Supreme Guard Command
The Supreme Guard Command is an elite protective security unit of the Korean People's Army Ground Force in North Korea, primarily tasked with ensuring the safety and welfare of the supreme leader Kim Jong Un, his family, and senior officials.[1] Established in 1946 as the initial guard formation for early Democratic People's Republic of Korea leadership, it expanded significantly in the 1990s following coup attempts against Kim Jong Il, incorporating broader responsibilities such as securing Pyongyang's government buildings, arms factories, and providing chauffeur, IT, and infrastructure support services.[1] Numbering between 95,000 and 100,000 personnel, the command is organized into six departments—including specialized units like the 2.16 Unit for close protection—three combat brigades, multiple bodyguard divisions, and a construction battalion, all headquartered in Pyongyang's Moranbong District and overseen by the Workers' Party of Korea's Administration Department.[1] Its personnel undergo intensified political-ideological training equivalent to colonel-level education, emphasizing absolute loyalty to the Kim bloodline as "living shields" and framing the unit as inheritors of anti-Japanese guerrilla traditions with a sacred protective mission.[2] Notable for its role in regime stability, the Supreme Guard Command has been involved in internal security measures, including surveillance and responses to perceived threats, as evidenced by public executions of officers for lapses in vigilance or suspected disloyalty.[3][1]Nomenclature
Official Designations and Historical Names
The Guard Command (Korean: 호위사령부; Hanja: 護衛司令部), a special operations unit within the Korean People's Army, serves as the primary official designation for the entity responsible for the personal security of the Supreme Leader and senior DPRK leadership.[1] This name reflects its command-level status directly subordinate to the leader's authority, distinct from regular military branches. In English-language analyses, it is frequently rendered as the Supreme Guard Command to emphasize its elite, apex protective role. Internally and for operational camouflage, the unit is designated as KPA Unit 963 (조선인민군 제963부대), a numeric identifier used to obscure its sensitive functions amid broader military structures.[4] Historically, it evolved from earlier iterations, including the Escort Bureau established in the late 1940s under Soviet-influenced post-liberation security arrangements, and was reorganized as the General Guard Bureau (호위총국) during the Kim Il-sung era to consolidate protective duties.[5] Subsequent restructurings under later leaders formalized its current command nomenclature, prioritizing direct oversight by the Workers' Party of Korea's central apparatus.[1]Unit Identifiers and Internal References
The Supreme Guard Command is internally designated as Unit 963 within the Korean People's Army (KPA), a numerical identifier employed in official military documentation and leadership directives.[6] This unit code distinguishes it from standard KPA formations and underscores its specialized status under direct supreme leadership oversight.[7] For example, on July 14, 2011, Kim Jong-il inspected the command of KPA Unit 963, as reported in state media, highlighting its use in internal operational references.[7] In addition to Unit 963, the command is referenced internally as the Escort Bureau or Guard Bureau, terms that emphasize its protective mandate for the Kim family and high-level officials without revealing operational details publicly.[6] These designations appear in defector testimonies and intelligence assessments, which describe the unit's compartmentalized structure to maintain secrecy and loyalty.[8] The Korean-language shorthand, often rendered as 호위사령부 (Hoi-sa ryeongbu), serves as the primary internal title in KPA hierarchies, aligning with its role as a standalone command equivalent to a corps-level entity.[6] Such identifiers facilitate strict access controls and vetting, ensuring that references to the unit in dispatches or training materials do not compromise its elite composition, which draws from rigorously screened personnel across the KPA.[8] Violations involving unauthorized disclosure of these codes, as in the 2018 purge of an officer for external media exposure, demonstrate the command's insulated operational environment.[6]Historical Origins and Evolution
Establishment in Post-Liberation Period (1945-1950)
