fbpx
Wikipedia

Intelligence Bureau (India)

The Intelligence Bureau (IB) (Hindi: आसूचना ब्यूरो; IAST: āsūcanā byūro) is India's internal security and counter-intelligence agency under Ministry of Home Affairs. It was founded in 1887 as Central Special Branch, and is reputed to be the oldest such organization in the world.[2][3]

Intelligence Bureau
आसूचना ब्यूरो
Insignia of Intelligence Bureau
Agency overview
Formedc. 1887 (1887)
HeadquartersNew Delhi, Delhi, India
Mottoजागृतं अहर्निशं (Sanskrit)
Jāgṛtaṃ Aharniśaṃ (ISO)
transl. "Always Alert"
Employees17,884
Annual budget3,418.32 crore (US$428.1 million)(2023–24)[1]
Minister responsible
Agency executive
Parent agencyMinistry of Home Affairs
Websitewww.mha.gov.in
125th Anniversary Postage Stamp (2013)

Until 1968, it handled both domestic and foreign intelligence after which Research and Analysis Wing was formed specifically for foreign intelligence following that IB was primarily assigned the role of domestic intelligence and internal security.[4] Tapan Deka, the current director of the IB, took over from Arvind Kumar on 24 June 2022.[5]

History

In 1885, Major General Charles MacGregor was appointed Quartermaster General for the British Indian Army at Simla and thereby became responsible for its intelligence activities. The main concern of the time was to monitor Russian troop deployments in Afghanistan so as to avoid an invasion of British India from the northwest.[citation needed]

Responsibilities

Shrouded in secrecy, the IB is used to garner intelligence from within India and also execute counter-intelligence and counter-terrorism tasks. The Bureau comprises employees from law enforcement agencies, mostly from the Indian Police Service (IPS) or the Indian Revenue Service (IRS) and the military. However, the Director of Intelligence Bureau (DIB) has always been an IPS officer. In addition to domestic intelligence responsibilities, the IB is particularly tasked with intelligence collection in border areas, following the 1951 recommendations of the Himmat Singh Ji Committee (also known as the North and North-East Border Committee), a task entrusted to the military intelligence organisations prior to independence in 1947. All spheres of human activity within India and in the neighborhood are allocated to the charter of duties of the Intelligence Bureau. The IB was also tasked with other external intelligence responsibilities as of 1951 until 1968, when the Research and Analysis Wing was formed.[6]

Activities and operations

The Intelligence Bureau reportedly has a lot of successes to its credit, but operations conducted by the IB are rarely declassified. Due to the extreme secrecy surrounding the agency, there is little concrete information available about it or its activities. The IB was trained by the Soviet KGB from the 1950s onward until the collapse of the Soviet Union. Understanding of the shadowy workings of the IB is largely speculative. Many times even members' own family members are unaware of their whereabouts. One known task of the IB is to clear licences to amateur radio enthusiasts. The IB also passes intelligence between other Indian intelligence agencies and the police. The bureau also grants the necessary security clearances to Indian diplomats and judges before they take the oath. On rare occasions, IB officers interact with the media during a crisis situation. The IB is also rumoured to intercept and open around 6,000 letters daily. It also has an email spying system similar to FBI's Carnivore system.[7] The bureau is authorised to conduct wiretapping without a warrant.[8]

The IB was initially India's internal and external intelligence agency. Due to lapses on the part of the Intelligence Bureau to predict the Sino-Indian War of 1962, and later on, intelligence failure in the India-Pakistan War in 1965, it was bifurcated in 1968 and entrusted with the task of internal intelligence only. The external intelligence branch was handed to the newly created Research and Analysis Wing.[9]

IB operated a counterintelligence programme to prevent the CIA from gathering information about the preparations and activities related to the Indian Nuclear weapons project before the Pokhran-II nuclear tests.[10]

IB had mixed success in counter-terrorism. It was reported in 2008 that the IB had been successful in busting terror modules. It alerted the police before the Hyderabad blasts and gave repeated warnings of a possible attack on Mumbai through the sea before the November 2008 Mumbai attacks. On the whole, however, the IB came in for some sharp criticism by the media after the relentless wave of terror attacks in 2008. The government came close to sacking top intelligence officials soon after 26/11 attacks because of serious lapses that led to the 2008 Mumbai attacks.[11] Heavy politics, under-funding and a shortage of field agents were the chief problems facing the agency. The overall strength of the agency is believed to be around 25,000, with 3500-odd field agents operating in the entire country. Of these, many were engaged in political intelligence.[12][13]

Since 2014, IB has undergone many reforms and changes. One of the biggest reforms was the cessation of internal-political espionage. The agency has also boosted up its infrastructure and recruited more agents.[14][15] It has been successful in stopping the earlier pattern of frequent terror attacks in India.[16] The agency has also been successful in counter-intelligence.

