enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Stasi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stasi

    The British Broadcasting Corporation noted that KGB officer (and future Russian President) Vladimir Putin worked in Dresden, from 1985 to 1989, as a liaison officer to the Stasi from the KGB. [14] Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov responded to the reports by stating that 'The KGB and the Stasi were partner intelligence agencies'.

  3. Super spy or paper pusher? How Putin's KGB years in East ...

    www.aol.com/news/super-spy-paper-pusher-putins...

    The opposite is true at the former Dresden Stasi headquarters, less than 100 yards away across a busy thoroughfare. The complex is now a museum and memorial to Stasi victims, with dank cellblocks ...

  4. Russian espionage in Germany - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russian_espionage_in_Germany

    The KGB had also broken into Bahr's apartment and bugged it. Willy Brandt's government later collapsed as a result of the Guillaume affair. [14] A new partnership agreement between the Stasi and the KGB was agreed between Erich Mielke and Yuri Andropov on December 6, 1973. The specific objectives named were: combating "ideological subversion ...

  5. Mass surveillance in East Germany - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mass_surveillance_in_East...

    The Stasi kept files on about 5.6 million people. [9] The Stasi had 90,000 full-time employees who were assisted by 170,000 full-time unofficial collaborators (Inoffizielle Mitarbeiter); together these made up 1 in 63 (nearly 2%) of the entire East German population. Together with these, a much larger number of occasional informers brought up ...

  6. Matthias Warnig - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matthias_Warnig

    [12] [13] [c] [d] Warnig allegedly worked with KGB officer Vladimir Putin. [4] [18] [19] [e] [f] The two men collaborated on recruiting West German citizens for the KGB. [7] Warnig, however, has denied this by saying that they met for the first time in 1991, when Putin was the head of the Committee for External Relations of the Saint Petersburg ...

  7. Stasi Records Agency - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stasi_Records_Agency

    The Stasi Records Agency (German: Stasi-Unterlagen-Behörde) was the organisation that administered the archives of Ministry of State Security (Stasi) of the former German Democratic Republic (East Germany). It was a government agency of the Federal Republic of Germany. It was established when the Stasi Records Act came into force on 29 ...

  8. Erich Mielke - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erich_Mielke

    [4] Following the end of World War II in 1945, Mielke returned to the Soviet Zone of Occupied Germany, which he helped organize into a Marxist–Leninist satellite state under the Socialist Unity Party (SED). [5] The Stasi under Mielke has been called by historian Edward Peterson the "most pervasive police state apparatus ever to exist on ...

  9. Main Directorate for Reconnaissance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Directorate_for...

    The Main Directorate for Reconnaissance [2] (German: Hauptverwaltung Aufklärung; German: HVA, German pronunciation: [haːfaʊ̯ˈaː] ⓘ) was the foreign intelligence service of the Ministry of State Security (Stasi), the main security agency of the German Democratic Republic (East Germany), from 1955 to 1990.