Foreign Intelligence Agency Explained

Agency Name:Foreign Intelligence Agency
Nativename:Polish: Agencja Wywiadu
Formed:29 June 2002
Preceding1:Polish: [[Urząd Ochrony Państwa]]
Jurisdiction:Government of Poland
Headquarters:Miłobędzka St., Warsaw
Minister1 Name:Donald Tusk
Minister1 Pfo:Prime Minister
Minister2 Name:Marcin Kierwiński
Minister2 Pfo:Minister - Coordinator of Special Forces
Chief1 Name:Col. Bartosz Jarmuszkiewicz[1]
Chief1 Position:Head
Chief2 Name:Col. Dominik Duda
Chief2 Position:Deputy Head
Chief3 Name:Col. Anetta Maciejewska
Chief3 Position:Deputy Head
Website:https://aw.gov.pl/

The Foreign Intelligence Agency (Polish: Agencja Wywiadu (pronounced as /pl/; or Polish: AW) is a Polish intelligence agency tasked with the gathering of public and secret information abroad for the Republic of Poland.[2]

It was created in 2002 from the reform and split of Polish: [[Urząd Ochrony Państwa]], which was split into Polish: Agencja Wywiadu (Polish: AW) and Polish: [[Agencja Bezpieczeństwa Wewnętrznego]] (Polish: ABW).

Current Head of the Foreign Intelligence Agency is Colonel Bartosz Jarmuszkiewicz.[3]

Genesis

When the People's Republic of Poland ended in 1989, the new authorities faced the challenge of reforming the special services, which were viewed very negatively by most Poles.

In April 1990, a law was passed creating the Office of State Protection (UOP), which replaced the Departments I and II of the Ministry of Internal Affairs. This marked the abolition of the Security Service (SB). The UOP was a separate, neutral institution that was not part of the Ministry of the Interior, indicating the depoliticization of the intelligence services. The Office of State Protection was supervised by the Ministry of the Interior in terms of personnel policy, the general policy of the head of the UOP and its compliance with state policy. Even then, however, there was a realization that intelligence should rather be under the authority of foreign affairs. The reason why the separation of intelligence and counterintelligence had not yet been decided upon in 1990 was the costliness of such an undertaking.[4] [5]

Even before the 2002 Law came into effect and two separate agencies were established, the position of Head of the UOP had already become the subject of a constitutional dispute. Indeed, this function was entrusted to Zbigniew Siemiątkowski, who was both an MP and secretary of state. The dispute concerned the issue of combining the MP's mandate with other government employment. According to Article 103(1) of the Polish Constitution, this is prohibited. On the other hand, however, in the same place in the Polish Constitution, an exception to this rule appears, stating that members of the Council of Ministers and secretaries of state in government administration may sit in parliament. The Constitutional Court spoke on the matter, ruling in 2004 (after the 2002 reform) that giving the heads of the ABW and AW the rank of secretaries of state is unconstitutional, as it circumvents the prohibition on combining a parliamentary mandate with employment in government administration. According to the CT ruling, the only legal effect of conferring the rank of secretary of state is the possibility of combining the position of agency head with a parliamentary mandate.[6] [7] [8]

Roles

The Foreign Intelligence Agency usually operates out of the territory of the Republic of Poland. Its activity within the territory of the Republic of Poland may be conducted only within a limited scope, exclusively in connection with its activity out of the state's frontiers. The roles of the Foreign Intelligence Agency include:

Structure

The Foreign Intelligence Agency comprises the following organizational units:

  1. Bureau I
  2. Bureau II
  3. Bureau III
  4. Bureau IV
  5. Bureau V
  6. Bureau VI
  7. Bureau VII
  8. Bureau VIII
  9. Staff Training Centre
  10. Independent Legal Unit

However, the Head of the Foreign Intelligence Agency is authorized to form or appoint units of a permanent or ad hoc character (e.g. task units).[10]

Current management

List of heads

Tenure Name
2002–2004Zbigniew Siemiatkowski[11] [12]
2004–2005Andrzej Ananicz
2005–2008Zbigniew Nowek
2008–2008Andrzej Ananicz
2008–2015Maciej Hunia
2015–2016 Grzegorz Małecki
2016–2022Piotr Krawczyk
2022–presentBartosz Jarmuszkiewicz

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Leadership - Foreign Intelligence Agency . AW . 2023-03-12 .
  2. Web site: Tasks - Foreign Intelligence Agency .
  3. Web site: Nowy Szef Agencji Wywiadu - Służby Specjalne - Portal Gov.pl.
  4. R. Leśkiewicz. 2016. Dzieje Najnowsze. 1. 181–182. Od Służby Bezpieczeństwa do Urzędu Ochrony Państwa. 48.
  5. Kolaszyński M.. 2012. Politeja. 21. 299–300. Kształtowanie polskiego modelu cywilnych służb specjalnych w latach 1989–1990. 3. .
  6. Book: 2021-06-18. M. Kolaszyński. 2016. I. 978-83-233-4225-0. Kraków. 999609739. Status ustrojowy polskich służb specjalnych po 1989 roku.
  7. Web site: 2023-03-12. Establishment of the Foreign Intelligence Agency - The creation of the Foreign Intelligence Agency - Foreign Intelligence Agency. Agencja Wywiadu.
  8. Wyrok Trybunału Konstytucyjnego z dnia 20 kwietnia 2004 r. (K 45/02).
  9. Web site: Object of Activity and Tasks of the Foreign Intelligence Agency. 2011-12-05. https://web.archive.org/web/20120426023000/http://www.aw.gov.pl/eng/agencja/przedmiot-dzialania-agencji.html. 2012-04-26. dead.
  10. Web site: Organizational structure of the Foreign Intelligence Agency. 2011-12-05. https://web.archive.org/web/20120426023006/http://www.aw.gov.pl/eng/agencja/organizacja.html. 2012-04-26. dead.
  11. Web site: Warsaw Business Journal - Online Portal - wbj.pl. 2012-03-14. archive.fo. https://archive.today/20120314161723/http://www.wbj.pl/?command=article&id=22412&. 2012-03-14. live. 2019-04-28.
  12. Web site: Former Heads of the Foreign Intelligence Agency – Foreign Intelligence Agency. 2023-03-12.