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Edvard Beneš

Edvard Beneš (Czech pronunciation: [ˈɛdvard ˈbɛnɛʃ] ; 28 May 1884 – 3 September 1948) was a Czech politician and statesman who served as the president of Czechoslovakia from 1935 to 1938, and again from 1939 to 1948. During the first six years of his second stint, he led the Czechoslovak government-in-exile during World War II.

Edvard Beneš
Beneš c. 1942
President of Czechoslovakia
In office
2 April 1945 – 7 June 1948
Prime Minister
Preceded byHimself as president in exile
Succeeded byKlement Gottwald
In exile
17 October 1939 – 2 April 1945
Prime MinisterJan Šrámek
In office
18 December 1935 – 5 October 1938
Prime Minister
Preceded byTomáš Masaryk
Succeeded byEmil Hácha
4th Prime Minister of Czechoslovakia
In office
26 September 1921 – 7 October 1922
PresidentTomáš Masaryk
Preceded byJan Černý
Succeeded byAntonín Švehla
Minister of Foreign Affairs
In office
14 November 1918 – 18 December 1935
Prime MinisterKarel Kramář
Vlastimil Tusar
Jan Černý
Himself
Antonín Švehla
František Udržal
Jan Malypetr
Milan Hodža
Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded byMilan Hodža
Personal details
Born(1884-05-28)28 May 1884
Kožlany, Bohemia, Austria-Hungary
Died3 September 1948(1948-09-03) (aged 64)
Sezimovo Ústí, Czechoslovakia
NationalityCzech
Political party
Spouse
Hana Benešová
(m. 1909)
Alma mater
Signature

As president, Beneš faced two major crises, which both resulted in his resignation. His first resignation came after the Munich Agreement and subsequent German occupation of Czechoslovakia in 1938, which resulted in his government's exile in the United Kingdom. The second came about with the 1948 Communist coup, which created a Communist regime in Czechoslovakia. Before his time as president, Beneš was also the first foreign affairs minister (1918–1935) and the fourth prime minister (1921–1922) of Czechoslovakia. The de facto leader of the Czech National Social Party, he was known as a skilled diplomat.[1]

Early life edit

Birth and family edit

Beneš was born into a peasant family in 1884 in the town of Kožlany, Bohemia in what was then Austria-Hungary. He was the youngest son and tenth child overall of Matěj Beneš (1843–1910) and Anna Petronila (née Beneš;[2] 1840–1909).[3][4] One of his siblings was the future Czechoslovak politician Vojta Beneš. His nephew through his brother Václav was Bohuš Beneš, a diplomat and author. Bohuš was the father of Emilie Benes Brzezinski, an American sculptor, and Václav E. Beneš, a Czech-American mathematician.[5]

Education and marriage edit

 
Edvard Beneš with his wife Hana in 1934

Beneš spent much of his youth in the Vinohrady district of Prague, where he attended a grammar school from 1896 to 1904. His landlord's family was acquainted with his future wife Anna Vlčková (1885–1974, later Hana Benešová) (cs). The two would study French, history, and literature together at the Sorbonne. Edvard and Anna got engaged in May 1906, and married in November 1909. Some time after their engagement, Anna changed her name to Hana. Edvard had always preferred to call her Hana, because he had just ended a relationship with another woman named Anna. Around the same time, Edvard Beneš also changed his name, going from the original spelling "Eduard" to "Edvard".[6][7]

He played football as an amateur for Slavia Prague.[8] After studying philosophy at Charles-Ferdinand University in Prague, Beneš left for Paris and continued his studies at the Sorbonne and at the Independent School of Political and Social Studies. He completed his first degree in Dijon, where he received his doctorate of law in 1908. Beneš then taught for three years at a business college, and after his 1912 habilitation in philosophy, Beneš became a lecturer of sociology at Charles University. He was also involved in scouting.[9]

In 1907, Beneš published over 200 articles in the Czech social democratic newspaper Právo lidu [cs] containing his impressions of life in Western Europe.[10] Beneš wrote he found Germany to be repulsive and an "empire of force and power" after visiting Berlin.[10] In London, he wrote that "the situation here is terrible and so is life".[10] During World War II, when Beneš was living in exile in London, the German Propaganda Ministry gleefully republished his articles from 1907 expressing mostly negative sentiments about life in Britain.[10] However, Beneš loved Paris, the "city of light".[11] He wrote that he found it to be "almost miraculously ... a magnificent synthesis of modern civilization, of which France is the bearer".[10] For the rest of his life, Beneš was a passionate Francophile and he always stated that Paris was his favorite city.[11]

Political career before independence edit

 
Triumvirate of Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk, Milan Rastislav Štefánik, and Edvard Beneš.

During World War I, Beneš was one of the leading organizers of an independent Czechoslovakia from abroad. He organized a pro-independence and anti-Austrian secret resistance movement, Maffia. In September 1915, he went into exile in Paris, where he made intricate diplomatic efforts to gain recognition from France and the United Kingdom for Czechoslovak independence. From 1916 to 1918, he was a Secretary of the Czechoslovak National Council in Paris and Minister of the Interior and of Foreign Affairs in the Provisional Czechoslovak government.

In May 1917, Beneš, Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk and Milan Rastislav Štefánik were reported to be organizing a "Czechoslovak Legion" to fight for the Western Allies in France and Italy, recruited from among Czechs and Slovaks who were able to get to the front and also from the large emigrant populations in the United States, which was said to number more than 1,500,000.[12] The force grew into one of tens of thousands and took part in several battles, including the Battles of Zborov and Bakhmach in Russia.[13]

Foreign minister edit

 
Time cover, 23 March 1925
 
Beneš (center) with the Czechoslovak delegation at the Locarno Treaties, 1925 Autochrome by Roger Dumas

From 1918 to 1935, Beneš was the first and longest-serving Foreign Minister of Czechoslovakia. On 31 October 1918, Karel Kramář reported from Geneva to Prague: "If you saw our Dr. Beneš and his mastery of global questions ... you would take off your hat and say it was truly marvelous!"[14] His international stature was such that he held the post through 10 successive governments, one of which he headed himself from 1921 to 1922. In 1919, his decision to pull demoralized Czechoslovak Legions out of the Russian Civil War was denounced by Kramář as a betrayal.[15] He represented Czechoslovakia at the 1919 peace conference in Paris, which led to the Versailles Treaty.

A committed Czechoslovakist, Beneš did not consider Czechs and Slovaks to be separate ethnicities. He served in the National Assembly from 1920 to 1925 and again from 1929 to 1935, representing the Czechoslovak National Social Party (called the Czechoslovak Social Party until 1925). He briefly returned to the academic world as a professor, in 1921. After Jan Černý's first stint as prime minister, Beneš formed a government (cs) for a little over a year from 1921 to 1922.

In the early 1920s, Beneš and his mentor President Masaryk viewed Kramář as the principal threat to Czechoslovak democracy, seeing him as a "reactionary" Czech chauvinist who was opposed to their plans for Czechoslovakia as a multi-cultural, multi-ethnic state.[15] Masaryk and Beneš were openly doubtful of Kramář's commitment to "Western values" that they were committed to such as democracy, enlightenment, rationality and tolerance, seeing him as a romantic Pan-Slavist who looked towards the east rather than the west for ideas.[15]

Kramář very much resented the way in which Masaryk openly groomed Beneš as his successor, noting that Masaryk put articles into the Constitution that set 45 as the age limit for senators, but 35 as the age limit for the presidency, which conveniently made Beneš eligible for the presidency.[15] The charge of Czech chauvinism against Kramář had some substance as he openly proclaimed his belief that the Czechs should be the dominant people in Czechoslovakia, denounced Masaryk and Beneš for their belief that the Sudeten Germans should be equal to the Czechs, and made clear his opposition to having German as one of the official languages of Czechoslovakia, views that made him abhorrent to Beneš.[16]

In 1927 Beneš was initiated in freemasonry at the Ian Amos Komensky Lodge No. 1.[17]

Between 1923 and 1927, Beneš was a member of the League of Nations Council, serving as president of its committee from 1927 to 1928. He was a renowned and influential figure at international conferences, such as those at Genoa in 1922, Locarno in 1925, The Hague in 1930 and Lausanne in 1932.

First presidency edit

 
Beneš with several other Little Entente leaders in Bucharest, Romania in 1936. From left to right: Prince Michael (Rom.), Beneš, King Carol II (Rom.), Prince Regent Paul (Yug.), and Prince Nicholas (Rom.).

When President Tomáš Masaryk retired in 1935, Beneš succeeded him. Under Masaryk, the Hrad ("the castle", as the Czechs called the presidency) had been built up into a major extra-constitutional institution enjoying considerably more informal power than the plain language of the Constitution indicated.[18] The framers of the Constitution had intended to create a parliamentary system in which the Prime Minister would be the country's leading political figure. However, due to a complex system of proportional representation, a typical National Assembly saw as many as ten parties represented. No party even approached the 151 seats needed for a majority; indeed, no party ever won more than 25 percent of the vote. As mentioned above, there were ten cabinets during Masaryk's presidency.

The Czech historian Igor Lukes (cs) wrote about the power of the Hrad under Beneš: "By the spring of 1938, the Czechoslovak parliament, the prime minister, and the cabinet had been pushed aside by Beneš. During the dramatic summer months he was – for better or worse – the sole decision-maker in the country".[18]

Sudeten Crisis edit

Edvard Beneš opposed Nazi Germany's claim to the German-speaking Sudetenland in 1938. The crisis began on 24 April 1938 when Konrad Henlein at the party congress of the Sudeten German Party in Karlsbad (modern Karlovy Vary) announced the 8-point "Karlsbad programme" demanding autonomy for the Sudetenland.[19] Beneš rejected the Karlsbad programme, but in May 1938 offered the "Third Plan" which would have created 20 cantons in the Sudetenland with substantial autonomy, which in turn was rejected by Henlein.[20] Beneš was keen to go to war with Germany provided that one or more of the Great Powers fought alongside Czechoslovakia, but was unwilling to fight Germany alone.[21] Sergei Aleksandrovsky, the Soviet minister in Prague, reported to Moscow after talking to Beneš that he was hoping to fight a "war against the whole world" provided the Soviet Union was willing to come in.[21]

In London in May 1938, Beneš came under diplomatic pressure from the British government to accede to the Karlsbad programme, which he initially refused. The British viewed the Sudetenland crisis as a domestic Czechoslovak crisis with international ramifications whereas Beneš saw the crisis as a matter between Czechoslovakia vs. Germany.

In July 1938, the British Foreign Secretary Lord Halifax offered the services of a British mediator Lord Runciman, to resolve the crisis, with the promise that Britain would support Czechoslovakia if Beneš was willing to accept the conclusions of Runciman's findings.[22] Seeing a chance to enlist British support, Beneš accepted the Runciman Mission.[22] The British historian A. J. P. Taylor wrote: "Beneš, whatever his other defects, was an incomparable negotiator; and the talents which had been a match for Lloyd George in 1919, soon took Runciman's measure in 1938 ... Instead, Runciman found that he was being maneuvered into a position where he had to endorse the Czech offers as reasonable, and to condemn the obstinacy of the Sudetens, not of Beneš. An appalling consequence [for Britain] loomed ever nearer; if Beneš did all that Runciman asked of him, and more, Great Britain would be saddled with the moral obligation to support Czechoslovakia in the ensuing crisis. To avert this consequence, Runciman, far from urging Beneš on, had to preach delay. Beneš did not allow him to escape".[23]

 
Adolf Hitler greets British prime minister Neville Chamberlain, 24 September 1938.

On 4 September 1938, Beneš presented the "Fourth Plan", which, had it happened, would essentially have turned Czechoslovakia into a federation, and would have given the Sudetenland widespread autonomy. Henlein rejected the Fourth Plan and instead launched a revolt in the Sudetenland, which soon failed. On 12 September 1938, in his keynote speech at the Nuremberg rally, Adolf Hitler demanded the Sudetenland join Germany. On 30 September 1938, Germany, Italy, France and the United Kingdom signed the Munich Agreement, which allowed for the annexation and military occupation of the Sudetenland by Germany. Czechoslovakia was not consulted.

Beneš agreed, despite opposition from within his country, after France and the United Kingdom warned that they would remain neutral in a war between Germany and Czechoslovakia, despite their previous guarantees to the contrary.[24] Beneš was forced to resign on 5 October 1938, under German pressure,[24] and was replaced by Emil Hácha. On Hácha's watch, Czechoslovakia lost more land to Hungary in the First Vienna Award the following month.

