Thursday, September 20, 2018

Bulgarian Secret Service 7

Bulgarian Secret Service 7 --- ===


Bulgarian Secret Service 7 was Bulgaria's secret Cold War "Service 7" long denied by officials was set up in 1963 to   kidnap discredit and  "execute death sentences" on emigre opponents to the Communist regime. By 1972 it was engaged in at least ten covert operations against dissident Bulgarians who had fled Communism and settled in Italy, Britain, Denmark, West Germany, Turkey, France, Ethiopia, Sweden and Switzerland. (1)  In the most famous case on 7 September 1978, Georgi Markov was assassinated on a London street via a micro-engineered pellet containing ricin, fired into his leg from an umbrella wielded by an agent of the Bulgarian Secret Service with help from the Soviet KGB (3)


*Footnotes 

  • (1) Bulgaria's 'murder bureau' targetted emigre dissidents - EUobserver  https://euobserver.com/news/30560  Jul 30, 2010  long before the notorious assassination of writer Georgi Markov in London in 1978, it can be revealed.
  • (2) Bulgaria set up secret unit set up to 'execute' opponents - Telegraph  Jul 30, 2010 - A secret Bulgarian unit known as "Service 7" was set up to "execute death sentences" on opponents to the Communist regime, secret files show. ... The existence of the death squad, long denied by former officials, came to light after Alexenia Dimitrova, a Bulgarian journalist ...
  • (3) Rózsa, L.; Nixdorff, K. (2006). "Biological Weapons in Non-Soviet Warsaw Pact Countries". In Wheelis, M.; Rózsa, L.; Dando, M. Deadly Cultures: Biological Weapons since 1945. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. pp. 157–168. ISBN 0-674-01699-8.
*Wikipedia 

Committee for State Security - Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Committee_for_State_Security
The Committee for State Security (BulgarianКомитет за държавна сигурностKomitet za dǎržavna sigurnost; abbreviated КДС, CSS, KDS), popularly known as State Security (Държавна сигурност, Darzhavna sigurnost; abbrievated ДС, DS) was the name of the Bulgarian secret service during the Communist rule of Bulgaria and the Cold War, until 1989.

Structure[edit]

Activity[edit]

In 1964, the State Security formed Service 7, led by Colonel Petko Kovachev, dedicated to murder, kidnapping, and disinformation against Bulgarian dissidents living abroad. The unit executed actions against dissidents in Italy, Britain, Denmark, West Germany, Turkey, France, Ethiopia, Sweden, and Switzerland. Documents describing its activities were declassified in 2010.[1]
State Security played an active part in the so-called "Revival Process" to Bulgarianize the Bulgarian Turks in the 1980s, as well as writer and dissident Georgi Markov's 1978 murder on Waterloo Bridge in London known for the "Bulgarian umbrella" that was used.
An issue the international community often raises is State Security's alleged control of the weapons, drugs, alcohol, cigarettes, gold, silver, and antiques traffic through Bulgaria before 1989.[citation needed] It is popularly thought that organised crime in the country in the 1990s was set up by former State Security agents.[2]
The agency is often incriminated with the ill-famed murder of dissident writer Georgi Markov and was formerly accused of the 1981 attempt on Pope John Paul II's life. Bulgaria has always sharply criticized and denied the latter allegation. In a 2002 visit, the Pontiff cleared Bulgaria of any involvement.
In 2018, declassified documents of the Communist Bulgaria revealed a plan to foment crisis between Turkey and Greece in 1971. The operation codenamed "Cross" and the plan was that Bulgarian secret agents would set fire on the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople and make it look like the work of Turks. The declassified documents state that “An intervention” in the religious entity would have “significantly damage[d] Turkish-Greek relations and force[d] the United States to choose one side in the ensuing crisis,”. In addition, the Bulgarians also planned to boost the effect of its operation against Greece and Turkey by conducting “active measures" “for putting the enemy in a position of delusion." The plan was developed by the 7th Department of the First Main Directorate of the DS, and was affirmed by Deputy Head of the Directorate on November 16, 1970, and approved by its Head. The operation was supposed to be prepared by the middle of 1971 and then executed, but it was abandoned.[3][4]

Legacy[edit]

The secret files of the DS have been a source of great controversy in the country. After the communist regime in the country collapsed, newly established democratic forces accused the former communist elite of secretly removing DS files that could compromise its members. In 2002, former Interior Minister Gen. Atanas Semerdzhiev was found guilty of razing 144,235 files from the DS archives. Others have accused the DS of infiltrating the young opposition.
On 5 April 2007 Bulgarian parliament appointed a special Committee for disclosing the documents and announcing affiliation of Bulgarian citizens to the State Security and the intelligence services of the Bulgarian National Army (or ComDos). It began checking persons who once held or still hold public positions to establish any affiliation. Regular reports are delivered to the parliament and all disclosures are made public on the Committee website and in special publications.[5]

See also[edit]

References[edit]



*Sources




'Murder Bureau': Department of Murders existed in Bulgaria - EurActiv
https://www.euractiv.com/.../murder-bureau-department-of-murders-existed-in-bulgar...
Sep 1, 2010 - The Bulgarian state security services once had a top-secret special bureau ... Cold War clandestine structure was called 'Service 7'. It began ...

Bulgarian Journalists Search the Files of the Former State Security ...
https://unredacted.com/.../bulgarian-journalists-search-the-files-of-the-former-state-sec...
Jul 14, 2010 - In Bulgaria, The Dossier Act (officially The Law for Access and ... The rare records reveal the existence of the super-secret “Service 7”, ...


Secret Police of Communist Bulgaria Was Not Part of Soviet KGB ...
https://www.novinite.com/.../Secret+Police+of+Communist+Bulgaria+Was+Not+Part+...
Sep 28, 2009 - The Bulgarian communist-era secret police, the so called "State Security" (DS) was closely related to, but was not a part of the notorious Soviet ...

Julia Kristeva was communist secret agent, Bulgaria claims | World ...
https://www.theguardian.com/.../julia-kristeva-communist-secret-agent-bulgaria-claimsMar 28, 2018 - The renowned Bulgarian psychoanalyst and philosopher Julia Kristeva worked as an agent and collaborator with the Balkan country's secret ...


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