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KGB

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For other uses of "KGB", see KGB (disambiguation).

Image:KGB Symbol.png

KGB (transliteration of "КГБ") is the Russian-language acronym for State Security Committee, (Russian: ; Komitet Gosudarstvennoy Bezopasnosti).

From March 13, 1954 to November 6, 1991 KGB was the umbrella organisation name for:

Roughly, the KGB's operational domain encompassed functions and powers like those exercised by the United States' Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), the counterintelligence (internal security) division of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), the Federal Protective Service, and the Secret Service.

In March 1953, Lavrenty Beria consolidated the MVD and the MGB into one body--the MVD; within a year, Beria was executed and MVD was split. The re-formed MVD retained its police and law enforcement powers, while the second, new agency, KGB, assumed internal and external security functions, and was subordinate to the Council of Ministers. On July 5, 1978 the KGB was re-christened as the "KGB of the Soviet Union", with its chairman holding a ministerial council seat.

The KGB was dissolved when its chief, Colonel-General Vladimir Kryuchkov, used the KGB's resources in aid of the August 1991 coup attempt to overthrow Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev. On August 23, 1991 Colonel-General Kryuchkov was arrested, and General Vadim Bakatin was appointed KGB Chairman--and mandated to dissolve the KGB of the Soviet Union. On November 6, 1991, the KGB officially ceased existing, though its successor national state security organisation, the Russian Federalnaya Sluzhba Bezopasnosti (FSB), is functionally much like the Soviet KGB.

Belarus is the only post-Soviet Union era country where the successor state security organization continues being known as KGB. Belarus also is the birthplace of Felix Dzerzhinsky, one of the founders of the KGB.

Image:Dzerzhinsky.jpg

Contents

Tasks and organization

Its tasked responsibilities were external espionage, counter-espionage, the liquidation of anti-Soviet and counter-revolutionary organisations within the Soviet Union, guarding the national borders, guarding the Communist Party and State leaders, and critical state property. Also, it investigated and prosecuted thieves of State and socialist property and white collar criminals. Unlike Western intelligence agencies, the KGB (theoretically) was uninterested in learning the enemy's intentions--only their capabilities; intentions were political decisions based upon Marxist theory.

In espionage, the KGB mostly relied on human intelligence (HUMINT), unlike their Western counterparts, who relied more on technology--imagery intelligence (IMINT) and signals intelligence (SIGINT). Using ideological attraction, the Soviets successfully recruited many high-level spies. Most notable are the KGB successes in gathering US atomic secrets, and, in the UK, the Cambridge Five, especially Kim Philby of the Secret Intelligence Service (SIS). Ideological recruitment abroad was nearly impossible after the Soviet Union crushed the 1956 Hungarian uprising. Instead, KGB was forced to rely upon blackmail and bribery to control most of its defectors. Still, this achieved notable successes, such as CIA mole Aldrich Ames and FBI mole Robert Hanssen, but fewer than in earlier decades.

Paralleling developments at MI5 and the CIA, the KGB had, before the dissolution of the Soviet Union, commercialized its advanced technologies for business applications. Artificial intelligence software which was formerly used to sort and filter signals intelligence has become available through companies such as Autonomy (an MI5 spin-off) and InfoTame (ex-KGB technologists).

Notable KGB operations

Image:KGB House Main.jpg

During the 1945-1991 Cold War, the KGB of the Soviet Union effected these operations against the West, some under its previous names (NKVD, MGB, etc.):

James Jesus Angleton, the CIA's counter-intelligence chief, feared that the KGB had moles in two, key places: (i) CIA's counter-intelligence section, and (ii) the FBI's counter-intelligence department. With said moles in place, the KGB would have awareness of and so could control U.S. counter-spy efforts to detect, capture, and arrest their spies; it could protect their moles by safely re-directing investigations that might uncover them, or to provide them sufficient advance warning to allow their escape. Moreover, KGB counter-intelligence vetted foreign sources of intelligence, so that moles in that area were positioned to stamp their approval of double agents sent against the CIA.

In retrospect, in the context of the capture of the soviet moles Aldrich Ames and Robert Hanssen, it appears Angleton's fears--then deemed paranoid--were well-grounded. Still, his officially disbelieved assertions cost him his counter-intelligence post in the CIA.

Occasionally, the KGB conducted assassinations abroad--mainly of Soviet Bloc defectors, and often helped other Communist country security services with their assassinations. An infamous example is the September 1978 killing of Bulgarian émigré Georgi Markov, in London, England, UK, wherein Bulgarian secret agents used a KGB-designed umbrella gun to shoot Markov dead with a ricin-poisoned pellet.

Organization

Image:Andropov.jpg

  • The KGB was a national Intelligence and Security Agency for the Soviet Union, and directly controlled the Republic-level KGB organizations, however, as Russia was the core republic of the Soviet Union, the KGB, itself, also was Russia's republic-level KGB. The CPSU directly controlled the KGB and guided its operations.

Senior Staff

  • The Senior staff were a Chairman, one or two First deputy chairmen, and four to six deputy chairmen.
    • the KGB Collegium--a Chairman, deputy chairmen, Directorate chiefs, and one or two republic-level KGB organization chairmen--effected key policy decisions.

Directorates

  • The KGB was organized into directorates. Some were:
    • The First Chief Directorate (Foreign Operations)--responsible for foreign operations and intelligence-gathering.
    • The Second Chief Directorate--responsible for internal political control of citizens and foreigners in the Soviet Union.
    • The Third Chief Directorate (Armed Forces)--controlled military counter-intelligence and the political surveillance of the Soviet armed forces.
    • The Fifth Chief Directorate--also responsible for internal security; originally combatted political dissent; later assumed tasks of the Second Chief Directorate, such as controlling religious dissent, monitoring artists, and publications censorship.
    • The Seventh Directorate (Surveillance)--handled surveillance, providing equipment to follow and monitor activities of both foreigners and Soviet citizens.
    • The Eighth Chief Directorate--responsible for communications, monitoring foreign communications and the cryptological systems used by KGB divisions, KGB transmissions to overseas stations, and the development of communications technology.
    • The Ninth Directorate (Guards)--40,000-man uniformed guard force providing bodyguard services to: the principal CPSU leaders (and families), major Soviet government facilities (including nuclear weapons stocks). It operated the Moscow VIP subway system, and the secure government telephone system linking high-level government and CPSU officers; it became the Federal Protective Service (FPS) under Boris Yeltsin.
    • The Sixteenth Chief Directorate (State Communications)--upgraded from Department to Directorate, operated the Soviet Union's government telephone and telegraph systems.
    • The Border Guards Directorate--245,000-man border security force combatted smuggling along the Soviet Union's borders with terrestrial, naval, and air force contingents.

Other Sections

The KGB also contained these independent sections and detachments:

missions and command-control structures remain unknown.

    • Kremlin Guard Force--beyond control of the Ninth Guards Directorate. The uniformed Kremlin Guard Force were the bodyguard of the Praesidium, et al.; it later became the Presidential Security Service PSS.

Trivia

  • Russian President Vladimir Putin has started out his career in KGB working in the Fifth Directorate, monitoring the activities of the students of the Leningrad University. He later worked for the KGB in East Germany.
  • In the post Soviet republic of Belarus, the KGB still operates under the same name, and near identical insignia.

See also

External link

  • KGB Info from FAS.org
  • Chebrikov, Viktor M., et al, eds. Istoriya sovetskikh organov gosudarstvennoi bezopasnosti. (1977) [1]


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