This mind map illustrates the critical role of intelligence agencies in India's internal security framework, detailing their key functions, the intelligence cycle, and the major agencies involved in safeguarding national interests.
This table highlights the key differences between India's two primary intelligence agencies, the Intelligence Bureau (IB) and the Research & Analysis Wing (RAW), in terms of their mandate, focus, and operational areas.
This mind map illustrates the critical role of intelligence agencies in India's internal security framework, detailing their key functions, the intelligence cycle, and the major agencies involved in safeguarding national interests.
This table highlights the key differences between India's two primary intelligence agencies, the Intelligence Bureau (IB) and the Research & Analysis Wing (RAW), in terms of their mandate, focus, and operational areas.
Collect, Analyze, Disseminate Info
Provide Actionable Intelligence
Intelligence Bureau (IB) - Internal
National Investigation Agency (NIA) - Investigation
National Technical Research Organisation (NTRO) - Tech
Collection (HUMINT, TECHINT, OSINT)
Analysis & Production
Dissemination
Coordination (MAC, S-MACs)
Cyber Intelligence & OSINT
| Feature | Intelligence Bureau (IB) | Research & Analysis Wing (RAW) |
|---|---|---|
| Mandate | Internal Intelligence | External Intelligence |
| Focus Area | Counter-terrorism, Counter-insurgency, LWE, Espionage, VIP Security, Border Management (internal aspects) | Foreign intelligence, Counter-terrorism abroad, Covert operations, Strategic intelligence, Cyber intelligence (external) |
| Establishment Year | 1887 (as Central Special Branch), reorganized post-independence | 1968 (separated from IB) |
| Reporting To | Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) | Prime Minister's Office (PMO) |
| Key Functions | Domestic intelligence gathering, counter-intelligence within India, threat assessments for internal security. | Gathering foreign intelligence, counter-proliferation, special operations, assessing external threats to India's security. |
💡 Highlighted: Row 0 is particularly important for exam preparation
Collect, Analyze, Disseminate Info
Provide Actionable Intelligence
Intelligence Bureau (IB) - Internal
National Investigation Agency (NIA) - Investigation
National Technical Research Organisation (NTRO) - Tech
Collection (HUMINT, TECHINT, OSINT)
Analysis & Production
Dissemination
Coordination (MAC, S-MACs)
Cyber Intelligence & OSINT
| Feature | Intelligence Bureau (IB) | Research & Analysis Wing (RAW) |
|---|---|---|
| Mandate | Internal Intelligence | External Intelligence |
| Focus Area | Counter-terrorism, Counter-insurgency, LWE, Espionage, VIP Security, Border Management (internal aspects) | Foreign intelligence, Counter-terrorism abroad, Covert operations, Strategic intelligence, Cyber intelligence (external) |
| Establishment Year | 1887 (as Central Special Branch), reorganized post-independence | 1968 (separated from IB) |
| Reporting To | Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) | Prime Minister's Office (PMO) |
| Key Functions | Domestic intelligence gathering, counter-intelligence within India, threat assessments for internal security. | Gathering foreign intelligence, counter-proliferation, special operations, assessing external threats to India's security. |
💡 Highlighted: Row 0 is particularly important for exam preparation
Intelligence Cycle: Involves planning and direction, collection (human intelligence, technical intelligence, open-source intelligence), processing and exploitation, analysis and production, and dissemination.
Key Agencies: Intelligence Bureau (IB) (internal intelligence, counter-terrorism, counter-insurgency, LWE), Research and Analysis Wing (RAW) (external intelligence, counter-terrorism abroad, strategic intelligence), National Technical Research Organisation (NTRO) (technical intelligence, cyber security), National Investigation Agency (NIA) (investigation of terror-related crimes), State Intelligence Departments (SIDs).
Functions: Early warning of threats, identifying sleeper cells, tracking insurgent movements, counter-espionage, cyber threat assessment, and providing strategic inputs for policy formulation.
Coordination: Crucial for effective intelligence sharing among central and state agencies, often facilitated by platforms like the Multi-Agency Centre (MAC).
Challenges: Balancing national security with individual privacy, inter-agency rivalries, resource constraints, adapting to new technologies used by adversaries, and maintaining accountability.
