I became a lower-class citizen after my discharge from the army
Stanislav Chromec was born in Těšetice on 26 September 1931 and grew up in Jičín. His father Jan Chromec was a military brass band master and mother Zdena was a housewife. During the Second World War, Stanislav Chromec could not study at a grammar school because of his father‘s partial Jewish origin. After the liberation he was admitted to the ‚quinta‘ year of K. V. Rais High in Jičín, and in 1949 he transferred to the ‚octava‘ of the Military Gymnasium in Moravská Třebová where he graduated. He went on to study at the Military Academy, later renamed the Military School of Air Defence, and at the Faculty of Senior Commanders of the Military Technical Academy in Brno. He joined the communist party in 1955. He received further education by studying at the Faculty of Electrical Engineering of the Czech Technical University and a graduate courses in systems engineering at the University of Economics. He defended his dissertation on the algorithmization and computerized solutions for decision-making processes in the army in 1968. His Candidate of Science degree was withdrawn in 1978 and he regained it post-1989. After graduation, he worked as a teacher and researcher at the Military Political Academy in Prague and as an officer in the operations department of an army anti-aircraft division. From 1967 on, he worked for the Research Institute 401 of the General Staff of the Czechoslovak Army. Following the Warsaw Pact troops invasion of Czechoslovakia, the Institute was subjected to the normalisation purges and many scientists were dismissed. During this tense period, Stanislav Chromec met a military counterintelligence officer several times but claims not to have sign any commitment to cooperate. In 1969-1973 he was registered as a secret collaborator of the military counterintelligence in the ‚confidant‘ category and his file was shredded in 1974. He was first expelled from the Communist Party and then from his job in 1970-1971. After his dismissal from the army, he faced difficulty finding work. He found employment as a systems engineer at Agroprojekt Prague (1971-1975). In 1972, the Chief of the General Staff of the CSLA filed a criminal complaint against him for allegedly abusing the rules for working with top secret materials; the charges were dropped for lack of evidence. From 1975 to 1990 he worked for the Research Institute of Engineering Technology and Economics and the Institute of Technology and Rationalization. He returned to the army in 1990 in the colonel rank and was eventually promoted to major general. He served with the Ministry of Defence as the Chief of the Army Strategic Development Administration, focusing on logistics and computing. He retired from active service in the army in 1994, but continued to work on topics linking computer science and the military. He published professional papers and held many positions in related fields.