Geographic & Command Chain Analysis of Police, Prisons, Militaries & Militias by Security Force Monitor

Myanmar | unit

Military Security Affairs

Based on 17 claims made by 6 sources, Military Security Affairs existed starting between 2004/1/1 and 2004/10/18 to at least 2023/12/31.

During its existence this unit had at least 0 commanders & other personnel, 1 directly superior units, and 7 subordinate units. At various points in time, Military Security Affairs, was seen in 0 locations.

According to sources there are 0 incidents which Military Security Affairs is directly named as a perpetrator, as well as 0 incidents which name a subordinate unit as the perpetrator. Additionally, 0 incidents happened in locations which overlapped with sites and/or areas of operations of the unit.

An incident is a public claim made by a civil society organization, an international organization, a government, or another source that a violation of human rights was perpetrated by the defense and security forces of a country. Graph analysis can generate linkages based on the dates and locations between these incidents and chains of command. The Security Force Monitor does not make allegations and nothing in this platform should be taken as the Monitor making an allegation against a unit or person.

on this page

Commanders & Other Personnel

Based on our sources, 0 people held positions with Military Security Affairs throughout time.

0 chains (page 1/1)

Chains of Command

Sources establish claims about the chain of command, commanders, the sites and areas of operations of units, and incidents through time. Security Force Monitor organizes these claims into structured data. The linkages in time between these claims time-bound periods are inferred according to the Monitor’s methodology. Individual time-bound chains of command can be generated from this data using graph analysis.

Every chain of command which included Military Security Affairs is shown below. These chains are disaggregated to show the entire time-range of each chain from the lowest unit in the chain to the highest unit at the top of the chain. Any individual who was part of that chain during the date-range is shown as well.

The chains show any direct or positional incidents which are claimed to have occurred during the time-range. Direct incidents have a source which directly names the unit as a perpetrator. Positional incidents occur when there is an intersection between claims from sources alleging an incident occurred and other sources giving a unit an overlapping location and date-range.

The following chains include Military Security Affairs. Click on a chain to see our inferred time periods as well as every source used to establish the chain of command.

7 chains of command (page 1/1)
⟝
2017/10/23
2021/2/1
⟞
πŸͺ– tatmadaw
52
πŸŽ–οΈ min aung hlaing general, senior general, vice senior general tatmadaw
πŸͺ– unknown parent unit ultimately under commander-in-chief of defence services
πŸͺ– military security affairs
πŸͺ– administration (military security affairs)
⟝
2017/10/23
2021/2/1
⟞
πŸͺ– tatmadaw
52
πŸŽ–οΈ min aung hlaing general, senior general, vice senior general tatmadaw
πŸͺ– unknown parent unit ultimately under commander-in-chief of defence services
πŸͺ– military security affairs
πŸͺ– border security (military security affairs)
⟝
2017/10/23
2021/2/1
⟞
πŸͺ– tatmadaw
52
πŸŽ–οΈ min aung hlaing general, senior general, vice senior general tatmadaw
πŸͺ– unknown parent unit ultimately under commander-in-chief of defence services
πŸͺ– military security affairs
πŸͺ– internal affairs (military security affairs)
⟝
2017/10/23
2021/2/1
⟞
πŸͺ– tatmadaw
52
πŸŽ–οΈ min aung hlaing general, senior general, vice senior general tatmadaw
πŸͺ– unknown parent unit ultimately under commander-in-chief of defence services
πŸͺ– military security affairs
πŸͺ– security and training (military security affairs)
⟝
2017/10/23
2021/2/1
⟞
πŸͺ– tatmadaw
52
πŸŽ–οΈ min aung hlaing general, senior general, vice senior general tatmadaw
πŸͺ– unknown parent unit ultimately under commander-in-chief of defence services
πŸͺ– military security affairs
πŸͺ– science and technology (military security affairs)
⟝
2017/10/23
2021/2/1
⟞
πŸͺ– tatmadaw
52
πŸŽ–οΈ min aung hlaing general, senior general, vice senior general tatmadaw
πŸͺ– unknown parent unit ultimately under commander-in-chief of defence services
πŸͺ– military security affairs
πŸͺ– international relations (military security affairs)
⟝
2017/10/23
2021/2/1
⟞
πŸͺ– tatmadaw
52
πŸŽ–οΈ min aung hlaing general, senior general, vice senior general tatmadaw
πŸͺ– unknown parent unit ultimately under commander-in-chief of defence services
πŸͺ– military security affairs
πŸͺ– counter intelligence (military security affairs)

