Hoover Research Fellow Maps the Paths of Cold War Czechoslovak Émigrés
Hoover research fellow Martin Nekola describes his work on documenting the experience of Czechoslovak exiles during the Cold War.
Collections are from US secretaries of state, individual activists and propagandists, and many émigré groups involved in the ideological struggle. Important subsets are collections relating to “citizen diplomacy,” in which individuals and organizations acted to defuse international tensions, particularly the danger of nuclear conflict; records of organizations on the front lines, such as the Free Europe Committee (later RFE/RL), involved in broadcasting and other activities aiming to penetrate the Iron Curtain; and papers relating to the role of the Third World in the confrontation.
US radio broadcasting organization targeting the Soviet bloc
US radio broadcasting organization targeting the Soviet bloc
Conference on the impact of Western broadcasting during the Cold War
Recordings of radio broadcasts to Vietnam, 1963–2002
President of RFE/RL, 1975–78
Chief, Czechoslovak Desk, RFE
Wrote Broadcasting Freedom: The Cold War Triumph of Radio Free Europe and Radio Liberty
Served in the Comitetul National Roman, the Romanian government in exile
Editor in chief of the Voice of America Czechoslovak service
Chairman of the Cold War Council
Hearst newspaper foreign correspondent, 1917–61
US diplomat in the Soviet Union, 1946–48
Chairman of the American Friends of the Captive Nations
Involved in nongovernmental exchange programs for US and Soviet citizens
Organized Friends Assisting Friends, a US/Russian cooperative program
Private US organization promoting contact with voluntary organizations abroad
Private US organization promoting a strong national security policy
Private US organization promoting US/Soviet cultural relations
Private US organization promoting educational exchanges with Soviet citizens