The reform of the Ukrainian Security Service (SBU) was high on the agenda at the August 13 meeting between the head of the National Security and Defense Council (RNBO) and an international advisory group composed of representatives of the European Union, NATO, and the United States.
RNBO Secretary Oleksandr Danylyuk said the group supported "the Ukrainian authorities' stance on the need to urgently reform the Security Service of Ukraine," according to a statement on the RNBO website.
Acting SBU chief Ivan Bakanov and Ruslan Ryaboshapka, deputy head of the presidential office, also attended the meeting.
Danylyuk, a former finance minister and McKinsey & Company consultant, told the BBC's Ukrainian Service on August 13 that a law is being finalized to revamp the SBU in order to "make its core functions of counterintelligence and combating terrorism stronger, not weaker."
The SBU is the country's least reformed security or law enforcement agency. It employs more than 30,000 people and is considered continental Europe's largest intelligence service.
It has little civic oversight and has powers far beyond what its Western counterparts have. Unlike other public officials, the SBU's staff is exempt from having their asset declarations accessible to the public.
Danylyuk said he wants to either shift or take away the agency's investigative powers on anti-corruption as well as economic and foreign intelligence -- functions that are duplicated elsewhere.
"It’s paramount that, this time, reform will be successful and effective," Danylyuk said.
New laws and amendments to existing ones should accompany the makeover, he said, to eliminate legislative overlaps and for functions to coalesce across different agencies.
When asked to address the SBU's reputation for shaking down businesses and the documented lavish lifestyles of some of its high-ranking officers, Danylyuk said changes should take place in a such away that the "public trusts it, so that all its actions are understood."
To succeed in the makeover, the RNBO chief said "we [must] act as one team upon the instructions of the president of Ukraine."
National-Security Council Chief: Ukraine's Spy Agency Is Top Reform Priority

Related
Editors' Picks
Top Trending
1
Inside The Ukraine-US Minerals Deal (It's Not What You Might Think)
2Will The US Leave NATO? Officials Push Back Against Rising Doubts
3Zelenskyy Says Relations With U.S. Salvageable Despite Heated Exchange In White House
4Analysis: 4 Takeaways From The Disaster In The Oval Office
5Pride, Horror, And Concern: What Ukrainians Think About The Trump-Zelenskyy Oval Office Standoff
6Taliban Declares End To Doha Agreement With The United States
7Europe Pushes For Lasting Peace, But Can Russia's Battlefield Momentum Be Halted?
8Russia’s Invasion Plan Vs. Reality: A Map Of Miscalculations
9Russia's Foreign Mercenaries In Ukraine War: Military Leak Shows Bosnian Serb Fighter As GRU Officer
10Starmer Says 'Time To Act' On Ukraine As Europe At Crossroads
RFE/RL has been declared an "undesirable organization" by the Russian government.
If you are in Russia or the Russia-controlled parts of Ukraine and hold a Russian passport or are a stateless person residing permanently in Russia or the Russia-controlled parts of Ukraine, please note that you could face fines or imprisonment for sharing, liking, commenting on, or saving our content, or for contacting us.
To find out more, click here.