It came on the heels of the peaceful 1989 "Velvet Revolution" that ousted communism and ushered in democracy on the back of peaceful protests as the Soviet bloc began to crumble.
The split was not triggered by popular demand, nor was it decided in a referendum; it largely resulted from the inability of negotiators to strike a satisfactory new partnership deal in democratic times.
Slovak-born Czech Prime Minister Andrej Babis spoke via telephone today with his Slovak counterpart Robert Fico who dubbed the divorce "an unprecedented example of a peaceful split of a federal republic" in a Facebook post.
"We had no problem being together. We had a problem with how to be together," former Slovak foreign affairs minister Milan Knazko told AFP.
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While recent surveys suggest that around half of Slovaks are happy with independence, a 1990 Czechoslovak opinion poll showed that just under 10 percent of Slovaks wanted their own country while in the Czech part of the federation only five percent of respondents wanted to go it alone.
An actor-turned-politician that played a popular role in the Velvet Revolution, Knazko was one of the four members of the Slovak delegation that held talks with Czechs in the summer of 1992 on the split.
"During the negotiations we tried to find a form of maintaining our federation. At one point, Czech PM Vaclav Klaus said we should rather have separate countries than to engage in some kind of experiment," Knazko recalled.
After their amicable divorce, the two countries have maintained close trade ties and political cooperation in forums like the Visegrad Group.
"Relations between Czechs and Slovaks are even better now than they were in the federative republic," Knazko said, adding that "time has shown that the division was a very reasonable step".
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