Human Intelligence (HUMINT): Involves gathering information through human sources, crucial for understanding ground realities and insurgent networks.
Technical Intelligence (TECHINT): Utilizes electronic surveillance, signal intelligence (SIGINT), imagery intelligence (IMINT), and cyber intelligence.
Actionable Intelligence: Intelligence that is timely, accurate, and specific enough to enable security forces to take direct action, as seen in the news incident.
This mind map illustrates the critical role of intelligence agencies in India's internal security framework, detailing their key functions, the intelligence cycle, and the major agencies involved in safeguarding national interests.
Intelligence Agencies in Internal Security
This table highlights the key differences between India's two primary intelligence agencies, the Intelligence Bureau (IB) and the Research & Analysis Wing (RAW), in terms of their mandate, focus, and operational areas.
| Feature | Intelligence Bureau (IB) | Research & Analysis Wing (RAW) |
|---|---|---|
| Mandate | Internal Intelligence | External Intelligence |
| Focus Area | Counter-terrorism, Counter-insurgency, LWE, Espionage, VIP Security, Border Management (internal aspects) | Foreign intelligence, Counter-terrorism abroad, Covert operations, Strategic intelligence, Cyber intelligence (external) |
| Establishment Year | 1887 (as Central Special Branch), reorganized post-independence | 1968 (separated from IB) |
| Reporting To | Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) | Prime Minister's Office (PMO) |
| Key Functions | Domestic intelligence gathering, counter-intelligence within India, threat assessments for internal security. | Gathering foreign intelligence, counter-proliferation, special operations, assessing external threats to India's security. |
Intelligence Cycle: Involves planning and direction, collection (human intelligence, technical intelligence, open-source intelligence), processing and exploitation, analysis and production, and dissemination.
Key Agencies: Intelligence Bureau (IB) (internal intelligence, counter-terrorism, counter-insurgency, LWE), Research and Analysis Wing (RAW) (external intelligence, counter-terrorism abroad, strategic intelligence), National Technical Research Organisation (NTRO) (technical intelligence, cyber security), National Investigation Agency (NIA) (investigation of terror-related crimes), State Intelligence Departments (SIDs).
Functions: Early warning of threats, identifying sleeper cells, tracking insurgent movements, counter-espionage, cyber threat assessment, and providing strategic inputs for policy formulation.
Coordination: Crucial for effective intelligence sharing among central and state agencies, often facilitated by platforms like the Multi-Agency Centre (MAC).
Challenges: Balancing national security with individual privacy, inter-agency rivalries, resource constraints, adapting to new technologies used by adversaries, and maintaining accountability.
Human Intelligence (HUMINT): Involves gathering information through human sources, crucial for understanding ground realities and insurgent networks.
Technical Intelligence (TECHINT): Utilizes electronic surveillance, signal intelligence (SIGINT), imagery intelligence (IMINT), and cyber intelligence.
Actionable Intelligence: Intelligence that is timely, accurate, and specific enough to enable security forces to take direct action, as seen in the news incident.
This mind map illustrates the critical role of intelligence agencies in India's internal security framework, detailing their key functions, the intelligence cycle, and the major agencies involved in safeguarding national interests.
Intelligence Agencies in Internal Security
This table highlights the key differences between India's two primary intelligence agencies, the Intelligence Bureau (IB) and the Research & Analysis Wing (RAW), in terms of their mandate, focus, and operational areas.
| Feature | Intelligence Bureau (IB) | Research & Analysis Wing (RAW) |
|---|---|---|
| Mandate | Internal Intelligence | External Intelligence |
| Focus Area | Counter-terrorism, Counter-insurgency, LWE, Espionage, VIP Security, Border Management (internal aspects) | Foreign intelligence, Counter-terrorism abroad, Covert operations, Strategic intelligence, Cyber intelligence (external) |
| Establishment Year | 1887 (as Central Special Branch), reorganized post-independence | 1968 (separated from IB) |
| Reporting To | Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) | Prime Minister's Office (PMO) |
| Key Functions | Domestic intelligence gathering, counter-intelligence within India, threat assessments for internal security. | Gathering foreign intelligence, counter-proliferation, special operations, assessing external threats to India's security. |