The Supreme Guard Command traces its origins to the immediate aftermath of World War II, when Soviet forces occupied northern Korea following Japan's surrender on August 15, 1945, and began reorganizing local security apparatus to support the installation of Kim Il-sung as de facto leader. Initial protection for Kim, who returned from Soviet exile in September 1945, relied on ad hoc arrangements involving Soviet advisors and reformed Japanese-era police units repurposed into the Korean People's Revolutionary Army's early cadres, drawn from anti-Japanese partisans loyal to Kim. These provisional measures addressed internal threats from domestic rivals and external pressures during the Soviet Military Administration's rule until 1948.[9] Formal establishment of the guard unit occurred in 1946, with elements of the 90th Training Command—itself a Soviet-influenced formation—reassigned specifically to secure the emerging North Korean leadership against factional intrigue and potential uprisings. This praetorian entity, initially modest in scale with several hundred personnel, operated under direct oversight from Kim's inner circle and the provisional government, prioritizing close-protection duties for residences and movements in Pyongyang. Its creation reflected causal priorities of regime survival in a volatile post-colonial environment, where Soviet backing ensured loyalty vetting through ideological screening of recruits from trusted guerrilla backgrounds.[9][10] By 1948, coinciding with the Democratic People's Republic of Korea's founding on September 9 and the Korean People's Army's activation on February 8, the guard command integrated into the nascent military hierarchy under the Ministry of National Defense, expanding to include specialized subunits for perimeter defense and intelligence on elite threats. Personnel numbers grew to approximately 1,000-2,000 by 1950, equipped with small arms and light vehicles sourced from Soviet aid, amid escalating tensions with the South that prompted fortified protocols around Kim's command posts. This period solidified the unit's role as a parallel security force, insulated from regular army chains to mitigate coup risks, a structure empirically validated by its endurance through subsequent purges.[9]Expansion During Korean War and Early DPRK (1950-1970s)
During the Korean War (1950–1953), the Supreme Guard Command maintained primary responsibility for the personal security of Kim Il-sung and senior leadership, operating from secure rear positions in northeastern North Korea and later Manpo as front lines fluctuated. North Korean official accounts assert the unit's direct involvement in combat support and defensive operations to safeguard command structures amid intense U.S. bombing campaigns that devastated much of the country.[4] The command's early focus on mobility and rapid response was tested by assassination threats and infiltration attempts, necessitating ad hoc reinforcements drawn from loyal partisan veterans.[11] In the immediate post-armistice period from 1953 to the late 1950s, the unit expanded amid DPRK's aggressive military reconstruction, which rebuilt the Korean People's Army from war-ravaged remnants into a force emphasizing self-reliance and ideological purity. Prioritizing regime survival, Kim Il-sung directed resources to elite protective elements like the Guard Command, increasing its personnel from initial hundreds to several thousand by incorporating vetted recruits from purged rival factions (Soviet, Yan'an, and domestic groups). This growth paralleled broader KPA expansion, with active-duty forces rising from approximately 200,000 in 1953 to over 400,000 by 1960, though the Guard Command remained a parallel, stove-piped entity outside standard army chains to minimize disloyalty risks.[12] Internal purges, peaking in 1956–1958, heightened demands for expanded vetting and surveillance subunits within the command, ensuring absolute loyalty amid factional challenges to Kim's authority.[11] The 1960s marked further organizational deepening as North Korea shifted toward a "people's war" doctrine influenced by Maoist guerrilla tactics, prompting the Guard Command to develop specialized brigades for urban defense in Pyongyang and mobile escort units for leadership travel. By mid-decade, amid escalating tensions with South Korea and the U.S., the unit integrated signals intelligence and counter-espionage elements to counter infiltration, reflecting causal priorities of causal regime preservation over conventional frontline roles. Personnel scale likely reached 10,000–20,000 by the early 1970s, supported by preferential access to food, housing, and Soviet-supplied equipment, as documented in defector testimonies emphasizing the command's role in quelling unrest during the 1967–1969 anti-faction campaigns.[12] This era solidified the command's dual functions of physical protection and welfare provision for elites, with dedicated farms and factories under its control to insulate against economic hardships affecting the general population. Into the 1970s, expansion accelerated in anticipation of leadership succession to Kim Jong-il, designated heir in 1974, with new departments formed for familial security and logistical self-sufficiency. The command's growth underscored Kim Il-sung's causal realism in prioritizing a praetorian force—recruited from politically reliable rural and military families—to deter coups, as evidenced by its insulation from KPA-wide purges and direct reporting to the premier. Secrecy limits precise metrics, but the unit's evolution from wartime escort to comprehensive apparatus mirrored DPRK's institutionalization of hereditary rule, producing multiple labor and republic heroes per official tallies while maintaining operational independence.[12]Reorganizations Under Later Kims (1980s-2011)
