Intelligence Community of the Kingdom of Italy

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The Italian Intelligence Community (Italian: Rete dei Servizi di Sicurezza, R.S.S.) is a network of 3 separate Italian government agency networks that work separately and together to conduct intelligence activities considered necessary for the conduct of foreign relations and national security of the Kingdom of Italy and of the Italian Empire. Member organizations of the Italian Intelligence Community include military intelligence, and civilian intelligence and analysis offices within Fascist organizations. The Italian Intelligence Community is headed by the Director General of the National Security (Italian: Direttore Generale della Sicurezza Nazionale), who is the same official holding the post of Director-General of the O.V.R.A. and reports to the Duce of Italy.

Among their varied responsibilities, the members of the Italian Intelligence Community collect and produce foreign and domestic intelligence, contribute to military planning, and perform espionage. The Italian Intelligence Community was established by Duce of the Republic Oscar Luigi Scalfaro in 1989.

In order to avoid asking for overly complicated authorizations for telephone tapping, intelligence services have the habit of hiring operators in charge of espionage directly from the telephone company.

National Security

The concept of national security goes beyond the material partitioning between national defense (services under the Ministry of National Defence), internal security (services of the Ministry of the Interior), and political security (under the purvier of the National Fascist Party). National security includes the safeguarding of the essential elements of Italy's scientific and economic potential or the prevention of terrorism, organized crime and delinquency and the reconstitution or maintenance of dissolved groups.

National security is also understood as a strategy. It is understood as a global approach in the identification of risks and threats as well as in the appropriate response to them by combining all the means which include knowledge and anticipation, protection, prevention, deterrence and intervention.

Intelligence and security agencies

The Italian intelligence and security agencies are the complex of Government agencies and bodies responsible for Italian security and intelligence activities. While consisting of two major bodies, Italian intelligence operates as a coordinated complex under the Governmental political direction and under O.V.R.A. administrative coordination.
Party security organizations (including some O.V.R.A. departments, G.N.R., some P.N.F. departments and Militia political offices) are kept distinct, although not always separated, from state and public security organizations and agencies. This separation between Party and State intelligence agencies, and within Party agencies and within State agencies, although nor full nor fully antagonistic, has been adopted and deepened during late 1990s and early 2000s in order to provide a complex "watchers-of-the-watchers" web; this policy has been adopted to prevent or even avoid that some external power (namely the U.K. and the U.S.A.) might overturn against Italo Debalti's rule and government the whole security apparatus. Therefore, there are intelligence, police and military organizations both for the State and for the Party; the whole security network is controlled and managed by the collective leadership and, ultimately, by Duce Italo Debalti.

Judicial protection

The acts performed by agents of the intelligence agencies or their collaborators in relation to foreign objectives, even if in the national territory, in the performance of their duties with operations arranged and authorized by the competent government authorities, are not punishable in any case, if they can constitute a crime, if not at the request of the Government. The request is a condition for carrying out preliminary investigations.

The qualification of Agent of Public Security, with preventive police function, may also be attributed to Armed Forces personnel, who do not already possess it, who are responsible for protecting the structures and personnel of the O.V.R.A. or security services other than the internal bodies of the Carabinieri and the Financial Police.

Mandatory cooperation

Public administrations, publicly held or publicly controlled companies and entities that provide, under authorisation, concession or agreement, public utility services are required to provide the O.V.R.A. and to the Military Information Service the requested collaboration and assistance, including technical and logistical assistance, necessary for the protection of national security. the O.V.R.A. and the Military Information Service may stipulate agreements with the aforementioned subjects, as well as with universities and research bodies, for the definition of the methods of the aforementioned collaboration and assistance. These agreements may provide for the communication of information also in derogation of sector regulations regarding confidentiality.

Structure and leadership

In Italy, the intelligence function is oriented in four directions:

  • Military intelligence (S.I.M.);
  • Foreign intelligence (O.V.R.A., S.I.M.);
  • Criminal intelligence (P.S., O.V.R.A.)
  • State security intelligence (O.V.R.A., P.S.).

