False
Explanation:
- Leading politicians in the Soviet Union followed the processes in the Czechoslovakia with great dissatisfaction and feared the weakening of the position of the Eastern Socialist bloc on the international scene, and since the Czechoslovak reformists did not gain the confidence of the Soviet allies, they worked actively in early July to prepare for a military coup against the Czechoslovakia.
- The combined army of the five Warsaw Pact states invaded and occupied the Czechoslovakia during the night of August 20 to August 21, and Alexander Dubcek and other Prague Spring leaders were taken to Moscow.
- Despite the defeat, Dubcek did not retire voluntarily, either at the time when Jan Palah burned down or at other manifestations against the presence of the occupying army in the Czechoslovak Republic. Alexander Dubcek was replaced by Gustav Husak.
- In April 1969, he was removed from office. He briefly worked as an ambassador to Turkey and was then expelled from the Communist Party of Slovakia in 1970 and retired from public life and worked for a forestry company in Bratislava.
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