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Documents

January 11, 1961

Information from MVR Inspectorate on Yugoslav Intelligence Services Against Bulgaria

The Ministry of Internal Affairs reports its intelligence findings on the activities of the Yugoslav intelligence services against Bulgaria. Working both from home and in-country, the Yugoslav intelligence is allegedly trying to gather information on a broad set of issues – ranging from trade relations within Comecon, to Bulgaria’s military capacity and its potential to pose a threat to Yugoslav Macedonia.

October 27, 1966

Bulgarian State Security Report on Penetration within Enemy Intelligence Centers

February 6, 1969

Bulgarian State Security Plan for Operational Measures toward Yugoslav, Romanian, and Czechoslovak Military Attaches

February 23, 1978

Ministerial Order on Organization of Counterintelligence Work Against Hostile Emigration

June 10, 1980

Meeting of the Collegium Bulgarian Ministry of the Interior on Operational Situation in Connection with the 1300 Anniversary of the Bulgarian State

November 23, 1982

Shorthand Protocol of a Bulgarian Ministry of the Interior Leadership Meeting on Turkish issue

January 24, 1984

Bulletin No 4 Bulgarian Ministry of the Interior on Subversive Activities of the Imperialist Countries Against Bulgaria

March 9, 1984

Bulgarian Ministry of the Interior Information on Results from System Improvement for Detection of RYAN Indications

May 3, 1984

Shorthand Protocol of the Bulgarian Ministry of the Interior Leadership Meeting on Turkish issue

June 2007

The Operational Situation as Reported in 1971, 1975, and 1981. Folder 35. The Chekist Anthology.

In folder 35 Mitrokhin discusses the KGB’s assertion of an increase in domestic dissent and unrest in the 1970s and early 1980s as well as the methods the KGB utilized to combat this threat. Soviet intelligence believed that this increase in domestic unrest was due primarily to an increased effort by the United States and its allies to promote internal instability within the USSR. In response, the KGB continued to screen foreigners, increased the harshness of penalties for distribution of anti-Soviet literature, and monitored the activities and temperament of nationalists, immigrants, church officials, and authors of unsigned literature within the Soviet Union. Mitrokhin’s note recounts the KGB’s assertion that foreign intelligence agencies were expanding their attempts to create domestic unrest within the USSR. These activities included the support and creation of dissidents within the Soviet Union, the facilitation of the theft Soviet property such as aircrafts, and the public espousal of a position against Soviet persecution of dissidents and Jews. Responding to public exposure of these activities, the KGB proclaimed its legality and trustworthiness while also beginning to assign some agents verbal assignments without written record.

Pagination