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{{short description|Ground forces branch of the armed forces of Myanmar}}
{{pp-pc|small=yes}}
{{redirect|Burmese Army||Burma Army (disambiguation)}} {{redirect|Burmese Army||Burma Army (disambiguation)}}
{{pp-pc}}
{{pp-pc|small=yes}}
{{EngvarB|date=September 2017}} {{EngvarB|date=September 2017}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=September 2017}} {{Use dmy dates|date=April 2024}}
{{infobox military unit {{infobox military unit
| unit_name = Myanmar Army | unit_name = Myanmar Army
| native_name = {{my|တပ်မတော်(ကြည်း)}} | native_name = {{Native name|my|'''တပ်မတော် (ကြည်း)'''}}<br/>{{Small |''{{lit |Tatmadaw (Kyi)}}''}}<br />{{Small |'Armed Forces (Army)'}}
| image = Army Flag of Myanmar.svg | image = Shoulder Sleeve of Myanmar Army.svg
| caption = Emblem of the Myanmar Army{{efn|This representative emblem is also the Shoulder Sleeve Insignia (SSI) of the office of ].}}<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://www.cincds.gov.mm/ |title=Official site of Commander-in-Chief's Office of the Myanmar Armed Forces |access-date=17 June 2022 |archive-date=14 June 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220614005935/https://cincds.gov.mm/ |url-status=live }}</ref>
| caption = The Myanmar Army's flag
| start_date = {{start date and age|df=yes|1945}} | start_date = {{start date and age|df=yes|1945}}
| country = Myanmar (Burma) | country = {{Flag|Myanmar}}
| allegiance = | allegiance =
| branch = | branch =
| type = Ground army | type = ]
| role = | role = ]
| size = {{bulletedlist|
| size = 406,000<ref name="(IISS)Studies2014">{{cite book|author1=The International The International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS)|author2=International Institute of Strategic Studies|title=The Military Balance 2014|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=l6DRngEACAAJ|accessdate=12 May 2021|date=24 January 2014|publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-1-85743-722-5|pages=265–266}}</ref>
|Active personnel: 150,000<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.globalfirepower.com/country-military-strength-detail.php?country_id=myanmar|title=2024 Myanmar Military Strength|website=Global Fire Power|access-date=17 September 2024}}</ref>
Reserve:Border Guard Force BGF (23 battalions), People's Militia Group PMG (46 groups),<ref name="mm peace monitor">{{cite web|url=https://www.mmpeacemonitor.org/border-guard-force-scheme|title=Border Guard Force Scheme|website=Myanmar Peace Monitor}}</ref> University Training Corp UTC (5 corps)<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.mmtimes.com/national-news/mandalay-upper-myanmar/19550-taint-of-1988-still-lingers-for-rebooted-student-militia.html|title=Taint of 1988 still lingers for rebooted student militia|work=Myanmar Times|date=18 March 2015|author=Maung Zaw}}</ref>
|Reserve personnel: 20,000<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.globalfirepower.com/country-military-strength-detail.php?country_id=myanmar|title=2024 Myanmar Military Strength|website=Global Fire Power|access-date=17 September 2024}}</ref>
| command_structure = Myanmar Armed Forces
|Paramilitary personnel: 55,000<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.globalfirepower.com/country-military-strength-detail.php?country_id=myanmar|title=2024 Myanmar Military Strength|website=Global Fire Power|access-date=17 September 2024}}</ref>
|Draftees:
~5,000 (estimates of the first batch of the service)<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.asahi.com/sp/ajw/articles/15166351|title=Myanmar will start drafting 5,000 people a month into the military soon}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://elevenmyanmar.com/news/first-batch-of-military-service-volunteers-arrive-at-training-shools-nationwide|title=First batch of military service arrive at training schools nationwide}}</ref>
|Reserves:
] (23 battalions)<ref name="mm peace monitor">{{cite web|url=https://www.mmpeacemonitor.org/border-guard-force-scheme|title=Border Guard Force Scheme|website=Myanmar Peace Monitor|date=11 January 2013|access-date=8 August 2020|archive-date=21 August 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200821082501/https://www.mmpeacemonitor.org/border-guard-force-scheme|url-status=live}}</ref>
] (46 groups)<ref name="mm peace monitor">{{cite web|url=https://www.mmpeacemonitor.org/border-guard-force-scheme|title=Border Guard Force Scheme|website=Myanmar Peace Monitor|date=11 January 2013|access-date=8 August 2020|archive-date=21 August 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200821082501/https://www.mmpeacemonitor.org/border-guard-force-scheme|url-status=live}}</ref>
University Training Corps (5 corps)<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.mmtimes.com/national-news/mandalay-upper-myanmar/19550-taint-of-1988-still-lingers-for-rebooted-student-militia.html|title=Taint of 1988 still lingers for rebooted student militia|work=The Myanmar Times|date=18 March 2015|author=Maung Zaw|access-date=8 August 2020|archive-date=19 February 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210219104747/https://www.mmtimes.com/national-news/mandalay-upper-myanmar/19550-taint-of-1988-still-lingers-for-rebooted-student-militia.html|url-status=dead}}</ref>
}}
| command_structure = {{Armed forces|Myanmar|name=Myanmar Armed Forces}}
| garrison = | garrison =
| garrison_label = | garrison_label =
| nickname = Tatmadaw Kyi | nickname = Tatmadaw (Kyi)
| patron = | patron =
| motto = * ရဲသော်မသေ၊ သေသော်ငရဲမလား။ ("If you are brave, you will not die, and if you die, hell will not come to you.")
| motto =
* ရဲရဲတက်၊ ရဲရဲတိုက်၊ ရဲရဲချေမှုန်း။ ("Bravely charge, bravely fight, and bravely annihilate.")
| colours =
* လေ့လာပါ၊ လေ့ကျင့်ပါ၊ လိုက်နာပါ။ ("Study, Practice and Follow Up.")
* တပ်မတော်အင်အားရှီမှ တိုင်ပြည်အင်အားရှီမည်။ ("Only when the military is strong will the nation be strong.")
* အသက်သွေးချွေး စဉ်မနှေးပေးဆပ်သည်မှာတပ်မတော်ပါ။ ("Never hesitating always ready to sacrifice blood and sweat is the Tatmadaw.)"
* တပ်နှင့်ပြည်သူမြဲကြည်ဖြူ သွေးခွဲလာသူတို့ရန်သူ။ ("Military and the people join in eternal unity, anyone attempting to divide them is our enemy.")
* တစ်သွေးတည်း၊ အသံတစ်သံ၊ အမိန့်တစ်ခု။ ("One blood, one voice, one command.")
* တပ်မတော်သည်အမျိုးသားရေးကိုဘယ်တော့မှသစ္စာမဖောက်။ ("The military shall never betray the national cause.")
* တပ်နှင့်ပြည်သူ လက်တွဲကူပြည်ထောင်စုဖြိုခွဲသူမှန်သမျှချေမှုန်းကြ။ ("Military and the people, cooperate and crush all those harming the union.")
* စည်းကမ်းရှီမှတိုးတက်မည်။ (Only when there is discipline will there be progress.")
* အမိနိုင်ငံတော်ကိုချစ်ပါ။ ဥပဒေကိုလးစားပါ။ ("Love your motherland. Respect the law.")
| colours = * {{Color box|#556B2F}} Olive green
* {{Color box|#90EE90}} Light green
* {{Color box|#E42217}} Red
* {{Color box|#D8AE21}} Desert
| colors_label = | colors_label =
| march = | march =
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| equipment = | equipment =
| equipment_label = | equipment_label =
| battles = ] | battles = {{Tree list}}
*]
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{{tree list/end}}
| anniversaries = 27 March 1945 | anniversaries = 27 March 1945
| decorations = | decorations =
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| disbanded = | disbanded =
| website = <!-- Commanders --> | website = <!-- Commanders -->
| commander1 = Vice Senior General ] | commander1 = {{Flagicon image|Commander in Chief flag of Myanmar.svg|size=25px}} ] ]
| commander1_label = ] | commander1_label = ]
| commander2 = {{Flagicon image|Commander in Chief (Army) flag of Myanmar.svg|size=25px}} ] ]
| commander2 =
| commander2_label = | commander2_label = ]
| commander3 = | commander3 =
| commander3_label = | commander3_label =
| notable_commanders = ] ]<br>General ]<br> Senior ] Than Shwe<br>Vice-Senior General ] | commander4 = ] ]
| commander4_label = ]
<!-- Insignia -->
| identification_symbol = | notable_commanders = {{ubl
| ] ]
| identification_symbol_label =
| ] ]
| identification_symbol_2 =
| ] ] ]<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MN23E2797Fk | title=ပြည်သူချစ်တဲ့ တပ်ချုပ် (သို့) သူရ ဦးတင်ဦး | website=] | date=June 2024 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9meqfGI4ZJw | title=သူရဦးတင်ဦး - ပြည်သူလွမ်းနေရမယ့် ရှားရှားပါးပါးကာချုပ်ဟောင်း- DVB News | website=] | date=3 June 2024 }}</ref>
| identification_symbol_2_label =
| ] ]
| identification_symbol_3 =
| ] ]
| identification_symbol_3_label =
| ] ]
| identification_symbol_4 =
| ] ]
| identification_symbol_4_label =
}}
<!-- Insignia -->| identification_symbol = ]
| identification_symbol_label = Flag of the Myanmar Army
| identification_symbol_2 = ]
| identification_symbol_2_label = Shoulder sleeve of Office of the Commander-in-Chief of Army
| identification_symbol_3 = ]
| identification_symbol_3_label = Shoulder sleeve infantry and light infantry
| identification_symbol_4 = ]
| identification_symbol_4_label = Former flag (1948–1994)
}} }}
{{Contains special characters|Burmese}} {{Contains special characters|Burmese}}

The '''Myanmar Army''' ({{lang-my|တပ်မတော်(ကြည်း)}}, {{IPA-my|taʔmədɔ̀ tɕí|pron}}) is the largest branch of the ] of ] (Burma) and has the primary responsibility of conducting land-based military operations. The Myanmar Army maintains the second largest active force in Southeast Asia after the ]. The '''Myanmar Army''' ({{langx|my|တပ်မတော်(ကြည်း)}}; {{IPA-my|taʔmədɔ̀ tɕí|pron}}) is the largest branch of the ], the armed forces of ], and has the primary responsibility of conducting land-based military operations. The Myanmar Army maintains the second largest active force in ] after the ].<ref name=csisbalance>{{citation|url=http://csis.org/files/media/csis/pubs/060626_asia_balance_south.pdf|title=The Asian Conventional Military Balance 2006|publisher=]|date=26 June 2006|page=4|access-date=20 March 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110429184804/http://csis.org/files/media/csis/pubs/060626_asia_balance_south.pdf|archive-date=29 April 2011|url-status=live}}</ref> It has clashed against ethnic and political insurgents since its inception in 1948.

