The Star Late Edition

Reports on KGB revival false

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MOSCOW: The KGB secret service is not being revived in Russia, says former Kremlin chief of staff Sergey Ivanov .

Ivanov, a confidant of President Vladimir Putin, said reports that a new ministry of state security was being set up along the lines of the much-feared Soviet-era body were false.

Various bodies would continue to work separately on investigat­ions, counter-espionage and security, Ivanov told Komsomolsk­aya Pravda daily. “I don’t see any sense in having a super ministry,” said Ivanov, who in August switched portfolios to transport and the environmen­t after working for four years as chief of staff of the presidenti­al administra­tion. Kommersant daily had earlier reported that the Kremlin was planning to reform the security forces – especially the FSB domestic secret service – before the next presidenti­al election in 2018. The newspaper reported that the plans included a new ministry of state security that would be able to lead investigat­ions in special criminal cases and have other powers similar to the old KGB.

There was a ministry of state security in Moscow between 1946 and 1953, the predecesso­r to the KGB (Committee for State Security).

Putin worked as a KGB agent in the former East Germany. The KGB was dissolved in 1991 and replaced by the FSB, for which Putin was the director in Moscow from 1998 to 1999.

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