1902: TTA, SPTA, PTA, ROSTA The origin of TASS dates back to December 1902 when it began operations as the Commercial Telegraph Agency (TTA) under the Ministry of Finance, with
Torgovo-Promyshlennaya Gazeta's staff being the main supplier of journalists. As the demand for non-business news began during the first battles of the
Russo-Japanese War in February 1904, the agency changed its name to the St. Petersburg Telegraph Agency (SPTA). As there was no change of headquarters and almost no change in its staff and function, it was a mere rebranding. In August 1914, one day after
St. Petersburg was renamed Petrograd, SPTA was renamed the Petrograd Telegraph Agency (PTA). It was seized by the
Bolsheviks in November 1917 and by December was renamed as the Central Information Agency of the
Soviet Russian Council of People's Commissars. On 7 September 1918, the presidium renamed PTA and the Press bureau into the Russian Telegraph Agency (
ROSTA), which became "the central information agency of the whole Russian Socialist Federative Soviet Republic". by a decree of the
Presidium of the Supreme Soviet, and took over the duties of the ROSTA as the country's central information agency. TASS enjoyed "exclusive right to gather and distribute information outside the Soviet Union, as well as the right to distribute foreign and domestic information within the Soviet Union, and manage the news agencies of the Soviet republics". Official state information was delivered as the
TASS Report. In addition to producing reports for general consumption, TASS produced packages of content for non-public use. Western news reports and potentially embarrassing domestic news would be compiled daily into a collection known as "White TASS", and particularly sensitive news would be compiled into a smaller collection known as "Red TASS". These collections were made available only to top journalists and political leaders, respectively. In 1961,
RIA Novosti was created to supplement TASS, mainly in foreign reporting and human-interest stories. After 1971, TASS was elevated to the status of State Committee at the
Government of the Soviet Union. The agency was frequently used as a
front organization by the Soviet intelligence agencies, such as the
NKVD (later
KGB) and
Main Intelligence Directorate, with TASS employees serving as
informants abroad. In 1959,
Alexander Alexeyev was dispatched to Cuba on a fact-finding mission, ostensibly working for TASS. Former
Georgetown University professor James David Atkinson stated that TASS was an "effective propaganda medium" but that it concentrated "more heavily on espionage than on other activities." TASS frequently served as a vector for Soviet
active measures. On 11 July 1975, TASS was awarded the Order of the October Revolution by the Soviet government.
1992: ITAR-TASS In January 1992, following the
dissolution of the Soviet Union, a
Presidential Decree signed by
Boris Yeltsin redefined the status of TASS and renamed it the
Information Telegraph Agency of Russia. In May 1994, the
Russian Government adopted a
resolution "
On approval of the Charter of the Information Telegraph Agency of Russia", under which it operates as a central government news agency. The TASS acronym was, by this point, well-recognized around the world and so was retained after being redefined as the
Telegraph Agency of Communication and Messages. The agency as a whole was referred to as "ITAR-TASS". == Organization ==