Although many Czechs view the Munich Agreement as part of a "Western betrayal", some scholars such as George F. Kennan and John Holroyd-Doveton suggest that the Agreement may have been a surprisingly positive outcome for Czechoslovakia. They argue that, if war had broken out in 1938, Czechoslovakia would have faced a similar destruction as Poland did the following year. As Poland was attacked in 1939, France launched its unsuccessful Saar Offensive in western Germany. One can only assume France's attack would have been equally futile in 1938, had a Czech-German war been sparked.[25] Kennan wrote in his memoirs:

The benefit of the Munich Agreement was that it has preserved for the exacting task of the future a magnificent younger generation disciplined, industrious and physically fit that would have undoubtedly been sacrificed if the solution had been the romantic one of hopeless resistance rather than the humiliating but true heroic one of realism.[26]

It is the opinion of several Czech, Slovak and German historians that the Czechoslovak border fortifications made the Czechoslovak-German boundary the best-fortified in Europe, as it was built on the French model of the Maginot Line defense system. But despite this, Germany's occupation of Austria earlier that year meant Czechoslovakia could equally have been attacked from the south. If Czechoslovakia had fought, it might have assisted Britain, France and the Soviet Union, but it may not have benefitted Czechoslovakia itself. There were various predictions of how long it would take the German army to defeat the Czechs, but seldom did a prediction contemplate a Czech victory.[27] Speculating the length of a hypothesised Czech-German war, Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk predicted two months, Winston Churchill wagered three months and according to Lavrentiy Beria's son, his father envisioned at least six months. Six months of modern warfare in a small country like Czechoslovakia would likely have left it devastated.[28][29][30]

Regardless, in March 1939, German troops marched into what remained of Czechoslovakia. They detached Slovakia as a puppet state, declared the rest of the nation to be the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia, and gave Transcarpathia to Hungary, thereby completing the German occupation of Czechoslovakia which would last until 1945.

Wartime exile in Britain edit

 
Beneš posing with members of the Czechoslovak Air Force, recently returned to the United Kingdom from the Middle East.

On 22 October 1938, Beneš went into exile in Putney, London. Czechoslovakia's intelligence service headed by František Moravec was still loyal to Beneš, which gave him a valuable bargaining chip in his dealings with the British as Paul Thümmel, a high ranking officer of the Abwehr, Germany's military intelligence, was still selling information to Moravec's group.[31] In July 1939, Beneš realising that "information is power", started to share with the British some of the intelligence provided by "Agent A-54" as Thümmel was code-named.[31] As the British lacked any spies in Germany comparable to Agent A-54, the British were intensely interested in the intelligence provided by him, which Beneš used to bargain with in dealings with the British.[31]

By July 1939, the Danzig crisis had pushed Britain to the brink of war with Germany, and British decision-makers were keenly interested in any high-level intelligence about Germany.[31] In the summer of 1939, Beneš hoped that the Danzig crisis would end in war, seeing a war with Germany as his only hope of restoring Czechoslovakia.[31] At the same time, Beneš started to have regular lunches with Winston Churchill, at the time only a backbench Conservative MP, and Harold Nicolson, a backbencher National Labour MP who was likewise opposed to the Munich Agreement.[31] Besides his new British friends like Churchill and Nicolson, Beneš also resumed contact with old British friends from World War I such as the historian Robert Seton-Watson and the journalist Henry Wickham Steed, who wrote articles urging the restoration of Czechoslovakia to its pre-Munich Agreement borders.[31]

On 23 August 1939, Beneš met Ivan Maisky, the Soviet ambassador to the Court of St. James, to ask for Soviet support. According to Maisky's diary, Beneš told him that he wanted a common frontier between Czechoslovakia and the Soviet Union.[32] Furthermore, Maisky's diary had Beneš saying that if Czechoslovakia were restored, he would cede Ruthenia, whose people Beneš noted were mostly Ukrainian, to the Soviet Union to bring about a common frontier.[32]

On the same day, Beneš learned of the Molotov–Ribbentrop pact. When he confronted Maisky, he was told that war would break out "in two weeks' time", causing Beneš to write: "My overall impression is that the Soviets want war, they have prepared for it conscientiously and they maintain that the war will take place – and that they have reserved some freedom of action for themselves ... [The pact was] a rather rough tactic to drive Hitler into war ... the Soviets are convinced that the time has come for a final struggle between capitalism, fascism and Nazism and that there will be a world revolution, which they will trigger at an opportune moment when others are exhausted by war".[33] Maisky would be proven right on 1 September, when Germany invaded Poland, and the British and French both declared war on Germany two days later.

Organizing the government-in-exile edit

 
26 Gwendolen Avenue in Putney, where Beneš lived between 1938 and 1940.

In October 1939, Beneš organised the Czechoslovak National Liberation Committee, which immediately declared itself the Provisional Government of Czechoslovakia. Britain and France withheld full recognition, though unofficial contacts were permitted.[34] A major issue in wartime Anglo-Czechoslovak relations was the Munich Agreement, which the British still stood by, and which Beneš wanted the British to abrogate.[35] The issue was important because as long the British continued to view the Munich Agreement as being in effect, they recognized the Sudetenland as part of Germany, a British war aim that Beneš naturally objected to. A problem for Beneš during the Phoney War in the winter of 1939–40 was the British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain attached much hope to the idea that anti-Nazi conservatives in Germany would persuade the Wehrmacht to overthrow Hitler, and as the anti-Nazi conservatives were adamant that the Sudetenland remain part of Germany, Chamberlain made it clear that Britain was not at war to undo the Munich Agreement.[36]

On 22 February 1940 during a secret meeting in Switzerland between Ulrich von Hassell representing the German conservatives and James Lonsdale-Bryans representing Great Britain, the former told the latter there was no possibility of a post-Nazi Germany ever agreeing to return the Sudetenland.[37] In 1939 and 1940, Chamberlain repeatedly made public statements that Britain was willing to make an "honorable peace" with a post-Nazi Germany, which meant the Sudetenland would remain within the Reich.[36] Beneš with his insistence on restoring Czechoslovakia to its pre-Munich borders was seen by Chamberlain as an obstacle that was standing in the way of his hope that the Wehrmacht would depose Hitler.

After the Dunkirk evacuation, Britain was faced with a German invasion while the British Army had lost most of its equipment, which it had to abandon at Dunkirk. At the same time, 500 Czechoslovak airmen had arrived in Britain together with half of a division, which Beneš called his "last and most impressive argument" for diplomatic recognition.[34] On 21 July 1940, the United Kingdom recognised the National Liberation Committee as being the Czechoslovak government-in-exile, with Jan Šrámek as prime minister and Beneš as president.[34] In reclaiming the presidency, Beneš took the line that his 1938 resignation was void since it had been under duress.

The intelligence provided by Agent A-54 was greatly valued by MI6, the British intelligence service, and Beneš used it to improve his bargaining position, telling the British he would share more intelligence from Agent A-54 in return for concessions to his government-in-exile.[38] As part of his efforts to improve his bargaining position, Beneš often exaggerated to the British the efficiency of Moravec's group, the Czechoslovak army in exile and the underground UVOD resistance group.[38] Besides Agent A-54, the Prime Minister of the Czech government under the Protectorate, General Alois Eliáš, was in contact with Moravec's agents. Beneš's efforts paid off as he was invited to lunch, first at 10 Downing Street by Churchill (who was now Prime Minister), and then by King George VI at Buckingham Palace.[38]

In September 1940, MI6 set up a communications center in Surrey for Czechoslovak intelligence and in October 1940 a Victorian mansion at Leamington Spa was given to the Czechoslovak brigade under General Miroslav.[38] At the same time, Moravec's group began to work with the Special Operations Executive (SOE) to plan resistance in the Protectorate of Bohemia-Moravia, though the distance between Britain and the Protectorate made it difficult for the SOE to parachute in agents.[38]

In November 1940, in the wake of the London Blitz, Beneš, his wife, their nieces and his household staff moved to The Abbey at Aston Abbotts, near Aylesbury in Buckinghamshire. The staff of his private office, including his secretary, Eduard Táborský (cs), and his chief of staff, Jaromír Smutný (cs), moved to the Old Manor House in the neighbouring village of Wingrave, and his military intelligence staff, headed by František Moravec, was stationed in the nearby village of Addington.

Operation Barbarossa begins edit

Beneš's relations with the Polish government-in-exile headed by General Władysław Sikorski were difficult due to the Teschen dispute, as General Sikorski insisted on claiming the region for Poland, while Beneš argued that it should return to Czechoslovakia when the war was over.[39] However, Beneš felt a Polish-Czechoslovak alliance was needed to counter Germany in the post-war world, and came around to the idea of a Polish-Czechoslovak federation as the best way of squaring the circle caused by the Teschen dispute.[39] In November 1940, Beneš and Sikorski signed an agreement in principle calling for federation, though Beneš's insistence that the Slovaks were not a nation and Slovakia would not be a full member of the federation caused much tension between himself and Slovak members of the government-in-exile.[39]

However, after Operation Barbarossa brought the Soviet Union into the war in June 1941, Beneš started to lose interest in the project, though a detailed agreement for the proposed federation was worked out and signed in January 1942.[39] The Russophile Beneš always felt more comfortable with dealing with Russians rather than the Poles, whose behavior in September 1938 was a source of much resentment to Beneš.[39] The promise from the Narkomindel that the Soviet Union supported returning Teschen to Czechoslovakia negated the whole purpose of the proposed federation for Beneš.[39]

On 22 June 1941, Germany launched Operation Barbarossa and invaded the Soviet Union. President Emil Hacha of the puppet government serving under the Protectorate praised Hitler in a statement for launching the "crusade against Bolshevism" and urged Czech workers to work even harder for a German victory, observing that much of the material used by the Wehrmacht was manufactured in the Protectorate.[40] Through Moravec, Beneš sent word to both General Eliáš and Hacha that they should resign rather than give comfort to the enemy, stating his belief that the Soviet Union would inevitably defeat Germany and thus would have a decisive role in the affairs of Eastern Europe after the war.[40] Moreover, Beneš charged that if the most of the resistance work in the Protectorate were done by the Czech communists that would give them "a pretext to take over power on the basis of the justified reproach that we helped Hitler".[40]

During the war Beneš told Ilya Ehrenburg, the Soviet writer: "The only salvation lies in a close alliance with your country. The Czechs may have different political opinions, but on one point we can be sure. The Soviet Union will not only liberate us from the Germans. It will also allow us to live without constant fear of the future."[41][42]

On 18 July 1941, the Soviet Union and UK[43] recognized Beneš's government-in-exile, promised non-interference in the internal affairs of Czechoslovakia, allowed the government-in-exile to raise an army to fight alongside the Red Army on the Eastern Front; and recognized the borders of Czechoslovakia as those before the Munich Agreement.[40] The last was the most important to Beneš, as the British government still maintained that the Munich Agreement was in effect and regarded the Sudetenland as part of Germany.[40] Even the United States (which was neutral) very tentatively regarded the government-in-exile as only a "provisional" government and rather vaguely stated the borders of Czechoslovakia were to be determined after the war, implying the Sudetenland might remain part of Germany.[40]

Working with the Czech resistance edit

During the summer and fall of 1941, Beneš came under increasing pressure from the Allies to have the Czechs play a greater role in resistance work.[44] The Narkomindel informed Beneš that the Soviets were disappointed that there was so little sabotage going on in the factories of the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia, which were such an important source of arms and other material for the Wehrmacht.[44] Likewise, the British started to demand that the Czechs do more resistance work.[44] Moravec after meeting the MI6's Director, Stewart Menzies, told Beneš that the British viewpoint was that when the United Kingdom was fighting for its life that "placing violets at the grave of the unknown soldier was simply not good enough".[44]

Making matters worse for Beneš was in late September 1941 that Reinhard Heydrich, who effectively taken over the Protectorate, launched a major crackdown on resistance.[45] The Prime Minister, General Eliáš, was arrested on 27 September 1941 on Heydrich's orders; martial law was proclaimed in the Protectorate; thousands were arrested and executed including two prominent leaders of the UVOD resistance group, Josef Bílý (cs) and Hugo Vojta (cs) who were arrested and shot without trial.[45]

On 5 October 1941, the lines of communication between the UVOD group and London were severed when the Gestapo, during the course of its raids, seized various radios and the codes for communicating with London.[45] At the same time, the Gestapo also learned of the existence of Agent A-54 and after an investigation arrested Thümmel, depriving Beneš of one of his most valuable bargaining chips.[45] Faced with this situation when the Allies were demanding more Czech resistance at the same time that Heydrich had launching a crackdown that was weakening the resistance, Beneš decided in October 1941 on a spectacular act of resistance that would prove to the world that the Czechs were still resisting.[46]

 
Edvard Beneš (right) gives medals to soldiers, including the later Operation Anthropoid assassins Jozef Gabčík and Jan Kubiš, 1940.