The force is headed by the ], currently ] ], concurrently ], with ] ] as the ]. The highest rank in the Myanmar Army is ], equivalent to ] in Western armies and is currently held by Min Aung Hlaing after being promoted from ]. With ] ] serving as the official ] for the Myanmar Army.
The Myanmar Army had a troop strength of around 350,000 as of 2006.<ref name=csisbalance>{{citation|url=http://csis.org/files/media/csis/pubs/060626_asia_balance_south.pdf|title=The Asian Conventional Military Balance 2006|publisher=]|date=26 June 2006|page=4|access-date=20 March 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110429184804/http://csis.org/files/media/csis/pubs/060626_asia_balance_south.pdf|archive-date=29 April 2011|url-status=live|df=dmy-all}}</ref> The army has extensive combat experience in fighting insurgents in rough terrain, considering it has been conducting non-stop ] operations against ethnic and political insurgents since its inception in 1948.

The force is headed by the ] ({{lang|my|တပ်မတော်ကာကွယ်ရေးဦးစီးချုပ်(ကြည်း)}}), currently Vice-Senior General Soe Win, concurrently Deputy Commander-in-Chief of the Defence Services, with Senior General ] as the ] ({{lang|my|တပ်မတော်ကာကွယ်ရေးဦးစီးချုပ်}}). The highest rank in the Myanmar Army is senior general, equivalent to ] in Western armies and is currently held by Min Aung Hlaing after being promoted from vice-senior general.
In 2011, following a transition from military government to civilian parliamentary government, the Myanmar Army imposed a military draft on all citizens: all males from age 18 to 35 and all females from 18 to 27 years of age can be drafted into military service for two years as enlisted personnel in time of national emergency. The ages for professionals are up to 45 for men and 35 for women for three years service as commissioned and non-commissioned officers. In 2011, following a transition from military government to civilian parliamentary government, the Myanmar Army imposed a military draft on all citizens: all males from age 18 to 35 and all females from 18 to 27 years of age can be drafted into military service for two years as enlisted personnel in time of national emergency. The ages for professionals are up to 45 for men and 35 for women for three years service as commissioned and non-commissioned officers.

The ''Government Gazette'' reported that 1.8&nbsp;trillion kyat (about US$2&nbsp;billion), or 23.6 percent of the 2011 budget was for military expenditures.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.businessweek.com/ap/financialnews/D9LMDOSO1.htm|title=Myanmar allocates 1/4 of new budget to military|date=1 March 2011|agency=]|access-date=9 March 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110628213807/http://www.businessweek.com/ap/financialnews/D9LMDOSO1.htm|archive-date=28 June 2011|url-status=live|df=dmy-all}}{{DL|date=May 2021}}</ref> The ''Government Gazette'' reported that 1.8&nbsp;trillion kyat (about US$2&nbsp;billion), or 23.6 percent of the 2011 budget was for military expenditures.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.businessweek.com/ap/financialnews/D9LMDOSO1.htm|title=Myanmar allocates 1/4 of new budget to military|date=1 March 2011|agency=]|access-date=9 March 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110628213807/http://www.businessweek.com/ap/financialnews/D9LMDOSO1.htm|archive-date=28 June 2011|url-status=dead}}</ref>


==Brief history== ==Brief history==
], circa April 1954, on the lookout for ] following their defeat in the ].]]


=== British and Japanese rule === === British and Japanese rule ===
In the late 1930s, during the period of ], a few Myanmar organizations or parties formed an alliance named Burma's Htwet-Yet (Liberation) Group, one of them being ]. Since most of the members were Communist, they wanted help from Chinese Communists; but when Tha-khin ] and a partner secretly went to China for help, they only met with a Japanese general and made an alliance with Japanese Army. In the early 1940s, Aung San and other 29 participants secretly went for the military training under Japanese Army and these 30 people are later known as the 30 Soldiers in Myanmar history and can be regarded as the origin of modern Myanmar Army. In the late 1930s, during the period of ], a few Myanmar organizations or parties formed an alliance named ] (Liberation) Group, one of them being ]. Since most of the members were Communist, they wanted help from Chinese Communists; but when Thakhin ] and a partner secretly went to China for help, they only met with a Japanese general and made an alliance with Japanese Army. In the early 1940s, Aung San and other 29 participants secretly went for the military training under Japanese Army and these 30 people are later known as the "]" in Myanmar history and can be regarded as the origin of the modern Myanmar Army.


When the ] was ready, the 30 Soldiers recruited Myanmar people in Thailand and founded Burmese Independence Army (BIA), which was the first phase of Myanmar Army. In 1942, BIA assisted Japanese Army in their conquest of Burma, which succeeded. After that, Japanese Army changed BIA to Burmese Defense Army (BDA), which was the second phase. In 1943, Japan officially declared Burma an independent nation, but the Burmese government did not possess the ''de facto'' rule over the country. When the ] was ready, the 30 Soldiers recruited Myanmar people in Thailand and founded ] (BIA), which was the first phase of Myanmar Army. In 1942, BIA assisted Japanese Army in their conquest of Burma, which succeeded. After that, Japanese Army changed BIA to Burmese Defense Army (BDA), which was the second phase. In 1943, Japan officially declared Burma an independent nation, but the new Burmese government did not possess ''de facto'' rule over the country.


While assisting British Army in 1945, Myanmar Army was in its third phase, which was the Patriotic Burmese Force (PBF), and the country became under British rule again. Afterwards, the structure of the army became under British authority; hence, for those who were willing to serve the nation but not in that army, General Aung San organized People's Comrade. While assisting the British Army in 1945, the Myanmar Army entered into its third phase, as the Patriotic Burmese Force (PBF), and the country became under British rule again. Afterwards, the structure of the army fell under British authority; hence, for those who were willing to serve the nation but not in that army, General Aung San organized the People's Comrades Force.


=== Post-Independence era === === Post-Independence era ===
] ]

At the time of Myanmar's independence in 1948, the Tatmadaw was weak, small and disunited. Cracks appeared along the lines of ethnic background, political affiliation, organisational origin and different services. Its unity and operational efficiency was further weakened by the interference of civilians and politicians in military affairs, and the perception gap between the staff officers and field commanders. The most serious problem was the tension between ethnic ] Officers, coming from the British Burma Army and ] officers, coming from the ] (PBF).{{citation needed|date=October 2020}} At the time of Myanmar's independence in 1948, the ] was weak, small and disunited. Cracks appeared along the lines of ethnic background, political affiliation, organisational origin and different services. Its unity and operational efficiency was further weakened by the interference of civilians and politicians in military affairs, and the perception gap between the staff officers and field commanders. The most serious problem was the tension between ethnic ] Officers, coming from the British Burma Army and ] officers, coming from the ] (PBF).{{citation needed|date=October 2020}}

In accordance with the agreement reached at Kandy Conference in September 1945, the Tatmadaw was reorganised by incorporating the ] and the Patriotic Burmese Forces. The officer corps shared by ex-PBF officers and officers from British Burma Army and Army of Burma Reserve Organisation (ARBO). The colonial government also decided to form what were known as "Class Battalions" based on ethnicity. There were a total of 15 rifle battalions at the time of independence and four of them were made up of former members of PBF. All influential positions within the War Office and commands were manned with non-former PBF Officers. All services including military engineers, supply and transport, ordnance and medical services, Navy and Air Force were all commanded by former officers from ABRO and British Burma Army.{{citation needed|date=October 2020}} In accordance with the agreement reached at Kandy Conference in September 1945, the Tatmadaw was reorganised by incorporating the ] and the Patriotic Burmese Forces. The officer corps shared by ex-PBF officers and officers from British Burma Army and Army of Burma Reserve Organisation (ARBO). The colonial government also decided to form what were known as "Class Battalions" based on ethnicity. There were a total of 15 rifle battalions at the time of independence and four of them were made up of former members of PBF. All influential positions within the War Office and commands were manned with non-former PBF Officers. All services including military engineers, supply and transport, ordnance and medical services, Navy and Air Force were all commanded by former officers from ABRO and British Burma Army.{{citation needed|date=October 2020}}


{| class="wikitable" {| class="wikitable"
|- |-
|+ Ethnic and Army composition of Tatmadaw in 1948 |+ Composition of the Tatmadaw in 1948
|- |-
! Battalion ! Battalion
! Composition
! Ethnic/Army composition
|- |-
| No. 1 ] || Bamar (Burma ]) | No. 1 ] || Bamar (])
|- |-
| No. 2 Burma Rifles || Karen majority + other Non-Bamar Nationalities ) | No. 2 Burma Rifles || Karen majority + other Non-Bamar Nationalities (commanded by then Lieutenant Colonel Saw Chit Khin )
|- |-
| No. 3 Burma Rifles || Bamar / former members of Patriotic Burmese Forces | No. 3 Burma Rifles || Bamar / former members of Patriotic Burmese Forces
|- |-
| No. 4 Burma Rifles || Bamar / former members of Patriotic Burmese Force – Commanded by the then ] ] | No. 4 Burma Rifles || Bamar / former members of Patriotic Burmese Force – Commanded by then ] ]
|- |-
| No. 5 Burma Rifles || Bamar / former members of Patriotic Burmese Force | No. 5 Burma Rifles || Bamar / former members of Patriotic Burmese Force
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==Formation and structure== ==Formation and structure==


