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- Q16932767 subject Q7183652.
- Q16932767 subject Q7213744.
- Q16932767 subject Q8415017.
- Q16932767 subject Q8439655.
- Q16932767 subject Q9189659.
- Q16932767 subject Q9444950.
- Q16932767 abstract "The Czech Republic, like other post-communist European states, has had a fairly consistent pro-American foreign policy. This pro-Americanism makes Neoconservatism in Europe more likely in post-communist European states. While other states in Europe have become hostile towards US policy since the 2003 invasion of Iraq the states of Central Europe (termed "new Europe" by Donald Rumsfeld) joined the American "coalition of the willing" in Iraq, contributing much-needed international legitimacy. The Bush administration has praised these states as sharing America's values and remembering the hardships of totalitarian regimes".Many of the Czech politicians involved with the Velvet Revolution and the transition from communism to democracy express similar foreign policy views to American Neoconservatives. There are also many key Czech politicians affiliated to Neoconservative think tanks and organisations. Examples of these organisations include the Prague Security Studies Institute, an organisation who co-hosted the Neoconservative Democracy and Security International Conference.According to Jenni Schaller:"Neoconservatism, as a straiti of political thought in the United States, has been represented as "distinctly American" and Irving Kristol, often considered the "godfather" of neoconservatism, emphatically states "[t]here is nothing like neoconservatism in Europe" (Kristol 2003: 33). Analyst Jeffrey Gedmin writes that the "environment for neoconservatism as such is an inhospitable one" in Europe, especially Germany (Gedmin 2004: 291). The states of Central Europe, in contrast to many of the established continental EU members, represent a rather more pro-American stance. With groups of former dissidents whose political leanings are in part informed by the American anticommunist, pro-democracy policies of the 1970s and 1980s.Schaller Argues that: "After the collapse of the communist regime in late 1989, the new government consisted mainly of former dissidents and some who had not been active dissenters, but had not been active party members either. In comparison with Slovakia, many more Czech dissidents with no previous political or even professional experience were willing to assume not only legislative, but also executive posts (Ucen 1999: 85). Václav Havel provides the most striking example, but quite a few other politically inexperienced former dissidents took important positions, especially within the first few post-1989 governments. Without exaggerating the influence of former dissidents in the post-communist era, I assume that their presence in the government, cabinet, and extragovernmental research does have an (at least limited) impact on policies, as well as public opinion.↑ ↑ ↑ ↑".
- Q16932767 wikiPageExternalLink Neocon_Europe.
- Q16932767 wikiPageWikiLink Q170217.
- Q16932767 wikiPageWikiLink Q1719918.
- Q16932767 wikiPageWikiLink Q182817.
- Q16932767 wikiPageWikiLink Q184650.
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- Q16932767 wikiPageWikiLink Q228197.
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- Q16932767 wikiPageWikiLink Q36233.
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- Q16932767 wikiPageWikiLink Q553196.
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- Q16932767 wikiPageWikiLink Q712430.
- Q16932767 wikiPageWikiLink Q7183652.
- Q16932767 wikiPageWikiLink Q7213744.
- Q16932767 wikiPageWikiLink Q7237689.
- Q16932767 wikiPageWikiLink Q796.
- Q16932767 wikiPageWikiLink Q8415017.
- Q16932767 wikiPageWikiLink Q8439655.
- Q16932767 wikiPageWikiLink Q9189659.
- Q16932767 wikiPageWikiLink Q9444950.
- Q16932767 comment "The Czech Republic, like other post-communist European states, has had a fairly consistent pro-American foreign policy. This pro-Americanism makes Neoconservatism in Europe more likely in post-communist European states. While other states in Europe have become hostile towards US policy since the 2003 invasion of Iraq the states of Central Europe (termed "new Europe" by Donald Rumsfeld) joined the American "coalition of the willing" in Iraq, contributing much-needed international legitimacy.".
- Q16932767 label "Neoconservatism in the Czech Republic".