In 1941, Beneš and František Moravec planned Operation Anthropoid to assassinate Reinhard Heydrich,[47] a high-ranking German official who was responsible for suppressing Czech culture, and for deporting and executing members of the Czech resistance. Beneš felt his dealings with the Allies, especially his campaign to persuade the British to nullify the Munich Agreement, was being weakened by the lack of any visible resistance in the Protectorate.[48] Beneš decided that assassinating Heydrich was the best way to improve his bargaining position, and it was largely he who pressed for Operation Anthropoid.[49]

Upon learning of the nature of the mission, resistance leaders begged the Czechoslovak government-in-exile to call off the attack, saying that "An attempt against Heydrich's life ... would be of no use to the Allies and its consequences for our people would be immeasurable."[50] Beneš personally broadcast a message insisting that the attack go forwards,[50] although he denied any involvement after the war.[51] Historian Vojtěch Mastný argues that he "clung to the scheme as the last resort to dramatize Czech resistance."[51] The 1942 assassination resulted in brutal German reprisals such as the execution of thousands of Czechs and the eradication of two villages: Lidice and Ležáky.

Arnold J. Toynbee, a prominent historian at the time, vehemently made the argument that the Czech regime was largely comparable to the situations in Germany, Poland and with the Magyars.[52]

Britain rejects the Munich Agreement edit

In 1942, Beneš finally persuaded the Foreign Office to issue a statement saying Britain had revoked the Munich Agreement and supported the return of the Sudetenland to Czechoslovakia.[35] Beneš saw the statement by the Foreign Secretary, Anthony Eden, to the House of Commons on 5 August 1942 revoking the Munich Agreement as a diplomatic triumph for himself.[34] Beneš had been greatly embittered by the behavior of the ethnic Germans of the Sudetenland in 1938, which he viewed as treasonous, and during his exile in London had decided that when Czechoslovakia was reestablished, he was going to expel all of the Sudeten Germans into Germany.[35] At the Munich Debate in the House of Commons, Anthony Eden acknowledged that there had been "discrimination, even severe discrimination" against the Sudeten Germans.[53] During his exile, Beneš had come to obsessively brood over the behavior of the Sudetenlanders and had reached the conclusion that they were all collectively guilty of treason.[39] In 1942, he stated the compulsory population exchange between Greece and Turkey in 1922–23 was his model for solving the problem of the Sudetenland, though unlike the Greek-Turkish population exchange, he proposed financial compensation to be paid to the Sudeten Germans expelled into Germany.[54]

Although not a Communist, Beneš was also on friendly terms with Joseph Stalin. Believing that Czechoslovakia had more to gain from an alliance with the Soviet Union than one with Poland, he torpedoed plans for a Polish–Czechoslovak confederation and in 1943, he signed an entente with the Soviets.[55][56][57] During his visit to Moscow to sign the alliance, Beneš complained about the "feudal" systems existing in Poland and Hungary, charging that unlike Czechoslovakia, which after World War I had broken up the estates owned mostly by ethnic Germans and Hungarians, the majority of the land in Poland and Hungary was still owned by the nobility, which he claimed was the source of political and economic backwardness in both nations.[58]

Beneš believed in the ideal of "convergence" between the Soviet Union and the western nations, arguing that based on what he was seeing in wartime Britain that the western nations would become more socialist after the war while at same time that wartime liberalising reforms in the Soviet Union meant the Soviet system would be more "western" after the war.[39] Beneš hoped and believed that the wartime alliance of the "Big Three" of the Soviet Union, the United Kingdom, and the United States would continue after the war, with the "Big Three" co-operating in an international system that would hold Germany in check.[39]

Though Beneš did not attend the Tehran Conference himself, the news of the mood of harmony that prevailed among the American, Soviet and British delegations at Tehran certainly gave him hope that the Big Three alliance would continue after the war.[59] Beneš saw the role of Czechoslovakia and his own role as being that of a mediator between the Big Three.[60] The fact that his old friend Churchill took him into his confidence concerning the post-war borders of Poland boosted Beneš's own perception of himself as an important diplomat, settling the disputes of Eastern Europe.[61] After talking to Beneš for four hours on 4 January 1944 about Poland's post-war borders, Churchill cabled to American President Franklin D. Roosevelt: "Beneš may be most useful in trying to make the Poles see reason and in reconciling them to the Russians, whose confidence he has long possessed".[61]

Second presidency edit

 
Beneš returning to Prague after the Prague uprising, 16 May 1945.

In April 1945, Beneš flew from London to Košice in eastern Slovakia, which had been taken by the Red Army and which became the temporary capital of Czechoslovakia.[62] Upon arriving, Beneš formed a coalition government called the National Front, with the Communist Party leader Klement Gottwald as prime minister.[63] Besides Gottwald, communists were named as ministers of defence, the interior, education, information, and agriculture.[63] The most important non-Communist minister was the foreign minister, Jan Masaryk, the long-term Czechoslovak minister in London and son of Tomáš Masaryk.[63] Besides the Communists, the other parties in the National Front government were the Social Democratic Party, Beneš own National Social Party (no relation to Hitler's National Socialists), the People's Party and the Slovak Democratic Party.[63]

Beneš also instituted the Košice programme, which declared that Czechoslovakia was now to be a state of Czechs and Slovaks with the German population in the Sudetenland and the Hungarian population in Slovakia to be expelled; there was to be a degree of decentralization with the Slovaks to have their own National Council, but no federation; capitalism was to continue, but the "commanding heights" of the economy were to be controlled by the state; and finally Czechoslovakia was to pursue a pro-Soviet foreign policy.[64]

Role in the Prague uprising edit

During the Prague uprising, which started on 5 May 1945, the city was surrounded by Wehrmacht and SS units, the latter in a vengeful mood. The Czech resistance appealed to the First Division of the German-sponsored Russian Liberation Army commanded by General Sergei Bunyachenko to switch sides, promising them that they be granted asylum in Czechoslovakia and would not be repatriated to the Soviet Union, where they faced execution for treason for fighting for Germany.[65] As the Czech resistance lacked heavy arms such as tanks and artillery, the First Division was badly needed to help hold Prague.

General Bunyachenko and his First Division defected to the Allied side, where it played a key role in holding off the German forces intent on retaking Prague and prevented the SS from massacring the people of Prague.[65] However, when General Bunyachenko learned on 7 May that he and his men would not be offered asylum after all, the First Division abandoned Prague in order to surrender to the American 3rd Army. Despite the promise that the men of First Division would be granted asylum, Beneš instead repatriated the First Division, and the rest of the ROA men in Czechoslovakia who were captured by his government, to the Soviet Union.[65]

Return to Prague edit

After the Prague uprising at the end of World War II, Beneš returned home and resumed his former position as president. Article 58.5 of the Constitution said, "The former president shall stay in his or her function till the new president shall be elected". He was unanimously confirmed in office by the Interim National Assembly on 28 October 1945. In December 1945, all of the Red Army forces left Czechoslovakia.[62] On 19 June 1946, Beneš was formally elected to his second term as president.[66]

Beneš presided over a coalition government, the National Front, from 1946 headed by Communist Party leader Klement Gottwald as prime minister. In the elections of May 1946, the Communists won 38% of the vote with the Czech National Social Party winning 18%, the People's Party 16%, the Slovak Democrats 14% and the Social Democrats 13%.[63] Until the summer of 1947, Czechoslovakia had what the British historian Richard J. Crampton called "a period of relative tranquility" with democracy reestablished, and institutions such as the media, opposition parties, the churches, the Sokols, and the Legionnaire veteran associations all existing outside of state control.[63]

In July 1947, both Beneš and Gottwald had decided to accept Marshall Plan aid, only for the Kremlin to order Gottwald to do a U-turn on the question of accepting the Marshall Plan.[67] When Beneš visited Moscow, the Soviet Foreign Minister Vyacheslav Molotov quite brutally informed him that the Kremlin regarded accepting Marshall Plan aid as a violation of the 1943 alliance, causing Beneš on his return to Prague to speak of a "second Munich", saying it was not acceptable for the Soviet Union to veto decisions made by Czechoslovakia.[67] The volte-face on the issue of the Marshall Plan did much damage to the image of the Czechoslovak Communists, and public opinion started to turn against them.[68] A public opinion poll showed that only 25% of the voters planned to vote Communist after the rejection of the Marshall Plan.[68]

In September 1947, the Communist-dominated police in Slovakia announced the discovery of an alleged separatist plot led by the followers of Father Tiso who were allegedly infiltrating the Slovak Democrats, but by November 1947, the supposed plot was revealed as a canard, with the media exposing the evidence for it as being manufactured by the police.[68] The scandal in Slovakia led to demands by the other parties of the National Front that the police be depoliticised.[68] During this time, Beneš had become increasingly disillusioned with the Communists, telling his ambassador in Belgrade to report to him personally, as there were so many Communist agents both in the Czechoslovak embassy in Belgrade and in his own office that it was the only way of ensuring secrecy.[69]

Expulsion of the Sudeten Germans edit

Beneš opposed the presence of Germans in the liberated republic.[citation needed] Believing that vigilante justice would be less divisive than trials, upon his arrival in Prague on 10 May, he called for the "liquidation of Germans and Hungarians"[citation needed] in the "interest of a united national state of Czechs and Slovaks."[70] As part of the Košice programme, Germans in the Sudetenland and Hungarians in Slovakia were to be expelled.[citation needed]

The Beneš decrees (officially called "Decrees of the President of the Republic"), among other things, expropriated the property of citizens of German and Hungarian ethnicity and facilitated Article 12 of the Potsdam Agreement by laying down a national legal framework for the loss of citizenship[citation needed] and the expropriation of about three million Germans and Hungarians. However, Beneš's plans for expelling the Hungarian minority from Slovakia caused tensions with Hungary, whose coalition government was likewise leaning towards the Soviet Union, and ultimately objections from Moscow ended the expulsion of the Hungarians shortly after it had begun.[62] In contrast, the Soviets had no objections to the expulsions of the Sudeten Germans, and the Czechoslovak authorities continued to expel the Sudeten Germans pursuant to the Potsdam Agreement until only a negligible number of Germans remained in the Sudetenland.[62]

On 15 March 1946, SS Obergruppenführer Karl Hermann Frank went on trial in Prague for war crimes.[71] Beneš ensured that Frank's trial received maximum publicity, being broadcast live on state radio, and statements from Frank's interrogations being leaked to the press.[71] On the stand, Frank remained a defiant Nazi, snarling insults at his Czech prosecutors, saying the Czechs were still Untermenschen ("sub-humans") as far he was concerned, and only expressing regret that he did not kill more Czechs when he had the chance. After Frank's conviction, he was publicly hanged before thousands of cheering people outside of Pankrác Prison on 22 May 1946.[71] As Frank was a Sudeten German, the political purpose of his trial was to symbolize to the world what Beneš called the "collective criminality" of the Sudeten Germans, which thus justified their expulsions.[71] The historian Mary Heimann wrote that though Frank was indeed guilty of war crimes and treason, his trial was used for a political purpose, namely to illustrate the collective criminality of the Sudeten Germans to the world.[71]

Communist coup of 1948 edit

 
Communist Party leader Klement Gottwald, whose coup ousted Beneš for the second time.

On 12 February 1948, the non-Communist ministers threatened to resign unless the "packing" of the police by the Communist interior minister, Václav Nosek (cs), stopped at once.[68] The Communists set up "action committees", whom Nosek ordered the civil servants to take their orders from.[69] Nosek also illegally had arms issued to the action committees.[69] On 20 February, the Communists formed the "people's militia" of 15,000.[69] On 21 February 1948, 12 non-Communist ministers resigned to protest Gottwald's refusal to stop the packing of the police with Communists despite the majority of the Cabinet having ordered it to end.[68] The non-Communists believed that Beneš would side with them to allow them to stay in office as a caretaker government until new elections.

Beneš initially refused to accept their resignations and insisted that no government could be formed without the non-Communist parties. However, Gottwald had by this time dropped all pretense of working within the system. He threatened a general strike unless Beneš appointed a Communist-dominated government. The Communists also occupied the offices of the non-Communists who had resigned. Faced with the crisis, Beneš hesitated and sought more time.[69]

On 22 February, a large parade by the Communist action committees took place in Prague, and ended with the people's militia attacking the offices of opposition parties and the Sokols.[69] Amid fears that civil war was imminent and rumours that the Red Army would sweep in to back Gottwald, Beneš gave way. On 25 February, he accepted the resignations of the non-Communist ministers and appointed a new Communist-dominated government in accordance with Gottwald's specifications.[69] The non-Communist parties were still nominally represented, so the government was still technically a coalition. However, with the exception of Masaryk, the non-Communist ministers were fellow travellers. In effect, Beneš had given legal sanction to a Communist coup.