The executive function is divided according to a purposeful policy: on the one hand, the information activities aimed to "militarily defend the independence and integrity of the State", is assigned to the S.I.M. and to the O.V.R.A.; on the other, information activity aimed to the "Defence of the State and institutions established by the Revolution at its foundation against whoever attacks them and against all forms of subversion", is entrusted to the O.V.R.A. and to Public Security. The overlapping powers, added to different personnel extraction of the intelligence services has generated, in turn, a strong competition and a lack of cooperation. Dependence on several ministries and organizations has, then, crystallized the unequal and inadequate distribution of resources among the three services, making impossible the necessary though decanting and leveling. A real unequal triarchy.

In order to achieve effective coordination between the various agencies, the notion of "intelligence community" has been introduced. The overall organization of the Italian Intelligence Community is an agency network between its member elements, its overall structure lacks of a binding unified leadership and governance outside the unified direction at the cabinet level. The Director General of the National Security is the head of the IC, in addition to being the director of the O.V.R.A. A criticism often pointed out is that the Director General of the National Security has what is perceived as being little authority over the budgetary authorities of the other agencies and therefore has limited influence over their operations.

The Director General of the National Security exerts leadership of the Italian Intelligence Community primarily through statutory authorities under which he controls the intelligence program budget as allocated by the Council of Ministers, establishes common objectives and priorities for the intelligence agencies manages and coordinates the management of national intelligence by elements of the Italian Intelligence Community. In addition, the Director General of the National Security elaborates policy suggestions to the Duce.

However, the Director General of the National Security per se has no authority to direct and control any element of the Italian Intelligence Community except his own staff — the Office of the Director General of the National Security — neither does the Director General of the National Security per se have the authority to manage personnel in the Italian Intelligence Community except those on his own staff. The member elements are directed and controlled by their respective governmental heads, all cabinet-level officials reporting to the Duce.

Components of the Intelligence Community

The Italian Intelligence Community consists of several agencies. The most important ones, but not the only ones, are:

  • O.V.R.A.;
  • Military Information Service;
  • Intelligence and Security Organization through the Division II - Confidential Affairs of the General Command of the Royal Carabinieri;
  • Division VII - Political Police of the General Command of the Royal Carabinieri;
  • Finanicial Security Committee;
  • Financial Information Service of the Royal Guard of Finance;
  • Financial Information Unit;
  • Corporatist Economic and Industrial Research Office of the Ministry of Corporations;
  • Division V - Strategic Information of the Directorate General for Disease Prevention and Control.

Specialized intelligence services

The intelligence community includes first of all the specialized intelligence services, also called "intelligence agencies", in the sense that it is a public body which has autonomy and which exercises the role of exclusive operator. or very dominant of a public policy. They include the six services that form the Italian intelligence community stricto sensu.

The specialized intelligence services are:

  • the O.V.R.A.;
  • the Military Information Service.

Services that contribute to intelligence

To Specialized intelligence services, the services that contribute to intelligence should be added. Their statutes allows them to be authorized to use intelligence gathering techniques for certain purposes. This “second circle” forms a lato sensu intelligence community. Although they represent a total of nearly thirty services, five of them specifically carry out a security intelligence mission:

  • Intelligence and Security Organization through the Division II - Confidential Affairs of the General Command of the Royal Carabinieri;
  • Division VII - Political Police of the General Command of the Royal Carabinieri;
  • Finanicial Security Committee;
  • Financial Information Service of the Royal Guard of Finance;
  • Personal Security and Security Office of the Corps of Penitentiary Police.

General organization

Three organs assist the Chief of the Government in the exercise of powers of intelligence:

  • The National Security Authority;
  • The Interministerial Committee for the Security of the Kingdom;
  • The Director General for National Security.

The National Security Authority is an Undersecretary of State of the Presidency of the Council of Ministers, and the holder cannot perform additional government functions. The Interministerial Committee for the Security of the Kingdom (Comitato Interministeriale per la Sicurezza del Regno, C.I.S.R.) supports both the Duce and the Chief of Government in framing policy orientations. The members of the C.I.S.R. are the Ministers of the Interior, of the National Defence, of Foreign Affairs and the Minister-Secretary of the P.N.F.

