Sunday, October 26, 2008

some more detail

Foreign Intelligence Service (SVR)

Country: Russia

Area of expertise: Officially—counterterrorism and protecting Russian commercial interests abroad. Unofficially—consolidating political power back home.

Activities: Russia has a formidable spying tradition that dates back to the czarist-era Cheka. After the collapse of the Soviet Union, the once omnipotent KGB was broken up into several smaller organizations with vastly limited powers. Since ex-KGB man Vladimir Putin took power, however, the SVR, or Sluzhba Vneshney Razvedk as it’s known in Russian, has recovered much of its swagger. Russian spying within the United States is now back to Cold War levels, U.S. officials believe. Peter Earnest, the executive director of the International Spy Museum in Washington, who matched wits with the KGB as a CIA operative for over three decades, shared this assessment. “They are as important today as they ever were, if not more,” he said. “Russia has not eased off at all on its espionage activities.” The SVR is widely suspected to have played a role in the assassination of ex-spy Alexander Litvinenko in London last year. Putin has denied this allegation and lauded the SVR as “one of the most professional and effective special services.” In reality, the intelligence services have emerged as one of the most powerful political groups in Putin’s Russia, and ex-KGB agents occupy many of the Kremlin’s key positions. As the Russian saying goes, “There’s no such thing as an ex-Chekist.”


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FREDERIC J. BROWN/AFP/Getty ImagesMinistry of State Security

Country: China

Area of expertise: Industrial espionage and data analysis, domestic security

Activities: The MSS is close in structure to the old Soviet KGB and is responsible for both domestic security and foreign espionage. Its overseas activities are believed to be focused aggressively on the United States, particularly its high-tech industries and military technology. Rather than relying on a handful of agents, the MSS views almost anyone has a potential intelligence asset and gathers intelligence on new weapons systems painstakingly over time through personal contacts. “Chinese espionage is different than Western espionage,” says Earnest. “We go after a secret somewhere; they go after numbers. They collect little bits and pieces and put it together.” Sources often don’t even realize they’ve collaborated with a foreign spy mission, and the thousands of Chinese diplomats, students, and business people who travel to the West every year make spies incredibly difficult to detect. Through this method, the Chinese have managed to reverse engineer numerous U.S. weapons systems. China appears to be stepping up its espionage efforts in cyberspace as well. In September 2007, the Pentagon accused China of hacking into U.S. Defense Department databases. The governments of Germany and Britain have made similar accusations.


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Research and Analysis Wing

Country: India

Area of expertise: Destabilizing Pakistan

Activities: RAW was founded in 1968 specifically to counter Pakistani support of militant groups within India, but over the years it has grown into one of the world’s most formidable intelligence services, with wide-ranging activities in Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Bangladesh, and elsewhere. It is particularly active in Bangladesh, where it played a key role in that country’s movement for independence from Pakistan. Pakistani authorities often blame RAW for terrorist attacks in their country. Although these accusations tend to lack evidence, RAW does have a history of backing militant groups in Kashmir, Afghanistan, and Sri Lanka. Recent years have not been easy for RAW. In 1996, RAW was implicated in a scandal involving the illegal donation of funds to U.S. congressional campaigns. Stories about infiltration by U.S. and Chinese assets have become public scandals, and the media is now calling for greater transparency and oversight of the notoriously secretive agency.


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ROUF BHAT/AFP/Getty ImagesInter-Services Intelligence

Country: Pakistan

Area of expertise: Destabilizing India

Activities: Sometimes described as a state within a state with virtually no oversight, ISI is best known for the firm control it exercises over Pakistan’s politics and its role in protecting the military from domestic opposition. But the ISI has also been accused of playing both sides in the global war on terror—fighting Islamist extremists domestically while abetting them abroad. Whether spreading anti-Indian propaganda in Kashmir or funding Sikh separatists in Punjab, the ISI has consistently undermined India’s stability for decades. India has accused the ISI of involvement in dozens of terrorist attacks over the years, including the Mumbai bombings of 2006 that killed 187 people. At the same time, the ISI has worked with the U.S. and allies to combat al Qaeda and the Taliban inside Pakistan.