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, as Kim Jong-il consolidated power following Kim Il-sung's designation of him as successor, the Guard Command—then integrated within the State Security Department—underwent scrutiny for potential vulnerabilities amid internal factional threats and coup risks.[13] A pivotal reorganization occurred in the early 1990s, when the Guard Command was spun off as an independent entity from the State Security Department to bolster direct loyalty to Kim Jong-il and mitigate perceived infiltration risks. This restructuring elevated its operational scale to corps level, incorporating expanded units, enhanced vetting protocols, and additional personnel drawn from trusted military elements to prioritize leadership protection over broader security functions.[13] Kim Jong-il personally oversaw dismissals of incumbent guards suspected of disloyalty, replacing them with a new formation known as the 2.16 Unit, comprising approximately 200 handpicked officers tasked exclusively with his personal security detail.[13] Post-reorganization, the Guard Command retained formal subordination to the Ministry of People's Armed Forces for administrative purposes but established parallel reporting lines through Korean Workers' Party channels, ensuring ideological oversight and rapid response to elite directives.[13] During the 1990s and 2000s, incremental adjustments focused on infrastructure expansions, such as fortified perimeters around Pyongyang leadership sites and integration of specialized sub-units for logistical support, though no large-scale structural overhauls were publicly documented beyond the early 1990s changes.[13] By 2010, official DPRK media reports indicated heightened visibility of Guard Command elements during Kim Jong-il's inspections and public movements, reflecting ongoing reinforcements in personnel and equipment to address famine-era instability and external pressures.[13] On July 14, 2011, Kim Jong-il inspected the command post of KPA Unit 963—a core operational arm of the Guard Command—praising its historical role in repelling threats and emphasizing its mission to safeguard the leadership against imperialist incursions.[7][14]Modern Reforms Under Kim Jong-un (2012-Present)
Upon assuming power, Kim Jong-un oversaw multiple leadership transitions in the Supreme Guard Command to reinforce personal allegiance and mitigate coup risks. In January 2015, the SGC's chief was reportedly dismissed amid broader military purges, signaling early efforts to install trusted figures.[15] By around 2020, Colonel General Kwak Chang-sik assumed the directorship, leading units during public events such as the April 2022 military parade, before his replacement by General Ra Chol Jin in October 2025 as part of a targeted shuffle in close-escort personnel.[16] These rotations, often involving promotions from internal departments like Department No. 1, prioritized operatives with proven proximity to the leadership.[17] Ideological reinforcement emerged as a core reform, with the SGC intensifying loyalty indoctrination under Kim Jong-un's directives. In June 2025, the command conducted advanced political education sessions—structured at colonel-equivalent levels—for its personnel, focusing on unwavering devotion to the Kim family lineage as the regime's foundational principle.[2] This built on periodic inspections by Kim, such as those of specialized battalions, to embed surveillance and self-policing mechanisms, drawing oversight from the Workers' Party's Organization and Guidance Department.[18] Security architecture saw incremental expansion through auxiliary units rather than wholesale restructuring. On October 20, 2022, Kim established the Party Central Committee Office 6 Bodyguard Company, a dedicated close-protection detachment augmenting SGC operations and reflecting heightened threat perceptions amid external pressures.[19] Purges sustained this vigilance, exemplified by the 2024 execution of a Department 55 officer by the Ministry of State Security for alleged infractions, underscoring zero-tolerance for lapses in elite-unit discipline.[3] Overall, these adjustments emphasized prophylactic loyalty controls and layered defenses over equipment modernization or doctrinal shifts, aligning the SGC with Kim's consolidation strategy amid resource constraints and internal rivalries. No public evidence indicates significant infrastructural expansions or technological upgrades specific to the command during this period.[16]Organizational Framework
Command Hierarchy and Oversight
The Supreme Guard Command (SGC) maintains a centralized hierarchy designed for rapid responsiveness and absolute loyalty to the Supreme Leader, Kim Jong-un, functioning as a praetorian unit separate from the broader Korean People's Army (KPA) structure. It is nominally under the State Affairs Commission, which Kim chairs and which oversees North Korea's armed forces, but operates via a direct "stove-pipe" reporting chain that circumvents intermediate KPA commands like the Ministry of People's Armed Forces. This insulation ensures operational independence, with subunits such as the #1 Department (personal protection) and Office Number Six (innermost security circle) channeling intelligence and directives straight to Kim through his personal secretariat.