The army has always been by far the largest service in Myanmar and has always received the ] of the defence budget.<ref>Working Papers – Strategic and Defence Studies Centre, ]</ref><ref name="Selth, Andrew 2002">Selth, Andrew (2002): ''Burma's Armed Forces: Power Without Glory'', Eastbridge. {{ISBN|1-891936-13-1}}</ref> It has played the most prominent part in Myanmar's struggle against the 40 or more insurgent groups since 1948 and acquired a reputation as a tough and resourceful military force. In 1981, it was described as 'probably the best army in Southeast Asia, apart from Vietnam's'.<ref>'']'', 20 May 1981</ref> The judgement was echoed in 1983, when another observer noted that "Myanmar's infantry is generally rated as one of the toughest, most combat seasoned in Southeast Asia".<ref>'']'', 7 July 1983</ref> The army has always been by far the largest service in ] and has always received the ] of the defence budget.<ref>Working Papers – Strategic and Defence Studies Centre, ]</ref><ref name="Selth, Andrew 2002">Selth, Andrew (2002): ''Burma's Armed Forces: Power Without Glory'', Eastbridge. {{ISBN|1-891936-13-1}}</ref> It has played the most prominent part in Myanmar's struggle against the 40 or more insurgent groups since 1948 and acquired a reputation as a tough and resourceful military force. In 1981, it was described as 'probably the best army in Southeast Asia, apart from Vietnam's'.<ref>'']'', 20 May 1981</ref> The judgement was echoed in 1983, when another observer noted that "Myanmar's infantry is generally rated as one of the toughest, most combat seasoned in Southeast Asia".<ref>'']'', 7 July 1983</ref>
In 1985, a foreign journalist with the rare experience of seeing Burmese soldiers in action against ethnic insurgents and narco-armies was "thoroughly impressed by their fighting skills, endurance and discipline".<ref>], ''Land of Jade''</ref> Other observers during that period characterised the Myanmar Army as "the toughest, most effective light infantry jungle force now operating in Southeast Asia".<ref>'']'' 21 February 1992</ref> Even the ], not known to praise the Burmese lightly, have described the Myanmar Army as "skilled in the art of ]".<ref>The Defence of Thailand (Thai Government issue), p.15, April 1995</ref> In 1985, a foreign journalist with the rare experience of seeing Burmese soldiers in action against ethnic insurgents and narco-armies was "thoroughly impressed by their fighting skills, endurance and discipline".<ref>], ''Land of Jade''</ref> Other observers during that period characterised the Myanmar Army as "the toughest, most effective light infantry jungle force now operating in Southeast Asia".<ref>'']'' 21 February 1992</ref> Even the ], not known to praise the Burmese lightly, have described the Myanmar Army as "skilled in the art of ]".<ref>The Defence of Thailand (Thai Government issue), p.15, April 1995</ref>

===Organisation=== ===Organisation===
The Myanmar Army had reached some 370,000 active troops of all ranks in 2000. There were 337 ]s, including 266 ] battalions as of 2000. Although the Myanmar Army's organisational structure was based upon the ], the basic manoeuvre and fighting unit is the ], known as {{lang|my|Tat Yinn}} ({{lang|my|(တပ်ရင်း)}}) in Burmese. This is composed of a headquarters unit; five rifle companies {{lang|my|Tat Khwe}} ({{lang|my|(တပ်ခွဲ)}}) with three rifle platoons {{lang|my|Tat Su}} ({{lang|my|(တပ်စု)}}) each; an administrative company with medical, transport, logistics, and signals units; a heavy weapons company including ], machine gun, and ] platoons. Each battalion is commanded by a lieutenant colonel {{lang|my|Du Ti Ya Bo Hmu Gyi or Du Bo Hmu Gyi}} with a major ({{lang|my|bo hmu}}) as second in command, with a total strength of 27 officers and 723 other ranks. Light infantry battalions in the Myanmar Army have much lower establishment strength of around 500; this often leads to these units being mistakenly identified by observers as under-strength infantry battalions. The Myanmar Army had reached some 370,000 active troops of all ranks in 2000. There were 337 ]s, including 266 ] as of 2000. Although the Myanmar Army's organisational structure was based upon the ], the basic manoeuvre and fighting unit is the ], known as {{lang|my|Tat Yinn}} ({{lang|my|တပ်ရင်း}}) in Burmese. This is composed of a headquarters company and four rifle companies {{lang|my|Tat Khwe}} ({{lang|my|တပ်ခွဲ}}) with three rifle platoons {{lang|my|Tat Su}} ({{lang|my|တပ်စု}}) each; headquarters company has medical, transport, logistics, and signals units; a heavy weapons company including ], ], and ] platoons. Each battalion is commanded by a lieutenant colonel {{lang|my|Du Ti Ya Bo Hmu Gyi or Du Bo Hmu Gyi}} with a ] ({{lang|my|Bo Hmu}}) as second in command. In 1966 structure, '''ကဖ/၇၀(၈)/၆၆''', a battalion has an authorised strength of 27 Officers and 750 Other Ranks, totaling at 777.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Aung Myoe |first=Maung |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1355/9789812308498 |title=Building the Tatmadaw |date=2009-01-22 |publisher=ISEAS Publishing |doi=10.1355/9789812308498 |isbn=978-981-230-849-8}}</ref> Light infantry battalions in the Myanmar Army have much lower establishment strength of around 500; this often leads to these units being mistakenly identified by observers as under-strength infantry battalions. Both Infantry Battalions and Light Infantry Battalions were reorganised as 857 men units, 31 Officers and 826 Other Ranks, in 2001 under structure of '''ကဖ'''/'''၇၀'''-'''ဆ'''/'''၂၀၀၁.''' However, currently, most battalions are badly undermanned and have less than 150 men in general.<ref>{{Cite web |title=PANDEMONIUM: The Conscription Law and Five Negative Potential Consequences |date=20 February 2024 |url=https://ispmyanmar.com/op-20/ }}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=Army defectors say Myanmar army is deteriorating |url=https://www.irrawaddy.com/in-person/interview/army-defector-says-myanmars-military-has-deteriorated-rapidly-since-the-coup.html&sa=U&ved=2ahUKEwjG34SWgbiGAxUpe2wGHZLUBtoQFnoECAYQAg&usg=AOvVaw1yHxAtaV9APd7_pM0wMmtp }}</ref>

With its significantly increased personnel numbers, weaponry, and mobility, today's {{lang|my|Tatmadaw Kyee}} ({{lang|my|တပ်မတော်(ကြည်း)}}) is a formidable conventional defence force for the Union of Myanmar. Troops ready for combat duty have at least doubled since 1988. Logistics infrastructure and ] fire support have been greatly increased. Its newly acquired military might was apparent in the Tatmadaw's dry season operations against ] (KNU) strongholds in ] and Kawmura. Most of the casualties at these battles were the result of intense and heavy bombardment by the Tatmadaw Kyee. The Tatmadaw Kyee is now much larger than it was before 1988, it is more mobile and has greatly improved armour, artillery, and air defence inventories. Its C3I (Command, Control, Communications, Computers and Intelligence) systems have been expanded and refined. It is developing larger and more integrated, self-sustained formations to improve coordinated action by different combat arms. The army may still have relatively modest weaponry compared to its larger neighbours, but it is now in a much better position to deter external aggression and respond to such a threat should it ever arise, although ] may not perform very well in combating with enemies.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Southeast_Asia/HJ07Ae01.html |title=Myanmar's losing military strategy |date=7 October 2006 |work=] |access-date=28 July 2010 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110513043428/http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Southeast_Asia/HJ07Ae01.html |archive-date=13 May 2011 |url-status=unfit |df=dmy-all }}</ref> With its significantly increased personnel numbers, weaponry, and mobility, today's {{lang|my|Tatmadaw Kyi}} ({{lang|my|တပ်မတော်(ကြည်း)}}) is a formidable conventional defence force for the Union of Myanmar. Troops ready for combat duty have at least doubled since 1988. Logistics infrastructure and ] fire support have been greatly increased. Its newly acquired military might was apparent in the Tatmadaw's dry season operations against ] (KNU) strongholds in ] and ]. Most of the casualties at these battles were the result of intense and heavy bombardment by the Myanmar Army. The Myanmar Army is now much larger than it was before 1988, it is more mobile and has greatly improved armour, artillery, and air defence inventories. Its C3I (Command, Control, Communications, Computers and Intelligence) systems have been expanded and refined. It is developing larger and more integrated, self-sustained formations to improve coordinated action by different combat arms. The army may still have relatively modest weaponry compared to its larger neighbours, but it is now in a much better position to deter external aggression and respond to such a threat should it ever arise, although ] may not perform very well in combating with enemies.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Southeast_Asia/HJ07Ae01.html |title=Myanmar's losing military strategy |date=7 October 2006 |work=] |access-date=28 July 2010 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110513043428/http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Southeast_Asia/HJ07Ae01.html |archive-date=13 May 2011 |url-status=unfit }}</ref>


===Expansion=== ===Expansion===
The first army ] to be formed after the 1988 military ] was the 11th Light Infantry Division (LID) in December 1988 with ] Win Myint as commander. In March 1990, a new regional military command was created in ] with ] Kyaw Min as commander and named the North-Western Regional Military Command. A year later, 101st LID was formed in ] with Colonel Saw Tun as commander. Two Regional Operations Commands (ROC) were formed in ] and ] to improve command and control. They were commanded respectively by Brigadier Soe Tint and Brigadier Maung Kyi. March 1995 saw a dramatic expansion of the Tatmadaw as it established 11 Military Operations Commands (MOC)s in that month. MOC are similar to ] divisions in Western armies, each with 10 regular infantry battalions ({{lang|my|Chay Hlyin Tatyin}}), a headquarters, and organic support units including ]. In 1996, two new RMC were opened, Coastal Region RMC was opened in Myeik with Brigadier Sit Maung as commander and Triangle Region RMC in ] with Brigadier ] as commander. Three new ROCs were created in ], ] and ]. In late 1998, two new MOCs were created in Bokepyin and Mongsat.<ref>WP 342. ]</ref> The first army ] to be formed after the 1988 military ] was the No. (11) Light Infantry Division (LID) in December 1988 with ] Win Myint as commander. In March 1990, a new regional military command was created in ] with ] Kyaw Min as commander and named the North-Western Regional Military Command. A year later, 101st LID was formed in ] with Colonel Saw Tun as commander. Two Regional Operations Commands (ROC) were formed in ] and ] to improve command and control. They were commanded respectively by Brigadier Soe Tint and Brigadier Maung Kyi. March 1995 saw a dramatic expansion of the Tatmadaw as it established 11 Military Operations Commands (MOC)s in that month. MOC are similar to ] divisions in Western armies, each with 10 regular infantry battalions ({{lang|my|Chay Hlyin Tatyin}}), a headquarters, and organic support units including ]. In 1996, two new RMC were opened, Coastal Region RMC was opened in ] with Brigadier Sit Maung as commander and Triangle Region RMC in ] with Brigadier ] as commander. Three new ROCs were created in ], ] and ]. In late 1998, two new MOCs were created in ] and Mongsat.<ref>WP 342. ]</ref>

