![]() | This article needs to beupdated. Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information.(April 2016) |
Pro Libertate is an anti-communist, right-wing political association in Switzerland.
Pro Libertate was founded in 1956 in response to the crushing of theHungarian Uprising of 1956. The association wrote letters to newspaper and made a series of publications, and organizedtraveling exhibitions to draw attention to the danger of communism. The longtime president of the association was Max Mössinger; currently,Thomas Fuchs is the president.[1]
Due to thedétente between theSoviet Union and the West, followed by the collapse of European communist regimes and end of theCold War, Pro Libertate lost some of its purpose. It shifted toward advocating for a strongSwiss Army, and opposing efforts to abolish the Army or end conscription. In 1989 it fought the first ballot initiative to abolish the Army, by theGroup for a Switzerland Without an Army, and it has organised opposition to every such initiative since. In connection with the critical reappraisal of the role ofSwitzerland during the Second World War in the 1990s, Pro Libertate supported the traditional, positive view of Switzerland's active duty servicemembers and of the government's choices, in a submission to theBergier commission.[1]
![]() | This article aboutpolitics inSwitzerland is astub. You can help Wikipedia byexpanding it. |