This article belongs to the lore of Ajax.

VID

Revision as of 22:37, 12 November 2023 by Mesogeia (talk | contribs)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Veritas Intelligence Directive
Директива Veritas по разведке
VID Logo.png
Official VID Seal
Agency overview
FormedJune 2, 1929; 95 years ago (1929-06-02)
Typedomestic and foreign intelligence agency
JurisdictionVelikoslavia
HeadquartersPhi Building, Kollavik
MottoVigilant when no others are"
Employees7,000
Agency executives
  • Lev Ashrenko, Director
  • Vice Director, Oleg Cherenko
Parent agencyTsar of Velikoslavia

The VID (Velikoslavian: Директива Veritas по разведке) is the primary Security agency of the Tsardom of Velikoslavia. It is a monolithic organization that operates outside of the chain Velikoslavian bureaucracy, answering directly to the Tsar of Velikoslavia and the Statsministris of Velikoslavia. The VID focuses on domestic intelligence, foreign intelligence, counter-intelligence, electronic warfare, government communications security, and operative-investigatory operations.

The organization has a long and oftentimes controversial history, starting out as a secret police force under Alexis IV, which was used to suppress dissent amongst the populace until it was reformed under Nicholas I in 1974, where its extra judicial powers were removed. Despite several reforms, the organization still has a storied history of allegedly being involved in many clandestine operations. The directive has been the subject of many controversies, including human rights violations, wiretapping, propaganda, and allegations of weapons trafficking.

Despite all VID records being kept extensively classified, in recent years Alexis V has officially released some of the directive's older records, including operations committed during both Partisan Wars.

Purpose

Organizational structure

Directorate

Office of Foreign Intelligence

Office of Counter Intelligence

Office of Analysis

Office of Communications

Toggle Organizational structure subsection

Training

Budget

Relationship with other intelligence agencies

History

Controversies