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FAPSI

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Federal Agency of Government Communications and Information
ФАПСИ
Emblem of FAPSI
Flag of Federal agency of the governmental communication and the information
Agency overview
FormedDecember 24, 1991; 32 years ago (1991-12-24)
Preceding agency
  • 8th Main Directorate, 16th Directorate of the KGB of the USSR
DissolvedMarch 11, 2003; 21 years ago (2003-03-11)
Superseding agency
JurisdictionRussia
HeadquartersMoscow, Russia
EmployeesClassified
Annual budgetClassified
Agency executive
  • Vladimir Mitryukhin (1999-2003), General Director
Parent agencyThe Kremlin Staff
WebsiteOfficial page (not active)

FAPSI (Template:Lang-ru) or Federal Agency of Government Communications and Information (FAGCI) (Template:Lang-ru) was a Russian government agency, which was responsible for signal intelligence and security of governmental communications.

The present-day FAPSI successor agencies are the relevant departments of the Federal Security Service (FSB) and Foreign Intelligence Service (SVR) as well as the Spetssvyaz (part of the Federal Protective Service of the Russian Federation) (FSO RF).

History

Creation

FAPSI was created from the 8th Main Directorate (Government Communications) and 16th Directorate (Electronic Intelligence) of the KGB. It is the equivalent to the USA National Security Agency. On September 25, 1991, Soviet president Mikhail Gorbachev dismantled the KGB into several independent departments. One of them became the Committee on Government Communications under the President of Soviet Union. On December 24, 1991 after the disbanding of the Soviet Union the organization became the Federal Agency of Government Communications and Information under the President of Russian Federation.

Dissolution

On March 11, 2003 the agency was reorganized into the Service of Special Communications and Information (Spetssvyaz, Spetssviaz) (Template:Lang-ru) of the Federal Security Service of the Russian Federation (FSB RF). On August 7, 2004, Spetssviaz was incorporated as a structural sub unit of the Federal Protective Service of the Russian Federation (FSO RF).

Structure

According to the press, the structure of FAPSI copied the structure of the US National Security Agency, it includes:

  • Chief R&D Directorate (Главное научно-техническое управление)
  • Chief directorate of government communications
  • Chief directorate of security of communications
  • Chief directorate of information technology (Главное управление информационных систем)
  • Special troops of FAPSI
  • Academy of Cryptography
  • Military School of FAPSI in Voronezh, sometimes referred as the world largest hacker's school
  • Military school of communications in Orel
  • Moscow Department of Penza Scientific Research Electrotechnics Institute (МО ПНИЭИ), manufacturer of software and hardware used by the above agencies

Chiefs

16th Directorate of the KGB

  • Nikolai Nikolaevich Andreev (1968–1973)
  • Major-General Igor Vasilievich Maslov (1973–?)

Committee on Government Communications under President of Soviet Union

  • General A.V. Starovoitov (1991)

Federal Agency of Government Communications and Information

  • General A.V. Starovoitov (1991–1998)
  • Vladislav Petrovich Sherstyuk (1998–1999) – former chief of Radio-electronics intelligence department of the agency
  • Vladimir Georgievich Matykhin (1999–2003) – a civilian specialist on cryptography and data protection

Service of Special Communications and Information (FAPSI successor)

  • Yuri P. Kornev (2003–2010)
  • Aleksey Mironov (since 2010)

FAPSI and the Internet

FAPSI was always interested in monitoring of Internet activities.

In 1994 it bought major Russian internet provider of that time RELCOM. According to their explanation they were not interested in interception of the network traffic, but in Internet experience of the firm and in utilization of "FAPSI's excess computing power and network bandwidth".

In 1995 by decree of President Boris Yeltsin all cryptographic systems except those licensed by FAPSI were forbidden in the Russian Federation. There are widespread rumors that all systems licensed by FAPSI have backdoors allowing the agency to freely access the encrypted information.

Since 1998 they require that all Internet providers in Russia install their hardware named SORM (СОРМ – Система Оперативно-Розыскных Мероприятий, System of Operative Investigative Actions) that allows filtering and remote control of internet traffic from FAPSI headquarters. Internet providers must pay for the devices (around US$15,000[1]) directly to FAPSI. Despite the original resistance of Internet providers they complied. It is claimed, however, that no legal document requires ISPs to provide these services free of charge, and some people report that one large St. Petersburg ISP told FSB that it does not decline their request, but is going to bill them appropriately, for which this ISP never saw FSB come back.[2]

Mishaps of the agency

One of the tasks of the agency is to protect government websites from getting hacked. Sometime they fail to do it by a very simple scenario - the domain is not paid for in time and becomes a trophy of cybersquatting.

In January 2004 site the election site http://www.putin2000.ru registered personally for Vladimir Putin was not paid for in time and became a pornographic site. Eventually the site was closed down;[3] and as of May, 2008, it operates as a replica of the 2000 election site, with notices that all materials on this site are presented exactly as they appeared in March 2000.[4]

See also

References

English

Russian