简·马萨里克:1945-1948年美国外交函电

Artyom Zorin
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引用次数: 0

摘要

扬·马萨里克(1886-1948)在1940年至1948年捷克斯洛伐克历史上最困难的时期担任捷克斯洛伐克外交部部长。他职业生涯的巅峰出现在战后,当时CSR正处于苏美对抗的中心。作为捷克斯洛伐克第一任总统Tomáš加里格·马萨里克的儿子,以及他的继任者爱德华·贝内什最亲密的伙伴,扬·马萨里克试图在他的国家倡导民主传统,并保持与西方的密切关系。但实际上,布拉格越来越多地卷入了莫斯科的势力范围。1948年3月,共产党掌权后不久,他的生命不幸夭折。直到现在,他的死仍然是各种理论和讨论的主题。如果他还活着,这位政治家和他的国家的命运将如何展开,这个问题仍然悬而未决。本文的目的是将马萨里克置于一个新的背景下,即通过美国外交官对他的看法来考虑他。提交人试图查明他们是否把他们希望加强捷克社会主义共和国的西方化和抵制苏联的影响同马萨里克联系起来,以及他们认为马萨里克突然死亡的原因是什么。这篇文章借鉴了对美国外交函电的研究。作者的结论是,尽管马萨里亚克普斯以亲西方政治家而闻名,但在美国,他在捷克斯洛伐克并不被视为一个重要和有影响力的人物。他拒绝加入国内的反共力量,并在国际舞台上支持莫斯科,这引起了华盛顿的不满。马萨里亚克的死在美国政界引起了共鸣。然而,美国国务院没有试图详细调查其原因,也没有对他自杀的官方说法提出质疑。然而,马萨里克成为了反抗共产主义的悲剧性象征,也使捷克斯洛伐克与西方保持密切关系的最后希望破灭。
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Jan Masaryk in American Diplomatic Correspondence, 1945–1948
Jan Masaryk (1886–1948) was the head of the Czechoslovak Ministry of Foreign Affairs during the most difficult period in the history of Czechoslovakia, from 1940 to 1948. The peak of his professional career came in the post-war years, when CSR was at the centre of the unfolding Soviet-American confrontation. As a son of the first Czechoslovak President Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk and the closest associate of his successor Edvard Beneš, Jan Masaryk was trying to advocate democratic traditions in his country and preserve close relations with the West. But in practice, Prague was increasingly drawn into Moscow's sphere of influence. His life was tragically cut short in March 1948, soon after the Communists takeover. Until now his death remains the subject of various theories and discussions. The question of how the fate of this politician and his country would have unfolded had he stayed alive remains open. The purpose of the article is to consider Masaryk in a new context, namely through his perception by American diplomats. The author attempts to ascertain whether they associated their hopes for strengthening the western orientation of the Czech Socialist Republic and countering Soviet influence with Masaryk, and what they believed to be the reasons for his sudden death. The article draws on a study of American diplomatic correspondence. The author concludes that despite Masaryk's reputation as a pro-Western politician, in the United States he was not considered an important and influential figure in Czechoslovakia. His refusal to join anti-communist forces at home and his support for Moscow in the international arena caused resentment in Washington. Masaryk's death resonated in American political circles. Yet the State Department made no attempt to investigate its causes in detail or to question the official version of his suicide. Nevertheless, Masaryk became a tragic symbol of resistance to communism and the collapse of the last hopes for maintaining close relations between Czechoslovakia and the West.
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