THE GERMAN STATE MINISTRY FOR CHECH AND MORAV, PRAGUE (1906) 1939 - 1945 (1965), inv. 1270, sig. 110-12/96

Page 163

English Translation

161.) The collective life and cooperation of the post-war democracies with the system of Soviet socialism is also possible and necessary for practical reasons. From what I said above, it is clear that the post-war democracies should and can carry out their structural post-War changes in evolution, and can do so without violence, I am convinced, by the way, that attempts to achieve a violent economic revolution after t t t d s d European states would be soothed even after the Second World War. In my first speech on the peace conference on 30 September 1969, in which I recommended the approval of the peace agreements to the Czechoslovak National Assembly, the following: "Alie those who have assumed that the war will end with a social revolution of grandiose style and with the final social revolution have a I've been guilty of fatal misconduct. Without a doubt we live in a time of great upheavals and must progress with the spirit of time. But anyone who has followed the whole war in the allied countries, who has seen the moral state of the population of these countries and the social construction of the present day sowhi of England, as well as of France, the United States and Italy, understands that all these premature hopes are based on false conditions and will not be fulfilled, based on these hopes.