[10][1] Oversight integrates party mechanisms to enforce ideological conformity and prevent internal threats, primarily via the Workers' Party of Korea (WPK) Administration Department, which handles personnel vetting, appointments, and surveillance of the command's elite ranks. The WPK's historical dominance over security organs, rather than full military subordination, reinforces this dual control, allowing Kim to balance force protection with political reliability amid frequent purges. Subordinate elements include combat brigades, logistics departments, and rapid-response forces, all coordinated by the SGC commander—a general-rank officer typically appointed to the WPK Central Military Commission for added alignment with leadership priorities.[1] This structure prioritizes causal deterrence against coups through compartmentalization and personal fealty, as evidenced by the command's role in monitoring KPA units and elites, distinct from conventional defense hierarchies focused on external threats. Recent ideological campaigns, such as intensified loyalty training on the Kim bloodline in 2025, underscore ongoing oversight to mitigate risks from within.[2][10]Departments, Brigades, and Specialized Units
The Supreme Guard Command comprises approximately six departments responsible for core operational functions, including close protection, logistical support, and surveillance of regime elites. The First Department, also known as the 1st Bureau, employs 6,000 to 10,000 personnel focused on immediate security details, such as bodyguards, drivers, engineers, and medical staff, providing transportation, logistics, and personal care for the supreme leader.[1] This department includes the 2.16 Unit, a subunit of about 2,000 members dedicated to the innermost security perimeter around the leader's movements.[1] The Second Department oversees protection and welfare for extended Kim family members and select high-ranking officials, including residential security and household management.[20] [1] The Security Department manages secure communications for the leadership, monitoring telephone and internet lines while coordinating with the Ministry of People's Security for infrastructure maintenance, and operates hardwired networks isolated from broader systems.[1] [20] Details on the remaining three departments remain limited due to the unit's opacity, but they collectively support ancillary roles like intelligence gathering on senior party and military figures.[20] Three combat brigades form the Command's primary offensive and defensive backbone, each stationed near Kim family residences and integrated into Pyongyang's layered defenses alongside the Pyongyang Defense Command and III Army Corps.[1] [12] These brigades, equipped with anti-aircraft artillery, multiple-launch rocket systems, tanks, and armored vehicles, maintain rapid-response capabilities for regime protection and urban perimeter control.[1] Their structure emphasizes loyalty-vetted infantry and mechanized elements, enabling independent operations outside standard Korean People's Army chains.[10] Specialized units augment the departments and brigades with targeted functions, including multiple bodyguard divisions for elite escort duties and a dedicated construction battalion for maintaining secure infrastructure, such as fortified residences and underground facilities.[1] An active intelligence subunit within the Command conducts investigations and surveillance on DPRK elites, reporting directly to the supreme leader to preempt internal threats.[20] These elements, dispersed across North Korea, ensure comprehensive coverage of leadership assets, including key government sites and arms production facilities.[1]Recruitment, Vetting, and Training Processes
Recruitment into the Supreme Guard Command draws primarily from young male candidates aged 17 to early 20s, selected through a national process emphasizing physical fitness, family loyalty, and ideological reliability within North Korea's songbun caste system. Candidates are often identified during compulsory military service or youth mobilization drives, with priority given to those from "core" class backgrounds free of political taint.[21] Physical prerequisites include heights matching the leader's approximate stature (around 170 cm), absence of facial scars or tattoos, and well-proportioned builds to ensure uniformity in ceremonial and protective roles.[21] Vetting entails exhaustive background investigations by the Korean Workers' Party's Organization and Guidance Department and State Security agencies, scrutinizing candidates' family histories for generations to exclude any disloyalty, defection, or association with purges. This process, which can span months, incorporates ideological assessments to confirm unwavering devotion to the Kim bloodline, with failures resulting in reassignment to regular Korean People's Army units or labor camps.[2] Recent incidents, such as the 2020 arrest of a pre-training teenager for unspecified lapses, underscore the zero-tolerance for perceived risks during vetting.[8] Training commences post-vetting with a multi-year regimen blending extreme physical endurance, combat skills, and political indoctrination, often lasting up to two years for core personnel. Physical components feature grueling marches, such as carrying 25 kg sandbags while circling Pyongyang's perimeter or running until issued footwear disintegrates, designed to forge resilience and obedience under duress.[22] Ideological sessions, intensified under Kim Jong-un since 2020, emphasize absolute loyalty to the Paektu bloodline, with Supreme Guard Command units receiving specialized modules on historical security breaches and regime mythology to preempt subversion.[2] Combat training includes martial arts, small-unit tactics, and weapons handling tailored for close protection, though operational effectiveness remains unverified due to isolation from external observation.[23]Personnel Scale, Equipment, and Infrastructure
