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FSB (Russia)
The FSB (ФСБ) is a state security organisation in Russia, and is the
domestic successor organization to the KGB. Its name is an acronym from
the Russian Federal Security Service of the Russian Federation
(Федера́льная слу́жба безопа́сности Росси́йской Федера́ции)
(Federal'naya Sluzhba Bezopasnosti Rossiyskoi Federatsii). It is
usually simply called the FSB in English-language sources. Its
headquarters are located in Moscow.
Overview
Restructuring
1995: incorporating KGB successor
1997
Heads of the FSB or equivalent
Curiosity
See also
The FSB played a major and ineffectual role in Chechnya (in March 2005
it accidentally killed Aslan Maskhadov, having wanted to take him alive
for interrogation) but it also had to fight organized crime, terrorism,
drug smuggling and corruption across the whole Federation as well. The
FSB has been accused of involvement in the 1999 Russian apartment
bombings.
On June 20, 1996, Yeltsin fired Barsukov and appointed Nikolay
Dmitrevich Kovalev, to Acting Director and later to Director of the
FSB. Russian president Vladimir Putin was head of the FSB from July
1998 to August 1999.
In September 1998, the FSB staff had received only half of their
salaries and the distribution of meal allowances had stopped at the
beginning of the year. The total number of FSB employees at the end of
1997 was 80,000.
1995: incorporating KGB successor
Following the attempted coup of 1991 against Mikhail Gorbachev, the KGB
was dismantled and ceased to exist after November 1991. Its successor,
the FSK (Federalnaya Sluzhba Kontrrazvedki (Федера́льная Слу́жба
Контрразве́дки), Federal Counterintelligence Service) was reorganized
into the FSB by the Federal Law of April 3, 1995, "On the Organs of the
Federal Security Service in the Russian Federation", making the new FSB
a more powerful organization.
This law described the FSB role in the regions:
• Clarified the FSB role in the
Armed Forces
• Gave the FSB director
ministerial status and the rank of army general
• Allowed it to conduct
intelligence work and to protect Russian citizens
and enterprises abroad
• Obliged the FSB to inform the
president and the prime minister about
national threats
• Gave the FSB powers of
detention and the right to enter any premises or
property "if there is sufficient evidence to suppose that a crime is
being been perpetrated there" without a warrant
• Permitted the FSB to set up
special units, carrying firearms, and to
train security personnel in private companies.
Established the control
structures over the FSB.
The FSB reforms were rounded out by Edict
633, signed by Boris Yeltsin
on June 23, 1995. The edict made the tasks of the FSB more specific,
giving the FSB substantial rights to conduct cryptographic work, and
described the powers of the FSB director. The number of deputy
directors was increased to 8: 2 first deputies, 5 deputies responsible
for departments and directorates and 1 deputy director heading the
Moscow City and Moscow regional directorate. Yeltsin appointed
Colonel-General Mikhail Ivanovich Barsukov as the new director of the
FSB.
1997
In May 1997, the FSB was reorganized again following a
political power struggle. The FSB structure was changed into five
departments and six directorates:
• Counterintelligence Department
• Anti terrorist Department
• Analysis, Forecasts and Strategic Planning Department
• Personnel and Management Department
• Operational Support Department
• Directorate of Analysis and Suppression of the Activity of Criminal
Organizations
• Investigation Directorate
• Operational-Search Directorate
• Operational-Technical Measures Directorate
• Internal Security Directorate
• Administration Directorate
• Prison
• Scientific-Technical centre
The FSB was not to recruit civilian
personnel and the number of places offered by the FSB Academy
was cut back.
| Heads of the FSB or
equivalent |
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| Viktor Pavlovich Barannikov |
January 1992 - July 1993 |
| Nikolai Mikhailovich Golushko |
July 1993 - February 1994 |
| Sergei Vadimovich Stepashin |
February 1994 - June 1995 |
| Mikhail Ivanovich Barsukov |
July 1995 - June 1996 |
| Nikolai Dmitrievich Kovalev |
July 1996 - July 1998 |
| Vladimir Vladimirovich Putin |
July 1998 - August 1999 |
| Nikolai Platonovich Patrushev |
since August 1999
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Curiosity
In the beginning of 2006 the Italian news agency ANSA reported the
publication on the FSB website of an offer, open to Russian citizens
working as spies for a foreign country, to work as double agents
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