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The KGB, short for Komitet Gosudarstvennoy Bezopasnosti (Russian: Комите́т
Госуда́рственной
Безопа́сности; English: Committee for State Security), was the name of the main Soviet external security and intelligence agency, as well as the main secret
police agency from March 13, 1954 to
November 6, 1991. The KGB's domain was
roughly that of the American Central Intelligence Agency and the counterintelligence division
of the FBI.
In March of 1953, Lavrenty
Beria united the MVD and MGB into one body, the MVD.
Within a year, Beria was executed and the MVD was split up. The reformed MVD retained its internal security functions while the
new KGB took on external security functions. The KGB was subordinated to the Council of Ministers. On July 5, 1978 the KGB was renamed the "KGB of the USSR" with the KGB
Chairman given a seat on the council.
The KGB was dissolved due to the participation of its chief, Colonel General Vladimir Kryuchkov, in the August 1991 coup
attempt designed to overthrow Mikhail Gorbachev. He used many
of the KGB's resources to aid the coup attempt. Kryuchkov was arrested, and General Vadim Bakatin was appointed Chairman on
August 23, 1991 with a mandate to dismantle
the KGB. On November 6, 1991 the Russian
KGB officially ceased to exist, though its successor organization, the Federalnaya Sluzhba Bezopasnosti, or FSB, is functionally extremely similar to
the KGB. Belarus is the only post-Soviet society where the successor organization
continues to be called the KGB. Belarus is also where one of the founders of the KGB, Felix Dzerzhinsky—who was born in a town now within Belarusian territory—remains a national
hero.
Some members of the KGB referred to it as "The committee" while other employees called it the Kontora Grubykh
Banditov, that is, the "association of crude bandits."
Tasks and Organization
Its tasks were external espionage, counter-espionage, liquidation of
anti-Soviet and counter-revolutionary formations within the USSR, and guarding the leaders of the party and state. Unlike Western
intelligence agencies, the KGB was (theoretically) not interested in learning enemy intentions, only their capabilities.
Intentions were political decisions based on Marxist theory and the personal whims of
the leadership.
In its espionage role, the KGB was mostly reliant on human
intelligence, unlike their western counterparts, who relied far more on imagery intelligence (IMINT) and signals intelligence. Using
ideological attraction, the Soviets were successful in recruiting a number of high level spies. Most notable are the KGB
successes in gathering US atomic secrets, and the Cambridge Five, especially Kim
Philby in the UK. This ideological method of conversion failed after the 1956 crushing
of the Hungarian uprising. Instead, the KGB was forced to rely on blackmail and bribery for most of its defectors. This still
achieved notable succeses, such as CIA mole Aldrich Ames and FBI mole Robert Hanssen, but far fewer than earlier.
Notable KGB Operations
- Alger Hiss is alleged to have been a KGB spy, but there is no hard
evidence.
- Robert Hanssen provided the KGB with information on U.S.
counterintelligence efforts through his job at the FBI.
- Aldrich Ames was a KGB mole within the CIA.
- Ethel and Julius Rosenberg were executed by the United States for providing information on the US's atomic programs
to the KGB.
James Jesus Angleton, head of CIA counter-intelligence,
reportedly lived in deathly fear that the KGB had moles in two key places: CIA counter-intelligence and FBI counter-intelligence.
With those two moles in place, the KGB would have control or awareness of all U.S. efforts to catch KGB spies, and could protect
their assets by safely redirecting any investigation that came close, or at least provide sufficient warning; also,
counter-intelligence had the job of vetting foreign sources of intelligence, so moles in that area were in a position to give a
stamp of approval to double agents against the CIA. With the capture of Aldrich Ames and Robert Hanssen, it appears that
Angleton's fears, deemed paranoid at the time, were well-grounded.
The KGB occasionally conducted assassinations, mainly of
defectors.
Organization
The KGB was organized into directorates. Some of the main directorates were:
- The First Chief Directorate (Foreign Operations) was responsible for foreign operations and
intelligence-gathering activities.
- The Second Chief Directorate was responsible for internal political control of citizens and foreigners
within the Soviet Union.
- The Third Chief Directorate (Armed Forces) controlled military counterintelligence and political
surveillance of the armed forces.
- The Fifth Chief Directorate also dealt with internal security. Originally created to combat political
dissent, it took up some of the tasks previously handled by the Second Chief Directorate.
- The Seventh Directorate (Surveillance) handled surveillance, providing equipment to follow and monitor the
activities of both foreigners and Soviet citizens.
- The Eighth Chief Directorate was responsible for communications. It dealt with monitoring foreign
communications and was also responsible for the cryptological systems used by KGB divisions, transmission to KGB stations
overseas, and the development of communication equipment
- The Ninth Directorate (Guards Directorate) provided guards for principal Party leaders and their families,
and major government facilities in the Soviet Union.
Heads of the KGB or equivalent
- All-Russian Extraordinary Commissary against the Counterrevolution and Sabotage, or Cheka, the Bolshevik-era equivalent to the KGB
- Main Political Department (GPU)
- Joint Main Political Department (OGPU)
- OGPU merged into the NKVD in July 1934
- MGB merged into MVD March 5, 1953
- Committee for State Security (KGB)
- Ivan Serov March 13, 1954 - December 8, 1958
- Aleksandr
Shelepin December 25, 1958 -
November 13, 1961
- Vladimir Yefimovich Semichastny November
13, 1961 - May 18, 1967
- Yuri Andropov May 18, 1967 - May 26,
1982
- Vitaliy Fedorchuk
May 26, 1982 - December 17, 1982
- Viktor Chebrikov
December 17, 1982 - October 1, 1988
- Vladimir
Kryuchkov October 1, 1988 - August 22, 1991
- Leonid Shebarshin
August 22, 1991 - August 23, 1991 (Acting)
- Vadim Bakatin August 23, 1991 - October 22, 1991
See also
- FSB (the post-Soviet successor
organization to the KGB)
- Numbers station
- History of Soviet espionage
KGB, also known as Conspiracy, is the name of a computer game by Virgin games and Cyro which
is set in the Soviet Union days before its collapse. You play a KGB Agent who works in the KGB equivalent of Internal Affairs. A
point and click adventure game with a high degree of challenge.
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