Unrealized Initiative on Fighting the Military Espionage in the Russian Empire (1909–1914)
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St Petersburg State University
Abstract
The appearance in the Russian legislative practice of the phenomenon of unrealized initiatives (bills) was a sign and a consequence mainly of political short-sightedness of the supreme executive and legislative
power. The Council of Ministers has not managed to recognize and actualize the regular military and spyware
threats. Problems of over-concentration of foreign colonists in the border regions of Russia and the imperfection
of the domestic proceedings in cases of espionage were considered as not worthy of attention and not in need of
immediate legal assessment. The State Duma and the Council of State, due to the lack of parliamentary experience
and of special (urgent) passing legislation procedures, has not had time to take preventive and comprehensive
legislative response to the foreign espionage. Meanwhile, emerging Russia’s national security system was
in need of additional regional «counterespionage» laws that could minimize favorable conditions for operations
of the German and Austrian intelligence. The functionality of the agents’ network in the western borderlands and
the South-West region (regions of Vilna, Warsaw, Kiev and Odessa military districts) was dependent to a large
extent on two factors. Firstly, the European Russian border line was inhabited by many foreigners used for the
false attraction and dispersion of attention of Russian military and police authorities. In addition, there was a concentration
in the Volyn and some other nearby provinces of the reserve of German and Austrian reservists (sworn
allegiance to Germany or Austria-Hungary and have served in the armed forces of these countries) who were
planned to get involved in the collection of intelligence information about the Russian defense with the beginning
of the mobilization. Moreover, several cases of cooperation of foreign colonists were recorded in the pre-war period.
And, secondly, the Grand Duchy of Finland, as a «state within a state», did not recognize the laws of Russian
Empire (in terms of the fight against political crimes). As a result, criminal law prosecution for espionage, carried
out by local police and judicial authorities and institutions, wasn’t so strict.
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Zverev V. O. Unrealized Initiative on Fighting the Military Espionage in the Russian Empire (1909–1914), Modern History of Russia, no. 2, 2017. P. 7–18.