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The STB: Changing The Guard DVD Secret Police Of Czechoslovakia

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The Shocking 1990 Investigative Report On The Revelations Of The Profound Power And Control Of The State Police Of Czechoslovakia, The First Such Report Made After The Fall Of Its Communist Regime, Presented In The Highest DVD Quality MPG Video Format Of 9.1 MBPS As An Archival Quality All Regions Format DVD! (Color, 1990, 54 Minutes.) #STB #StatniBezpecnost #StatnaBezpecnost #StateSecurity #Czechoslovakia #CzechoslovakSocialistRepublic #CzechoslovakRepublic #FourthCzechoslovakRepublic #CSSR #IntelligenceAgencies #SecretPolice #StatePolice #StateSecurity #Espionage #CovertOperations #CommunistPartyOfCzechoslovakia #KomunistickaStranaCeskoslovenska #KSC #EasternBloc #CommunistBloc #Oppression #CommunistOpression #Czechoslovakia #CzechoslovakianHistory #HistoryOfCzechoslovakia #Totalitarianism #StateSurveillance #Communism #CommunistRepression #ColdWar #DVD

The STB (Czech: Statni Bezpecnost, Slovak: Statna Bezpecnost, "State Security", known as the STB or StB) was the secret police force in communist Czechoslovakia. Founded on June 30, 1945, it served as an intelligence and counter-intelligence agency, and dealt with any activity that was considered opposition to the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia and the state. The StB was controlled by the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia, who used the StB as an instrument of power and repression; State Security spied on and intimidated political opponents of the Party and forged false criminal evidence against them, facilitating the communists' rise to power in 1948. Even before Czechoslovakia became a communist state, the StB obtained forced confessions by means of torture, including the use of psychoactive drugs, blackmail and kidnapping. After the coup d'etat of 1948, these practices developed under the tutelage of Soviet advisers. Other common practices included telephone tapping, permanent monitoring of apartments, intercepting private mail, house searches, surveillance, and arrests and indictment for so-called "subversion of the republic". After the coup, the StB conducted Operation Border Stone to capture citizens who attempted to defect and cross the Iron Curtain. StB was the main supporter of the Red Brigades, an Italian far-left militant organization. In cooperation with the Palestine Liberation Organization, the StB conducted logistic support and training for Red Brigades in PLO training camps in North Africa and Syria. The StB's part in the fall of the regime in 1989 remains uncertain. The reported murder of a student by police during a peaceful demonstration in November 1989 was the catalyst for wider public support and further demonstrations, leading to the overthrow of the communist regime. According to StB agent Ludvik Zifcak, he was used to impersonate a fictitious dead student, Martin Smid. However, in 1992, the Czechoslovak parliamentary commission for investigation of events of November 17, 1989, has ruled out Zifcak's testimony, stating that "the role of former StB lieutenant L. Zifcak was only marginal, without any connection to critical events and without any active effort to influence these events. Investigation of related circumstances has indisputably proved that L. Zifcak's testimony that attributes a key role in November's events to himself is based on facts, which are either technically impossible and unfeasible, or contradict actions of persons mentioned by him, which aimed to completely different goals." State Security was dissolved on February 1, 1990. The current intelligence agency of the Czech Republic is the Security Information Service. Former employees and associates (informers) of the StB are currently banned from taking certain jobs, such as legislators or police officers. The Act on Lawlessness of the Communist Regime and on Resistance Against It states that the StB, as an organisation based on the ideology of the Communist Party, "aimed to suppress human rights and democracy through its activities" and thus based on a criminal ideology. The State Security was a part of the National Security Corps (Czech: Sbor narodni bezpecnosti, SNB; Slovak: Zbor narodnej bezpecnosti, ZNB) along with Public Security (Czech: Verejna bezpecnost, VB; Slovak: Verejna bezpecnost, VB) - a uniformed force that performed standard police duties. Both forces worked at regional and district levels, supervised by the Ministries of the Interior of the Czech and Slovak Socialist Republics, but operationally directed by the federal Ministry of Interior. In the early 1990s former dissident and "StB hunter" Petr Cibulka published the names of over 200,000 alleged StB officers and collaborators, who spied and reported on family members, friends, neighbours, and colleagues. Pavel Bret, a deputy director of the Office for the Documentation and the Investigation of the Crimes of Communism, criticized Cibulka's lists, saying: "It's dangerous to apply sweeping blacklisting. We shouldn't forget who compiled them. If [Cibulka] wants to be objective, he should also inform the public how people had been recruited -- that it was often through compromising documents, extortion, beatings -- or their collaboration was falsified." In 2003, the Czech Interior Ministry released an official list of 75,000 StB agents and collaborators, including 3,000 names of collaborators from abroad. According to the Radio Prague, "The Ministry says it contains less names than that of Petr Cibulka because it only lists those who collaborated with the StB knowingly, and not people who were considered as potential informants."

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