Workings

The Group A (Gazetted) officers carry out coordination and higher-level management of the IB. Subsidiary Intelligence Bureaus (SIBs) are headed by officers of the rank of Joint Director or above, but smaller SIBs are also sometimes headed by Deputy Directors. The SIBs have their units at district headquarters headed by Assistant Director (AD) or Deputy Central Intelligence Officers (DCIO). The IB maintains a large number of field units and headquarters (which are under the control of Joint or Deputy Directors). It is through these offices and the intricate process of deputation that a very organic linkage between the state police agencies and the IB is maintained. In addition to these, at the national level the IB has several units (in some cases SIBs) to keep track of issues like terrorism, counter-intelligence, VIP security, threat assessment and sensitive areas (i.e. Jammu and Kashmir and such). IB officers (like their counterparts in R&AW) get monthly special pays and an extra one-month salary every year, as well as better promotions. IB Officers are either directly recruited or are deputed from CAPFs and Armed Forces.

Constitutionality

IB was created on 23 December 1887, by the British Secretary of State as a sub-sect of the Central Special Branch but there is no act of the Indian parliament nor executive order relating to the functioning of the IB. In 2013, a public interest litigant challenged the legality of IB.[17]


Ranks and insignia

Insignia Position in Intelligence Bureau Position in police service
  Director of Intelligence Bureau[a] N/A
  Special Director Director general of police
Additional Director Additional director general of police
  Joint Director Inspector general of police
  Deputy Director Deputy inspector general of police
  Joint Deputy Director Senior Superintendent of Police
  Assistant Director Superintendent of Police
  Deputy Central Intelligence Officer Additional superintendent of police
  Assistant Central Intelligence Officer I Deputy Superintendent of Police
  Assistant Central Intelligence Officer II Inspector of Police
  Junior Intelligence Officer I Sub-Inspector of Police
  Junior Intelligence Officer II Assistant Sub-Inspector of Police
  Security Assistant Head Constable

Besides the above posts, there are various other supporting and office posts in the Bureau as well.

Media portrayal

The Intelligence Bureau has been depicted in films such as Bad Aur Badnaam (Hindi, 1984), Mukhbiir (Hindi, 2008), Vande Matharam (Tamil, 2010), Kahaani (Hindi, 2012), Jism 2 (Hindi, 2012), Iru Mugan (Tamil, 2016), and Spyder (Tamil, Telugu, 2017).

IB also featured in the Sony TV Series Yudh starring Amitabh Bachchan.

See also

Footnotes

  • . 1954. Archived from the original on 16 April 2009. Retrieved 13 September 2010.
  • . December 2006. Archived from the original on 5 June 2014. Retrieved 15 November 2015.