The Supreme Guard Command maintains a personnel strength estimated at 95,000 to 120,000 members, forming a substantial elite force within the Korean People's Army Ground Force.[1][10][24] These troops are distributed nationwide across approximately six departments, three combat brigades, and several specialized bodyguard divisions, enabling layered protection for leadership residences and travel routes.[1] Recruitment prioritizes loyalty and physical fitness, with personnel drawn from vetted military and civilian pools, though exact enlistment figures remain classified due to the unit's opacity.[1] Equipment allocations emphasize defensive and rapid-response capabilities, including anti-aircraft artillery systems, multiple-launch rocket systems for perimeter defense, armored combat vehicles, main battle tanks, and rotary-wing helicopters for aerial support and evacuation.[1] Ground mobility is augmented by specialized "jeeps" and luxury sedans such as Mercedes models, facilitating secure transport of protected individuals along predefined corridors.[1] This arsenal, superior to standard Korean People's Army units, reflects the Command's role as a self-contained praetorian force capable of independent operations.[10] Infrastructure supports operational redundancy and survivability, featuring fortified compounds around Pyongyang and provincial sites, extensive underground tunnel networks for emergency relocation, and dedicated logistical facilities.[3] Recent developments include construction of nine luxury residential buildings and a Guard Command support structure in the Ch'angkwangsan district between May 2021 and May 2022, enhancing elite welfare amid broader regime priorities.[25] These assets, maintained through prioritized resource allocation, underscore the unit's integration with North Korea's command economy, though maintenance challenges persist due to sanctions and isolation.[1]Core Functions and Operational Roles
Leadership Protection and Security Protocols
The Supreme Guard Command (SGC), also known as Unit 963, serves as the primary entity responsible for the physical security of North Korea's supreme leadership, including Kim Jong Un, his immediate family, and select high-ranking officials, through a layered system of preventive and reactive measures designed to counter assassination attempts, coups, or external incursions. These protocols emphasize compartmentalization, with specialized departments handling distinct aspects such as advance reconnaissance, close protection, and signals intelligence to minimize vulnerabilities in the leader's routines and residences.[1][10] Core security operations begin with meticulous route planning and inspection prior to any movement by protected individuals; SGC units deploy to scout paths, neutralize potential ambush points, and establish exclusion zones, as evidenced during Kim Jong Un's 2018 visit to Panmunjom where Unit 963 personnel secured perimeters and conducted pre-event sweeps. Close-protection teams, drawn from vetted elite brigades, maintain constant proximity, often employing tactics like vehicle-escort formations where bodyguards run alongside the leader's convoy to enable instant intervention against perceived threats—a method highlighted during the 2019 Hanoi summit with U.S. President Donald Trump.[26][27] Personnel selection for protective roles involves exhaustive ideological indoctrination, family background scrutiny, and psychological evaluations to ensure unwavering loyalty, with the SGC's scale—estimated at 95,000 to 120,000 members—allowing for redundant layers of guardianship across multiple shifts and contingency units trained in hand-to-hand combat, marksmanship, and rapid medical response. The Security Department within the SGC further enforces protocols by intercepting and monitoring all leadership communications, including telephone and limited internet access, to preempt internal dissent or espionage.[28][10] In high-risk zones, such as border areas or construction sites like Samjiyon, the SGC imposes travel restrictions and heightened surveillance on dedicated routes, barring civilian access and deploying stationary observation posts to maintain a persistent security envelope around elite residences and travel corridors. These measures, informed by historical purges of disloyal elements within the command, prioritize deterrence through overwhelming presence and swift punitive response, though their efficacy remains opaque due to the regime's opacity.[29][3]Logistical and Welfare Support for Elites