The most significant expansion after the infantry in the army was in armour and artillery. Beginning in 1990, the Tatmadaw procured 18 ] ]s and 48 ] amphibious ]s from China. Further procurements were made, including several hundred ] and ] ]s (APC). By the beginning of 1998, Tatmadaw had about 100 T-69II main battle tanks, a similar number of T-63 amphibious light tanks, and several T-59D tanks. These tanks and armoured personnel carriers were distributed throughout five armoured infantry battalions and five tank battalions and formed the first armoured division of the Tatmadaw as the 71st Armoured Operations Command with its headquarters in Pyawbwe. The most significant expansion after the infantry in the army was in armour and artillery. Beginning in 1990, the Tatmadaw procured 18 ] ]s and 48 ] amphibious ]s from China. Further procurements were made, including several hundred ] and ] ]s (APC). By the beginning of 1998, the Tatmadaw had about 100 T-69II main battle tanks, a similar number of T-63 amphibious light tanks, and several T-59D tanks. These tanks and armoured personnel carriers were distributed throughout five armoured infantry battalions and five tank battalions and formed the first armoured division of the Tatmadaw as the 71st Armoured Operations Command with its headquarters in ].

===Bureau of Special Operations (BSO)=== ===Bureau of Special Operations (BSO)===
] ]
]
The Bureau of Special Operations ({{lang|my|ကာကွယ်ရေးဌာန စစ်ဆင်ရေး အထူးအဖွဲ့}}) in the Myanmar Army are high-level field units equivalent to ] in Western terms and consist of two or more regional military commands (RMC) commanded by a lieutenant general and six staff officers. The Bureau of Special Operations ({{lang|my|ကာကွယ်ရေးဌာန စစ်ဆင်ရေး အထူးအဖွဲ့}}) in the Myanmar Army are high-level field units equivalent to ] in Western terms and consist of two or more regional military commands (RMC) commanded by a lieutenant general and six staff officers.

The units were introduced under the ] on 28 April 1978 and 1 June 1979. In early 1978, the Chairman of BSPP, General Ne Win, visited the North Eastern Command Headquarters in Lashio to receive a briefing about ] (BCP) ] and their ]. He was accompanied by Brigadier General Tun Ye from the Ministry of Defence. Brigadier General Tun Ye was the regional commander of the Eastern Command for three years and before that he served in North Eastern Command areas as commander of Strategic Operation Command (SOC) and commander of Light Infantry Divisions for four years. As BCP military operations were spread across three Regional Military Command (RMC) areas (Northern, Eastern, and North Eastern), Brigadier General Tun Ye was the most informed commander about the BCP in the Myanmar Army at the time. At the briefing, General Ne Win was impressed by Brigadier General Tun Ye and realised that co-ordination among various Regional Military Commands (RMC) was necessary; thus, decided to form a bureau at the Ministry of Defence. The units were introduced under the ] on 28 April 1978 and 1 June 1979. In early 1978, the Chairman of ], General ], visited the Northeastern Command Headquarters in ] to receive a briefing about ] (BCP) ] and their ]. He was accompanied by Brigadier General Tun Ye from the Ministry of Defence. Brigadier General Tun Ye was the regional commander of the Eastern Command for three years and before that he served in Northeastern Command areas as commander of Strategic Operation Command (SOC) and commander of Light Infantry Divisions for four years. As BCP military operations were spread across three Regional Military Command (RMC) areas (Northern, Eastern, and Northeastern), Brigadier General Tun Ye was the most informed commander about the BCP in the Myanmar Army at the time. At the briefing, General Ne Win was impressed by Brigadier General Tun Ye and realised that co-ordination among various Regional Military Commands (RMC) was necessary; thus, decided to form a bureau at the Ministry of Defence.

Originally, the bureau was for "special operations", wherever they were, that needed co-ordination among various Regional Military Commands (RMC). Later, with the introduction of another bureau, there was a division of command areas. The BSO-1 was to oversee the operations under the Northern Command, North Eastern Command, the Eastern Command, and the North Western Command. BSO-2 was to oversee operations under the South Eastern Command, South Western Command, Western Command and Central Command. Originally, the bureau was for "special operations", wherever they were, that needed co-ordination among various Regional Military Commands (RMC). Later, with the introduction of another bureau, there was a division of command areas. The BSO-1 was to oversee the operations under the Northern Command, Northeastern Command, the Eastern Command, and the Northwestern Command. BSO-2 was to oversee operations under the Southeastern Command, Southwestern Command, Western Command and Central Command.

Initially, the chief of the BSO had the rank of brigadier general. The rank was upgraded to major general on 23 April 1979. In 1990, it was further upgraded to lieutenant general. Between 1995 and 2002, Chief of Staff (Army) jointly held the position of Chief of BSO. However, in early 2002, two more BSO were added to the General Staff Office; therefore there were altogether four BSOs. The fifth BSO was established in 2005 and the sixth in 2007. Initially, the chief of the BSO had the rank of brigadier general. The rank was upgraded to major general on 23 April 1979. In 1990, it was further upgraded to lieutenant general. Between 1995 and 2002, Chief of Staff (Army) jointly held the position of Chief of BSO. However, in early 2002, two more BSO were added to the General Staff Office; therefore there were altogether four BSOs. The fifth BSO was established in 2005 and the sixth in 2007.

Currently there are six Bureaus of Special Operations in the Myanmar ].<ref name="GS">{{cite web |url=https://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/myanmar/army-orbat-1.htm |title=Myanmar-Army Regional Military Commands |author=<!--Not stated--> |website=Global Security |publisher=GlobalSecurity.org |access-date=23 September 2021 |archive-date=24 August 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210824155427/https://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/myanmar/army-orbat-1.htm |url-status=live }}</ref>
Currently there are six Bureaus of Special Operations in the Myanmar ].{{citation needed|date=October 2020}}
]

{| class="wikitable" {| class="wikitable"
|- |-
Line 154: Line 218:
|- |-
| Bureau of Special Operations 1 | Bureau of Special Operations 1
| Central Command<br> North Western Command<br>Northern Command | Central Command<br /> Northwestern Command<br />Northern Command
| Lt. Gen. Tay Zar Kyaw | Lt. Gen. Ko Ko Oo
| |
|- |-
| Bureau of Special Operations 2 | Bureau of Special Operations 2
| North Eastern Command<br>Eastern Command<br>Triangle Region Command<br>Eastern Central Command | Northeastern Command<br />Eastern Command<br />Triangle Region Command<br />Eastern Central Command
| Lt. Gen. Than Tun Oo | Lt. Gen. Naing Naing Oo
| |
|- |-
| Bureau of Special Operations 3 | Bureau of Special Operations 3
| South Western Command<br>Southern Command<br>Western Command | Southwestern Command<br />Southern Command<br />Western Command
| Lt. Gen. Win Bo Shein |Lt. Gen. Phone Myat
| |
|- |-
| Bureau of Special Operations 4 | Bureau of Special Operations 4
| Coastal Command<br>South Eastern Command | Coastal Command<br />Southeastern Command
| Lt. Gen. Aung Soe | Lt. Gen. ]
| |
|- |-
| Bureau of Special Operations 5 | Bureau of Special Operations 5
| Yangon Command | Yangon Command
| Lt. Gen. Thet Pone | Lt. Gen. ]
| |
|- |-
| Bureau of Special Operations 6 | Bureau of Special Operations 6
| Naypyidaw Command | Naypyidaw Command
| Lt. Gen. Moe Myint Tun | Lt. Gen. ]
| |
|} |}


===Regional Military Commands (RMC)=== ===Regional Military Commands (RMC)===
For better command and communication, the Tatmadaw formed a Regional Military Commands ({{lang|my|တိုင်း စစ်ဌာနချုပ်}}) structure in 1958. Until 1961, there were only two regional commands, they were supported by 13 infantry brigades and an infantry division. In October 1961, new regional military commands were opened and leaving only two independent infantry brigades. In June 1963, the Naypyidaw Command was temporarily formed in ] with the deputy commander and some staff officers drawn from Central Command. It was reorganised and renamed as Yangon Command on 1 June 1965.{{citation needed|date=October 2020}} For a better command and communication, the Tatmadaw formed a Regional Military Commands ({{lang|my|တိုင်း စစ်ဌာနချုပ်}}) structure in 1958. Until 1961, there were only two regional commands, they were supported by 13 infantry brigades and an infantry division. In October 1961, new regional military commands were opened and leaving only two independent infantry brigades. In June 1963, the Naypyidaw Command was temporarily formed in ] with the deputy commander and some staff officers drawn from Central Command. It was reorganised and renamed as Yangon Command on 1 June 1965.{{citation needed|date=October 2020}}

A total of 517 infantry and light infantry battalions are commanded by the Regional Military Commands, and organised under the direct control of RMCs, into Military Operation Commands, Light Infantry Divisions and Tactical Operations Commands. Additionally, nationwide there are 100 ] Battalions, 24 Armoured/tank Battalions and 9 Missile Battalions.<ref name=":1">{{Cite web |title=How business finances the crimes of the Myanmar military: MEHL Files {{!}} Justice For Myanmar |url=https://www.justiceformyanmar.org/stories/how-business-finances-the-crimes-of-the-myanmar-military |access-date=2024-12-27 |website=www.justiceformyanmar.org}}</ref>
A total of 337 infantry and light infantry battalions organised in Tactical Operations Commands, 37 independent field artillery regiments supported by affiliated support units including armoured ] and ] battalions. RMCs are similar to ] formations in Western armies. The RMCs, commanded by major general, are managed through a framework of Bureau of Special Operations (BSOs), which are equivalent to field army group in Western terms.{{citation needed|date=October 2020}}

RMCs are similar to ] formations in Western armies. The RMCs, commanded by major general, are managed through a framework of Bureau of Special Operations (BSOs), which are equivalent to field army group in Western terms.{{citation needed|date=October 2020}}.