During the crisis, Beneš failed to rally support as he could have done from the Sokols, the Legionnaire veterans' associations, the churches and many of the university students.[69] Richard J. Crampton wrote: "In February 1948, Beneš still commanded enormous respect and authority", and if he had used his moral prestige, he could have rallied public opinion against the Communists.[72] However, Beneš still saw Germany as the main danger to Czechoslovakia and ultimately believed that Czechoslovakia needed the alliance with the Soviet Union more than the other way around, and as such Prague could never afford a lasting rift with Moscow.[69] Finally, Beneš was a deeply ill man in February 1948, suffering from hypertension, arteriosclerosis and Pott's disease, and his poor health contributed to the lack of fight in him.[72]

Shortly afterward, elections were held in which voters were presented with a single list from the National Front, now a Communist-dominated organization. On 12 March 1948, professor Václav Černý visited Beneš at his villa at Sezimovo Ústí, where the president accused Joseph Stalin of using him. According to Černý, Beneš used such violent and vulgar language about Stalin that he did not bother writing down the president's commentary, believing it was unpublishable.[73]

The Constituent National Assembly, now a subservient tool of the Communists, approved a new constitution on 9 May. Although it was not a completely Communist document, it was close enough to the Soviet Constitution that Beneš refused to sign it.[74] He resigned as president on 7 June 1948, and Gottwald took over most presidential functions until being elected his successor a week later.[72]

On 14 August 1948, the Soviet and Czechoslovak media launched a campaign of vilification against Beneš, accusing him of being an enemy of the Soviet Union and claimed that he refused a Soviet offer of unilateral military assistance in September 1938 because he wanted the Munich Agreement imposed on Czechoslovakia.[75]

On his deathbed, Beneš became furious about the claim the Soviet Union had offered to help unilaterally in 1938 with the former presidential chancellor Jaromír Smutný (cs) writing: "He would like to know when, by whom and to whom was the offer made".[75] During the Communist era in Czechoslovakia, Beneš was vilified as a traitor for turning down this purported offer.[76]

Death and legacy edit

 
Statue of Beneš in front of Czernin Palace, headquarters of the Czech Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Prague.

Beneš had been in poor health since the spring of 1945, when he suffered a minor stroke. He suffered two more strokes in 1947, and seeing the undoing of his life's work left him completely broken. In a 2018 interview with Radio Prague International, historian Igor Lukes recalled that by February 1948, Beneš' poor health left him "a shell of a man" who did not have the emotional or physical stamina to hold out against the "rough, rough players" of the KSČ.[77][3]

He died of natural causes at his villa in Sezimovo Ústí on 3 September 1948, seven months after the communist coup.[3] He is interred in the garden of his villa, and his bust is part of the headstone. His wife Hana, who lived until 2 December 1974, is interred next to him.

Much controversy remains on his character and policy.[78][needs update] According to the SVR, Beneš had closely co-operated with the Soviet intelligence before the war especially with Soviet agent Pyotr Zubov.[79]

Beneš's friend, the British historian A. J. P. Taylor, wrote in 1945: "Beck, Stojadinović, Antonescu, and Bonnet despised Beneš's integrity and prided themselves on their cunning; but their countries, too, fell before the German aggressor, and every step they took has made the resurrection of their countries more difficult. In contrast, the foreign policy of Dr. Beneš during the present war has won Czechoslovakia a secure future".[80] The leaders to whom Taylor referred were Colonel Józef Beck, the Polish foreign minister 1932–39 and a leading figure in the Sanation military dictatorship, which at times worked with the Third Reich; Milan Stojadinović, who served as the prime minister of Yugoslavia 1935–39 and who followed a pro-German foreign policy; General Ion Antonescu, the Conducător (dictator) of Romania 1940–44; and Georges Bonnet, the French foreign minister 1938–39, who favored abandoning Eastern Europe to Nazi Germany. Taylor's assessment that Beneš was a man of integrity (unlike Bonnet, Antonescu, Beck and Stojadinović) and that he was leading Czechoslovakia in the right direction was widely shared in 1945.[80]

Honors and awards edit

Benes was elected an International Member of the American Philosophical Society in 1939.[81] He received awards and decorations before and after World War II.

National orders edit

Award or decoration Country Date
  Czechoslovak War Cross 1918[82] Czechoslovakia 1919
  Czechoslovak Victory Medal[82] Czechoslovakia 1920
  Czechoslovak Revolutionary Medal[82] Czechoslovakia 1922
  Order of the White Lion[82] Czechoslovakia 1936
  Czechoslovak War Cross 1939–1945[82] Czechoslovakia 1945
  Military Order of the White Lion[82] Czechoslovakia 1945

Foreign orders edit

Award or decoration Country Date
  Order of St. Sava[82]   Yugoslavia 1920
  Order of the Star of Romania[82]   Kingdom of Romania 1921
  Légion d'honneur[82]   France 1922
  Order of the Crown of Italy[83]   Kingdom of Italy 1921
  Order of the British Empire[82]   United Kingdom 1923
  Order of Leopold[82]   Belgium 1923
  Order of the Oak Crown[82]   Luxembourg 1923
  Order of Charles III[82]   Spain 1924
  Order of Polonia Restituta[82]   Poland 1925
  Decoration of Honour for Services to the Republic of Austria[82]   Austria 1926
  Order of the Three Stars[82]   Latvia 1927
  Order of the Rising Sun[82]   Empire of Japan 1928
  Order of Muhammad Ali[82]   Kingdom of Egypt 1928
  Order of the White Eagle[82]   Yugoslavia 1929
  Order of the Lithuanian Grand Duke Gediminas[82]   Lithuania 1929
  Order of the Cross of the Eagle[82]   Estonia 1931
  Military Order of Christ[82]   Portugal 1932
  Military Order of Saint James of the Sword[82]   Portugal 1933
  Order of the Redeemer[82]   Greece 1933
  Order of the Dannebrog[82]   Denmark 1933
  Order of Saint-Charles[82]   Monaco 1934
  Order of the Spanish Republic[82]   Spanish Republic 1935
  Order of the White Elephant[82]   Siam 1935
  Order of the Aztec Eagle[84]   Mexico 1935
  Order of Karađorđe's Star[82]   Yugoslavia 1936
  Order of Brilliant Jade[82]   China 1936
  Order of Boyacá[82]   Colombia 1937
  Order of Carol I[82]   Kingdom of Romania 1937
  Order of Pahlavi[82]   Iran 1937
  Order pro Merito Melitensi[82]   Sovereign Military Order of Malta 1938
  Order of St. Olav[82]   Norway 1945
  Order of Propitious Clouds[82]   China 1947

See also edit

References edit

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  12. ^ 'Czech Army for France' in The Times, Thursday, 23 May 1918, p. 6, col. F
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Sources edit

  • Crampton, Richard (1997). Eastern Europe in the Twentieth Century. London: Routledge. ISBN 0415164230.
  • Hauner, Milan (2009). "'We Must Push Eastwards!' The Challenges and Dilemmas of President Beneš after Munich". Journal of Contemporary History. 44 (4): 619–656. doi:10.1177/0022009409339435. JSTOR 40542980. S2CID 144521196.
  • Heimann, Mary (2009). Czechoslovakia: The State That Failed. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0300172423.
  • Lukes, Igor (1996). Czechoslovakia Between Stalin and Hitler: The Diplomacy of Edvard Beneš in the 1930s. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780195102666.
  • Lukes, Igor (1999). "Stalin and Czechoslovakia: An Autopsy of a Myth". In Igor Lukes; Erik Goldstein (eds.). The Munich Crisis, 1938 Prelude to World War II. London: Frank Cass. pp. 13–47. ISBN 9781136328329.
  • Mastný, Vojtěch (1971). The Czechs Under Nazi Rule: The Failure of National Resistance, 1939–1942. New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-03303-9.
  • Neville, Peter (2010). Benes & Masaryk: Czechoslovakia. Haus Publishing. ISBN 9781905791729. JSTOR j.ctt1r6b055.
  • Orzoff, Andrea (2009). The Battle for the Castle. Oxford University Press.
  • Konrád, Ota; Küpper, René (2013). Edvard Beneš: Vorbild und Feindbild : politische, mediale und historiographische Deutungen (in German). Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht. ISBN 978-3-525-37302-6.
  • Crampton, Richard (18 November 1999). . Ce-review.org. Archived from the original on 4 October 2009. Retrieved 19 November 2013.
  • Wheeler-Bennett, John (1967). The Nemesis of Power The German Army In Politics 1918-1945. London: Macmillan.
  • Taylor, A.J.P. (1976). The Origins of the Second World War. London: Penguin.
  • Weinberg, Gerhard (2004). A World At Arms. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0521618266.
  • Zeman, Zbyněk; Klimek, Antonín (1997). The Life of Edvard Beneš: Czechoslovakia in Peace and War. Oxford: Clarendon Press. ISBN 978-0-19-820583-8.
  • Zinner, Paul E. (1994). "Czechoslovakia: The Diplomacy of Eduard Benes". In Gordon A. Craig and Felix Gilbert (ed.). The Diplomats, 1919–1939. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press. pp. 100–122. ISBN 978-0-691-03660-1. OCLC 31484352.

Primary sources edit

  • Hauner, Milan, ed. Edvard Beneš’ Memoirs: The Days of Munich (vol. 1), War and Resistance (vol. 2), Documents (vol. 3). First critical edition of reconstructed War Memoirs 1938–45 of President Beneš of Czechoslovakia (published by Academia Prague 2007 ISBN 978-80-200-1529-7).

External links edit

  • Article about Edvard Beneš in Encyclopædia Britannica.
  • Küpper, René: Beneš, Edvard, in: 1914–1918-online. International Encyclopedia of the First World War.
  • Biography at the Czech Ministry of Foreign Affairs (in Czech)
  • . Time. 26 September 1938. Archived from the original on 17 January 2008. Retrieved 14 August 2008. – an article published in Time on 26 September 1938 – free archive
  • Pictures of Edvard Beneš funeral – lying in state (in the opened coffin)
  • Pictures of Edvard Beneš funeral – funeral procession with wreaths and laying of coffin into grave
  • Pictures of Edvard Beneš and his wife – archive of Šechtl and Voseček Museum of Photography
  • Newspaper clippings about Edvard Beneš in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW
  • Beneš's speech on behalf of the 10th anniversary of Stefanik's death BENEŠ, Edvard. Štefánik a jeho odkaz. Praha : ČIN, 1929. 66 s. – available online at University Library in Bratislava Digital Library (in Czech)
Political offices
Position established Minister of Foreign Affairs of Czechoslovakia
1918–1935
Succeeded by
Preceded by Prime Minister of Czechoslovakia
1921–1922
Succeeded by
Preceded by President of Czechoslovakia
1935–1938
Succeeded by
Preceded by President of Czechoslovakia
1945–1948
Succeeded by
Awards and achievements
Preceded by Cover of Time magazine
23 March 1925
Succeeded by