Notes

  1. ^ Highest ranking IPS Officer

References

  1. ^ "MHA gets Rs 1.96 lakh crores in Budget-2023; focus on women safety, police modernisation". The Print.
  2. ^ . Fas.org. 30 May 2008. Archived from the original on 26 November 2012. Retrieved 9 December 2012.
  3. ^ ""National Security" for whom?". Economic and Political Weekly: 7–8. 5 June 2015.
  4. ^ ""National Security" for whom?". Economic and Political Weekly: 7–8. 5 June 2015.
  5. ^ "Tapan Deka is new IB chief, RAW secretary Samant Goel gets 1-yr extension". Hindustantimes. 24 June 2022. Retrieved 24 June 2022.
  6. ^ "Nehchal Sandhu new IB director". The Indian Express. 26 November 2010. Retrieved 27 March 2012.
  7. ^ . Archived from the original on 3 December 2010.
  8. ^ "The secret world of phone tapping". India Today. 9 December 2010. Retrieved 27 March 2012.
  9. ^ Shaffer, Ryan (2015). "Unraveling India's Foreign Intelligence: The Origins and Evolution of the Research and Analysis Wing". International Journal of Intelligence and CounterIntelligence. 28 (2): 252–289. doi:10.1080/08850607.2015.992754. S2CID 154372472.
  10. ^ Richelson, Jeffrey (2007). "Pokhran Surprise". Spying on the Bomb: American Nuclear Intelligence from Nazi Germany to Iran and North Korea. W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN 9780393329827. India's success in preventing U.S. spy satellites from seeing signs of the planned tests days to weeks in advance was matched by its success in preventing acquisition of other types of intelligence. India's Intelligence Bureau ran an aggressive counterintelligence program, and the CIA, despite a large station in New Delhi, was unable to recruit a single Indian with information about the Vajpayee government's nuclear plans.
  11. ^ . Archived from the original on 17 July 2012.
  12. ^ . Thaindian.com. 9 December 2008. Archived from the original on 15 March 2010. Retrieved 10 August 2012.
  13. ^ Sudha Ramachandran. . Archived from the original on 6 January 2010.
  14. ^ "1,800 Sashastra Seema Bal personnel to move to Intelligence Bureau". Economic Times. Retrieved 18 December 2018.
  15. ^ "Immigration rush: Intelligence Bureau to hire 550 ex-CAPF personnel at airports". EconomicTimes. Retrieved 13 July 2018.
  16. ^ "40 kilograms of explosives: Thwarting a nightmare at Pulwama". OneIndia. Retrieved 29 May 2020.
  17. ^ . The Times of India. 26 March 2012. Archived from the original on 10 May 2013.

Further reading

  • MacGregor, Lady (Ed.). The Life and Opinions of Major-General Sir Charles MacGregor. 2 vols. 1888, Edinburgh
  • MacGregor, General Sir Charles. The Defence of India. Shimla: Government of India Press. 1884.
  • Kulkarni. Sin of National Conscience. 2005.