{| class="wikitable" {| class="wikitable"
Line 193: Line 261:
! Regional Military Command (RMC) ! Regional Military Command (RMC)
! Badge ! Badge
! States & Divisions ! States & Regions
! Headquarters ! Headquarters
! Strength ! Strength<ref name=":1" />
!Notes
|- |-
| Northern Command | Northern Command
({{lang|my|မြောက်ပိုင်းတိုင်းစစ်ဌာနချုပ်}}) ({{lang|my|မြောက်ပိုင်းတိုင်းစစ်ဌာနချုပ်}})
| ] | ]
| ] | ]
| ] | ]
| 32 Infantry Battalions | 46 Infantry Battalions plus an additional 3 Battalions as ] units
|11 Battalions have been captured by the ] by the end of 2024.
|- |-
| North Eastern Command | Northeastern Command
({{lang|my|အရှေ့မြောက်ပိုင်းတိုင်းစစ်ဌာနချုပ်}}) ({{lang|my|အရှေ့မြောက်ပိုင်းတိုင်းစစ်ဌာနချုပ်}})
| ] | ]
| Northern ] | Northern ]
| ] | ]
| 30 Infantry Battalions | 45 Infantry Battalions
|] by the ] on 3 August 2024. 32 Battalions have been captured by the ] by the end of 2024.
|- |-
| Eastern Command | Eastern Command
({{lang|my|အရှေ့ပိုင်းတိုင်းစစ်ဌာနချုပ်}}) ({{lang|my|အရှေ့ပိုင်းတိုင်းစစ်ဌာနချုပ်}})
| ] | ]
| | Southern ] and ] | | Southern ] and ]
| ] | ]
| 42 Infantry Battalions<br>including 16× Light Infantry Battalions under<br>Regional Operation Command (ROC) Headquarters at Loikaw | 35 Infantry Battalions<br />plus an additional 2 Battalions as ] units
|1 Battalion has been captured by the ] by the end of 2024
|- |-
| South Eastern Command | Southeastern Command
({{lang|my|အရှေ့တောင်တိုင်းစစ်ဌာနချုပ်}}) ({{lang|my|အရှေ့တောင်တိုင်းစစ်ဌာနချုပ်}})
| ] | ]
| ] and ] | ] and ]
| ] | ]
| 56 Infantry Battalions plus an additional 13 Battalions as ] units
| 40 × Infantry Battalions
|5 Battalions have been captured by the ] by the end of 2024
|- |-
| Southern Command | Southern Command
({{lang|my|တောင်ပိုင်းတိုင်းစစ်ဌာနချုပ်}}) ({{lang|my|တောင်ပိုင်းတိုင်းစစ်ဌာနချုပ်}})
| ] | ]
| ] and ] Divisions | ] and ] Regions
| ] | ]
| 27 × Infantry Battalions | 32 Infantry Battalions
|
|- |-
| Western Command | Western Command
({{lang|my|အနောက်ပိုင်းတိုင်းစစ်ဌာနချုပ်}}) ({{lang|my|အနောက်ပိုင်းတိုင်းစစ်ဌာနချုပ်}})
|]
|
| ] and ] | ] and ]
| ] | ]
| 31 × Infantry Battalions | 43 Infantry Battalions
|] by the ] on 20 December 2024. 33 Battalions have been captured by the ] by the end of 2024
|- |-
| South Western Command | Southwestern Command
({{lang|my|အနောက်တောင်တိုင်းစစ်ဌာနချုပ်}}) ({{lang|my|အနောက်တောင်တိုင်းစစ်ဌာနချုပ်}})
| ] | ]
| ] (Irrawaddy Division) | ]
| ] (Bassein) | ]
| 11 × Infantry Battalions | 11 Infantry Battalions
|
|- |-
| North Western Command | Northwestern Command
({{lang|my|အနောက်မြောက်တိုင်းစစ်ဌာနချုပ်}}) ({{lang|my|အနောက်မြောက်တိုင်းစစ်ဌာနချုပ်}})
| ] | ]
| ] | ]
| ] | ]
| 25 × Infantry Battalions | 49 Infantry Battalions
|4 Battalions have been captured by the ] by the end of 2024
|- |-
| Yangon Command | Yangon Command
({{lang|my|ရန်ကုန်တိုင်းစစ်ဌာနချုပ်}}) ({{lang|my|ရန်ကုန်တိုင်းစစ်ဌာနချုပ်}})
| ] | ]
| ] | ]
| Mayangone Township-Kone-Myint-Thar | Mayangone Township-Kone-Myint-Thar
| 11 × Infantry Battalions | 41 Infantry Battalions
|
|- |-
| Coastal Region Command | Coastal Region Command
({{lang|my|ကမ်းရိုးတန်းတိုင်းစစ်ဌာနချုပ်}}) ({{lang|my|ကမ်းရိုးတန်းတိုင်းစစ်ဌာနချုပ်}})
| ] | ]
| ] (Tenassarim Division) | ]
| ] (]) | ]
| 43 Infantry Battalions<br>including battalions under 2 MOC based at Tavoy | 45 Infantry Battalions
|
|- |-
| Triangle Region Command | Triangle Region Command
({{lang|my|တြိဂံတိုင်းစစ်ဌာနချုပ်}}) ({{lang|my|တြိဂံတိုင်းစစ်ဌာနချုပ်}})
|] |]
| | Eastern ] | | Eastern ]
| Kyaingtong (]) | Kyaingtong (])
| 23 Infantry Battalions | 40 Infantry Battalions plus an additional 4 Battalions as ] units
|
|- |-
| Central Command | Central Command
({{lang|my|အလယ်ပိုင်းတိုင်းစစ်ဌာနချုပ်}}) ({{lang|my|အလယ်ပိုင်းတိုင်းစစ်ဌာနချုပ်}})
|] |]
| ] | ]
| ] | ]
| 31 Infantry Battalions | 25 Infantry Battalions
|1 Battalion has been captured by the ] by the end of 2024
|- |-
| Naypyidaw Command | Naypyidaw Command
({{lang|my|နေပြည်တော်တိုင်းစစ်ဌာနချုပ်}}) ({{lang|my|နေပြည်တော်တိုင်းစစ်ဌာနချုပ်}})
|] |]
| ] | ]
| ] | ]
| Formed in 2006 – ? × Infantry Battalions | Formed in 2006 – 18 Infantry Battalions
|
|- |-
| Eastern Central Command | Eastern Central Command
({{lang|my|အရှေ့အလယ်ပိုင်းတိုင်းစစ်ဌာနချုပ်}}) ({{lang|my|အရှေ့အလယ်ပိုင်းတိုင်းစစ်ဌာနချုပ်}})
|] |]
| | Middle ] | | Middle ]
| ]<ref>{{cite news |title=MEETING WITH TATMADAWMEN: SENIOR GENERAL HELD MEETINGS AT MONG PING AND KHO LAM |url=https://www.myanmaritv.com/news/meeting-tatmadawmen-senior-general-held-meetings-mong-ping-and-kho-lam |date=18 February 2022 |language=en}}</ref>
| ]
| Formed in 2011 – 7 × Infantry Battalions | Formed in 2011 – 31 Infantry Battalions
|
|} |}

