During the
New State regime and until its end in 1974, the main intelligence agency in Portugal was the
PIDE—
Polícia Internacional e de Defesa do Estado (International and State Defense Police). Nominally under jurisdiction of the
Ministry of the Interior, PIDE was in fact a
secret police force controlled directly by
Portuguese prime-minister
António de Oliveira Salazar. In 1968, under Salazar's successor
Marcello Caetano, PIDE was renamed the
Direcção Geral de Segurança (DGS, Directorate General of Security) and underwent some reform. Following a
coup by the
Portuguese military in 1974 the agency was immediately abolished due to the abhorrence felt for the PIDE/DGS as a tool of the authoritarian regime. Because of the memory of the abuses of the PIDE/DGS in supporting the regime the establishment of a new civilian intelligence agency was delayed for more than a decade. However, following a
terrorist attack on the Embassy of Turkey in 1983, the assassination of a
Palestine Liberation Organization representative at a
Socialist International conference also in 1983, and a number of
domestic terrorist attacks, the
Portuguese government became convinced of the need for a new intelligence agency. This led to the establishment of SIRP in 1984. ==Organization==