As a result of the Sanders affair and complaints about abuses within the BNV, Prime Minister Beel set up the Wijnvelt Committee, which issued a 191-page report on 12 May 1948. Among other things, it was concluded that Einthoven had made policy mistakes, but because the set-up of the BNV was not well thought out in advance, he could stay on as head, and then become the head of the CVD and the BVD. In January 1946, the government had already decided to dissolve the BNV on 31 December of that year, as there appeared to be no longer any question of German sabotage activities. Meanwhile, for future tasks in the field of internal security, the
Centrale Veiligheidsdienst (CVD) was established in April 1946, which was renamed the
Binnenlandse Veiligheidsdienst (BVD) in 1949. ==Literature==