====Commanders of Regional Military Commands==== ====Commanders of Regional Military Commands====
{{unreferenced section|date=October 2020}} {{unreferenced section|date=October 2020}}
Line 306: Line 389:
! Notes ! Notes
|- |-
| Eastern Command || 1961 ||Brigadier General San Yu || Major General Lin Aung ||Initially in 1961, San Yu was appointed as Commander of Eastern Command but was moved to NW Command and replaced with Col. Maung Shwe then. | Eastern Command || 1961 ||Brigadier General San Yu || Major General Zaw Min Latt||Initially in 1961, San Yu was appointed as Commander of Eastern Command but was moved to NW Command and replaced with Col. Maung Shwe then.
|- |-
| South Eastern Command || 1961 ||Brigadier General ] ||Major General Ko Ko Maung ||In 1961 when SE Command was formed, Sein Win was transferred from former Southern Command but was moved to Central Command and replaced with Thaung Kyi then. | Southeastern Command || 1961 ||Brigadier General ] ||Brigadier General Soe Min ||In 1961 when SE Command was formed, Sein Win was transferred from former Southern Command but was moved to Central Command and replaced with Thaung Kyi then.
|- |-
| Central Command || 1961 || Colonel Thaung Kyi || Major General Ko Ko Oo || Original NW Command based at Mandalay was renamed Central Command in March 1990 and original Central Command was renamed Southern Command | Central Command || 1961 || Colonel Thaung Kyi || Major General Kyi Khaing || Original NW Command based at Mandalay was renamed Central Command in March 1990 and original Central Command was renamed Southern Command
|- |-
| North Western Command || 1961 || Brigadier General Kyaw Min ||Major General Myo Moe Aung || Southern part of original North western Command in Mandalay was renamed Central Command in March 1990 and northern part of original NW Command was renamed NW Command in 1990. | Northwestern Command || 1961 || Brigadier General Kyaw Min ||Major General ]|| Southern part of original Northwestern Command in Mandalay was renamed Central Command in March 1990 and northern part of original NW Command was renamed NW Command in 1990.
|- |-
| South Western Command || 1961 || Colonel ]||Major General Aung Aung ||Kyi Maung was sacked in 1963 and was imprisoned few times. He became Deputy Chairman of NLD in the 1990s. | Southwestern Command || 1961 || Colonel ]||Brigadier General Wai Linn||Kyi Maung was sacked in 1963 and was imprisoned a few times. He became Deputy Chairman of NLD in the 1990s.
|- |-
| Yangon Command || 1969 || Colonel ]||Major General Nyunt Win Swe || Formed as Naypyidaw Command in 1963 with deputy commander and some staff officers from Central Command. Reformed and renamed Yangon Command on 1 June 1969. | Yangon Command || 1969 || Colonel ]||Major General ]|| Formed as Naypyidaw Command in 1963 with deputy commander and some staff officers from Central Command. Reformed and renamed Yangon Command on 1 June 1969.
|- |-
| Western Command || 1969 ||Colonel Hla Tun || Major General Htin Latt Oo || | Western Command || 1969 ||Colonel Hla Tun || Brigadier General Kyaw Swar Oo ||
|- |-
| North Eastern Command || 1972 || Colonel ]||Major General Aung Zaw Aye || | Northeastern Command || 1972 || Colonel ]||Major General Soe Tint||
|- |-
| Northern Command || 1947 || Brigadier Ne Win|| Major General ||Original Northern Command was divided into Eastern Command and NW Command in 1961. Current Northern Command was formed in 1969 as a part of reorganisation and is formed northern part of previous NW Command | Northern Command || 1947 || Brigadier Ne Win|| Brigadier General Aung Zaw Htwe||Original Northern Command was divided into Eastern Command and NW Command in 1961. Current Northern Command was formed in 1969 as a part of reorganisation and is formed northern part of previous NW Command
|- |-
| Southern Command || 1947 ||Brigadier Saw Kya Doe ||Major General Myo Win ||Original Southern Command in Mandalay was renamed Central Command in March 1990 | Southern Command || 1947 ||Brigadier Saw Kya Doe ||Brigadier General Kyi Theik ||Original Southern Command in Mandalay was renamed Central Command in March 1990
|- |-
| Triangle Region Command || 1996 || Brigadier General ] ||Major General Khin Hlaing || Thein Sein later became Prime Minister and elected as president in 2011 | Triangle Region Command || 1996 || Brigadier General ] ||Major General Aung Khaing Win || Thein Sein later became Prime Minister and elected as president in 2011
|- |-
| Coastal Region Command || 1996 || Brigadier General ] Sit Maung|| Major General Saw Than Hlaing || | Coastal Region Command || 1996 || Brigadier General ] Sit Maung|| Major General Soe Min||
|- |-
| Naypyidaw Command || 2005 ||Brigadier Wei Lwin ||Major General Zaw Myo Tin || | Naypyidaw Command || 2005 ||Brigadier Wei Lwin ||Major General Saw Than Hlaing ||
|- |-
| Eastern Central Command || 2011 ||Brigadier Mya Tun Oo ||Major General Vacant || | Eastern Central Command || 2011 ||Brigadier ] ||Major General Myo Min Tun ||
|} |}


===Regional Operations Commands (ROC)=== ===Regional Operations Commands (ROC)===
Regional Operations Commands (ROC) ({{lang|my|ဒေသကွပ်ကဲမှု စစ်ဌာနချုပ်}}) are commanded by a brigadier general, are similar to infantry brigades in Western Armies. Each consists of 4 Infantry battalions (Chay Hlyin Tatyin), HQ and organic support units. Commander of ROC is a position between LID/MOC commander and tactical Operation Command (TOC) commander, who commands three infantry battalions. The ROC commander holds financial, administrative and judicial authority while the MOC and LID commanders do not have judicial authority.<ref name="Selth, Andrew 2002"/><ref name="Myoe, Maung Aung">Myoe, Maung Aung: ''Building the tatmadaw – Myanmar Armed Forces Since 1948'', Institute of SouthEast Asian Studies. {{ISBN|978-981-230-848-1}}</ref> Regional Operations Commands (ROC) ({{lang|my|ဒေသကွပ်ကဲမှု စစ်ဌာနချုပ်}}) are commanded by a brigadier general, are similar to infantry brigades in Western Armies. Each consists of 4 Infantry battalions (Chay Hlyin Tatyin), HQ and organic support units. Commander of ROC is a position between LID/MOC commander and tactical Operation Command (TOC) commander, who commands three infantry battalions. The ROC commander holds financial, administrative and judicial authority while the MOC and LID commanders do not have judicial authority.<ref name="Selth, Andrew 2002"/><ref name="Myoe, Maung Aung">Myoe, Maung Aung: ''Building the tatmadaw – Myanmar Armed Forces Since 1948'', Institute of SouthEast Asian Studies. {{ISBN|978-981-230-848-1}}</ref> ROC (Laukkai) was captured by MNDAA on Jan 5, 2024.

{| class="wikitable" {| class="wikitable"
|- |-
! Regional Operation Command (ROC) ! Regional Operation Command (ROC)
! Headquarters ! Headquarters
!Strength
! Notes ! Notes
|- |-
| Loikaw Regional Operations Command || ] ({{lang|my|လွိုင်ကော်}}) Kayah State|| | Loikaw Regional Operations Command || ] ({{lang|my|လွိုင်ကော်}}) Kayah State
|8 Infantry Battalions||
|- |-
| Laukkai Regional Operations Command || ] ({{lang|my|လောက်ကိုင်}}), Shan State|| | Laukkai Regional Operations Command || ] ({{lang|my|လောက်ကိုင်}}), Shan State
|7 Infantry Battalions|| Captured by the ] on 5 January 2024
|- |-
| Kalay Regional Operations Command || ] ({{lang|my|ကလေး}}), Sagaing Division|| | Kalay Regional Operations Command || ] ({{lang|my|ကလေး}}), Sagaing Division
|4 Infantry Battalions||
|- |-
| Sittwe Regional Operations Command || ] ({{lang|my|စစ်တွေ}}), Yakhine State|| | Sittwe Regional Operations Command || ] ({{lang|my|စစ်တွေ}}), Rakhine State
|4 Infantry Battalions||
|- |-
| Pyay Regional Operations Command || ] ({{lang|my|ပြည်}}), Bago Division|| | Pyay Regional Operations Command || ] ({{lang|my|ပြည်}}), Bago Division
|2 Infantry Battalions||
|- |-
| Tanaing Regional Operations Command || Tanaing ({{lang|my|တနိုင်း}}), Kachin State|| Formerly ROC ] | Tanai Regional Operations Command || ] ({{lang|my|တနိုင်း}}), Kachin State
|5 Infantry Battalions|| Formerly ROC ]
|-
| Wanhseng Regional Operations Command || Wanhseng, Shan State|| Formed in 2011<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.irrawaddy.org/article.php?art_id=20435 |title=Archived copy |access-date=6 March 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110302202117/http://www.irrawaddy.org/article.php?art_id=20435 |archive-date=2 March 2011 |url-status=live |df=dmy-all }}</ref>
|- |-
| Wanhseng Regional Operations Command || Wanhseng, Shan State
| || Formed in 2011<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.irrawaddy.org/article.php?art_id=20435 |title=Junta Expands Military |access-date=6 March 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110302202117/http://www.irrawaddy.org/article.php?art_id=20435 |archive-date=2 March 2011 |url-status=live }}</ref>
|} |}

===Military Operations Commands (MOC)=== ===Military Operations Commands (MOC)===


Military Operations Commands (MOC) ({{lang|my|စစ်ဆင်ရေးကွပ်ကဲမှုဌာနချုပ်}}), commanded by a brigadier-general are similar to Infantry Divisions in Western Armies. Each consists of 10 Mechanised Infantry battalions equipped with ] armoured personnel carriers, Headquarters and support units including field artillery batteries. These ten battalions are organised into three Tactical Operations Commands: one Mechanised Tactical Operations Command with BTR-3 armoured personnel carriers, and two Motorized Tactical Operations Command with ] 6x6 trucks. Military Operations Commands (MOC) ({{lang|my|စစ်ဆင်ရေးကွပ်ကဲမှုဌာနချုပ်}}), commanded by a brigadier-general are similar to Infantry Divisions in Western Armies. Each consists of 10 Mechanised Infantry battalions equipped with ] armoured personnel carriers, Headquarters and support units including field artillery batteries. These ten battalions are organised into three Tactical Operations Commands: one Mechanised Tactical Operations Command with BTR-3 armoured personnel carriers, and two Motorised Tactical Operations Command with ] 6x6 trucks.

MOC are equivalent to Light Infantry Divisions (LID) in the Myanmar Army order of battle as both command 10 infantry battalions through three TOC's (Tactical Operations Commands). However, unlike Light Infantry Divisions, MOC are subordinate to their respective Regional Military Command (RMC) Headquarters.<ref name="Myoe, Maung Aung"/> Members of MOC does not wear distinguished arm insignias and instead uses their respective RMC's arm insignias. For example, MOC-20 in ] wore the arm insignia of Costal Region Military Command. MOC are equivalent to Light Infantry Divisions (LID) in the Myanmar Army order of battle as both command 10 infantry battalions through three TOC's (Tactical Operations Commands). However, unlike Light Infantry Divisions, MOC are subordinate to their respective Regional Military Command (RMC) Headquarters.<ref name="Myoe, Maung Aung"/> Members of MOC does not wear distinguished arm insignias and instead uses their respective RMC's arm insignias. For example, MOC-20 in ] wore the arm insignia of Coastal Region Military Command. No. (15) MOC and No. (9) MOC has been captured by AA. No. (16) MOC has been captured by MNDAA.


