CESIS
Comitato Esecutivo per i Servizi di Informazione e Sicurezza (Executive Committee for Intelligence and Security Services) was an Italian government committee whose mission was the coordination of all the intelligence sector, and specifically between the two civilian and military intelligence agencies (respectively, SISDE and SISMI), with the aim to report all the relevant information collected by it to the political Authorities, represented by the Presidency of the Council of Ministers. With the reform of the Italian Intelligence Services approved on 1 August 2007, CESIS was replaced by DIS.[1] HistorySince the end of World War II, Italian intelligence agencies have been reorganized many times in an attempt to increase their effectiveness and bring them more fully under civilian control. The committee was established as part of a broader reform of the Italian intelligence community, which represented the latest in a long string of government attempts to effectively manage Italy's intelligence agencies.
CESIS's first Secretary General was Prefect Gaetano Napoletano, the last one was Lieutenant General Giuseppe Cucchi. MissionCESIS was a collective body, chaired by the President of Council, and composed of the main political, public security, military and intelligence agency top authorities:
The Secretary General of CESIS was not only a member, but, as the chief of General Secretariat of CESIS (see below), he also acted as the Secretary of this body. The General SecretariatThe General Secretariat, the Office of the Secretary General, was a focal point which, amongst other things:
UCSI's role is to protect the Italian secret of State.[2] By means of the General Secretariat, the President of Council ensures the unity of political leadership and management of the intelligence agencies. The Secretary General exerted, by proxy, the role of ANS ("National Security Authority"), peculiar of the President of Council. The Secretaries General
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