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This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Edvard Benes news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2018 Learn how and when to remove this message Edvard Benes Czech pronunciation ˈɛdvard ˈbɛnɛʃ 28 May 1884 3 September 1948 was a Czech politician and statesman who served as the president of Czechoslovakia from 1935 to 1938 and again from 1939 to 1948 During the first six years of his second stint he led the Czechoslovak government in exile during World War II Edvard BenesBenes c 1942President of CzechoslovakiaIn office 2 April 1945 7 June 1948Prime MinisterZdenek FierlingerKlement GottwaldPreceded byHimself as president in exileSucceeded byKlement GottwaldIn exile 17 October 1939 2 April 1945Prime MinisterJan SramekIn office 18 December 1935 5 October 1938Prime MinisterMilan HodzaJan SyrovyPreceded byTomas MasarykSucceeded byEmil Hacha4th Prime Minister of CzechoslovakiaIn office 26 September 1921 7 October 1922PresidentTomas MasarykPreceded byJan CernySucceeded byAntonin SvehlaMinister of Foreign AffairsIn office 14 November 1918 18 December 1935Prime MinisterKarel Kramar Vlastimil Tusar Jan Cerny Himself Antonin Svehla Frantisek Udrzal Jan Malypetr Milan HodzaPreceded byPosition establishedSucceeded byMilan HodzaPersonal detailsBorn 1884 05 28 28 May 1884Kozlany Bohemia Austria HungaryDied3 September 1948 1948 09 03 aged 64 Sezimovo Usti CzechoslovakiaNationalityCzechPolitical partyCzech Realist PartyCzech National Social PartySpouseHana Benesova m 1909 wbr Alma materCharles University in PragueUniversity of ParisParis Institute of Political StudiesSignature As president Benes faced two major crises which both resulted in his resignation His first resignation came after the Munich Agreement and subsequent German occupation of Czechoslovakia in 1938 which resulted in his government s exile in the United Kingdom The second came about with the 1948 Communist coup which created a Communist regime in Czechoslovakia Before his time as president Benes was also the first foreign affairs minister 1918 1935 and the fourth prime minister 1921 1922 of Czechoslovakia The de facto leader of the Czech National Social Party he was known as a skilled diplomat 1 Contents 1 Early life 1 1 Birth and family 1 2 Education and marriage 2 Political career before independence 3 Foreign minister 4 First presidency 4 1 Sudeten Crisis 5 Wartime exile in Britain 5 1 Organizing the government in exile 5 2 Operation Barbarossa begins 5 3 Working with the Czech resistance 5 4 Britain rejects the Munich Agreement 6 Second presidency 6 1 Role in the Prague uprising 6 2 Return to Prague 6 3 Expulsion of the Sudeten Germans 6 4 Communist coup of 1948 7 Death and legacy 8 Honors and awards 8 1 National orders 8 2 Foreign orders 9 See also 10 References 11 Sources 11 1 Primary sources 12 External linksEarly life editBirth and family edit Benes was born into a peasant family in 1884 in the town of Kozlany Bohemia in what was then Austria Hungary He was the youngest son and tenth child overall of Matej Benes 1843 1910 and Anna Petronila nee Benes 2 1840 1909 3 4 One of his siblings was the future Czechoslovak politician Vojta Benes His nephew through his brother Vaclav was Bohus Benes a diplomat and author Bohus was the father of Emilie Benes Brzezinski an American sculptor and Vaclav E Benes a Czech American mathematician 5 Education and marriage edit nbsp Edvard Benes with his wife Hana in 1934 Benes spent much of his youth in the Vinohrady district of Prague where he attended a grammar school from 1896 to 1904 His landlord s family was acquainted with his future wife Anna Vlckova 1885 1974 later Hana Benesova cs The two would study French history and literature together at the Sorbonne Edvard and Anna got engaged in May 1906 and married in November 1909 Some time after their engagement Anna changed her name to Hana Edvard had always preferred to call her Hana because he had just ended a relationship with another woman named Anna Around the same time Edvard Benes also changed his name going from the original spelling Eduard to Edvard 6 7 He played football as an amateur for Slavia Prague 8 After studying philosophy at Charles Ferdinand University in Prague Benes left for Paris and continued his studies at the Sorbonne and at the Independent School of Political and Social Studies He completed his first degree in Dijon where he received his doctorate of law in 1908 Benes then taught for three years at a business college and after his 1912 habilitation in philosophy Benes became a lecturer of sociology at Charles University He was also involved in scouting 9 In 1907 Benes published over 200 articles in the Czech social democratic newspaper Pravo lidu cs containing his impressions of life in Western Europe 10 Benes wrote he found Germany to be repulsive and an empire of force and power after visiting Berlin 10 In London he wrote that the situation here is terrible and so is life 10 During World War II when Benes was living in exile in London the German Propaganda Ministry gleefully republished his articles from 1907 expressing mostly negative sentiments about life in Britain 10 However Benes loved Paris the city of light 11 He wrote that he found it to be almost miraculously a magnificent synthesis of modern civilization of which France is the bearer 10 For the rest of his life Benes was a passionate Francophile and he always stated that Paris was his favorite city 11 Political career before independence edit nbsp Triumvirate of Tomas Garrigue Masaryk Milan Rastislav Stefanik and Edvard Benes During World War I Benes was one of the leading organizers of an independent Czechoslovakia from abroad He organized a pro independence and anti Austrian secret resistance movement Maffia In September 1915 he went into exile in Paris where he made intricate diplomatic efforts to gain recognition from France and the United Kingdom for Czechoslovak independence From 1916 to 1918 he was a Secretary of the Czechoslovak National Council in Paris and Minister of the Interior and of Foreign Affairs in the Provisional Czechoslovak government In May 1917 Benes Tomas Garrigue Masaryk and Milan Rastislav Stefanik were reported to be organizing a Czechoslovak Legion to fight for the Western Allies in France and Italy recruited from among Czechs and Slovaks who were able to get to the front and also from the large emigrant populations in the United States which was said to number more than 1 500 000 12 The force grew into one of tens of thousands and took part in several battles including the Battles of Zborov and Bakhmach in Russia 13 Foreign minister edit nbsp Time cover 23 March 1925 nbsp Benes center with the Czechoslovak delegation at the Locarno Treaties 1925 Autochrome by Roger Dumas From 1918 to 1935 Benes was the first and longest serving Foreign Minister of Czechoslovakia On 31 October 1918 Karel Kramar reported from Geneva to Prague If you saw our Dr Benes and his mastery of global questions you would take off your hat and say it was truly marvelous 14 His international stature was such that he held the post through 10 successive governments one of which he headed himself from 1921 to 1922 In 1919 his decision to pull demoralized Czechoslovak Legions out of the Russian Civil War was denounced by Kramar as a betrayal 15 He represented Czechoslovakia at the 1919 peace conference in Paris which led to the Versailles Treaty A committed Czechoslovakist Benes did not consider Czechs and Slovaks to be separate ethnicities He served in the National Assembly from 1920 to 1925 and again from 1929 to 1935 representing the Czechoslovak National Social Party called the Czechoslovak Social Party until 1925 He briefly returned to the academic world as a professor in 1921 After Jan Cerny s first stint as prime minister Benes formed a government cs for a little over a year from 1921 to 1922 In the early 1920s Benes and his mentor President Masaryk viewed Kramar as the principal threat to Czechoslovak democracy seeing him as a reactionary Czech chauvinist who was opposed to their plans for Czechoslovakia as a multi cultural multi ethnic state 15 Masaryk and Benes were openly doubtful of Kramar s commitment to Western values that they were committed to such as democracy enlightenment rationality and tolerance seeing him as a romantic Pan Slavist who looked towards the east rather than the west for ideas 15 Kramar very much resented the way in which Masaryk openly groomed Benes as his successor noting that Masaryk put articles into the Constitution that set 45 as the age limit for senators but 35 as the age limit for the presidency which conveniently made Benes eligible for the presidency 15 The charge of Czech chauvinism against Kramar had some substance as he openly proclaimed his belief that the Czechs should be the dominant people in Czechoslovakia denounced Masaryk and Benes for their belief that the Sudeten Germans should be equal to the Czechs and made clear his opposition to having German as one of the official languages of Czechoslovakia views that made him abhorrent to Benes 16 In 1927 Benes was initiated in freemasonry at the Ian Amos Komensky Lodge No 1 17 Between 1923 and 1927 Benes was a member of the League of Nations Council serving as president of its committee from 1927 to 1928 He was a renowned and influential figure at international conferences such as those at Genoa in 1922 Locarno in 1925 The Hague in 1930 and Lausanne in 1932 First presidency edit nbsp Benes with several other Little Entente leaders in Bucharest Romania in 1936 From left to right Prince Michael Rom Benes King Carol II Rom Prince Regent Paul Yug and Prince Nicholas Rom When President Tomas Masaryk retired in 1935 Benes succeeded him Under Masaryk the Hrad the castle as the Czechs called the presidency had been built up into a major extra constitutional institution enjoying considerably more informal power than the plain language of the Constitution indicated 18 The framers of the Constitution had intended to create a parliamentary system in which the Prime Minister would be the country s leading political figure However due to a complex system of proportional representation a typical National Assembly saw as many as ten parties represented No party even approached the 151 seats needed for a majority indeed no party ever won more than 25 percent of the vote As mentioned above there were ten cabinets during Masaryk s presidency The Czech historian Igor Lukes cs wrote about the power of the Hrad under Benes By the spring of 1938 the Czechoslovak parliament the prime minister and the cabinet had been pushed aside by Benes During the dramatic summer months he was for better or worse the sole decision maker in the country 18 Sudeten Crisis edit Main article Munich Agreement Edvard Benes opposed Nazi Germany s claim to the German speaking Sudetenland in 1938 The crisis began on 24 April 1938 when Konrad Henlein at the party congress of the Sudeten German Party in Karlsbad modern Karlovy Vary announced the 8 point Karlsbad programme demanding autonomy for the Sudetenland 19 Benes rejected the Karlsbad programme but in May 1938 offered the Third Plan which would have created 20 cantons in the Sudetenland with substantial autonomy which in turn was rejected by Henlein 20 Benes was keen to go to war with Germany provided that one or more of the Great Powers fought alongside Czechoslovakia but was unwilling to fight Germany alone 21 Sergei Aleksandrovsky the Soviet minister in Prague reported to Moscow after talking to Benes that he was hoping to fight a war against the whole world provided the Soviet Union was willing to come in 21 In London in May 1938 Benes came under diplomatic pressure from the British government to accede to the Karlsbad programme which he initially refused The British viewed the Sudetenland crisis as a domestic Czechoslovak crisis with international ramifications whereas Benes saw the crisis as a matter between Czechoslovakia vs Germany In July 1938 the British Foreign Secretary Lord Halifax offered the services of a British mediator Lord Runciman to resolve the crisis with the promise that Britain would support Czechoslovakia if Benes was willing to accept the conclusions of Runciman s findings 22 Seeing a chance to enlist British support Benes accepted the Runciman Mission 22 The British historian A J P Taylor wrote Benes whatever his other defects was an incomparable negotiator and the talents which had been a match for Lloyd George in 1919 soon took Runciman s measure in 1938 Instead Runciman found that he was being maneuvered into a position where he had to endorse the Czech offers as reasonable and to condemn the obstinacy of the Sudetens not of Benes An appalling consequence for Britain loomed ever nearer if Benes did all that Runciman asked of him and more Great Britain would be saddled with the moral obligation to support Czechoslovakia in the ensuing crisis To avert this consequence Runciman far from urging Benes on had to preach delay Benes did not allow him to escape 23 nbsp Adolf Hitler greets British prime minister Neville Chamberlain 24 September 1938 On 4 September 1938 Benes presented the Fourth Plan which had it happened would essentially have turned Czechoslovakia into a federation and would have given the Sudetenland widespread autonomy Henlein rejected the Fourth Plan and instead launched a revolt in the Sudetenland which soon failed On 12 September 1938 in his keynote speech at the Nuremberg rally Adolf Hitler demanded the Sudetenland join Germany On 30 September 1938 Germany Italy France and the United Kingdom signed the Munich Agreement which allowed for the annexation and military occupation of the Sudetenland by Germany Czechoslovakia was not consulted Benes agreed despite opposition from within his country after France and the United Kingdom warned that they would remain neutral in a war between Germany and Czechoslovakia despite their previous guarantees to the contrary 24 Benes was forced to resign on 5 October 1938 under German pressure 24 and was replaced by Emil Hacha On Hacha s watch Czechoslovakia lost more land to Hungary in the First Vienna Award the following month Although many Czechs view the Munich Agreement as part of a Western betrayal some scholars such as George F Kennan and John Holroyd Doveton suggest that the Agreement may have been a surprisingly positive outcome for Czechoslovakia They argue that if war had broken out in 1938 Czechoslovakia would have faced a similar destruction as Poland did the following year As Poland was attacked in 1939 France launched its unsuccessful Saar Offensive in western Germany One can only assume France s attack would have been equally futile in 1938 had a Czech German war been sparked 25 Kennan wrote in his memoirs The benefit of the Munich Agreement was that it has preserved for the exacting task of the future a magnificent younger generation disciplined industrious and physically fit that would have undoubtedly been sacrificed if the solution had been the romantic one of hopeless resistance rather than the humiliating but true heroic one of realism 