Everything about The Securitate totally explained
The
Securitate (
Romanian for
Security; official full name
Departamentul Securităţii Statului,
State Security Department), was the
secret police force of
Communist Romania. Previously the
Romanian secret police was called
Siguranţa statului (Safety of the State). Founded on
August 30,
1948, with help from the
Soviet NKVD, the Securitate was abolished in December 1989, shortly after
President Nicolae Ceauşescu was ousted.
The Securitate was, in proportion to Romania's population, one of the largest and most brutal secret police forces in the
Eastern bloc. The first budget of the Securitate in 1948 stipulated a number of 4,641 positions, of which 3,549 were filled by February 1949. By 1951, the Securitate's staff had increased fivefold, while in January 1956, the Securitate had 25,468 employees. Under the regime of Nicolae Ceauşescu, the Securitate employed some 11,000 agents and a half-million informers.)
History
Founding
The General Direction for the Security of the People (Romanian initials: DGSP, but more commonly just called the Securitate) was officially founded on
August 30,
1948 by Decree 221/30 of the Presidium of the
Great National Assembly.
Initially, many of the agents of the Securitate were former
Royal Security Police (named
General Directorate of Safety Police—
Direcţia Generală a Poliţiei de Siguranţă in Romanian) members. However, before long, Pantiuşa ordered anyone who had served the monarchy's police in any capacity arrested, and in the places of the Royal Security Policemen, he hired ardent members of the
Communist Party, to ensure total loyalty within the organisation.
The first budget of the Securitate in 1948 stipulated a number of 4,641 positions, out of which on
February 11,
1949, 3,549 were filled: 64% were
workers, 4%
peasants, 28%
clerks, 2% persons of unspecified origin, and 2%
intellectuals.
The National Commission for Visas and Passports controlled all travel and emigration in and out of Romania. In effect, emigration was impossible for anyone but highly placed Party officials, as any normal Romanian who applied for it would immediately be placed under surveillance. Many Jews and Germans were given passports and exit visas through tacit agreements with the Israeli and West German governments, whereby Romania would receive a payment of 5 to 10 thousand USD per exit visa. Regular people who were not Jewish, German, Baptist, or highly placed Party Members were also able to apply for emigration to the West. The drawback was that the average waiting period was 3 to 4 years between an application to emigrate was filed and until a Romanian passport was issued. This waiting period amounted to nothing more than a light prison sentence as applicants would be immediately fired from their jobs, thus deprived of their right to earn a living, and were subject to harassment by Securitate personnel. When laws related to travel abroad were relaxed in 1988, 40,000 Romanians went to Hungary refusing to return home.
Methodology
In the
1980s, the Securitate launched a massive campaign to stamp out dissent in Romania, manipulating the country's population with vicious
rumors (such as supposed contacts with
Western intelligence agencies),
machinations,
frameups, public
denunciations, encouraging conflict between segments of the population, public humiliation of dissidents, toughened
censorship and the repression of even the smallest gestures of independence by intellectuals. Often the term "intellectual" was used by the Securitate to describe dissidents with higher education, such as University or College students, writers, directors and scientists who opposed the philosophy of the Communist party. For example, assassinations were also used to silence dissent, with the attempt to kill high-ranking defector
Ion Mihai Pacepa being well known among intelligence officials. In the 1980s, Securitate officials hired
Carlos the Jackal to assassinate Pacepa, but the attempt failed.
Forced entry into
homes and
offices and the planting of microphones was another tactic the Securitate used to extract information from the general population. Telephone conversations were routinely monitored, and all internal and international fax and telex communications were intercepted. Securitatea's methods were largely similar to those of the
Stasi and the
KGB and often similar technology was used in accomplishing the tasks needed.
Downfall
The Securitate was abolished in late 1989, after the Communist dictator
Nicolae Ceauşescu was ousted.
Until 2005 it was generally accepted that to the very end of Nicolae Ceauşescu's rule, the Securitate was fiercely loyal to the government. Allegations were also made that at a speech by Ceauşescu to a handpicked crowd of 100,000, the Securitate opened fire on the defenceless crowd after some anti-Ceauşescu shouts were heard.
