EN
Throughout the entire existence of the regime the foreign policy of Communist Czechoslovakia was linked to the foreign policy of the USSR, which it copied, supported and potentially developed roughly until 1987–1988, although at a different intensity. In specific relation to the policy of the Third Republic, Prague communist diplomacy focused not only on confirmation of the legal (and naturally also political) nullity of the Munich Agreement and its consequences, but, on a broader scale, also on the definitive international-legal acknowledgement of a status quo, created as a result of the Potsdam Agreement.