26 It is the opinion of several Czech Slovak and German historians that the Czechoslovak border fortifications made the Czechoslovak German boundary the best fortified in Europe as it was built on the French model of the Maginot Line defense system But despite this Germany s occupation of Austria earlier that year meant Czechoslovakia could equally have been attacked from the south If Czechoslovakia had fought it might have assisted Britain France and the Soviet Union but it may not have benefitted Czechoslovakia itself There were various predictions of how long it would take the German army to defeat the Czechs but seldom did a prediction contemplate a Czech victory 27 Speculating the length of a hypothesised Czech German war Tomas Garrigue Masaryk predicted two months Winston Churchill wagered three months and according to Lavrentiy Beria s son his father envisioned at least six months Six months of modern warfare in a small country like Czechoslovakia would likely have left it devastated 28 29 30 Regardless in March 1939 German troops marched into what remained of Czechoslovakia They detached Slovakia as a puppet state declared the rest of the nation to be the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia and gave Transcarpathia to Hungary thereby completing the German occupation of Czechoslovakia which would last until 1945 Wartime exile in Britain editSee also German occupation of Czechoslovakia and United Kingdom home front during World War II nbsp Benes posing with members of the Czechoslovak Air Force recently returned to the United Kingdom from the Middle East On 22 October 1938 Benes went into exile in Putney London Czechoslovakia s intelligence service headed by Frantisek Moravec was still loyal to Benes which gave him a valuable bargaining chip in his dealings with the British as Paul Thummel a high ranking officer of the Abwehr Germany s military intelligence was still selling information to Moravec s group 31 In July 1939 Benes realising that information is power started to share with the British some of the intelligence provided by Agent A 54 as Thummel was code named 31 As the British lacked any spies in Germany comparable to Agent A 54 the British were intensely interested in the intelligence provided by him which Benes used to bargain with in dealings with the British 31 By July 1939 the Danzig crisis had pushed Britain to the brink of war with Germany and British decision makers were keenly interested in any high level intelligence about Germany 31 In the summer of 1939 Benes hoped that the Danzig crisis would end in war seeing a war with Germany as his only hope of restoring Czechoslovakia 31 At the same time Benes started to have regular lunches with Winston Churchill at the time only a backbench Conservative MP and Harold Nicolson a backbencher National Labour MP who was likewise opposed to the Munich Agreement 31 Besides his new British friends like Churchill and Nicolson Benes also resumed contact with old British friends from World War I such as the historian Robert Seton Watson and the journalist Henry Wickham Steed who wrote articles urging the restoration of Czechoslovakia to its pre Munich Agreement borders 31 On 23 August 1939 Benes met Ivan Maisky the Soviet ambassador to the Court of St James to ask for Soviet support According to Maisky s diary Benes told him that he wanted a common frontier between Czechoslovakia and the Soviet Union 32 Furthermore Maisky s diary had Benes saying that if Czechoslovakia were restored he would cede Ruthenia whose people Benes noted were mostly Ukrainian to the Soviet Union to bring about a common frontier 32 On the same day Benes learned of the Molotov Ribbentrop pact When he confronted Maisky he was told that war would break out in two weeks time causing Benes to write My overall impression is that the Soviets want war they have prepared for it conscientiously and they maintain that the war will take place and that they have reserved some freedom of action for themselves The pact was a rather rough tactic to drive Hitler into war the Soviets are convinced that the time has come for a final struggle between capitalism fascism and Nazism and that there will be a world revolution which they will trigger at an opportune moment when others are exhausted by war 33 Maisky would be proven right on 1 September when Germany invaded Poland and the British and French both declared war on Germany two days later Organizing the government in exile edit Main article Czechoslovak government in exile nbsp 26 Gwendolen Avenue in Putney where Benes lived between 1938 and 1940 In October 1939 Benes organised the Czechoslovak National Liberation Committee which immediately declared itself the Provisional Government of Czechoslovakia Britain and France withheld full recognition though unofficial contacts were permitted 34 A major issue in wartime Anglo Czechoslovak relations was the Munich Agreement which the British still stood by and which Benes wanted the British to abrogate 35 The issue was important because as long the British continued to view the Munich Agreement as being in effect they recognized the Sudetenland as part of Germany a British war aim that Benes naturally objected to A problem for Benes during the Phoney War in the winter of 1939 40 was the British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain attached much hope to the idea that anti Nazi conservatives in Germany would persuade the Wehrmacht to overthrow Hitler and as the anti Nazi conservatives were adamant that the Sudetenland remain part of Germany Chamberlain made it clear that Britain was not at war to undo the Munich Agreement 36 On 22 February 1940 during a secret meeting in Switzerland between Ulrich von Hassell representing the German conservatives and James Lonsdale Bryans representing Great Britain the former told the latter there was no possibility of a post Nazi Germany ever agreeing to return the Sudetenland 37 In 1939 and 1940 Chamberlain repeatedly made public statements that Britain was willing to make an honorable peace with a post Nazi Germany which meant the Sudetenland would remain within the Reich 36 Benes with his insistence on restoring Czechoslovakia to its pre Munich borders was seen by Chamberlain as an obstacle that was standing in the way of his hope that the Wehrmacht would depose Hitler After the Dunkirk evacuation Britain was faced with a German invasion while the British Army had lost most of its equipment which it had to abandon at Dunkirk At the same time 500 Czechoslovak airmen had arrived in Britain together with half of a division which Benes called his last and most impressive argument for diplomatic recognition 34 On 21 July 1940 the United Kingdom recognised the National Liberation Committee as being the Czechoslovak government in exile with Jan Sramek as prime minister and Benes as president 34 In reclaiming the presidency Benes took the line that his 1938 resignation was void since it had been under duress The intelligence provided by Agent A 54 was greatly valued by MI6 the British intelligence service and Benes used it to improve his bargaining position telling the British he would share more intelligence from Agent A 54 in return for concessions to his government in exile 38 As part of his efforts to improve his bargaining position Benes often exaggerated to the British the efficiency of Moravec s group the Czechoslovak army in exile and the underground UVOD resistance group 38 Besides Agent A 54 the Prime Minister of the Czech government under the Protectorate General Alois Elias was in contact with Moravec s agents Benes s efforts paid off as he was invited to lunch first at 10 Downing Street by Churchill who was now Prime Minister and then by King George VI at Buckingham Palace 38 In September 1940 MI6 set up a communications center in Surrey for Czechoslovak intelligence and in October 1940 a Victorian mansion at Leamington Spa was given to the Czechoslovak brigade under General Miroslav 38 At the same time Moravec s group began to work with the Special Operations Executive SOE to plan resistance in the Protectorate of Bohemia Moravia though the distance between Britain and the Protectorate made it difficult for the SOE to parachute in agents 38 In November 1940 in the wake of the London Blitz Benes his wife their nieces and his household staff moved to The Abbey at Aston Abbotts near Aylesbury in Buckinghamshire The staff of his private office including his secretary Eduard Taborsky cs and his chief of staff Jaromir Smutny cs moved to the Old Manor House in the neighbouring village of Wingrave and his military intelligence staff headed by Frantisek Moravec was stationed in the nearby village of Addington Operation Barbarossa begins edit Benes s relations with the Polish government in exile headed by General Wladyslaw Sikorski were difficult due to the Teschen dispute as General Sikorski insisted on claiming the region for Poland while Benes argued that it should return to Czechoslovakia when the war was over 39 However Benes felt a Polish Czechoslovak alliance was needed to counter Germany in the post war world and came around to the idea of a Polish Czechoslovak federation as the best way of squaring the circle caused by the Teschen dispute 39 In November 1940 Benes and Sikorski signed an agreement in principle calling for federation though Benes s insistence that the Slovaks were not a nation and Slovakia would not be a full member of the federation caused much tension between himself and Slovak members of the government in exile 39 However after Operation Barbarossa brought the Soviet Union into the war in June 1941 Benes started to lose interest in the project though a detailed agreement for the proposed federation was worked out and signed in January 1942 39 The Russophile Benes always felt more comfortable with dealing with Russians rather than the Poles whose behavior in September 1938 was a source of much resentment to Benes 39 The promise from the Narkomindel that the Soviet Union supported returning Teschen to Czechoslovakia negated the whole purpose of the proposed federation for Benes 39 On 22 June 1941 Germany launched Operation Barbarossa and invaded the Soviet Union President Emil Hacha of the puppet government serving under the Protectorate praised Hitler in a statement for launching the crusade against Bolshevism and urged Czech workers to work even harder for a German victory observing that much of the material used by the Wehrmacht was manufactured in the Protectorate 40 Through Moravec Benes sent word to both General Elias and Hacha that they should resign rather than give comfort to the enemy stating his belief that the Soviet Union would inevitably defeat Germany and thus would have a decisive role in the affairs of Eastern Europe after the war 40 Moreover Benes charged that if the most of the resistance work in the Protectorate were done by the Czech communists that would give them a pretext to take over power on the basis of the justified reproach that we helped Hitler 40 During the war Benes told Ilya Ehrenburg the Soviet writer The only salvation lies in a close alliance with your country The Czechs may have different political opinions but on one point we can be sure The Soviet Union will not only liberate us from the Germans It will also allow us to live without constant fear of the future 41 42 On 18 July 1941 the Soviet Union and UK 43 recognized Benes s government in exile promised non interference in the internal affairs of Czechoslovakia allowed the government in exile to raise an army to fight alongside the Red Army on the Eastern Front and recognized the borders of Czechoslovakia as those before the Munich Agreement 40 The last was the most important to Benes as the British government still maintained that the Munich Agreement was in effect and regarded the Sudetenland as part of Germany 40 Even the United States which was neutral very tentatively regarded the government in exile as only a provisional government and rather vaguely stated the borders of Czechoslovakia were to be determined after the war implying the Sudetenland might remain part of Germany 40 Working with the Czech resistance edit See also Resistance in the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia and Operation Anthropoid During the summer and fall of 1941 Benes came under increasing pressure from the Allies to have the Czechs play a greater role in resistance work 44 The Narkomindel informed Benes that the Soviets were disappointed that there was so little sabotage going on in the factories of the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia which were such an important source of arms and other material for the Wehrmacht 44 Likewise the British started to demand that the Czechs do more resistance work 44 Moravec after meeting the MI6 s Director Stewart Menzies told Benes that the British viewpoint was that when the United Kingdom was fighting for its life that placing violets at the grave of the unknown soldier was simply not good enough 44 Making matters worse for Benes was in late September 1941 that Reinhard Heydrich who effectively taken over the Protectorate launched a major crackdown on resistance 45 The Prime Minister General Elias was arrested on 27 September 1941 on Heydrich s orders martial law was proclaimed in the Protectorate thousands were arrested and executed including two prominent leaders of the UVOD resistance group Josef Bily cs and Hugo Vojta cs who were arrested and shot without trial 45 On 5 October 1941 the lines of communication between the UVOD group and London were severed when the Gestapo during the course of its raids seized various radios and the codes for communicating with London 45 At the same time the Gestapo also learned of the existence of Agent A 54 and after an investigation arrested Thummel depriving Benes of one of his most valuable bargaining chips 45 Faced with this situation when the Allies were demanding more Czech resistance at the same time that Heydrich had launching a crackdown that was weakening the resistance Benes decided in October 1941 on a spectacular act of resistance that would prove to the world that the Czechs were still resisting 46 nbsp Edvard Benes right gives medals to soldiers including the later Operation Anthropoid assassins Jozef Gabcik and Jan Kubis 1940 In 1941 Benes and Frantisek Moravec planned Operation Anthropoid to assassinate Reinhard Heydrich 47 a high ranking German official who was responsible for suppressing Czech culture and for deporting and executing members of the Czech resistance Benes felt his dealings with the Allies especially his campaign to persuade the British to nullify the Munich Agreement was being weakened by the lack of any visible resistance in the Protectorate 48 Benes decided that assassinating Heydrich was the best way to improve his bargaining position and it was largely he who pressed for Operation Anthropoid 49 Upon learning of the nature of the mission resistance leaders begged the Czechoslovak government in exile to call off the attack saying that An attempt against Heydrich s life would be of no use to the Allies and its