The post-
World War II Ministry of Public Security (UB) was responsible for security, intelligence and
counterintelligence. It controlled over 41,000 soldiers of the
Internal Security Corps, 57,500 members of the
Citizens' Militia, 32,000
Border Protection Forces, 10,000
prison officers and 125,000 members of the
Volunteer Reserve Citizen Militia. After the 1954 defection to the
West of
Józef Światło (born Izaak Fleischfarb), a high-ranking
Ministry of Public Security officer instrumental in arresting Cardinal
Stefan Wyszyński, this Ministry of Public Security was abolished. In December 1954, the
Communist Party divided the old UB into two parts: the
Committee for Public Security (
Komitet do spraw Bezpieczeństwa Publicznego, or KDSBP) and the
Ministry of Internal Affairs (MSW). The former was a
secret police responsible for internal and external
intelligence and
counterintelligence to fight underground movements and the influence of the
Catholic Church. The MSW was responsible for administrative duties, and eventually controlled the Internal Security Corps, militia, border troops, prison guards and the Volunteer Reserve Citizen Militia.
1956 reform The year 1956 brought change to Polish politics. Recently released from prison,
Władysław Gomułka became the
first secretary of the
Central Committee of the
Polish United Workers' Party. Reforms were made in the structure of state security. The Committee of Public Safety was abolished, and its duties were taken over by the
MSW. The introduction of Security Service to the Interior Ministry (which was already in the Polish public safety system since 1954), came as a result of directive number 00238/56 made by
Władysław Wicha on 29 November 1956. Wicha was a Polish
communist and politician
PZPR member and then the first Minister of Internal Affairs from 1954 to 1964. After that his directive, the MSW was the only security body in Poland. Officers working in the Security Service were nicknamed "SB-eks" (Służba Bezpieczeństwa agents). SB also contracted individuals as
secret collaborators (
Tajny Współpracownik or TW), who usually received money for the services rendered. ==Directors==