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Secret police

From Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The first page of Beria's notice (oversigned by Stalin and other high-ranking Politburo members), to kill approximately 25,000 Polish officers and intellectuals in the Katyn Forest and other places in the Soviet Union

A secret police force is an agency most often used in dictatorships. It is used to scare people living under a dictatorship into agreeing with the dictator's policies. Not all dictatorships, however, use a secret police force. Fidel Castro's Cuba and Mao Zedong's China were able to maintain a dictatorship without using secret police.[source?]

Historical secret police agencies

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Secret police agencyNationExisted fromState leader
Cheka / OGPU / NKVD / KGB [1][2]U.S.S.R.1917–1946Vladimir Lenin / Joseph Stalin
GestapoThird Reich1933–1945Adolf Hitler
StasiEast Germany (DDR)1950–1990Walter Ulbricht / Erich Honecker (1971–89)
OVRAItaly1927–1943Benito Mussolini
DINA / CNIChile1973–1990Augusto Pinochet
State Security DepartmentNorth Korea1948–present [3]Kim dynasty (North Korea)

References

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  1. The chronology of the Soviet secret police agencies is very complicated. Listed here are examples up to 1946. The series continues postwar as the MGB and KGB.
  2. Andrew, Christopher and Mitrokhin, Vasili 2000. The sword and the shield: the Mitrokhin Archive and the secret history of the KGB. N.Y. Basic Books. ISBN 0-465-00312-5, ISBN 978-0-465-00312-9
  3. Though still in existance, the set-up is clearly based on the Soviet model.