consequences for our people would be immeasurable 50 Benes personally broadcast a message insisting that the attack go forwards 50 although he denied any involvement after the war 51 Historian Vojtech Mastny argues that he clung to the scheme as the last resort to dramatize Czech resistance 51 The 1942 assassination resulted in brutal German reprisals such as the execution of thousands of Czechs and the eradication of two villages Lidice and Lezaky Arnold J Toynbee a prominent historian at the time vehemently made the argument that the Czech regime was largely comparable to the situations in Germany Poland and with the Magyars 52 Britain rejects the Munich Agreement edit In 1942 Benes finally persuaded the Foreign Office to issue a statement saying Britain had revoked the Munich Agreement and supported the return of the Sudetenland to Czechoslovakia 35 Benes saw the statement by the Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden to the House of Commons on 5 August 1942 revoking the Munich Agreement as a diplomatic triumph for himself 34 Benes had been greatly embittered by the behavior of the ethnic Germans of the Sudetenland in 1938 which he viewed as treasonous and during his exile in London had decided that when Czechoslovakia was reestablished he was going to expel all of the Sudeten Germans into Germany 35 At the Munich Debate in the House of Commons Anthony Eden acknowledged that there had been discrimination even severe discrimination against the Sudeten Germans 53 During his exile Benes had come to obsessively brood over the behavior of the Sudetenlanders and had reached the conclusion that they were all collectively guilty of treason 39 In 1942 he stated the compulsory population exchange between Greece and Turkey in 1922 23 was his model for solving the problem of the Sudetenland though unlike the Greek Turkish population exchange he proposed financial compensation to be paid to the Sudeten Germans expelled into Germany 54 Although not a Communist Benes was also on friendly terms with Joseph Stalin Believing that Czechoslovakia had more to gain from an alliance with the Soviet Union than one with Poland he torpedoed plans for a Polish Czechoslovak confederation and in 1943 he signed an entente with the Soviets 55 56 57 During his visit to Moscow to sign the alliance Benes complained about the feudal systems existing in Poland and Hungary charging that unlike Czechoslovakia which after World War I had broken up the estates owned mostly by ethnic Germans and Hungarians the majority of the land in Poland and Hungary was still owned by the nobility which he claimed was the source of political and economic backwardness in both nations 58 Benes believed in the ideal of convergence between the Soviet Union and the western nations arguing that based on what he was seeing in wartime Britain that the western nations would become more socialist after the war while at same time that wartime liberalising reforms in the Soviet Union meant the Soviet system would be more western after the war 39 Benes hoped and believed that the wartime alliance of the Big Three of the Soviet Union the United Kingdom and the United States would continue after the war with the Big Three co operating in an international system that would hold Germany in check 39 Though Benes did not attend the Tehran Conference himself the news of the mood of harmony that prevailed among the American Soviet and British delegations at Tehran certainly gave him hope that the Big Three alliance would continue after the war 59 Benes saw the role of Czechoslovakia and his own role as being that of a mediator between the Big Three 60 The fact that his old friend Churchill took him into his confidence concerning the post war borders of Poland boosted Benes s own perception of himself as an important diplomat settling the disputes of Eastern Europe 61 After talking to Benes for four hours on 4 January 1944 about Poland s post war borders Churchill cabled to American President Franklin D Roosevelt Benes may be most useful in trying to make the Poles see reason and in reconciling them to the Russians whose confidence he has long possessed 61 Second presidency edit nbsp Benes returning to Prague after the Prague uprising 16 May 1945 In April 1945 Benes flew from London to Kosice in eastern Slovakia which had been taken by the Red Army and which became the temporary capital of Czechoslovakia 62 Upon arriving Benes formed a coalition government called the National Front with the Communist Party leader Klement Gottwald as prime minister 63 Besides Gottwald communists were named as ministers of defence the interior education information and agriculture 63 The most important non Communist minister was the foreign minister Jan Masaryk the long term Czechoslovak minister in London and son of Tomas Masaryk 63 Besides the Communists the other parties in the National Front government were the Social Democratic Party Benes own National Social Party no relation to Hitler s National Socialists the People s Party and the Slovak Democratic Party 63 Benes also instituted the Kosice programme which declared that Czechoslovakia was now to be a state of Czechs and Slovaks with the German population in the Sudetenland and the Hungarian population in Slovakia to be expelled there was to be a degree of decentralization with the Slovaks to have their own National Council but no federation capitalism was to continue but the commanding heights of the economy were to be controlled by the state and finally Czechoslovakia was to pursue a pro Soviet foreign policy 64 Role in the Prague uprising edit Main article Prague uprising During the Prague uprising which started on 5 May 1945 the city was surrounded by Wehrmacht and SS units the latter in a vengeful mood The Czech resistance appealed to the First Division of the German sponsored Russian Liberation Army commanded by General Sergei Bunyachenko to switch sides promising them that they be granted asylum in Czechoslovakia and would not be repatriated to the Soviet Union where they faced execution for treason for fighting for Germany 65 As the Czech resistance lacked heavy arms such as tanks and artillery the First Division was badly needed to help hold Prague General Bunyachenko and his First Division defected to the Allied side where it played a key role in holding off the German forces intent on retaking Prague and prevented the SS from massacring the people of Prague 65 However when General Bunyachenko learned on 7 May that he and his men would not be offered asylum after all the First Division abandoned Prague in order to surrender to the American 3rd Army Despite the promise that the men of First Division would be granted asylum Benes instead repatriated the First Division and the rest of the ROA men in Czechoslovakia who were captured by his government to the Soviet Union 65 Return to Prague edit After the Prague uprising at the end of World War II Benes returned home and resumed his former position as president Article 58 5 of the Constitution said The former president shall stay in his or her function till the new president shall be elected He was unanimously confirmed in office by the Interim National Assembly on 28 October 1945 In December 1945 all of the Red Army forces left Czechoslovakia 62 On 19 June 1946 Benes was formally elected to his second term as president 66 Benes presided over a coalition government the National Front from 1946 headed by Communist Party leader Klement Gottwald as prime minister In the elections of May 1946 the Communists won 38 of the vote with the Czech National Social Party winning 18 the People s Party 16 the Slovak Democrats 14 and the Social Democrats 13 63 Until the summer of 1947 Czechoslovakia had what the British historian Richard J Crampton called a period of relative tranquility with democracy reestablished and institutions such as the media opposition parties the churches the Sokols and the Legionnaire veteran associations all existing outside of state control 63 In July 1947 both Benes and Gottwald had decided to accept Marshall Plan aid only for the Kremlin to order Gottwald to do a U turn on the question of accepting the Marshall Plan 67 When Benes visited Moscow the Soviet Foreign Minister Vyacheslav Molotov quite brutally informed him that the Kremlin regarded accepting Marshall Plan aid as a violation of the 1943 alliance causing Benes on his return to Prague to speak of a second Munich saying it was not acceptable for the Soviet Union to veto decisions made by Czechoslovakia 67 The volte face on the issue of the Marshall Plan did much damage to the image of the Czechoslovak Communists and public opinion started to turn against them 68 A public opinion poll showed that only 25 of the voters planned to vote Communist after the rejection of the Marshall Plan 68 In September 1947 the Communist dominated police in Slovakia announced the discovery of an alleged separatist plot led by the followers of Father Tiso who were allegedly infiltrating the Slovak Democrats but by November 1947 the supposed plot was revealed as a canard with the media exposing the evidence for it as being manufactured by the police 68 The scandal in Slovakia led to demands by the other parties of the National Front that the police be depoliticised 68 During this time Benes had become increasingly disillusioned with the Communists telling his ambassador in Belgrade to report to him personally as there were so many Communist agents both in the Czechoslovak embassy in Belgrade and in his own office that it was the only way of ensuring secrecy 69 Expulsion of the Sudeten Germans edit Main articles Expulsion of Germans from Czechoslovakia and Czechoslovak Hungarian population exchange Benes opposed the presence of Germans in the liberated republic citation needed Believing that vigilante justice would be less divisive than trials upon his arrival in Prague on 10 May he called for the liquidation of Germans and Hungarians citation needed in the interest of a united national state of Czechs and Slovaks 70 As part of the Kosice programme Germans in the Sudetenland and Hungarians in Slovakia were to be expelled citation needed The Benes decrees officially called Decrees of the President of the Republic among other things expropriated the property of citizens of German and Hungarian ethnicity and facilitated Article 12 of the Potsdam Agreement by laying down a national legal framework for the loss of citizenship citation needed and the expropriation of about three million Germans and Hungarians However Benes s plans for expelling the Hungarian minority from Slovakia caused tensions with Hungary whose coalition government was likewise leaning towards the Soviet Union and ultimately objections from Moscow ended the expulsion of the Hungarians shortly after it had begun 62 In contrast the Soviets had no objections to the expulsions of the Sudeten Germans and the Czechoslovak authorities continued to expel the Sudeten Germans pursuant to the Potsdam Agreement until only a negligible number of Germans remained in the Sudetenland 62 On 15 March 1946 SS Obergruppenfuhrer Karl Hermann Frank went on trial in Prague for war crimes 71 Benes ensured that Frank s trial received maximum publicity being broadcast live on state radio and statements from Frank s interrogations being leaked to the press 71 On the stand Frank remained a defiant Nazi snarling insults at his Czech prosecutors saying the Czechs were still Untermenschen sub humans as far he was concerned and only expressing regret that he did not kill more Czechs when he had the chance After Frank s conviction he was publicly hanged before thousands of cheering people outside of Pankrac Prison on 22 May 1946 71 As Frank was a Sudeten German the political purpose of his trial was to symbolize to the world what Benes called the collective criminality of the Sudeten Germans which thus justified their expulsions 71 The historian Mary Heimann wrote that though Frank was indeed guilty of war crimes and treason his trial was used for a political purpose namely to illustrate the collective criminality of the Sudeten Germans to the world 71 Communist coup of 1948 edit Main article 1948 Czechoslovak coup d etat nbsp Communist Party leader Klement Gottwald whose coup ousted Benes for the second time On 12 February 1948 the non Communist ministers threatened to resign unless the packing of the police by the Communist interior minister Vaclav Nosek cs stopped at once 68 The Communists set up action committees whom Nosek ordered the civil servants to take their orders from 69 Nosek also illegally had arms issued to the action committees 69 On 20 February the Communists formed the people s militia of 15 000 69 On 21 February 1948 12 non Communist ministers resigned to protest Gottwald s refusal to stop the packing of the police with Communists despite the majority of the Cabinet having ordered it to end 68 The non Communists believed that Benes would side with them to allow them to stay in office as a caretaker government until new elections Benes initially refused to accept their resignations and insisted that no government could be formed without the non Communist parties However Gottwald had by this time dropped all pretense of working within the system He threatened a general strike unless Benes appointed a Communist dominated government The Communists also occupied the offices of the non Communists who had resigned Faced with the crisis Benes hesitated and sought more time 69 On 22 February a large parade by the Communist action committees took place in Prague and ended with the people s militia attacking the offices of opposition parties and the Sokols 69 Amid fears that civil war was imminent and rumours that the Red Army would sweep in to back Gottwald Benes gave way On 25 February he accepted the resignations of the non Communist ministers and appointed a new Communist dominated government in accordance with Gottwald s specifications 69 The non Communist parties were still nominally represented so the government was still technically a coalition However with the exception of Masaryk the non Communist ministers were fellow travellers In effect Benes had given legal sanction to a Communist coup During the crisis Benes failed to rally support as he could have done from the Sokols the Legionnaire veterans associations the churches and many of the university students 69 Richard J Crampton wrote In February 1948 Benes still commanded enormous respect and authority and if he had used his moral prestige he could have rallied public opinion against the Communists 72 However Benes still saw Germany as the main danger to Czechoslovakia and ultimately believed that Czechoslovakia needed the alliance with the Soviet Union more than the other way around and as such Prague could never afford a lasting rift with Moscow 69 Finally Benes was a deeply ill man in February 1948 suffering from hypertension arteriosclerosis and Pott s disease and his poor health contributed to the lack of fight in him 72 Shortly afterward elections were held in which voters were presented with a single list from the National Front now a