Vojenské rozhledy / Czech Military Review Nr. 1/2006: 163-171
Plukovník in memoriam Jakub KoutnýPersonálie
Mnozí z těch, kteří prošli ohněm druhé světové války, se již krátce po únoru 1948 stali obětí zvůle koncentrované moci a takzvané třídní zákonnosti komunistického režimu. Nový systém totiž žádal poslušných sluhů. Lidí průměrných a ještě lépe podprůměrných, kteří budou slepě, bez přemýšlení plnit rozkazy prodloužené ruky moskevských diktátorů - Komunistické strany Československa.
Colonel in memoriam Jakub Koutný
Mr. Koutný belonged among those who went through the fire of World War II and lately became victims of despotism of the so-called "class laws". In fact, Col. Koutný was not a soldier, but the journalist. At the beginning of war, Mr. Koutný was sent to Poland to inform about Polish practices to return Czechoslovak refugees back to the "Protectorate Bohemia and Moravia". At Poland he joined the Czechoslovak Military Group; lately he experienced Soviet labour camps. In a small city of Buzuluk, where the first Czechoslovak Field Battalion was formed, he became the chief of recruiting commission. There he met people returning from the NKVD's camps (i.e. Soviet Secret Police's detention camps). Many his reports to the Chief of Czechoslovak Military Mission Heliodor Pika were preserved in archives. Nowadays they bear witness on those fearful camps. As a press officer he laid down the foundation of the Czech army daily "Our Army in the USSR". He worked at the Czechoslovak Headquarters in Russia, as a liaison officer at the Command of the 1st Czechoslovak Army Corps in the USSR, as a political and military advisor to the commander of armour brigade Lt.Col. Janko. In his liberated country he helped to establish the military publishing house Our Army (Naše vojsko). Shortly after the communist coup d'etat, in 1949, he was imprisoned. He died in a communist jail in 1960.
Zveřejněno: 15. březen 2006 Zobrazit citaci


