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Presidential Security Service (Russia)

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Presidential Security Service of Russia
Служба безопасности президента России
Common namePresidential Security Service
AbbreviationSBP
Agency overview
FormedNovember 11, 1993
(27 years ago)
Preceding agency
Employees2,500
Annual budgetClassified
Jurisdictional structure
Federal agencyRUS
Operations jurisdictionRUS
Governing bodyFederal Protective Service (Russia)
Constituting instrument
  • Law On State Protection
General nature
Operational structure
HeadquartersThe Kremlin, Moscow
Agency executive
  • Alexey Rubezhnoy, Commander
Parent agencyFederal Protective Service, FSO
Child agency
  • Psychological Analysis Directorate
Notables
Anniversary
  • November 11

The Presidential Security Service (SBP) (Template:Lang-ru) is a federal government agency concerned with the tasks related to the protection of the President of Russia and the Prime Minister of Russia with their respective families and residences. It traces its origin to the USSR's Ninth Chief Directorate of the KGB, and in the beginning, it was led by KGB general Alexander Korzhakov.

Structure and command

The Russian Presidential Security Service is a branch of the FSO that is concerned with protection of the President and the Prime Minister of Russia.

From 2000 to 2013, the position of the head of the agency was held by the General Viktor Zolotov. Presidential Protection Service had about 2,500 personnel in 2007, as suggested by a publication in the Western press.[1]

Psychological Security Dept.

The Psychological Security Department is the Intelligence branch of SBP who is responsible for analyzing information collected about the security threats to the life of the president. The Department mixes several selected intelligence experts from the Military Intelligence, Federal Internal Security and the Foreign Intelligence into one branch.

Heads of Presidential Security Service

See also

References

  1. ^ Cooper, Julian (2007-12-20). "The Funding of the Power Agencies of the Russian State". The Journal of Power Institutions in Post-Soviet Societies. Pipss.org (in French) (6/7). doi:10.4000/pipss.562. ISSN 1769-7069.