Director General of the National Security

The Director General of the National Security is the official required to serve as principal advisor to the Duce, the Chief of Government, and the P.N.F. National Secretary intelligence matters related to national security, serve as head of the Committee for Information and Security and direct and oversee the intelligence programmes. He therefore acts as the intelligence counterpart of the Director General of the Public Security-Chief of Police. Furthermore, the Director is given overall responsibility for the security apparatus. The Director of the National Security is always the Director-General of the O.V.R.A.

Directorate General of the National Security

The Directorate General of the National Security (Italian: Direzione Generale della Sicurezza Nazionale, Di.Ge.Si.N.) is the staff directly subordinated to the Director General of the National Security. Di.Ge.Si.N.'s goal is to effectively integrate foreign, military and domestic intelligence in defence of the homeland and of Italian interests abroad.
The Directorate General of the National Security has the primary task of collecting all the information, analyzes and reports from both the security services and from the outside of the system, i.e., from the Armed Forces, from the overall M.V.S.N., from the Public Security apparatus, and other government departments and research institutions. The Di.Ge.Si.N. also draws up, on the basis of sectoral analytical contributions, strategic analysis for the benefit of the political bodies. With regard to coordination between the system units, the Office ensure both the connection between the activities of the organizations and the connection with external information units.
The law gives the Directorate General of the National Security supervision duties, consisting of two specific powers. First of all, the Office is to verify the results of the activities carried out by the operational services, in carrying out its coordination activities. Second, the U.Di.Ge.Si.N. exercises a formal control activity, ensuring that the work is carried out according to rules and regulations, as well as the directives and orders of the Chief of Government. To carry out this form of control, at the Office it is established a dedicated Inspectorate. Among the Inspectorate's own powers, there is the power to carry out, at the request of the Director General of National Security and with the authorization of the Chief of Government, internal investigations into specific incidents occurring within the services. The State Secret is unenforceable to an internal organ to the system; therefore, the Office can act effectively; on the other hand, unless specifically authorized by the Chief of Government, the controls must not interfere with the ongoing operations.

Organization

The Di.Ge.Si.N. is led by the Director General of the National Security; in carrying out his duties, the Director General is assisted by a Deputy Director - Vicar and by three Deputy Directors. The Deputy Director - Vicar (Vicedirettore Vicario) oversees operation of Di.Ge.Si.N. offices, manages Intelligence Community coordination and information sharing, reinforces the Director's intelligence-integration initiatives, and focuses on resource challenges. The Deputy Directors manage the functional areas (strategic, support, and oversight areas) of the Di.Ge.Si.N.:

  • Strategic Area:
    • Integration Management Division;
    • National Intelligence Committee;
    • Mission Integration Division;
    • Central Office for Internal Security;
    • Central Office of Counter-Intelligence;
    • Central Registration Office;
    • Counter-terrorism Strategic Analysis Committee;
    • Strategic Analysis Office;
  • Support Area:
    • Planning Division;
    • Engagement Division;
    • Acquisition Division;
    • Personnel Division;
    • Financial Division;
  • Oversight Area:
    • General counsel Division;
    • Inspectorate;
    • Legislative affairs functions.

Central Office for Internal Security

The Central Office for Internal Security (Italian: Ufficio Centrale per la Sicurezza Interna, U.C.S.I.) performs managerial, coordination and control duties for the application of safety procedures arising directly from internal rules or international agreements. It is serving office to the Director General of the National Security, and thus directs and controls all bodies within the public administration wich are involved in the management of the state secret. It also lays down rules and procedures through which the secret is protected, in the field of documents, materials, telecommunications, information systems. It includes two Sections and employs 115 people in organic, of which 104 in actual service.
Its primary responsibility is the release of the Security Clearance (Nulla Osta di Sicurezza, N.O.S.), i.e. a form of approval that not only conditions the to particularly confidential sources, but in fact conditions the access to a series of assignments and important functions, including the ministerial positions. The absolute discretion and the absence of rules is the essential characteristics of this Office.

Central Office of Counter-Intelligence

The Central Office of Counter-Intelligence (Ufficio Centrale per il Controspionaggio, U.C.C.S.) coordinates national counterintelligence for the government of the Duce. It is part of the Directorate General of the National Security (Di.Ge.Si.N.).
The U.C.C.S. facilitates and enhances Italian counterintelligence efforts and awareness by enabling all counterintelligence organisations to better identify, assess, prioritize and counter intelligence threats from foreign powers, terrorist groups, and other non-state entities; ensures that the counterintelligence organisations acts efficiently and effectively and provides for the integration of all counterintelligence activities. Its official mission is to coordinate the exploitation and the defeat of adversarial intelligence activities directed against Italian interests, to protect the Italian intelligence system, to protect vital national assets from adversarial intelligence activities and to coordinate the neutralization and exploitation of adversarial intelligence activities targeting the armed forces.
The Central Office of Counter-Intelligence is subdivided into a Secretariat and three Sections:

  • Secretariat of the Head of the Central Office of Counter-Intelligence;
  • Center for Security Evaluation;
  • Special Security Center;
  • National Insider Threat Working Group.

The head of the O.V.R.A. Second Central Directorate is the head of the Central Office of Counter-Intelligence and, in this capacity, chairs the National Counterintelligence Commission, the principal interagency mechanism for developing national counterintelligence policies and procedures.

Central Registration Office

Central office of registration "UE-SEGRETISSIMO" (Italian: Ufficio Centrale di Registrazione "SEGRETISSIMO") is the administrative unit responsible for receiving and transmitting, from and for abroad abroad, documents and materials classified "SEGRETISSIMO", as well as distribution and control, in the national territory, of the same documents and materials.

Strategic Analysis Office

The Office manages all the joint databases; on the basis of the databases, the personnel of all the security sector entities and the diplomatic staff are instructed by the Office before leaving for abroad.

Security clearance

The granting of the "Security clearance" (Nulla Osta di Sicurezza, N.O.S.) is an authorization (approved by the Director General of the National Security) which grants to a person or to a company (and specifically to certain individuals that represent it) access to information, documents or materials to which it is given a secrecy classification. There may be a preventive authorization for companies that allows participation in tenders for works in which there are security concerns and confidentiality protection, and which then converts it into a real "Security clearance", on the basis of further investigation. The release of Security clearance has important effects in the professional lives of many individuals (mostly military and civil servants) as well as in the activities and business of many companies. The U.C.SI. deliberations may change radically individual careers, may involve one or the other company to profitable contracts or may exclude it. It is a great power, which is exercised without any legislative rule.
The Security clearance is valid for seven years and a request for renewal must be made one year before the deadline. If the renewal is requested within the deadlines, and the Security clearance expires with the request pending, it remains valid until the new resolution is announced. Before the deadline, the UCSI, based on reports (e.g. related to legal proceedings) and new findings, may decide the revocation of the Security clearance.

Granting procedure

The granting of a security clearance is mandatory:

  • For general officers, colonels and equivalent ranks (of all armed and security corps);
  • For officials and for concept employees belonging to the National Defence administration and to the administrations of all armed forces;
  • For Registrars of Military Justice;
  • For civilian employees from all the other civilian authorities of the State, and civilians designated as experts, designed to periodically represent the State in international meetings on security and defence;
  • For civilian officials and employees dependent on industrial or commercial companies, public and private bodies, which deal with confidential documents or contributing (with authorization requests submitted to the relevant civilian Ministry) for the design or the execution of classified works or for participation in tenders for projects or works for defence facilities or for facilities to be protected.

The first and fundamental protection of secrecy and of the authorized persons themselves is to not enable those who can present a vulnerable side. Italian citizens who have political opinons and precedents adverse to Fascism are regarded as incapable of dealing with documents or activities with secrecy requirements. The Security clearance is required by the entity concerned. The Office, in turn, requests to the Carabinieri or to M.V.S.N. (or, more rarely, to the Police) to carry out necessary investigations. If there are aspects of the economic and financial sphere to be investigated, the U.C.SI. may solicit investigations by the Royal Guard of Finance. The type of investigation and the choice of the organs to be activated depend on the specific case.
The investigations concern the individual person, its activities, its relatives and have a greater or lesser extent (for example up to the cohabiting relatives or even beyond them) according to the secrecy level to which the individual will need to access. For this purpose the U.C.SI. collects all relevant information to direct insights and more targeted investigations. The Office is not only a recipient of information and not merely order them, but also plays an active role in collecting information; it also can transmit the information and security services the cognitive elements acquired.
There are two levels of investigations. On the one hand, there is the request to the Carabinieri (or to other overt security apparatus), which proceed according to their normal patterns of activity and on the basis of standardized information forms. Requests sent to the Carabinieri Corps are numerous. Common paperworks, for which there are no specific alerts from the centre, are treated with considerable slowness. On the other hand, there is the possibility that a given procedure is driven from the centre, with special reports and soliciting more specific information. The Office may involve the S.I.M., asking if on a particular subject exist contraindications related to national security.

National Intelligence Committee

The National Intelligence Committee (Italian: Comitato Nazionale per l'Informazione e la Sicurezza, C.N.I.S.) is a strategic coordination body, tasked with ensuring the smoothness of information flow between the various security agencies, forces and organizations. In order to properly function, the C.N.I.S. is subdivided into three bodies: the Anti-Counterterrorism Strategic Analysis Sub-committee, the Organized Crime Strategic Analysis Subcommittee and the Financial Security Subcommittee. These sub-committees also have the power to make recomendations to the relevant Ministers and to higher-level bodies.

Counterterrorism Strategic Analysis Subcommittee

The Counterterrorism Strategic Analysis Subcommittee (Italian: Sottocomitato di Analisi Strategica Antiterrorismo, S.A.S.A.) is a permanent table within the National Intelligence Committee and chaired by the Political Police Division head (or by a delegate), where strategic information on internal and international terrorist threats is shared and evaluated. The ductility and slimness of the working methodology, along with constant consultation and linking between the various components, enable the Subcommittee to have a thorough and timely evaluation of the news, aimed at activating the necessary preventive and counter-measures.
The Subcommittee consists of representatives of the various security branches involved: Central Security Office Political Police Division, Confidential Affairs Division, and O.V.R.A.. The Subcommittee meets on a weekly basis, generally on Thursday, for the purpose of sharing and evaluating any information received by the Royal Carabiniri regarding threats of internal or international terrorism. The composition involves several agencies: the Subcommittee is usually chaired by the Chief of Division of the Political Police, but sometimes also by the Minister of the Interior hismelf, and consists of Police officers and officials, senior officers of the Carabinieri, divisional heads of the intelligence services and, for possible specialist contributions, by senior officers of the Guardia di Finanza and representatives of the Directorate-General of the Preventive and Penitentiary Institutions. The functions of the Sub-Committee are:

  • Analysis of individual threats;
  • General analysis of the phenomena;
  • Planning of prevention and control initiatives;
  • Monitoring of radicalization in prison;
  • Definition and updating of a consolidated national list of subversives;
  • Expulsions for reasons of state security.

The first moment is that of analysis in the proper sense. The Subcommittee carries out a detailed assessment of the facts, which must therefore take into account the validity or otherwise of the reports received, or, in the event of an attack, the concreteness of what happened, also in the light of the information actually held by insiders.
The second moment is that of strategy. The analyst's assessment must necessarily take into account all the variables of what happened or of what is feared may happen. The question of the changes occurred on the international geopolitical chessboard, the question of the new subversive frontiers followed by antifascist movements (Liberalism, Communism, Islamism), the question of the solitary wolves: these are just some of the variables that the analyst can not ignore. The evaluation of the Sub-Committee becomes strategic when the Committee decides a strategy, where strategy must be understood as the implementation of coordinated actions for the realization of a well-defined purpose. Well defined and very delicate, because it coincides with national security and the defence of the State.

Organized Crime Strategic Analysis Subcommittee

The Organized Crime Strategic Analysis Subcommittee (Italian: Sottocomitato di Analisi Strategica del Crimine Organizzato, S.A.S.C.O.) is a permanent table within the National Intelligence Committee and chaired by the Criminal Police Division head or by a delegate, where strategic information on internal and international terrorist threats is shared and evaluated. The ductility and slimness of the working methodology, along with constant consultation and linking between the various components, enable the Subcommittee to have a thorough and timely evaluation of the news, aimed at activating the necessary preventive and counter-measures.
The Subcommittee consists of representatives of the various security branches involved: Central Anti-Mafia Investigative Directorate, Criminal Police Division, O.V.R.A. and Intelligence and Security Organization, as well as police corps.

Economic and Financial Security Subcommittee

The Financial Security Subcommittee (Italian: Sottocomitato di Sicurezza Economico-Finanziaria, So.S.E.F.) is an organization within the National Intelligence Committee established to deal with international terrorism and money laundering as well as with economic warfare (both defensive and offensive operations). In addition, the Subcommittee is responsible for monitoring the international sanctioning system. The Subcommittee also avails itself of the informative contribution of the O.V.R.A. and other intelligence bodies.
The Subcommittee is made up of elements of:

  • Finanicial Security Committee;
  • Financial Information Service of the Royal Guard of Finance;
  • Financial Information Unit of the Bank of Italy;
  • Corporatist Economic and Industrial Research Office of the Ministry of Corporations;
  • Ministry of Economic Activities.

The Subcommittee is chaired by the Director General of the Treasury of the Ministry of Economic Activities.

Cyber National Security Perimeter

The Cyber National Security Perimeter (Italian: Perimetro di Sicurezza Nazionale Cibernetica) consists of public administrations, national, public and private bodies and operators on which depends the exercise of an essential function of the State or the provision of an essential service for the maintenance of civil, social or business activities, fundamental for the interests of the State and from whose malfunctioning, interruption, even partial, or improper use, could result in a prejudice for national security. In order to be part of the Cyber ​​National Security Perimeter, the subject must exercise its functions or services by networks, information systems and IT services from which malfunction, interruption, even partial, or improper use may result in prejudice to national security.
The subjects belonging to the Cyber ​​National Security Perimeter prepare and update a list of the relevant networks, including the related architecture and components, and transmit these lists to the Presidency of the Council of Ministers and to the Director General of National Security (see above), also for the activities of prevention, preparation and management of cybernetic crises.
The Head of Government, in the presence of a serious and imminent risk for national security connected to the vulnerability of networks, systems and services and in cases of cyber-crisis, may in any case dispose, total or partial, where deemed necessary, of one or more devices or products used in the networks, in the systems or for the performance of the services concerned.
At the core of cybersecurity governance is the Office of the Director General of National Security. The Director General of National Security chairs the Cyber ​​Security Nucleus (Nucleo Sicurezza Cibernetica, N.S.C.). The latter is an intergovernmental board that performs cyber crisis management and liaison functions between the various components of institutional architecture. The Nucleus promotes the programming and operational planning of the response, in conjunction with the civil defense and civil protection plans, evaluates and promotes information sharing procedures, acquires communications about cases of violations or attempts to violate security or loss of integrity by the Ministry of Corporations, intelligence services, police forces and, in particular, by the National IT Crime Center for the Protection of Critical Infrastructures (CNAIPIC). Elements of the

  • Computer Security Incident Response Team of the N.S.C.;
  • Cybernetic Alerting and Response Unit (U.A.RI.C.) of the N.S.C.;
  • Eighth Central Directorate of the O.V.R.A.;
  • Computer Emergency Response Team of the Ministry of Corporations;
  • Computer Emergency Response Team of the Ministry of Public Administration;
  • Section V - Infrastructure Protection of the Public Security;
  • Cyber Offences Special Unit, U.S.R.I., of the Royal Guardia di Finanza;
  • Joint Command for Cybernetic Operations, of the Ministry of Defence.

Corporate security and intelligence

According to the fascist doctrine of public-led public-private integration, the national interest requires the integration of the State with company professionals, especially those of large companies.
The large strategic public-owned companies are strategic branches of the State for the acquisition of strategic information for national security. An effective and effective eed partnership between large strategic companies and the State, in its various forms, is deemed of interest for both sides. This formula is mainly aimed at regulating cooperation and collaboration between the armed forces, law enforcement agencies, intelligence services on the one hand and corporate security on the other. To achieve this result, an organic exchange between corporate security and intelligence agencies is necessary (especially, but not only, the OVRA). The exchange between intelligence and corporate security is subject to the direction of the PNF.

See also