Amt für Politische Sicherheit
| Amt für Politische Sicherheit | |
| Central party security office overview | |
|---|---|
| Formed | 1953 |
| Dissolved | 30 November 2024 |
| Jurisdiction | Government of the Tanoa Einsatzgruppen |
| Headquarters | Georgetown, Tanoa |
| Parent Central party security office | NSTAP |
Amt für Politische Sicherheit (English: Office for Political Security) was a central party security office of the NSTAP within the political structure of the Tanoa Einsatzgruppen. It was responsible for political reliability checks, internal party security, loyalty investigations, and the supervision of political conduct within the party and state administration.
The office formed part of the political security apparatus of the Government of the Tanoa Einsatzgruppen. It worked with the Parteiamt für Politische Führung, the Amt für Ideologische Schulung, the Tanoanischssicherheitshauptamt, the Sicherheitsdienst von Eef Paap, and the Sicherheitspolizei.
The Amt für Politische Sicherheit did not function as a police force. Its role was administrative and political. It identified suspected disloyalty, examined internal reports, reviewed the conduct of officials, and transferred serious cases to security or police institutions.
History
[edit | edit source]The Amt für Politische Sicherheit was established in 1953, during the consolidation of the NSTAP as the ruling political organization of the Tanoa Einsatzgruppen. Its creation followed the expansion of the party into civil administration, youth organizations, and internal state offices.
Before the office was established, questions of political loyalty were handled by local party officials, commanders of the Allgemeine SS, and early security formations. These arrangements were inconsistent and depended heavily on individual commanders. The creation of a central office allowed the party to maintain standardized political security records and internal review procedures.
During the 1950s and 1960s, the office became closely connected to the expansion of party membership and civil administration. Officials entering administrative service were often reviewed through political security procedures before being approved for promotion or sensitive assignments.
Under Eef Paap, the office remained active as a tool for supervising political reliability across the regime. It operated alongside the security services but retained a separate party function. Its files were used to evaluate loyalty, investigate suspected dissent, and monitor officials considered politically unreliable.
The office continued to operate until the collapse of the Tanoa Einsatzgruppen in November 2024.
Organization
[edit | edit source]The Amt für Politische Sicherheit was headquartered in Georgetown, where its central files and senior staff were based. It was subordinate to the NSTAP and operated as part of the party apparatus rather than as an independent ministry.
The office was divided into sections responsible for party vetting, internal reports, administrative loyalty reviews, youth organization screening, and coordination with security institutions. These sections collected information from regional party offices, administrative departments, and security bodies.
Local party branches submitted reports concerning suspected political disloyalty, misconduct, unauthorized associations, or failure to follow party policy. These reports were reviewed by the central office and placed into political security files.
The office did not command the Ordnungspolizei, Sicherheitspolizei, or Tanoanischssicherheitshauptamt. It could refer cases to those institutions when a matter required arrest, surveillance, interrogation, or formal security action.
Functions
[edit | edit source]The main function of the Amt für Politische Sicherheit was the supervision of political loyalty within the NSTAP and the administrative structure of the Tanoa Einsatzgruppen. It reviewed party members, civil officials, youth leaders, and selected personnel within state institutions.
The office maintained political security files on officials and party members. These files included loyalty assessments, reports from local party offices, disciplinary notes, ideological evaluations, and referrals from other institutions.
It also carried out political screening for appointments and promotions. Officials seeking positions within the party, civil administration, propaganda offices, population administration, or youth leadership could be reviewed by the office before receiving approval.
The office worked with the Amt für Ideologische Schulung in cases where ideological retraining was considered sufficient. Individuals accused of minor political unreliability could be ordered to attend additional instruction or be placed under closer supervision.
More serious cases were referred to the Tanoanischssicherheitshauptamt, Sicherheitsdienst von Eef Paap, or Sicherheitspolizei. These cases included suspected organized dissent, contact with hostile groups, sabotage, espionage, or disloyalty inside sensitive institutions.
Role within the regime
[edit | edit source]Within the Tanoan political system, the Amt für Politische Sicherheit served as the main party body for internal political control. Its work helped the NSTAP monitor its own members and maintain discipline within institutions connected to the regime.
The office did not hold supreme authority over security policy. That authority remained with the Führer of Tanoa, the Oberkommando der Tanoa Einsatzgruppen, the Allgemeine SS, and the central security institutions. The Amt für Politische Sicherheit functioned as a political filter between the party structure and the enforcement apparatus.
Its influence came from its ability to affect careers, appointments, and internal status. A negative report from the office could prevent a person from receiving promotion, joining the party, holding a sensitive position, or continuing in administrative service.
The office also helped connect political education with political enforcement. It worked with ideological and propaganda offices to define acceptable conduct, then used political security procedures to identify officials who failed to meet those standards.
Relations with other institutions
[edit | edit source]The Amt für Politische Sicherheit worked closely with the Parteiamt für Politische Führung, which coordinated the broader party leadership structure. The political security office provided loyalty assessments and internal reports used by party leadership when appointing or removing officials.
It also cooperated with the Amt für Ideologische Schulung. The ideological office handled education and political training, while the political security office handled investigations, reliability checks, and internal reviews.
The office maintained regular contact with the Tanoanischssicherheitshauptamt and its subordinate services. The Sicherheitsdienst von Eef Paap and Tanoanischsicherheitsdienst were used for intelligence and security work, while the Amt für Politische Sicherheit focused on the party and administrative side of political reliability.
The Sicherheitspolizei and Ordnungspolizei became involved when a political case required enforcement action. In those cases, the office provided reports or recommendations but did not carry out police operations itself.
Dissolution
[edit | edit source]The Amt für Politische Sicherheit ceased to function during the collapse of the Tanoa Einsatzgruppen in November 2024. After the death of Eef Paap on 24 November 2024, central party authority and political supervision broke down across the regime.
By 30 November 2024, the office had formally ceased to exist along with the wider NSTAP party apparatus. Surviving records from the office were later treated as part of the broader administrative and security archives of the regime.