State insecurity
Dec 19th 2006 From The Economist print edition
Spy scandals in eastern Europe reveal some damaging hang-ups
WHEN spooks start mattering, democrats start worrying. Eastern Europe 
has shed the planned economy and oneparty rule. But the intelligence and 
security services still have disproportionate influence. Indeed, it 
seems to be growing.
In Poland reform of the military-intelligence agency, the WSI, has been 
the main achievement-critics would say the sole one-of the government in 
the past year. A commission charged with the job claims that the WSI was 
actively involved in influencing the media and business (particularly 
arms-trading and property), as well as government itself. The WSI has 
now been broken up into a military-intelligence and a 
counter-intelligence service.
Some 300 Soviet-trained officers have been fired.
Across the border in Lithuania another scandal is blazing in the 
security service, the VSD. A top Lithuanian spy posted to Belarus, 
Vytautas Pociunas, was found dead in mysterious circumstances-an event 
that some link to feuds within the VSD over freight contracts. A 
muck-racking newspaper which published supposedly inside information 
about the VSD was raided. A parliamentary committee wants the VSD chief, 
Arvydas Pocius, to go. He has suspended his service's two top 
counter-intelligence officers, claiming that they "pose a threat to 
national security".
Making sense of all this is hard. But one thread stretches back to the 
removal in 2004 of Rolandas Paksas, a president whose unfortunate choice 
of friends led Lithuania's allies to worry about the country's future. 
Mr Paksas was impeached after the then VSD boss, Mecys Laurinkus, told 
Lithuania's parliament about the president's Russian-related antics. 
That success may have made the VSD big-headed.
It is hard to find an ex-communist country in eastern Europe in which 
the intelligence and security services are depoliticised and 
uncontroversial. In Bulgaria the director of the department responsible 
for secret communist-era archives, which lawmakers have voted to open, 
was found dead at his desk in November, shot with his own gun.
The authorities' delay in announcing the death, which leaked out in 
Brussels, prompted accusations of a cover-up.
Two other senior figures committed suicide in October.
Romania's communist-era Securitate has proved the most pervasive and 
resilient, with extensive business and political connections. President 
Trajan Basescu recently sacked his intelligence chiefs in a row over the 
escape of a suspected triple agent who was also an arms-dealer and 
kidnapper (just another dull day in the Balkans). The president's 
critics wonder how, in communist times, he wangled a plum job abroad, in 
Antwerp, without help and encouragement from his or a 
foreign-intelligence service, something over which the files are oddly 
silent.
A common feature here is the weakness of eastern Europe's politicians 
and public institutions, which often fail to counteract the influence of 
those linked to the past. The old regimes of eastern Europe did not 
disappear in a sea of flags and euphoria in 1989. Many senior figures 
relabelled themselves, their money and their power-and are still doing 
nicely under the new system. It helps that decades of totalitarian rule 
leave people easily spooked. Few believe that the men in raincoats are 
under proper legal and political control.
One answer may be to start from scratch, with new recruits, something 
that Poland is now considering. Estonia, whose small, British-trained 
intelligence service is widely seen as one of the best in eastern 
Europe, did this in 1992. It also has a rule that politicians must never 
be spied on. "Such cases are for the voters to judge," explains an 
official, sternly.
About sponsorship Copyright © 2006 The Economist Newspaper and The 
Economist Group. All rights reserved.

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