The Supreme Guard Command extends its mandate beyond physical protection to encompass comprehensive logistical and welfare provisions for North Korea's supreme leadership, including Kim Jong-un and select family members, as well as senior officials. This includes managing transportation, acute medical services, and procurement of specialized goods unavailable to the general populace.[1][10] The Command's #1 Department, comprising 6,000 to 10,000 personnel, handles close-range logistical needs for Kim Jong-un, such as chauffeured transport via dedicated vehicle fleets, on-site emergency medical care, and general supply coordination, including the elite 2.16 Unit originally formed for his predecessor.[1] A specialized logistics group within the Command procures luxury consumables and high-end items for the Kim family and top elites, ensuring sustained access to exclusive resources amid the country's economic constraints.[10] Additional welfare functions involve ancillary services like document delivery, IT infrastructure support, and maintenance or construction of leadership facilities, often integrated with security protocols.[1] Office Number Six coordinates event planning and overseas travel logistics, as demonstrated during Kim Jong-un's 2018 Singapore summit, where the Command orchestrated rapid deployment of personnel, equipment, and support assets via airlift.[10] These operations prioritize life-prolonging medical interventions tailored for the leadership, distinct from standard national healthcare systems.[10] Historically, the #2 Department provided similar transport and provisioning for figures like Kim Kyong-hui until shifts in leadership dynamics, underscoring the Command's adaptability to elite hierarchies.[1] Overall, these roles reinforce regime stability by insulating elites from domestic scarcities, with the Command drawing on independent supply chains insulated from broader Korean People's Army logistics.[10]Combat Readiness and Rapid Response Capabilities
The Supreme Guard Command (SGC), also designated as Korean People's Army Unit 963, emphasizes combat readiness through extensive training protocols and heavy armament to safeguard regime leadership against internal and external threats. Personnel, numbering around 100,000, receive years of specialized instruction focusing on physical endurance, hand-to-hand combat, and marksmanship, including feats like shattering granite slabs barehanded and demolishing light bulbs to simulate precision under stress. This regimen, combined with continuous ideological reinforcement, aims to forge elite fighters capable of operating in high-threat environments.[10] Equipped with tanks, artillery pieces, surface-to-air missiles, armored personnel carriers, and other heavy weaponry, the SGC deploys combat-oriented brigades to protect Kim family residences, Pyongyang's access points, and critical infrastructure. These assets enable defensive operations beyond static guarding, including counter-sniper engagements and anti-terrorist maneuvers, with advanced communication systems integrated for real-time coordination, potentially extending to nuclear command relays. Artillery subunits within the command undergo regular combat drills, as observed during leadership inspections on December 4, 2014, where units demonstrated firing proficiency and tactical maneuvers.[10][30] Rapid response capabilities are anchored in a dedicated subunit of approximately 2,000 troops, outfitted with armored vehicles and automatic weapons, tasked with swiftly neutralizing coup risks or incursions by seizing key Pyongyang sites such as government buildings and military depots. This force trains for immediate deployment to isolate threats, reflecting the regime's prioritization of preemptive internal security over broader offensive roles. During field exercises involving live weapons, SGC elements have positioned themselves defensively around leadership figures, maintaining elevated alert postures even among allied special operations troops, as seen in drills reported on September 17, 2024.[10][31]Leadership and Personnel
Successive Commanders and Tenure
Marshal Ri Ul-sol served as commanding officer of the Guard Command, the entity encompassing the Supreme Guard Command's protective functions, retiring from the role prior to his death in 2015; he had previously been deputy commander in 1982 and oversaw operations during a period of leadership transitions in the late 20th century.[32][33] General Yun Jong-rin succeeded as director, holding the position through at least 2018 and focusing on the personal security of Kim Jong Un and senior leadership.[34]| Commander | Rank | Tenure | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ri Ul-sol | Marshal | Until early 2000s (exact dates unconfirmed in available records) | Oversaw Guard Command; Yun served as his chief of staff prior to succession.[35][32] |
| Yun Jong-rin | General | Circa 2003–2019 | Directed personal security operations; replaced amid accountability for a security lapse.[34][36][17] |
| Kwak Chang-sik | Colonel General | 2019–early 2025 | Appointed following Yun's removal; served approximately seven years managing elite protection protocols.[36][37] |
| Ra Chol Jin | Lieutenant General | Since early 2025 | Current director, appointed amid recent personnel shifts in bodyguard units.[37] |