Communist dominated organization On 12 March 1948 professor Vaclav Cerny visited Benes at his villa at Sezimovo Usti where the president accused Joseph Stalin of using him According to Cerny Benes used such violent and vulgar language about Stalin that he did not bother writing down the president s commentary believing it was unpublishable 73 The Constituent National Assembly now a subservient tool of the Communists approved a new constitution on 9 May Although it was not a completely Communist document it was close enough to the Soviet Constitution that Benes refused to sign it 74 He resigned as president on 7 June 1948 and Gottwald took over most presidential functions until being elected his successor a week later 72 On 14 August 1948 the Soviet and Czechoslovak media launched a campaign of vilification against Benes accusing him of being an enemy of the Soviet Union and claimed that he refused a Soviet offer of unilateral military assistance in September 1938 because he wanted the Munich Agreement imposed on Czechoslovakia 75 On his deathbed Benes became furious about the claim the Soviet Union had offered to help unilaterally in 1938 with the former presidential chancellor Jaromir Smutny cs writing He would like to know when by whom and to whom was the offer made 75 During the Communist era in Czechoslovakia Benes was vilified as a traitor for turning down this purported offer 76 Death and legacy edit nbsp Statue of Benes in front of Czernin Palace headquarters of the Czech Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Prague Benes had been in poor health since the spring of 1945 when he suffered a minor stroke He suffered two more strokes in 1947 and seeing the undoing of his life s work left him completely broken In a 2018 interview with Radio Prague International historian Igor Lukes recalled that by February 1948 Benes poor health left him a shell of a man who did not have the emotional or physical stamina to hold out against the rough rough players of the KSC 77 3 He died of natural causes at his villa in Sezimovo Usti on 3 September 1948 seven months after the communist coup 3 He is interred in the garden of his villa and his bust is part of the headstone His wife Hana who lived until 2 December 1974 is interred next to him Much controversy remains on his character and policy 78 needs update According to the SVR Benes had closely co operated with the Soviet intelligence before the war especially with Soviet agent Pyotr Zubov 79 Benes s friend the British historian A J P Taylor wrote in 1945 Beck Stojadinovic Antonescu and Bonnet despised Benes s integrity and prided themselves on their cunning but their countries too fell before the German aggressor and every step they took has made the resurrection of their countries more difficult In contrast the foreign policy of Dr Benes during the present war has won Czechoslovakia a secure future 80 The leaders to whom Taylor referred were Colonel Jozef Beck the Polish foreign minister 1932 39 and a leading figure in the Sanation military dictatorship which at times worked with the Third Reich Milan Stojadinovic who served as the prime minister of Yugoslavia 1935 39 and who followed a pro German foreign policy General Ion Antonescu the Conducător dictator of Romania 1940 44 and Georges Bonnet the French foreign minister 1938 39 who favored abandoning Eastern Europe to Nazi Germany Taylor s assessment that Benes was a man of integrity unlike Bonnet Antonescu Beck and Stojadinovic and that he was leading Czechoslovakia in the right direction was widely shared in 1945 80 Honors and awards editBenes was elected an International Member of the American Philosophical Society in 1939 81 He received awards and decorations before and after World War II National orders edit Award or decoration Country Date nbsp Czechoslovak War Cross 1918 82 Czechoslovakia 1919 nbsp Czechoslovak Victory Medal 82 Czechoslovakia 1920 nbsp Czechoslovak Revolutionary Medal 82 Czechoslovakia 1922 nbsp Order of the White Lion 82 Czechoslovakia 1936 nbsp Czechoslovak War Cross 1939 1945 82 Czechoslovakia 1945 nbsp Military Order of the White Lion 82 Czechoslovakia 1945 Foreign orders edit Award or decoration Country Date nbsp Order of St Sava 82 nbsp Yugoslavia 1920 nbsp Order of the Star of Romania 82 nbsp Kingdom of Romania 1921 nbsp Legion d honneur 82 nbsp France 1922 nbsp Order of the Crown of Italy 83 nbsp Kingdom of Italy 1921 nbsp Order of the British Empire 82 nbsp United Kingdom 1923 nbsp Order of Leopold 82 nbsp Belgium 1923 nbsp Order of the Oak Crown 82 nbsp Luxembourg 1923 nbsp Order of Charles III 82 nbsp Spain 1924 nbsp Order of Polonia Restituta 82 nbsp Poland 1925 nbsp Decoration of Honour for Services to the Republic of Austria 82 nbsp Austria 1926 nbsp Order of the Three Stars 82 nbsp Latvia 1927 nbsp Order of the Rising Sun 82 nbsp Empire of Japan 1928 nbsp Order of Muhammad Ali 82 nbsp Kingdom of Egypt 1928 nbsp Order of the White Eagle 82 nbsp Yugoslavia 1929 nbsp Order of the Lithuanian Grand Duke Gediminas 82 nbsp Lithuania 1929 nbsp Order of the Cross of the Eagle 82 nbsp Estonia 1931 nbsp Military Order of Christ 82 nbsp Portugal 1932 nbsp Military Order of Saint James of the Sword 82 nbsp Portugal 1933 nbsp Order of the Redeemer 82 nbsp Greece 1933 nbsp Order of the Dannebrog 82 nbsp Denmark 1933 nbsp Order of Saint Charles 82 nbsp Monaco 1934 nbsp Order of the Spanish Republic 82 nbsp Spanish Republic 1935 nbsp Order of the White Elephant 82 nbsp Siam 1935 nbsp Order of the Aztec Eagle 84 nbsp Mexico 1935 nbsp Order of Karađorđe s Star 82 nbsp Yugoslavia 1936 nbsp Order of Brilliant Jade 82 nbsp China 1936 nbsp Order of Boyaca 82 nbsp Colombia 1937 nbsp Order of Carol I 82 nbsp Kingdom of Romania 1937 nbsp Order of Pahlavi 82 nbsp Iran 1937 nbsp Order pro Merito Melitensi 82 nbsp Sovereign Military Order of Malta 1938 nbsp Order of St Olav 82 nbsp Norway 1945 nbsp Order of Propitious Clouds 82 nbsp China 1947See also edit nbsp Czech Republic portal nbsp History portal nbsp Politics portal History of Czechoslovakia Little EntenteReferences edit Edvard Benes Prague Castle Hrad cz Retrieved 19 November 2013 Marriage record at Pilsen archives in Czech Portafontium eu Retrieved 11 December 2018 a b c Dennis Kavanagh 1998 Benes Edvard A Dictionary of Political Biography Oxford University Press p 43 Archived from the original on 21 September 2013 Retrieved 26 August 2017 ISBN missing Jandik Stanislav 7 April 2018 Edvard Benes ve vzpominkach svych sourozencu in Czech Volne myslenky Retrieved 7 April 2018 via Google Books Princeton Alumni Weekly Knihy Google 1949 Retrieved 19 November 2013 Edvard Benes A Drama Between Hitler and Stalin Argo 2016 ISBN 978 80 2571 895 7 pp 23 24 322 footnote 6 Mrs Hana on the occasion of 125th birth anniversary of Hana Benesova Stalo se pred 100 lety Robinson a Benes in Czech Czech Radio 28 April 2001 Retrieved 19 November 2013 Skauting Historie Junak svaz skautu a skautek CR in Czech Retrieved 23 September 2007 a b c d e Zeman amp Klimek 1997 p 10 a b Zeman amp Klimek 1997 p 11 Czech Army for France in The Times Thursday 23 May 1918 p 6 col F Preclik Vratislav 2019 Masaryk a legie in Czech Paris Karvina in association with the Masaryk Democratic Movement Prague pp 40 90 124 128 140 148 184 190 ISBN 978 80 87173 47 3 Heimann 2009 p 40 a b c d Orzoff 2009 p 60 Orzoff 2009 p 106 sadilek Czechoslovakia a Masonic wonder Praga Masonica Retrieved 2 March 2021 a b Lukes 1999 p 15 Crampton 1997 p 75 Crampton 1997 p 76 a b Lukes 1999 p 29 a b Taylor 1976 p 210 Taylor 1976 p 211 a b William Shirer The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich Touchstone Edition New York Simon amp Schuster 1990 Holroyd Doveton John 2013 Maxim Litvinov A Biography Woodland Publications p 329 Kennan George F 1988 Memoirs Random House p 95 Holroyd Doveton John 2013 Maxim Litvinov A Biography Woodland Publications p 324 Amery Leopold 1938 Empire at Bay p 514 Churchill Winston 1948 The Second World War Vol 1 Cassell amp Co p 246 Beria Sergo 2003 My Father Gerald Duckworth amp Co p 49 a b c d e f g Heimann 2009 p 122 a b Heimann 2009 p 123 Lukes 1999 p 40 a b c d Crampton 1997 p 190 a b c Weinberg 2004 p 519 a b Wheeler Bennett 1967 pp 489 490 Wheeler Bennett 1967 p 489 a b c d e Heimann 2009 p 131 a b c d e f g h i Crampton 1997 p 191 a b c d e f Heimann 2009 p 132 Ehrenburg Ilya War Years p 130 Holroyd Doveton John 2013 Maxim Litvinov A Biography Woodland Publications p 329 English Velika Loze Ceske Republiky Grand Lodge of the Czech Republic www vlcr cz March 2016 Retrieved 2 March 2021 a b c d Heimann 2009 p 133 a b c d Heimann 2009 p 134 Heimann 2009 p 137 HISTORIE Spion kteremu nelze verit Neviditelny pes Neviditelnypes lidovky cz 14 March 2008 Retrieved 19 November 2013 Crampton 1997 pp 192 193 Crampton 1997 p 193 a b Mastny 1971 p 209 a b Mastny 1971 p 210 Holroyd Doveton John 2013 Maxim Litvinov A Biography Woodland Publications p 320 The Munich Debate Economist 24 July 1937 via 183 Zeman amp Klimek 1997 p 182 Andrea Orzoff 2009 Battle for the Castle Oxford University Press US p 199 ISBN 978 0 19 974568 5 Retrieved 10 August 2011 A T Lane Elzbieta Stadtmuller 2005 Europe on the move the impact of Eastern enlargement on the European Union LIT Verlag Munster p 190 ISBN 978 3 8258 8947 0 Retrieved 10 August 2011 Roy Francis Leslie R F Leslie 1983 The History of Poland since 1863 Cambridge University Press p 242 ISBN 978 0 521 27501 9 Retrieved 10 August 2011 Zeman amp Klimek 1997 p 189 Zeman amp Klimek 1997 p 191 Zeman amp Klimek 1997 pp 190 191 a b Zeman amp Klimek 1997 p 193 a b c d Crampton 1997 p 235 a b c d e f Crampton 1997 p 236 Crampton 1997 pp 235 236 a b c Weinberg 2004 p 826 Prozatimni NS RCS 1945 1946 2 schuze cast 1 4 28 10 1945 Psp cz Retrieved 19 November 2013 a b Crampton 1997 pp 236 237 a b c d e f Crampton 1997 p 237 a b c d e f g h i Crampton 1997 p 238 Frommer Benjamin 2005 National Cleansing Retribution Against Nazi Collaborators in Postwar Czechoslovakia Cambridge University Press pp 41 43 ISBN 978 0521008969 a b c d e Heimann 2009 p 162 a b c Crampton 1997 p 239 Lukes 1999 p 21 Czech Republic Czechoslovakia Stalinization Library of Congress Country Studies a b Lukes 1999 p 23 Lukes 1999 pp 23 24 Chris Johnstone 24 February 2018 Communist coup confirmed Czechoslovak reality but was wake up call for West Radio Prague International Taborsky Edward 1 July 1958 The Triumph and Disaster of Eduard Benes Foreign Affairs 36 July 1958 669 684 doi 10 2307 20029320 JSTOR 20029320 Retrieved 7 April 2018 via www foreignaffairs com Was late Czechoslovak president Benes Soviet agent press OSINT Archived from the original on 21 February 2017 Retrieved 20 February 2017 a b Lukes 1996 p 159 APS Member History search amphilsoc org Retrieved 12 May 2023 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj Rady a vyznamenani prezidentu republiky in Czech vyznamenani net 18 December 2012 Retrieved 24 May 2021 Benes Edvard B 8 March 2011 Docent Kaspar prevzal nejvyssi mexicke vyznamenani 19 July 2018 Sources editCrampton Richard 1997 Eastern Europe in the Twentieth Century London Routledge ISBN 0415164230 Hauner Milan 2009 We Must Push Eastwards The Challenges and Dilemmas of President Benes after Munich Journal of Contemporary History 44 4 619 656 doi 10 1177 0022009409339435 JSTOR 40542980 S2CID 144521196 Heimann Mary 2009 Czechoslovakia The State That Failed New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 978 0300172423 Lukes Igor 1996 Czechoslovakia Between Stalin and Hitler The Diplomacy of Edvard Benes in the 1930s Oxford University Press ISBN 9780195102666 Lukes Igor 1999 Stalin and Czechoslovakia An Autopsy of a Myth In Igor Lukes Erik Goldstein eds The Munich Crisis 1938 Prelude to World War II London Frank Cass pp 13 47 ISBN 9781136328329 Mastny Vojtech 1971 The Czechs Under Nazi Rule The Failure of National Resistance 1939 1942 New York Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 231 03303 9 Neville Peter 2010 Benes amp Masaryk Czechoslovakia Haus Publishing ISBN 9781905791729 JSTOR j ctt1r6b055 Orzoff Andrea 2009 The Battle for the Castle Oxford University Press Konrad Ota Kupper Rene 2013 Edvard Benes Vorbild und Feindbild politische mediale und historiographische Deutungen in German Vandenhoeck amp Ruprecht ISBN 978 3 525 37302 6 Crampton Richard 18 November 1999 Central Europe Review Book Review The Life of Edvard Benes 1884 1948 Ce review org Archived from the original on 4 October 2009 Retrieved 19 November 2013 Wheeler Bennett John 1967 The Nemesis of Power The German Army In Politics 1918 1945 London Macmillan Taylor A J P 1976 The Origins of the Second World War London Penguin Weinberg Gerhard 2004 A World At Arms Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0521618266 Zeman Zbynek Klimek Antonin 1997 The Life of Edvard Benes Czechoslovakia in Peace and War Oxford Clarendon Press ISBN 978 0 19 820583 8 Zinner Paul E 1994 Czechoslovakia The Diplomacy of Eduard Benes In Gordon A Craig and Felix Gilbert ed The Diplomats 1919 1939 Princeton New Jersey Princeton University Press pp 100 122 ISBN 978 0 691 03660 1 OCLC 31484352 Primary sources edit Hauner Milan ed Edvard Benes Memoirs The Days of Munich vol 1 War and Resistance vol 2 Documents vol 3 First critical edition of reconstructed War Memoirs 1938 45 of President Benes of Czechoslovakia published by Academia Prague 2007 ISBN 978 80 200 1529 7 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Edvard Benes Article about Edvard Benes in Encyclopaedia Britannica Kupper Rene Benes Edvard in 1914 1918 online International Encyclopedia of the First World War President Benes in exile in England during World War II Biography at the Czech Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Czech Sons of Death Time 26 September 1938 Archived from the original on 17 January 2008 Retrieved 14 August 2008 an article published in Time on 26 September 1938 free archive Pictures of Edvard Benes funeral lying in state in the opened coffin Pictures of Edvard Benes funeral funeral procession with wreaths and laying of coffin into grave Pictures of Edvard Benes and his wife archive of Sechtl and Vosecek Museum of Photography Newspaper clippings about Edvard Benes in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW Benes s speech on behalf of the 10th anniversary of Stefanik s death BENES Edvard Stefanik a jeho odkaz Praha CIN 1929 66 s available online at University Library in Bratislava Digital Library in Czech Political offices Position established Minister of Foreign Affairs of Czechoslovakia1918 1935 Succeeded byMilan Hodza Preceded byJan Cerny Prime Minister of Czechoslovakia1921 1922 Succeeded byAntonin Svehla Preceded byTomas Masaryk President of Czechoslovakia1935 1938 Succeeded byEmil Hacha Preceded byEmil Hacha President of Czechoslovakia1945 1948 Succeeded byKlement Gottwald Awards and achievements Preceded byFerdinand Foch Cover of Time magazine23 March 1925 Succeeded byGeorge Harold Sisler Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Edvard Benes amp oldid 1221992332, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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