Soviet KGB
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
Proper noun - Soviet KGB: The former primary state security and intelligence agency of the Soviet Union, operating from 1954 until the dissolution of the USSR in 1991. It was responsible for internal security, foreign intelligence, counterintelligence, and border control.
Usage
The term "Soviet KGB" is used historically to refer specifically to the security agency of the former Soviet state. - The archives of the Soviet KGB contain many secrets from the Cold War era. - He was a high-ranking officer in the Soviet KGB before the collapse of the USSR.
Advanced Usage
- "the KGB": While "KGB" alone is common, preceding it with "Soviet" explicitly anchors the organization to its historical national context, distinguishing it from other intelligence services or its successor agencies in post-Soviet states.
- The methods of the Soviet KGB were studied by intelligence agencies worldwide.
Variants and Related Words
- KGB: The acronym for "Komitet Gosudarstvennoy Bezopasnosti" (Committee for State Security). This is the most common shorthand.
- Cheka, NKVD, NKGB, MGB: These are names of predecessor state security organizations in the Soviet Union before the formation of the KGB in 1954.
- FSB: The "Federal Security Service of the Russian Federation," the primary successor agency to the KGB in Russia.
Synonyms
- Soviet secret police: A descriptive synonym emphasizing its internal security and political control functions.
- Soviet intelligence agency: A broader term highlighting its foreign espionage role.
Related Phrases
- KGB agent: An officer or operative of the KGB.
- The novel features a former KGB agent as its protagonist.
- KGB archives: The collected records and files of the organization.
- Historians are gradually gaining access to the KGB archives.
Noun
- formerly the predominant security police organization of Soviet Russia