Ministry of Internal Affairs III explained

Ministry of Internal Affairs III
Native Name:Belügyminisztérium III. Főcsoportfőnökség
Preceding1:State Protection Authority
Preceding2:Department II (Political Investigation Department), Ministry of Interior (1956-1962)
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Agency Type:Secret police
Jurisdiction:Hungary
Status:Disbanded after 1990
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Parent Agency:Ministry of Interior (Hungary)
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Department III of the Ministry of Internal Affairs (Hungarian: Belügyminisztérium III. Főcsoportfőnökség),[1] [2] also known as the State Security Department of the Ministry of Interior (Hungarian: Belügyminisztérium Állambiztonsági Szervek),[1] was the secret police of the Hungarian People's Republic after the State Protection Authority (AVH) was disbanded in 1956. The MIA III was called the AVH as a derogatory name due to the former replacing the latter in the Hungarian Revolution of 1956.

Archived data related to the AVH and MIA III are made available through the Historical Archives of the Hungarian State Security.[3]

For the most part, under the goulash Communism system Department III operated with somewhat more restraint than other secret police agencies in the Communist world, and certainly more so than the ÁVH. However, it was still a feared tool of government control.

History

The Ministry of Interior created Department II in order to replace the State Protection Authority in 1956 as the Political Investigation Department, which operated from 1956 to 1962.[4] The department was further reorganized under András Tömpe because of a scandal that involved a Hungarian military officer named Béla Lapusnyik, who sought asylum to the West through Austria in May 1962. From 1962 to 1964, the state security structure was reorganized with the renaming of the department as MIA III.[4]

According to a statement made by János Kenedi on January 1, 1971, the department had 3,975 staff members, with 242 members serving in the III/III Department.[5] The statement also mentioned that around 11,000 to 17,000 MIA III officers were also working in the department.[5]

In 1978, Section 261 of the Hungarian Criminal Code came into effect, providing legal measures against terrorism. In 1979, the department was instructed by the Hungarian Interior Ministry to work with the Rendőrség as terrorism was made a state security task. Department III/II-8 was tasked to take command of sections involved in fighting against terrorism, including Departments III/I, III/II, III/III and III/IV.

In the early 1980s reorganization of the entire state security apparatus took place as a response to the increasing number of tasks. Department III/I-8 was divided into Department III/II-9 and Department III/II-10. Department III/II-9 was tasked with warrants. Department III/II-10, which was formed from the former sub-departments III/II-8-B and C, was tasked with controlling tourism and terrorism, with counterterrorism being specifically the task of sub-department III/II-10-A. Department III/II-10 also worked with the Action Subsection of the Rendőrség to conduct periodic raids against Turkish and Arabic individuals suspected of terrorism, arresting, expelling, and initiating criminal procedures against them with the aim of forcing them from the country. By 1987, Ministry of the Interior agencies had compiled files on the Organization of International Revolutionaries (OIR), Abu Nidal Organization, Grey Wolves, and Muslim Brotherhood.

Hungarian authorities had mixed relations with terrorist groups in the 1980s. Various international terrorists found temporary refuge or attempted to establish bases of operation in Hungary in the 1970s and 80s, such as Basque, Turkish, Kurdish, Irish, and other groups, though they were surveilled. Some organizations were provided state support, such T-34 tanks and training given to the Palestinian Liberation Front in 1979, though its leader Muhammad Zaidan was forced out of Hungary after the Achille Lauro hijacking in 1985. Venezuelan terrorist Carlos the Jackal was allowed to operate from headquarters in Budapest during the early half of the 1980s, though state security closely surveilled him under confidential investigation C-79 and attempted to persuade him to leave.

After Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty's headquarters in Munich was bombed by Carlos on February 21, 1981,[6] and with pressure from the United States, MIA III worked with Czechoslovak and East German intelligence to curb Carlos' activities throughout Eastern Europe and eventually drive him and his group out of Hungary in 1985. MIA III was also involved in removing ANO's Hungarian base in 1986, likely due to pressure from the US, in confidential investigation N-86. The change from state tolerance to intolerance of terrorists during the 1980s was due to politics. As Hungary opened foreign relations with non-communist countries, including Israel, and pressure from the Soviet Union decreased, the threat of terrorism against Hungarians grew, as did the counterterrorism department. In 1989, it collaborated fully with Japanese and South Korean agencies in an investigation of the Japanese Red Army.

In January 1990, the department was disbanded.[4] The Military Intelligence Office and the Military Security Office were the first post-communist intelligence agencies to be created as the successor to MIA III.[7]

Structure

MIA III was organized in the Hungarian Interior Ministry with the following structure:[1] [5]

References

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Web site: https://web.archive.org/web/20210209190936/https://www.cryptomuseum.com/spy/hu.htm. Hungary. 2021-10-23. 2021-02-09. Crypto Museum.
  2. Web site: https://web.archive.org/web/20211023092353/http://www.coldwar.hu/publications/pol_trans.pdf. The Political Transition in Hungary, 1989-90. 2021-10-23. 2021-10-23. COLD WAR INTERNATIONAL HISTORY PROJECT BULLETIN.
  3. Web site: https://web.archive.org/web/20190914001839/http://www.archivportal.hu/en/archives-of-hungary/historical-archives-of-the-hungarian-state-security/. Historical Archives of the Hungarian State Security. Hungarian Archives Portal. 2021-10-23. 2019-09-14.
  4. Draft for Understanding the Historical Background of Changes in the Ideological Language and Communication of Secret Services in 20th Century's Hungary. 2021-10-23. Bela Revesz. International Journal for the Semiotics of Law - Revue Internationale de Sémiotique Juridique . 2020-08-11. 33 . 3 . 855–898 . 10.1007/s11196-020-09759-w . 225384316 .
  5. Web site: https://web.archive.org/web/20160302081111/www.hvg.hu/itthon/20050411tartotisztek. Állambiztonsági tisztek listája (1956-1989). 12 April 2005 . 2021-10-23. 2016-03-02. Hungarian. Heti Világgazdaság.
  6. Web site: 'RFE/RL Will Continue To Be Heard': Carlos the Jackal and The Bombing of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, February 21, 1981. 14 April 2020 . Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty. https://web.archive.org/web/20201030141038/https://pressroom.rferl.org/a/carlos-the-jackal-and-the-bombing-of-rfe-rl-munich-1981/30554421.html. 2020-10-30. 2021-10-23.
  7. Web site: https://web.archive.org/web/20191225081325/https://www.knbsz.gov.hu/en/history.html. Historical background. Military National Security Service. 2021-10-23. 2019-12-25.