On February 15, 1991 Czechoslovakia's President Václav Havel, his Polish counterpart Lech Wałęsa, and the Hungarian Prime Minister József Antall met on the Danube's shore in Visegrad to sign a cooperation agreement aiming at overcoming historical animosities between these countries and help them to successfully accomplish social and economic transformation and join the European Union. After the split of Czechoslovakia in 1993, the Group became known as Visegrad 4. What has this group achieved in this first quarter of century of its existence and what are the challenges that lie ahead? Anca Dragu pose these questions to Andrej Matišák, a keen observer of foreign policy at the Slovak daily Pravda and Michal Kořan, an analyst with the Prague based Institute of International Relations. Both gave the same answer to the first question.
V4 25 years later
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