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- Stasi - Wikipedia
Former high-ranking officers and employees of the Stasi, including the last Stasi director, Wolfgang Schwanitz, make up the majority of the organization's members, and it receives support from the German Communist Party, among others
- Stasi | Meaning, Facts, Methods, Files | Britannica
The Stasi was one of the most hated and feared institutions of the East German communist government The Stasi developed out of the internal security and police apparatus established in the Soviet zone of occupation in Germany after World War II
- The Stasi: The Most Terrifying Secret Police in History?
The Stasi were one of the most successful intelligence services in history: they kept almost unimaginably detailed files and records on large quantities of the population, and created an atmosphere of fear and unease that they then proceeded to exploit
- Stasi: How the GDR kept its citizens under surveillance
As "the shield and sword of the party," the Stasi was in charge of maintaining the rule of the Socialist Unity Party of Germany (SED) by clamping down on any opposition
- Stasi Records Archive - The Federal Archives
Thousands of pages of documents, hundreds of photo series, and many hours of audio and video material provide an in-depth view of the methods and activities of the Stasi
- The Stasi: Inside the Twisted World of East Germany‘s Secret Police
Stasi agents were dispatched to other socialist countries to help train and advise their security services, sharing expertise in surveillance, interrogation, and psychological warfare
- East German Secret Police: 5 Things You Might Not Know About The Stasi
When the Stasi were founded in 1950, it wasn’t seen as controversial Indeed, the Stasi was seen as a localized extension of the KGB, the Soviet Security Service that had arrived when the Russians had liberated Berlin from the Nazis in 1945
- Stasi, East Germany’s Spy Machine — 200,000 Spies, 111 km of Secrets
The German Democratic Republic’s (GDR) Ministry for State Security, commonly referred to as the Stasi, was an omnipresent and sadistic force whose primary role was to spy on and police the
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