Communist Terror in Post-War Europe
The General of Fear: Bedřich Reicin and the Communist Purges
14m
15 March 1939. German troops enter Prague and Czechoslovakia disappears as a sovereign state. Under Nazi occupation, repression, surveillance, and the erosion of democratic norms become everyday reality. Yet liberation in 1945 does not end the culture of control — it transforms it.
Bedřich Reicin stands at the center of this continuity.
A committed communist and later head of Czechoslovak military intelligence, he built a powerful security apparatus within the army. Officers were screened, dismissed, imprisoned, and subjected to brutal interrogations. Fear, provocation, and fabricated evidence became tools of political control as the new regime consolidated power after 1948.
But the system he helped construct eventually turned against him. In the internal purges of the early 1950s, Reicin himself fell victim to the same machinery of accusation and coercion.
This is the story of repression carried from foreign occupation into domestic dictatorship — and of a man consumed by the structure he helped create.
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