State Intelligence Agency (Bulgaria) Explained

The State Intelligence Agency (SIA) is a Bulgarian foreign intelligence service, which obtains, processes, analyzes and provides the state leadership with intelligence, assessments, analyses and prognoses, related to the national security, interests and priorities of the Republic of Bulgaria.[1]

History

The history of intelligence agencies in Bulgaria can date back to 1925 when the Law on Administration & Police (Закона за администрацията и полицията, Zakona za Administracijata i Policijata) & the Police Directorate of the State Security Department set up a Foreign Policy Service (външнополитическа служба, Vohnšnopolitičeska služba). Foreign Policy Intelligence existed as from 1925-1990 as part of the Police Directorate (Дирекция на полицията) which existed from 1925-1944.[2]

In the wake of post-communist era the foreign/external intelligence activities, formerly carried out by the First Main Directorate of the Committee for State Security, were separated and consolidated in the National Intelligence Service. Reforms in the security sector in Bulgaria began as early as 1991; the period was characterized by the deep mistrust of the successors of the Communist-era services and by dismissal of several experienced officials on political grounds.[3] The passage from the Party-Interior-Defence architecture to the President-Prime Minister model led to a downgrading of efficiency. The National Intelligence Service was subordinated to the President:[4]

The Kosovo War was a milestone and a turning point for the Bulgarian foreign policy and for the intelligence community because of the great amount of practical co-operation with the major NATO countries and an unusual amount of information and intelligence sharing, although no formal contact was established. Alongside military and financial intelligence reform, a Security Council, subordinated to the Prime Minister, was created with the aim of coordinating the efforts of the whole of the intelligence community. On October 1, 2015 National Intelligence Service was transformed into State Intelligence Agency with the State Intelligence Agency Act, passed by the XLIII National Assembly.[5]

Mission

The State Intelligence Agency (SIA) is a security service, which obtains, processes, analyzes and provides the state leadership with intelligence, assessments, analyses and prognoses, related to the national security, interests and priorities of the Republic of Bulgaria. SIA is part of the intelligence community, defined in the National Security Strategy as a system of state bodies that provide information and analysis, assess the risks and threats to the national security, and plan and implement due countermeasures.

The Agency also takes part in the activities of the intelligence communities of the European Union (EU) and the North-Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO).

SIA cooperates with the other state institutions and structures that are part of the national security system, which perform functions in the sphere of diplomacy, defence, intelligence, counterintelligence, criminal investigation, law enforcement and security.

The mission of SIA is to protect the national security and the interests of the Republic of Bulgaria, but also to support the state leadership in their efforts to fulfill the national priorities, by providing the latest and most reliable intelligence and analysis of events and developments pertaining to the national security, foreign policy, economy and the safeguarding of the constitutional order.

To this end, SIA carries out intelligence operations and obtains, stores, summarizes, analyzes and provides intelligence information.

Intelligence information is any information, obtained by the Agency about foreign countries, organizations and individuals, or Bulgarian organizations and individuals related to these, which is of significance for the national security of the Republic of Bulgaria.

Different information materials – such as reports, analyses and briefings – are prepared on the basis of the acquired intelligence information and provided to the state leadership.

The Agency supplies intelligence information to the Speaker of the National Assembly; the President of the Republic; the Prime Minister and the Members of Cabinet; and other government agencies in accordance with their competence.

The Agency supplies intelligence reports, identical in volume and content to

the President of the Republic, the Speaker of the National Assembly and the Prime Minister.

SIA reports directly to the Council of Ministers, while it performs tasks set by the Prime Minister and by the President of the country, in consultation with the Prime Minister.

The Agency does not carry out assignments of domestic political nature.

SIA’s functions are:[6]

Priority areas of activity

Main tasks

Control

The activities of the State Intelligence Agency as part of the system of national security protection and the Agency’s Chairperson are subject to parliamentary, administrative, judicial and civil control under Article 21 of the Act on the Management and Functioning of the System of National Security Protection.[7]

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Home. State Intelligence Agency. 2018-01-29.
  2. https://translate.googleusercontent.com/translate_c?depth=1&hl=en&prev=search&rurl=translate.google.com&sl=bg&sp=nmt4&u=https://www.dar.bg/bg/for_us/znak-na-dar&usg=ALkJrhi0X5oERGzkb5RlFvpmngJs90i0Lw
  3. Web site: Bulgarian intelligence service and its reforms. Nikolow. Simeon. Research Institute for European and American Studies. 4 January 2016.
  4. Book: REFORMING THE INTELLIGENCE SERVICES IN BULGARIA. THE EXPERIENCE FROM THE LAST DECADE. Bozhilov. Nikolai. October 2002. GENEVA CENTRE FOR THE DEMOCRATIC CONTROL OF ARMED FORCES (DCAF). 3.
  5. News: Legal Basis. State Intelligence Agency. 2018-02-01.
  6. News: Mission. State Intelligence Agency. 2018-02-01.
  7. News: Control. State Intelligence Agency. 2018-02-01.