External links

  • By Maloy Krishna Dhar

intelligence, bureau, india, intelligence, bureau, hindi, आस, चन, iast, āsūcanā, byūro, india, internal, security, counter, intelligence, agency, under, ministry, home, affairs, founded, 1887, central, special, branch, reputed, oldest, such, organization, worl. The Intelligence Bureau IB Hindi आस चन ब य र IAST asucana byuro is India s internal security and counter intelligence agency under Ministry of Home Affairs It was founded in 1887 as Central Special Branch and is reputed to be the oldest such organization in the world 2 3 Intelligence Bureauआस चन ब य र Insignia of Intelligence BureauAgency overviewFormedc 1887 1887 HeadquartersNew Delhi Delhi IndiaMottoज ग त अहर न श Sanskrit Jagṛtaṃ Aharnisaṃ ISO transl Always Alert Employees17 884Annual budget 3 418 32 crore US 428 1 million 2023 24 1 Minister responsibleAmit Shah Minister of Home AffairsAgency executiveTapan Deka DirectorParent agencyMinistry of Home AffairsWebsitewww wbr mha wbr gov wbr in125th Anniversary Postage Stamp 2013 Until 1968 it handled both domestic and foreign intelligence after which Research and Analysis Wing was formed specifically for foreign intelligence following that IB was primarily assigned the role of domestic intelligence and internal security 4 Tapan Deka the current director of the IB took over from Arvind Kumar on 24 June 2022 5 Contents 1 History 2 Responsibilities 3 Activities and operations 4 Workings 5 Constitutionality 6 Ranks and insignia 7 Media portrayal 8 See also 9 Footnotes 10 Notes 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksHistoryIn 1885 Major General Charles MacGregor was appointed Quartermaster General for the British Indian Army at Simla and thereby became responsible for its intelligence activities The main concern of the time was to monitor Russian troop deployments in Afghanistan so as to avoid an invasion of British India from the northwest citation needed ResponsibilitiesShrouded in secrecy the IB is used to garner intelligence from within India and also execute counter intelligence and counter terrorism tasks The Bureau comprises employees from law enforcement agencies mostly from the Indian Police Service IPS or the Indian Revenue Service IRS and the military However the Director of Intelligence Bureau DIB has always been an IPS officer In addition to domestic intelligence responsibilities the IB is particularly tasked with intelligence collection in border areas following the 1951 recommendations of the Himmat Singh Ji Committee also known as the North and North East Border Committee a task entrusted to the military intelligence organisations prior to independence in 1947 All spheres of human activity within India and in the neighborhood are allocated to the charter of duties of the Intelligence Bureau The IB was also tasked with other external intelligence responsibilities as of 1951 until 1968 when the Research and Analysis Wing was formed 6 Activities and operationsThe Intelligence Bureau reportedly has a lot of successes to its credit but operations conducted by the IB are rarely declassified Due to the extreme secrecy surrounding the agency there is little concrete information available about it or its activities The IB was trained by the Soviet KGB from the 1950s onward until the collapse of the Soviet Union Understanding of the shadowy workings of the IB is largely speculative Many times even members own family members are unaware of their whereabouts One known task of the IB is to clear licences to amateur radio enthusiasts The IB also passes intelligence between other Indian intelligence agencies and the police The bureau also grants the necessary security clearances to Indian diplomats and judges before they take the oath On rare occasions IB officers interact with the media during a crisis situation The IB is also rumoured to intercept and open around 6 000 letters daily It also has an email spying system similar to FBI s Carnivore system 7 The bureau is authorised to conduct wiretapping without a warrant 8 The IB was initially India s internal and external intelligence agency Due to lapses on the part of the Intelligence Bureau to predict the Sino Indian War of 1962 and later on intelligence failure in the India Pakistan War in 1965 it was bifurcated in 1968 and entrusted with the task of internal intelligence only The external intelligence branch was handed to the newly created Research and Analysis Wing 9 IB operated a counterintelligence programme to prevent the CIA from gathering information about the preparations and activities related to the Indian Nuclear weapons project before the Pokhran II nuclear tests 10 IB had mixed success in counter terrorism It was reported in 2008 that the IB had been successful in busting terror modules It alerted the police before the Hyderabad blasts and gave repeated warnings of a possible attack on Mumbai through the sea before the November 2008 Mumbai attacks On the whole however the IB came in for some sharp criticism by the media after the relentless wave of terror attacks in 2008 The government came close to sacking top intelligence officials soon after 26 11 attacks because of serious lapses that led to the 2008 Mumbai attacks 11 Heavy politics under funding and a shortage of field agents were the chief problems facing the agency The overall strength of the agency is believed to be around 25 000 with 3500 odd field agents operating in the entire country Of these many were engaged in political intelligence 12 13 Since 2014 IB has undergone many reforms and changes One of the biggest reforms was the cessation of internal political espionage The agency has also boosted up its infrastructure and recruited more agents 14 15 It has been successful in stopping the earlier pattern of frequent terror attacks in India 16 The agency has also been successful in counter intelligence WorkingsThe