Secret Agents of the Russian Gendarmerie in the Fight against Espionage at the Beginning of the First World War
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St Petersburg State University
Abstract
The article discusses the limited intelligence capabilities of the gendarmerie departments of the Warsaw
Governor General (Lomzinska, Warsaw, Kielce, Lublin, and Radom provinces) in the fight against German
and Austrian spies in the second half of 1914 and the first half of 1915. One reason for the secret police’s lack of
readiness is the reluctance of the gendarmerie-police authorities to organize counter-response work on an appropriate
basis. The rare, fragmentary, and not always valuable information received by agents of the investigating
authorities did not allow the gendarmes to organize full-scale and successful operational work on a subordinate
territory to identify hidden enemies of the state. The low potential, and, in some cases, the complete uselessness
of secret service personnel for the interests of the military wanted list led to the fact that most politically disloyal
persons were accidentally identified by other special services. In most cases, spies were detected either due to
information from army intelligence and counterintelligence agencies, or due to the vigilance of military personnel
of the advanced units of the Russian army. The authors conclude that the gendarmerie departments were unable
to organize a systematic operational escort of military personnel of the Russian armies deployed in the Warsaw
Military District. Despite the fact that the duty of the gendarmerie police included not only criminal procedures,
but also operational searches, there was no qualified identification of spies with the help of secret officers.
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Zverev V. O., Polovnikov O. G. ‘Secret Agents of the Russian Gendarmerie in the Fight against Espionage at the Beginning of the First World War’, Modern History of Russia, vol. 10, no. 4, 2020, pp. 892–901.