Executive Commission of Intelligence (Huajiang): Difference between revisions
(Created page with "{{Infobox government agency | name = Executive Commission of Intelligence | native_name = '''{{lang-zh|labels=no|执行情报委员会}}''' | type...") |
m (Moved Title of Chinese Text) |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Infobox government agency | {{Infobox government agency | ||
| name = Executive Commission of Intelligence | | name = Executive Commission of Intelligence<br>{{lang-zh|labels=no|执行情报委员会}} | ||
| native_name = | |||
| type = Executive Commission | | type = Executive Commission | ||
| seal = Huajiang Executive Commission of Intelligence Emblem.png | | seal = Huajiang Executive Commission of Intelligence Emblem.png |
Revision as of 01:22, 8 September 2019
The Executive Commission of Intelligence (Huajiangite: 执行情报委员会; Alphabetized Huajiangite: Zhí háng qíngbào wěiyuánhuì) is the national-level intelligence agency of Huajiang, under the authority of the Executive Commissioner of Intelligence. The Executive Commission of Intelligence is considered an important part of the Executive Branch and is one of the Executive Commissioners that sits in the Executive Council. The Executive Commission of Intelligence is responsible for the collection and procession of information and data that relates to national security for domestic intelligence. Within foreign intelligence, they are tasked with monitoring, collecting and procession data for counterintelligence purposes. The Executive Commission of Intelligence is subdivided into five official branches that are under its direct control. There exist several other subdivisions of the Executive Commission that were created by He Dazhao and Yan Chen, however they are not under the direct control of the Executive Commission. The majority of operations that are conducted by the Executive Commission are clandestine, as well as all the data, statistics and research conducted are kept clandestine.
The Executive Commission of Intelligence was created by Feng Shixang after the end of the Great Continental War, originally only made up of 21 people, all of which were individual spies that were sent to foreign countries in the aftermath of the Great Continental War. The plan was called the Wei Operation (
Subdivisions
Agency of Internal and Domestic Intelligence
The Agency of Internal and Domestic Intelligence (Acronym: NGQ;