{| class="wikitable" {| class="wikitable"
Line 370: Line 460:
! Military Operation Command (MOC) ! Military Operation Command (MOC)
! Headquarters ! Headquarters
!Strength
! Notes ! Notes
|- |-
| 1st Military Operations Command (MOC-1) || ], ] || | No. (1) Military Operations Command (MOC-1) || ], ]
|11 Infantry Battalions||
|- |-
| 2nd Military Operations Command (MOC-2) || ], Shan State || | No. (2) Military Operations Command (MOC-2) || ], Shan State
|11 Infantry Battalions||
|- |-
| 3rd Military Operations Command (MOC-3)|| ], ] || | No. (3) Military Operations Command (MOC-3)|| ], ]
|10 Infantry Battalions||Renamed as No. (3) Infantry Brigade<ref name="auto">{{Cite web |date=2024-01-02 |title=မြန်မာစစ်တပ် ဘာကြောင့် အားနည်းသွားသလဲ |url=https://www.bbc.com/burmese/articles/cy6w571xdgvo |access-date=2024-04-07 |publisher=BBC News မြန်မာ |language=my}}</ref>
|- |-
| 4th Military Operations Command (MOC-4)|| ], ] || Designated Airborne Division | No. (4) Military Operations Command (MOC-4)|| ], ]
|10 Infantry Battalions|| Designated Airborne Division. Renamed as No. (4) Infantry Brigade<ref name="auto"/>
|- |-
| 5th Military Operations Command (MOC-5)|| ], ] || | No. (5) Military Operations Command (MOC-5)|| ], ]
|10 Infantry Battalions||
|- |-
| 6th Military Operations Command (MOC-6)|| ] ({{lang|my|ပျဉ်းမနား}}), ] || | No. (6) Military Operations Command (MOC-6)|| ] ({{lang|my|ပျဉ်းမနား}}), ]
|10 Infantry Battalions||
|- |-
| 7th Military Operations Command (MOC-7)|| ] ({{lang|my|ဖယ်ခုံ}}), Shan State || | No. (7) Military Operations Command (MOC-7)|| ] ({{lang|my|ဖယ်ခုံ}}), Shan State
|10 Infantry Battalions||
|- |-
| 8th Military Operations Command (MOC-8)|| ] ({{lang|my|ထားဝယ်}}), ] || | No. (8) Military Operations Command (MOC-8)|| ] ({{lang|my|ထားဝယ်}}), ]
|10 Infantry Battalions||
|- |-
| 9th Military Operations Command (MOC-9)|| ] ({{lang|my|ကျောက်တော်}}), Rakhine State || | No. (9) Military Operations Command (MOC-9)|| ] ({{lang|my|ကျောက်တော်}}), Rakhine State
|10 Infantry Battalions||Captured by ] on 10 February 2024.<ref>{{Cite web |last=မိုးဦး |first=ရောင်နီ |date=2024-02-08 |title=စကခ (၉) လက်အောက်ခံ ခြေမြန်တပ်ရင်း ၁၀ ရင်းလုံး AA သိမ်းယူ |url=https://myanmar-now.org/mm/news/49077/ |access-date=2024-04-07 |website=Myanmar Now}}</ref> Commanded by Brigadier General Zaw Min Htun.<ref name="auto2">{{Cite web |last= |first= |title=ရက္ခိုင်တပ်တော်၏ ၃ လတာ တိုက်ပွဲအတွင်း တပ်မမှူးနှင့် ဗျူဟာမှူးအဆင့် ၂ ဦးအား အရှင်ဖမ်းမိပြီး ၂ ဦးအားအသေမိ |url=https://burmese.narinjara.com/news/detail/65cd34cbd6e87504260616aa |access-date=2024-04-07 |website=Narinjara News |language=my}}</ref>
|- |-
| 10th Military Operations Command (MOC-10)|| ] ({{lang|my|ကျီကုန်း (ကလေးဝ)}}), ] || | No. (10) Military Operations Command (MOC-10)|| ] ({{lang|my|ကျီကုန်း (ကလေးဝ)}}), ]
|10 Infantry Battalions||
|- |-
| 11th Military Operations Command (MOC-11)|| || | No. (12) Military Operations Command (MOC-12)|| ] ({{lang|my|ကော့ကရိတ်}}), ]
|10 Infantry Battalions||Previously commanded by Brigadier General Aung Zaw Lin<ref name="auto1">{{Cite web |date=2024-01-24 |title=လောက်ကိုင်မှာ လက်နက်ချတဲ့ တပ်မှူးတွေ သေဒဏ်တကယ်ပေးခံရသလား |url=https://www.bbc.com/burmese/articles/ce94zr2x7q2o |access-date=2024-04-07 |publisher=BBC News မြန်မာ |language=my}}</ref> Current Commander, Colonel Myo Min Htwe<ref>{{Cite web |last=views |first=MLAT in သတင်း {{!}} သတင်းတို 19 January 2024 • 1110 |title=ရှမ်းမြောက်မှာ လက်နက်ချ၊ ဖမ်းဆီးခံရတဲ့ ဗိုလ်မှူးချုပ်တွေနေရာကို လူစားထိုးခန့် |url=https://myaelattathan.org/articles/%E1%80%9B%E1%80%BE%E1%80%99%E1%80%BA%E1%80%B8%E1%80%99%E1%80%BC%E1%80%B1%E1%80%AC%E1%80%80%E1%80%BA%E1%80%99%E1%80%BE%E1%80%AC_%E1%80%9C%E1%80%80%E1%80%BA%E1%80%94%E1%80%80%E1%80%BA%E1%80%81%E1%80%BB%E1%80%96%E1%80%99%E1%80%BA%E1%80%B8%E1%80%86%E1%80%AE%E1%80%B8%E1%80%81%E1%80%B6%E1%80%9B%E1%80%90%E1%80%B2%E1%80%B7_%E1%80%97%E1%80%AD%E1%80%AF%E1%80%9C%E1%80%BA%E1%80%99%E1%80%BE%E1%80%B0%E1%80%B8%E1%80%81%E1%80%BB%E1%80%AF%E1%80%95%E1%80%BA%E1%80%90%E1%80%BD%E1%80%B1%E1%80%94%E1%80%B1%E1%80%9B%E1%80%AC%E1%80%80%E1%80%AD%E1%80%AF_%E1%80%9C%E1%80%B0%E1%80%85%E1%80%AC%E1%80%B8%E1%80%91%E1%80%AD%E1%80%AF%E1%80%B8%E1%80%81%E1%80%94%E1%80%B7%E1%80%BA |access-date=2024-04-07 |website=myaelattathan.org}}</ref>
|- |-
| No. (13) Military Operations Command (MOC-13)|| ] ({{lang|my|ဘုတ်ပြင်း}}), Tanintharyi Region
|10 Infantry Battalions||
|- |-
| 12th Military Operations Command (MOC-12)|| ] ({{lang|my|ကော့ကရိတ်}}), ] || | No. (14) Military Operations Command (MOC-14)|| ] ({{lang|my|မိုင်းဆတ်}}), Shan State
|10 Infantry Battalions||
|- |-
| 13th Military Operations Command (MOC-13)|| ] ({{lang|my|ဘုတ်ပြင်း}}), Tanintharyi Region || | No. (15) Military Operations Command (MOC-15)|| ] ({{lang|my|ဘူးသီးတောင်}}), Rakhine State
|10 Infantry Battalions||Captured by Arakha Army on 4 May 2024.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Ethnic Resistance Group Claims Capture of Hundreds of Soldiers in Western Myanmar |url=https://thediplomat.com/2024/05/ethnic-resistance-group-claims-capture-of-hundreds-of-soldiers-in-western-myanmar/ |access-date=2024-05-17 |website=thediplomat.com |language=en-US}}</ref>
|- |-
| 14th Military Operations Command (MOC-14)|| ] ({{lang|my|မိုင်းဆတ်}}), Shan State || | No. (16) Military Operations Command (MOC-16)|| ] ({{lang|my|သိန်းနီ}}), Shan State
|10 Infantry Battalions|| Captured by the ] on 7 January 2024<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.irrawaddy.com/news/burma/myanmars-brotherhood-alliance-seizes-two-more-towns-in-shan-state.html|title=Myanmar's Brotherhood Alliance Seizes Two More Towns in Shan State}}</ref> Previously commanded by Brigadier General Thaw Zin Oo<ref name="auto1" /> Currently commanded by Colonel Maung Maung Lay. Unit renamed as No 16 Infantry Brigade<ref>{{Cite web |title=သိန္နီမြို့၌ သဘာဝဘေးအန္တရာယ်ကြိုတင်ကာကွယ်ရေး ပြင်ဆင်စုဖွဲ့ခြင်းလုပ်ငန်းဆောင်ရွက် {{!}} Information and Public Relations Department |url=https://www.moi.gov.mm/iprd/news/149109 |access-date=2024-04-07 |website=moi.gov.mm}}</ref>
|- |-
| 15th Military Operations Command (MOC-15)|| ] ({{lang|my|ဘူးသီးတောင်}}), Rakhine State || | No. (17) Military Operations Command (MOC-17)|| ] ({{lang|my|မိုင်းပန်}}), Shan State
|10 Infantry Battalions||
|- |-
| 16th Military Operations Command (MOC-16)|| ] ({{lang|my|သိန်းနီ}}), Shan State || | No. (18) Military Operations Command (MOC-18)|| ] ({{lang|my|မိုင်းပေါက်}}), Shan State
|11 Infantry Battalions||
|- |-
| 17th Military Operations Command (MOC-17)|| ] ({{lang|my|မိုင်းပန်}}), Shan State || | No. (19) Military Operations Command (MOC-19)|| ] ({{lang|my|ရေး}}), ]
|10 Infantry Battalions||
|- |-
| 18th Military Operations Command (MOC-18)|| ] ({{lang|my|မိုင်းပေါက်}}), Shan State || | No. (20) Military Operations Command (MOC-20)|| ] ({{lang|my|ကော့သောင်း}}), Tanintharyi Region
|10 Infantry Battalions||
|- |-
| 19th Military Operations Command (MOC-19)|| ] ({{lang|my|ရေး}}), ] || | No. (21) Military Operations Command (MOC-21)|| ] ({{lang|my|ဗန်းမော်}}), Kachin State
|8 Infantry Battalions||
|-
| 20th Military Operations Command (MOC-20)|| ] ({{lang|my|ကော့သောင်း}}), Tanintharyi Region ||
|-
| 21st Military Operations Command (MOC-21)|| ] ({{lang|my|ဗန်းမော်}}), Kachin State ||
|} |}

