dawn on August 21 and told of their mission just before re-boarding their plane.

"A commander explained that our 'Czechoslovak brothers' had asked for help, that it was 'worse than a war'," Valkov recalls.

Those who were scared of the mission were invited to make themselves known, but no-one dared.

When they arrived at Prague's Ruzyne airport, the Russians were already there.
The Bulgarian troops took control of movements at the airport and quickly dug trenches around the perimeter.

Information reached them through a newspaper printed in Bulgarian called the "Ruzyne Guardian".

'Go home!'
Relatively isolated from the dramatic events in the city of Prague itself where Soviet tanks rolled down the streets, the Bulgarians saw some signs of hostility -- although they maintain that the local population was generally positive towards them.

"There were young people protesting at the airport entrance with banners in Russian reading 'Idite domoy!' ('Go home!')," Chonkov says. "It was the first time we had seen a civilian protest."

On September 9 one Bulgarian was found dead. His fellow soldiers never learned the exact circumstances of his death.

The soldiers experienced few qualms about their mission, during it or afterwards.

"We were convinced by the propaganda, we thought we weren't fighting against ordinary people but against those who wanted to split Czechoslovakia off from the socialist community," says Chonkov.

They received a hero's welcome on their return to Bulgaria and were given three days' leave. Those who wanted to were given the opportunity to go to university without sitting the normal entrance exam.

Despite the international condemnation the crushing of the Prague Spring attracted, Chonkov insists: "We never fired on any Czechs".

For the 40th anniversary of the operation in 2008, Chonkov held a reunion for a dozen of his old comrades and had T-shirts made for them symbolising their self-image: a Kalashnikov with a rose -- Bulgaria's national flower -- emerging from its barrel.


© Agence France-Presse










Today's News

August 21, 2018

Christie's New York to auction an artwork created by an algorithm

200-million year old Pterosaur 'built for flying'

Museum Ludwig exhibits 'Photographer’s Name: Aenne Biermann'

'Most horrible place on earth': German Foreign Minister visits Auschwitz

Australian artist Charles Blackman OBE passed away this morning

Eagles overtake Michael Jackson with biggest selling album

Jewish Museum of Florida-FIU offers a rare glimpse of exquisite Tennessee Williams paintings

Exhibiting artists revealed for The National 2019: New Australian Art

Vanderven Oriental Art announces TEFAF New York Fall highlights

LiveAuctioneers Mid-Year Report reveals industry's highest online sales prices, sell-through rate and bidder traffic

Rizzoli to release Marla Hamburg Kennedy's 'Brooklyn Photographs Now'

Record-shattering Mickey Mantle jersey stuns hobby in $8.6 Million Heritage Sports Platinum Night Auction

ICA Philadelphia announces major $1 million gift from Marc J. Leder to endow curatorial directorship

Sculpture by the Sea, Bondi Announces 2018 Transfield Australian Invited Artist Program

Mali singer Khaira Arby, 'Nightingale of Timbuktu', is dead

Symbolic & powerful poppy art installation begins at National WWI Museum and Memorial

PULSE announces 2018 Projects special commission artist

H&H Classics to offer a rare and eye-catching Jaguar E-Type

Once upon a time... preserving folk tales in Benin

Paintings attributed to Van Gogh, Filla, Jawlensky will headline sale

Bulgarian memories of Prague Spring: 'We weren't aggressors'

Tehran museum lionises war in which Iran took on 'world'

The Jewish Museum exhibits Yael Bartana's installation 'Entartete Kunst Lebt! (Degenerate Art Lives!)'




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 




Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)


Editor: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful