State Security Administration (Yugoslavia)


The State Security Service, more commonly known by its original name as the State Security Administration, was the secret police organization of Yugoslavia. Best known at all times simply by the acronym UDBA, in its latter decades it was composed of six semi-independent secret police organizations—one for each of the six Yugoslav federal republics—coordinated by the central federal headquarters in the capital of Belgrade.
Although it operated with more restraint than other secret police agencies in the communist dictatorships of Eastern Europe, the UDBA was nonetheless a feared tool of control. It is alleged that the UDBA was responsible for the "eliminations" of dozens of enemies of the state within Yugoslavia and internationally. Eliminations vary from those of World War II Ustaše Croat leaders Ante Pavelić and Vjekoslav Luburić, to Croatian emigrant writer Bruno Bušić and Serbian emigrant writer Dragiša Kašiković.
With the breakup of Yugoslavia, the breakaway republics went on to form their own secret police agencies, while the State Security Service of the FR Yugoslavia kept its UDBA-era name.

Functions

UDBA formed a major part of the Yugoslav intelligence services from 1946-1991, and was primarily responsible for internal state security. After 1946 the UDBA underwent numerous security and intelligence changes due to topical issues at that time, including: fighting gangs; protection of the economy; Cominform/Informbiro; and bureaucratic aspirations. In 1945 and 1946, for instance, the UDBA was organized into districts. In 1950, when the administrative-territorial units were abolished as authorities, the UDBA was reorganized again. During this period the intelligence and security activities concentrated less on intelligence and more on internal security. There was an emphasis on collectivism, brotherhood, social harmony, loyalty, and tolerance towards those with different views. Deviation from this set of values became an immediate issue for security services.
Later, the use of force was mitigated and when the process of "decentralization of people's power" began, intelligence and security services underwent further reorganization in order to decentralise power and increase effectiveness. The Act on Internal Affairs and the Decree on Organization of State Internal Affairs Secretariat regulated the intelligence security authority as the prerogative of the State Security Directorate within the Ministry of the Interior. The following reorganization addressed issues relating to the competence of the federation.

Structure

Intelligence and security activity was organized in the following manner:

1946–1986 period

On of the first successful actions of UDBA was operation Gvardijan, that denied Božidar Kavran chance to infiltrate ex-Ustasha groups in order to raise uprising against Yugoslavia, eventually capturing Kavran himself.
From 1963–1974, security intelligence services dealt with a series of domestic and foreign political events. At home, there were political confrontation both before and after the Brioni Plenum, liberal flareups and massive leftist student demonstrations in Belgrade in 1968, Hrvatsko proljeće or "MASPOK" in Croatia in 1971, a nationalist incursion of the Bugojno group in the Raduša area, and a revival of nationalism in Yugoslav republics. The most significant event abroad was the invasion of the Warsaw Pact troops into Czechoslovakia in 1968.
These were the circumstances at the time the first act on internal affairs of the individual republics was adopted in 1967. According to this act, internal affairs were handled directly by the municipal administrative bodies and the secretariats of internal affairs of each republic or by their provincial bodies. This was the first time since 1945 that republics gained control and greater influence over their individual security organs and intelligence security services.
The State Security Service was defined by law as a professional service within the Republic Secretariat of Internal Affairs. Naturally, most of its competence remained within federal institutions, as prescribed by the Act on Handling Internal Affairs Under Competence of Federal Administrative Bodies, which determined that the federal secretariat of internal affairs coordinate the work of the SDB in the republics and provinces. Further steps were taken with the transformation of state administration, adoption of the Federal Act on State Administration, and the Republic Act. The newly adopted act on internal affairs tasked the Republic Secretariat of Internal Affairs with state security issues, which then became RSUP issues and were no longer given special handling "at the RSUP". This resolution remained in force until the 1991 modifications of the act on internal affairs.

Post–1986 period

The role of intelligence and security changed after 1986, when a different mentality reigned within the Party and the processes of democratization were initiated. Intelligence security agencies came under attack, and many people started publicly writing about and criticizing the SDB. There were no more taboo subjects. The party organization was abolished in the SDB and the first attempts to introduce parliamentary control began.
The appointment of a commission to monitor the work was one of the most absurd decisions made by the country's intelligence security services during the era of "social democracy", since SDB activity was regulated by federal legislation and regulations published in the secret Official Gazettes. Neither the commission members nor its president had access to these Acts. It was difficult to evaluate information, since the commission had no investigative powers or capability to verify information. The head of the service was tasked simply to deliver requested information, even classified, to the commission. The SDB was also still receiving tasks from the Party, although the supervising commission lacked the powers to control those tasks. The above-mentioned events undermined the unity of the SDB, which formulated its own, unpublished regulations. This made any protest about violation of rights impossible, as the regulations were inaccessible to the public.
The first democratic multi party elections in 1990, which enhanced the process of democratization, reverberated within the Federal Secretariat of Internal Affairs and Federal State Security Service, which were fighting to maintain control over the individual SDBs in the republics. The latter became increasingly disunited; it was still legally connected to the federal bodies, but was becoming aware of the fact that it operated and worked in their particular republic. Some professional cadres, especially those in the "domestic field", began leaving the service. Conflict was increasing, and SDB archives were being systematically destroyed. In its search for new roles, the SDBs also began to limit information they were sending to the SSDB. It ultimately restricted its information to foreign intelligence services.
Along with the weakening of the SSDB position, attempts were made by the Yugoslav People's Army Security Service or KOS to strengthen its own strongholds in the different republics and in the individual SDBs. The attempts failed because they depended upon cadres of other nationalities still employed in the SDBs but who had no access to data bases and had no decision-making power due to their "Yugoslav" orientation.
Recently released files contain information on 1 million citizens of the Socialist Republic of Slovenia and other former Yugoslav republics, whose files the UDBA in Slovenia kept records. In 2003 and 2010, it was to possible to see the names of the UDBA agents in Slovenia, some of whom are still active in the Slovenian Military and the Ministry of Interior, at the website udba.net. The government of Slovenia promptly demanded the removal of pages from the website, so they are currently not accessible.

List of notable targeted people

YearCountryAssassinated
1946Ivo Protulipac, Andrej Uršič
1948Ilija Abramović
1960Dinka Domančinović
1962Rudolf Kantoci
1966Mate Miličević
1967Joze Jelić, Mile Jelić, Vlado Murat, Bardhosh Gervalla, Anđelko Pernar, Marijan Šimundić, Petar Tominac
1968Josip Krtalić
1968Pero Čović
1968Nedjeljko Mrkonjić
1968Andrija Lončarić
1968Ante Znaor
1968Đuro Kokić, Vid Maričić, Mile Rukavina, Krešimir Tolj, Hrvoje Ursa
1969Mirko Ćurić, Nahid Kulenović, Ratko Obradović
1969Spanish StateVjekoslav Luburić
1971Ivo Bogdan
1971Maksim Krstulović
1971Mirko Šimić
1971Mijo Lijić
1972Rosemarie Bahorić, Stjepan Ševo, Tatjana Ševo
1972Ivan Mihalić, Josip Senić
1973Josip Buljan-Mikulić
1974Mate Jozak
1974Maksim Krstulović
1975Nikola Martinović
1975Matko Bradarić, Petar Valić, Bora Blagojević
1975Vinko Eljuga
1975Ivica Miošević, Nikola Penava, Ilija Vučić
1975Stipe Mikulić
1976Ivan Tuksor
1976Miodrag Bošković, Uroš Milenković
1977Union of South AfricaJozo Oreč
1977Ivan Vučić
1977Dragiša Kašiković and Ivanka Milosevich
1978Bruno Bušić
1978Križan Brkić
1979Cvitko Cicvarić, Goran Šećer
1979Marijan Rudela, Zvonko Šimac
1980Mirko Desker, Nikola Miličević
1981Mate Kolić
1981Petar Bilandžić, Ivo Furlić, Ivan Jurišić, Mladen Jurišić, Ante Kostić, Jusuf Gërvalla, Bardhosh Gërvalla, Kadri Zeka
1981Stanko Nižić
1983Stjepan Đureković, Franjo Mikulić, Đuro Zagajski, Milan Župan
1984Slavko Logarić
1984Tomislav Katalenic
1986Franjo Mašić
1987Damir Đureković
1987Ivan Hlevnjak
1990Enver Hadri

Footnotes