However, articles published in Romanian newspapers after the post-communist leader
Ion Iliescu ended his second presidential mandate suggest that large segments of the Securitate were actually involved in Ceauşescu's fall. This is a theory supported by the fact that there was a strong anti-Ceauşescu movement in the Securitate (see
Ion Mihai Pacepa).
Today a number of millionaires in Romania are suspected or confirmed to have been high-ranking members or collaborators of the Securitate.
The DSS lived on until 1991 when Parliament approved a law reorganizing the DSS into a few special and secret services like the SRI (
Romanian Intelligence Service) (with internal tasks such as counterespionage), the SIE (
Foreign Intelligence Service), the SPP (
Protection and Guard Service) (the former Directorate V), the STS (
Special Telecommunications Service) (the former General Directorate for Technical Operations), etc.
Subdivisions
General Directorate for Technical Operations
The
General Directorate for Technical Operations was a key part of the Securitate. Created with Soviet assistance in
1954, it monitored all voice and electronic
communications in and out of Romania. They bugged
telephones and intercepted all
telegraphs and
telex messages, as well as placing
microphones in both public and private buildings. Nearly all conversations conducted in Communist Romania would be listened to by this department.
Directorate for Counterespionage
The
Directorate for Counterespionage surveyed all foreigners in Romania, and did their utmost to impede contact between foreigners and Romanians. Contact that was impossible to stop was instead monitored. It enforced a variety of measures to prevent Romanians living with foreign nationals, one of these being the requirement to report any known foreigners to the Securitate within 24
hours. This Directorate also stopped Romanians seeking
asylum in foreign
embassies.
Directorate for Penitentiaries
The
Directorate for Penitentiaries operated Romania's prisons, which were notorious for their horrendous conditions. Prisoners were routinely
beaten, denied
medical attention, had their
mail taken away from them, and sometimes even administered lethal doses of
poison.
Directorate for Internal Security
The
Directorate for Internal Security was originally charged for ensuring proper activity going on in the PCR. But after Ion Mihai Pacepa's defection in 1978 and claims to expose details of Ceauşescu's regime, such as collaboration with Arab terrorists, massive espionage on American industry and elaborate efforts to rally Western political support, international infiltration and espionage in the Securitate only increased, much to the infuration of Ceauşescu. In order to solve this problem the entire Division was reorganized and was charged with rooting out dissent in the Communist Party itself. It almost acted as a Securitate for the Securitate, and was responsible for bugging the phones of other Securitate officers to ensure total loyalty.
National Commission for Visas and Passports
The
National Commission for Visas and Passports controlled all
travel and
emigration in and out of Romania. In effect, emigration was impossible for anyone but highly placed Party officials, as any normal Romanian who applied for it would immediately be placed under surveillance. Many Jews and Germans were given passports and exit visas through tacit agreements with the Israeli and West German governments, whereby Romania would receive a payment of 5 to 10 thousand
USD per exit visa. Regular people who were not Jewish, German, Baptist, or highly placed Party Members were also able to apply for emigration to the West. The drawback was that the average waiting period was 3 to 4 years between an application to emigrate was filed and until a Romanian passport was issued. This waiting period amounted to nothing more than a light prison sentence as applicants would be immediately fired from their jobs, thus deprived of their right to earn a living, and were subject to harassment by Securitate personnel. When laws related to travel abroad were relaxed in
1988, 40,000 Romanians went to
Hungary refusing to return home.
Directorate for Security Troops
The
Directorate for Security Troops acted as a 20,000 strong
paramilitary force for the government, equipped with
artillery and
armoured personnel carriers. They guarded
television and
radio stations, and Party buildings. To ensure total loyalty amongst these crack troops, there were five times as many
political officers in the Directorate for Security Troops than there were in the regular
army. In the event of a
coup, this Directorate would be called in to protect the regime. Security troops enjoyed special treatment, and often lived in far superior conditions to their countrymen.
After the
Revolution, the Directorate for Security Troops was disbanded and replaced first by the Guard and Order Troops (
Trupele de Pază şi Ordine), and in July 1990 by the
Gendarmerie.
Directorate for Militia
The
Directorate for Militia controlled Romania's standard
police force, carried out tasks such as
traffic control. In 1990 it was replaced by the
Romanian Police.
Directorate V
Directorate V were
bodyguards for important governmental officials.
Further Information
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