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ROUF BHAT/AFP/Getty ImagesSecret Intelligence Service (MI6)

Country: Britain

Area of expertise: Counterterrorism, James Bond nostalgia

Activities: After a decade of budget cuts during the “peace dividend” years following the Cold War, Her Majesty’s secret service was caught somewhat unprepared for the challenges of the war on terror. On 9/11, only 30 of MI6’s 1,600 agents were working on counterterrorism. Since then, the agency has been on an all-out recruitment blitz that includes previously unheard of measures, such as taking out ads in newspapers and allowing agents to grant interviews. (Among the fun facts revealed: There really is a person called “Q” who designs gadgets, just like in the James Bond films, but “M” is actually called “C.”) MI6 has also taken out ads in online spy-themed computer games such as “Tom Clancy’s Splinter Cell.” This is a far cry from the Cold War era, when undercover recruiters surreptitiously singled out Oxford and Cambridge’s best and brightest for intelligence work. Despite the charm offensive, MI6 has been attacked in the British media for allegedly participating in CIA-organized “rendition” of terrorism suspects to be tortured abroad. Kremlin officials have also accused MI6 of trying to influence Russia’s domestic politics. MI6’s activities may not be as expansive as they once were, but Earnest characterizes this as “a shift in priorities” toward Middle Eastern terrorism, “rather than a decline.”


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The Mossad

Country: Israel

Area of expertise: Combating Islamist terrorism, evacuating Jewish refugees

Activities: “We’re all students of the Mossad,” says Earnest. Since it was founded in 1951, “the Institute,” as it translates in English, has acquired a reputation for extraordinary skill and aggressiveness in combating Israel’s enemies. Some of its notable achievements include the abduction of Nazi leader Adolf Eichmann from Argentina in 1960, the assassination of the planners of the 1972 Munich Olympics killings, and the assassination of a senior Hamas operative with an exploding cellphone in 1996. The Mossad has also been active over the years in efforts to assist Jewish refugees who seek to immigrate to Israel, including the secret airlifting of thousands of Ethiopian Jews in “Operation Moses” in 1984. The Mossad made some moves toward greater transparency and openness in the 1990s, including revealing the name of its director for the first time, but under Ariel Sharon it turned back toward the clandestine operations for which it is best known. Reports indicate that the Mossad may have had either an agent or an informant at the Syrian military installation that Israel bombed in September 2007.

the list of the agencies (spy)

Home World Wide Intelligence (and defense) Agencies
Here are the web site of MANY official intelligence agencies from many different countries around the world. Many of the links give direct access to the English version of the web site, unless it does not exist. Enjoy!
Global Intelligence Agencies

OECD Financial Action Task Force on Money Laundering (FATF)
International Criminal Police Organization - INTERPOL
NATO - North Atlantic Treaty Organization
USA Intelligence Agencies

Dept. of Homeland Security

National Counter Intelligence Executive

Central Intelligence Agency (CIA)

National Security Agency (NSA)

National Reconnaissance Office (NRO)

National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency

Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA)

Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)

Coast Guard Intelligence

Air Force Intelligence

Army Intelligence

Navy Intelligence

The Secret Service

Australia/Oceania

Australian Secret Intelligence Service

Australian Secret Intelligence Organization

Australian Federal Police

Australian Protective Service (APS)

Indonesia - State Intelligence Agency (BIN)

New Zealand Security Intelligence Service
New Zealand Police
Canada

Security Intelligence Review Committee

Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS)

Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP)

Criminal Intelligence Service Canada (CSIC)

United Kingdom

MI5

Secret Intelligence Service (SIS)

National Criminal Intelligence Service

Metropolitan Police [Scotland Yard]

Office of Surveillance Commissioners

GCHQ- Government Communications Headquarters

UK Home Office - Terrorism

European Intelligence Agencies

Belgium Military Intelligence and Security Service

Croatia National Security Office

Czech Republic Security Information Service (BIS)

Danish Intelligence Service Politiets Efterretningstjeneste (PET)

Estonia Security Police Board

Finish Security Police

France DGSE - General Directorate for External Security

France DAS - Délégation aux Affaires Stratégiques (Delegation of Strategic Affairs)