Subordinate units

A total of 7 units were subordinate to Military Security Affairs through time. This includes all subordinate units which fell directly under Military Security Affairs as well as those that had intermediary superiors before ultimately falling under Military Security Affairs. The list of subordinate units found below was generated by using graph analysis on all claims made by sources.

Clicking on a time range brings you to a chain of command with its sources.

7 subordinate units (page 1 / 2)
Subordinate in command chains with these times periods:
Subordinate in command chains with these times periods:
Subordinate in command chains with these times periods:
Subordinate in command chains with these times periods:
Subordinate in command chains with these times periods:

Sites & Areas of Operation

Military Security Affairs was located and/or operated in Military Security Affairs locations through time. Each location is shown below with the geographic chain of administrative boundaries above each location. These geographic chains give a more complete picture for each individual site or area of operations.

0 chains (page 1/1)

Incidents

Sources directly claim that Military Security Affairs was the perpetrator of 0 incidents. Additionally, 0 incidents are alleged to have been committed by units subordinate to Military Security Affairs. Finally, sources state that 0 incidents occurred in locations where Military Security Affairs had an overlapping location and date-range. These positional incidents include all direct and subordinate allegations as well.

0 incidents which directly name this perpetrator (page 1 / 1)
0 incidents which name a subordinate perpetrator (page 1 / 1)
0 incidents in sites & areas of operation (page 1 / 1)

Claims & Sources

Sources and claims connected to Military Security Affairs are listed below.

Each individual relationship, positioning, or assertion may contain multiple claims establishing its existence.

17 claims based off 6 sources (page 1 / 2)
claim/statusconflict
assertion/unit:namesOCMSA, Office of the Chief of Military Security Affairs, Sa Ya Pa
assertion/unit:classificationsIntelligence, Military
⟝
2004/1/1γ€œ2005/1/1
2023/2/7γ€œ2004/12/31
β”ˆ
claim/statusaccepted
assertion/unit:namesOCMSA, Office of the Chief of Military Security Affairs, Sa Ya Pa
assertion/unit:classificationsIntelligence, Military
β”„
2023/2/3
2023/2/7
β”ˆ
claim/statusaccepted
assertion/unit:namesMilitary Security Affairs
assertion/unit:classificationsMilitary
β”„
2004/1/1γ€œ2005/1/1
2022/12/31γ€œ2023/12/31
β”ˆ
claim/statusaccepted
assertion/unit:namesMilitary Security Affairs
assertion/unit:classificationsIntelligence
β”„
2023/1/1
2023/12/31
β”ˆ
Citation Officer in charge of Myanmar’s interrogation centres named deputy home affairs minister | citation: :archive | @9efedeee-b795-4874-bab0-6c374efa83bc adds context that the unit being refered to is Military Security Affairs @8dd1251a-f52e-4c3d-b47a-cad2cddb77b9
claim/statusaccepted
assertion/unit:namesMilitary Intelligence, SYB, Sa Ya Pa
assertion/unit:classificationsIntelligence, Military
β”„
2023/1/23
2023/1/23
β”ˆ
claim/statusaccepted
assertion/unit:namesMilitary Security Affairs
⟝
2004/10/18γ€œ2017/10/23
2017/10/23
β”ˆ