Group A Gazetted officers carry out coordination and higher level management of the IB Subsidiary Intelligence Bureaus SIBs are headed by officers of the rank of Joint Director or above but smaller SIBs are also sometimes headed by Deputy Directors The SIBs have their units at district headquarters headed by Assistant Director AD or Deputy Central Intelligence Officers DCIO The IB maintains a large number of field units and headquarters which are under the control of Joint or Deputy Directors It is through these offices and the intricate process of deputation that a very organic linkage between the state police agencies and the IB is maintained In addition to these at the national level the IB has several units in some cases SIBs to keep track of issues like terrorism counter intelligence VIP security threat assessment and sensitive areas i e Jammu and Kashmir and such IB officers like their counterparts in R amp AW get monthly special pays and an extra one month salary every year as well as better promotions IB Officers are either directly recruited or are deputed from CAPFs and Armed Forces ConstitutionalityIB was created on 23 December 1887 by the British Secretary of State as a sub sect of the Central Special Branch but there is no act of the Indian parliament nor executive order relating to the functioning of the IB In 2013 a public interest litigant challenged the legality of IB 17 Ranks and insigniaSee also List of police ranks in India Insignia Position in Intelligence Bureau Position in police service nbsp Director of Intelligence Bureau a N A nbsp Special Director Director general of policeAdditional Director Additional director general of police nbsp Joint Director Inspector general of police nbsp Deputy Director Deputy inspector general of police nbsp Joint Deputy Director Senior Superintendent of Police nbsp Assistant Director Superintendent of Police nbsp Deputy Central Intelligence Officer Additional superintendent of police nbsp Assistant Central Intelligence Officer I Deputy Superintendent of Police nbsp Assistant Central Intelligence Officer II Inspector of Police nbsp Junior Intelligence Officer I Sub Inspector of Police nbsp Junior Intelligence Officer II Assistant Sub Inspector of Police nbsp Security Assistant Head ConstableBesides the above posts there are various other supporting and office posts in the Bureau as well Media portrayalThe Intelligence Bureau has been depicted in films such as Bad Aur Badnaam Hindi 1984 Mukhbiir Hindi 2008 Vande Matharam Tamil 2010 Kahaani Hindi 2012 Jism 2 Hindi 2012 Iru Mugan Tamil 2016 and Spyder Tamil Telugu 2017 IB also featured in the Sony TV Series Yudh starring Amitabh Bachchan See also nbsp India portalList of Indian intelligence agenciesFootnotes THE INDIAN POLICE SERVICE UNIFORM RULES 1954 Archived from the original on 16 April 2009 Retrieved 13 September 2010 World Intelligence and Security Agencies December 2006 Archived from the original on 5 June 2014 Retrieved 15 November 2015 Notes Highest ranking IPS OfficerReferences MHA gets Rs 1 96 lakh crores in Budget 2023 focus on women safety police modernisation The Print Intelligence Bureau IB India Intelligence Agencies Fas org 30 May 2008 Archived from the original on 26 November 2012 Retrieved 9 December 2012 National Security for whom Economic and Political Weekly 7 8 5 June 2015 National Security for whom Economic and Political Weekly 7 8 5 June 2015 Tapan Deka is new IB chief RAW secretary Samant Goel gets 1 yr extension Hindustantimes 24 June 2022 Retrieved 24 June 2022 Nehchal Sandhu new IB director The Indian Express 26 November 2010 Retrieved 27 March 2012 Republic of India Archived from the original on 3 December 2010 The secret world of phone tapping India Today 9 December 2010 Retrieved 27 March 2012 Shaffer Ryan 2015 Unraveling India s Foreign Intelligence The Origins and Evolution of the Research and Analysis Wing International Journal of Intelligence and CounterIntelligence 28 2 252 289 doi 10 1080 08850607 2015 992754 S2CID 154372472 Richelson Jeffrey 2007 Pokhran Surprise Spying on the Bomb American Nuclear Intelligence from Nazi Germany to Iran and North Korea W W Norton amp Company ISBN 9780393329827 India s success in preventing U S spy satellites from seeing signs of the planned tests days to weeks in advance was matched by its success in preventing acquisition of other types of intelligence India s Intelligence Bureau ran an aggressive counterintelligence program and the CIA despite a large station in New Delhi was unable to recruit a single Indian with information about the Vajpayee government s nuclear plans IB R amp AW brass almost got the sack after 26 11 Archived from the original on 17 July 2012 New IB chief has his task cut out Thaindian News Thaindian com 9 December 2008 Archived from the original on 15 March 2010 Retrieved 10 August 2012 Sudha Ramachandran Security cracks and the remedy Archived from the original on 6 January 2010 1 800 Sashastra Seema Bal personnel to move to Intelligence Bureau Economic Times Retrieved 18 December 2018 Immigration rush Intelligence Bureau to hire 550 ex CAPF personnel at airports EconomicTimes Retrieved 13 July 2018 40 kilograms of explosives Thwarting a nightmare at Pulwama OneIndia Retrieved 29 May 2020 Explain Intelligence Bureau s legality HC tells Centre The Times of India 26 March 2012 Archived from the original on 10 May 2013 Further readingMacGregor Lady Ed The Life and Opinions of Major General Sir Charles MacGregor 2 vols 1888 Edinburgh MacGregor General Sir Charles The Defence of India Shimla Government of India Press 1884 Kulkarni Sin of National Conscience 2005 External linksThe Intelligence Bureau India s Prime Intelligence Agency By Maloy Krishna Dhar Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Intelligence Bureau India amp oldid 1181017751, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.