German - The Federal Intelligence Service (BND)

German - Military Intelligence Services (MAD)

German - Office for the Protection of the Constitution (BFV)

Greece - National Intelligence Service

Hungarian National Security Office

Hungarian Information Agency

Hungarian Military Intelligence Office

Italy - Italian Intelligence Community

Netherlands - General Intelligence and Security Service (AIVD)

Netherlands - Military Intelligence and Security Service (MIVD)

Norway - National Police Security Service

Norwegian Intelligence Service

Poland - Government Intelligence Community

Poland - Foreign Intelligence Community

Portugal Intelligence System

Portugal - Security Intelligence Service

Romanian - Intelligence Service (SRI)

Romanian - Foreign Intelligence Service (SIE)

Serbian - Security Intelligence Agency

Slovenian Intelligence and Security Agency

Spain - National Intelligence Center (CNI)

Sweden - Military Intelligence and Security Service (MUST)

Swedish Security Police (SAPO)

Sweden - SIGINT Intelligence Organization (FRA)

Switzerland - Strategic Intelligence Service (SIS)

Switzerland - Federal Office of Police

Ukraine - National Security Services

Central and South America

Argentina - Federal Police

Argentina - National Gendarmerie

Brazil - Brazilian Intelligence Agency (ABIN)

Colombia - Administrative Department of Security (DAS)

Mexico - Center for Research on National Security (CISEN)

Mexico - Secretariat of National Defense (SEDENA)

Mexico - Secretariat of the Navy (SM)

Mexico - Secretariat of Foreign Relations (SRE)

Mexico - Secretariat of Public Security (SSP)

Mexico - Attorney General of the Republic (PGR)

Mexico - Federal District Judicial Police (PJDF)
Peru - Consejo Nacional de Inteligencia (National Intelligence Council)
African Intelligence

South Africa - South African Secret Service

South Africa - Department of Defense

South Africa - National Intelligence Agency

South Africa - Police Services

China

China - Ministry of Public Security

Japan

Japan - Cabinet Office

Japan - Cabinet Secretariat

Japan - Public Security Intelligence Agency

Japan - Defense Facilities Administration Agency

Japan - Ground Self Defense Force

Japan - Defense Agency

Japan - Maritime Self-Defense Force

Japan - Air Self Defense Force

Japan - National Police Agency

Japan - National Public Safety Commission

Japan - Ministry of Foreign Affairs

Japan - Ministry of Justice

Japan - Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry

Japan - Japanese External Trade Organization

South Korea

Korea - Ministry of National Defense

Korea - Defense Security Command

Korea - Central Intelligence Agency

Korea - National Police Agency

Korea- Presidential Security Services

Korea - National Intelligence Services

Philippines

Philippines - National Intelligence Coordinating Agency

Philippines - Army

Philippines - Department of National defense

Philippines - Air Force

Philippines - Navy

Philippines - National Police

Philippines - Marine Corps

Philippines - Armed Forces

Taiwan

Taiwan - Ministry of National Defense

Taiwan - National Security Bureau

Taiwan - National Police Administration

Taiwan - Investigation Bureau

India

India - Cabinet Secretariat

India - Ministry of External Affairs

India - Armed Forces

India - Army

India - Navy

India - Air Force

India - Coast Guard

India - Ministry of Home Affairs

India - Central Bureau of Investigation

India - Central Reserve Police Force

India - Central Security Industrial Force

India - Border Security Force

India - Narcotics Control Bureau

Pakistan

Pakistan - National Accountability Bureau

Pakistan - Ministry of Defense

Pakistan - Ministry of Interior

Pakistan - Ministry of Narcotics Control

Russia

Russia - Foreign Intelligence Services (SVR)

Russia - Federal Security Services (FSB)

Russia - FSB Voronej Oblast Website

Russia - Interlinked System for Recognizing Enemies (SOUD)

Middle East

Israel - Mossad: Institute for Intelligence and Special Task

Israel - Shabak: Security Services

Israel - Aman: Military Intelligence

Israeli Foreign Ministry Official Homepage

Jordan - General Intelligence Department

Turkey - National Intelligence Organization (MIT)