===Light Infantry Divisions (LID)=== ===Light Infantry Divisions (LID)===
Light Infantry Division ({{lang|my|Chay Myan Tat Ma}} or {{lang|my|Ta Ma Kha}}), commanded by a brigadier general, each with 10 Light Infantry Battalions organised under 3 Tactical Operations Commands, commanded by a Colonel (''3 battalions each and 1 reserve''), 1 Field Artillery Battalion, 1 Armour Squadron and other support units.<ref name="Selth, Andrew 2002"/><ref name="Myoe, Maung Aung"/> Light Infantry Division ({{lang|my|ခြေမြန်တပ်မ}} or {{lang|my|တမခ}}), commanded by a brigadier general, each with 10 Light Infantry Battalions organised under 3 Tactical Operations Commands, commanded by a Colonel (''3 battalions each and 1 reserve''), 1 Field Artillery Battalion, 1 Armour Squadron and other support units.<ref name="Selth, Andrew 2002"/><ref name="Myoe, Maung Aung"/>

These divisions were first introduced to the Myanmar Army in 1966 as rapid reaction mobile forces for strike operations. 77th Light Infantry Division was formed on 6 June 1966, followed by 88th Light Infantry Division and 99th Light Infantry Division in the two following years. 77th LID was largely responsible for the defeat of the Communist forces of the CPB (]) based in the forested hills of the central ] Mountains in the mid-1970s. Three more LIDs were raised in the latter half of the 1970s (the 66th, 55th and 44th) with their headquarters at ], ] and ]. They were followed by another two LIDs in the period prior to the 1988 military coup (the 33rd LID with headquarters at ] and the 22nd LID with headquarters at ]). 11th LID was formed in December 1988 with headquarters at ], ] and 101st LID was formed in 1991 with its headquarters at ].<ref name="Selth, Andrew 2002" /><ref name="Myoe, Maung Aung" /> These divisions were first introduced to the Myanmar Army in 1966 as rapid reaction mobile forces for strike operations. No. (77) Light Infantry Division was formed on 6 June 1966, followed by No. (88) Light Infantry Division and No. (99) Light Infantry Division in the two following years. No. (77) LID was largely responsible for the defeat of the Communist forces of the CPB (]) based in the forested hills of the central ] Mountains in the mid-1970s. Three more LIDs were raised in the latter half of the 1970s (the No. (66), No. (44) and No. (55)) with their headquarters at ], ] and ]. They were followed by another two LIDs in the period prior to the 1988 military coup (the No. (33) LID with headquarters at ] and the No. (22) LID with headquarters at ]). No. (11) LID was formed in December 1988 with headquarters at Inndine, ] and No. (101) LID was formed in 1991 with its headquarters at ].<ref name="Selth, Andrew 2002" /><ref name="Myoe, Maung Aung" />

Each LID, commanded by Brigadier General ({{lang|my|Bo hmu gyoke}}) level officers, consists of 10 light infantry battalions specially trained in ], ], "search and destroy" operations against ethnic insurgents and narcotics-based armies. These battalions are organised under three Tactical Operations Commands (TOC; {{lang|my|Nee byu har}}). Each TOC, commanded by a Colonel ({{lang|my|Bo hmu gyi}}), is made up of three or more combat battalions, with command and support elements similar to that of brigades in Western armies. One infantry battalion is held in reserve. As of 2000, all LIDs have their own organic Field Artillery units. For example, 314th Field Artillery Battery is now attached to 44th LID. Some of the LID battalions have been given Parachute and Air Borne Operations training and two of the LIDs have been converted to mechanised infantry formation with divisional artillery, armoured reconnaissance and tank battalions<ref name="Selth, Andrew 2002" /> Each LID, commanded by Brigadier General ({{lang|my|Bo hmu gyoke}}) level officers, consists of 10 light infantry battalions specially trained in ], ], "search and destroy" operations against ethnic insurgents and narcotics-based armies. These battalions are organised under three Tactical Operations Commands (TOC; {{lang|my|Nee byu har}}). Each TOC, commanded by a Colonel ({{lang|my|Bo hmu gyi}}), is made up of three or more combat battalions, with command and support elements similar to that of brigades in Western armies. One infantry battalion is held in reserve. As of 2000, all LIDs have their own organic Field Artillery units. For example, 314th Field Artillery Battery is now attached to 44th LID. Some of the LID battalions have been given Parachute and Air Borne Operations training and two of the LIDs have been converted to mechanised infantry formation with divisional artillery, armoured reconnaissance and tank battalions<ref name="Selth, Andrew 2002" />

LIDs are considered to be a strategic asset of the Myanmar Army, and after the 1990 reorganisation and restructuring of the Tatmadaw command structure, they are now directly answerable to Chief of Staff (Army).<ref name="Selth, Andrew 2002"/><ref name="Myoe, Maung Aung"/> LIDs are considered to be a strategic asset of the Myanmar Army, and after the 1990 reorganisation and restructuring of the Tatmadaw command structure, they are now directly answerable to Chief of Staff (Army).<ref name="Selth, Andrew 2002"/><ref name="Myoe, Maung Aung"/>

{| class="wikitable" {| class="wikitable"
|- |-
Line 435: Line 543:
! Notes ! Notes
|- |-
|11th Light Infantry Division || ] || 1988 || Inndine || Col. Win Myint || || Formed after 1988 military coup. |No. (11) Light Infantry Division || ] || 1988 || Inndine || Col. Win Myint || Brigadier General|| Formed after 1988 military coup. Previous Commander, Brigadier General Min Min Htun (not to be confused with 101) was killed in action<ref name="auto2"/>
|- |-
|22nd Light Infantry Division || ] || 1987 || Hpa-An || Col. Tin Hla || || Involved in crackdown of unarmed protestors during 8.8.88 democracy uprising |No. (22) Light Infantry Division || ] || 1987 || Hpa-An || Col. Tin Hla || Brigadier General Toe Win || Involved in crackdown of unarmed protestors during 8.8.88 democracy uprising
|- |-
|33rd Light Infantry Division || ] || 1984 ||]/later Sagaing || Col. Kyaw Ba || ||Involved in crackdown against the Rohingya in northern Rakhine state<ref name=":0">{{Cite web|url=https://www.reuters.com/investigates/special-report/myanmar-rohingya-battalions/|title=How Myanmar's shock troops led the assault that expelled the Rohingya|website=Reuters|language=en|access-date=2018-08-28|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180717204629/https://www.reuters.com/investigates/special-report/myanmar-rohingya-battalions/|archive-date=17 July 2018|url-status=live|df=dmy-all}}</ref> |No. (33) Light Infantry Division || ] || 1984 ||]/later Sagaing || Col. Kyaw Ba || Colonel Kyaw Set Myint ||Involved in crackdown against the Rohingya in northern Rakhine state<ref name=":0">{{Cite news|url=https://www.reuters.com/investigates/special-report/myanmar-rohingya-battalions/|title=How Myanmar's shock troops led the assault that expelled the Rohingya|work=Reuters|date=26 June 2018|access-date=2018-08-28|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180717204629/https://www.reuters.com/investigates/special-report/myanmar-rohingya-battalions/|archive-date=17 July 2018|url-status=live}}</ref>

Involved in the ] Involved in the ]
|- |-
|44th Light Infantry Division || || 1979 || Thaton || Col. Myat Thin || || |No. (44) Light Infantry Division ||] || 1979 || Thaton || Col. Myat Thin || Colonel Soe Min Htet ||Previou Commander, Brigadier General Aye Min Naung was killed after helicopter got shot down in 2023.
|- |-
|No. (55) Light Infantry Division ||] || 1980 || Sagaing/later Kalaw || Col. Phone Myint || Colonel Aung Soe Min || Surrendered to the ] on 26 December 2023,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.irrawaddy.com/news/burma/myanmar-infantry-division-surrenders-in-laukkai-shan-state-reports.html|title=Myanmar Infantry Division Surrenders in Laukkai, Shan State: Reports}}</ref> which included the Division Commander Brigadier General Zaw Myo Win<ref name="auto1"/>
|55th Light Infantry Division || || 1980 || Sagaing/later Kalaw || Col. Phone Myint || ||
|- |-
|66th Light Infantry Division || || 1976 || Innma || Col. Taung Zar Khaing || || |No. (66) Light Infantry Division ||] || 1976 || Innma || Col. Taung Zar Khaing || Colonel Kyaw Soe Lin||
|- |-
|77th Light Infantry Division || || 1966 || Hmawbi/later Bago || Col. Tint Swe || || |No. (77) Light Infantry Division ||] || 1966 || Hmawbi/later Bago || Col. Tint Swe || Brigadier General Kyaw Kyaw Han||
|- |-
|88th Light Infantry Division || || 1967 ||]|| Col. Than Tin || || |No. (88) Light Infantry Division ||]|| 1967 ||]|| Col. Than Tin || Brigadier General Aung Hein Win|| Units of 88th LID were deployed in Yangon and other regions to crackdown on protesters in 2021{{citation needed|date=May 2023}}
|- |-
|99th Light Infantry Division || || 1968 || Meiktila || Col. Kyaw Htin || ||Involved in crackdown against the Rohingya in northern Rakhine state<ref name=":0" /> |No. (99) Light Infantry Division ||] || 1968 || Meiktila || Col. Kyaw Htin || Colonel Aung Kyaw Lwin||Involved in crackdown against the Rohingya in northern Rakhine state<ref name=":0" />
|- |-
|101st Light Infantry Division || ] || 1991 || Pakokku || Col. Saw Tun || || Units of 101st LID were deployed during the purge of Military Intelligence faction in 2004. |No. (101) Light Infantry Division || ] || 1991 || Pakokku || Col. Saw Tun || Colonel Myint Swe|| Units of 101st LID were deployed during the purge of Military Intelligence faction in 2004.
Division Commander Brigadier General Min Min Htun was captured by TNLA<ref>{{Cite AV media |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uwmOmmwZlMA |title=ကိုထက်မြတ်ပြောတဲ့ (၁၀၁) တပ်မမှူးမင်းမင်းထွန်းအကြောင်း|access-date=2024-04-07|archiveurl= https://web.archive.org/web/20240409224333/https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uwmOmmwZlMA|archive-date=April 9, 2024 |via=YouTube}}</ref>
|- |-
|}
No. (11) Light Infantry Division: The Division GOC Brigadier General Min Min Htun was killed on Feb 7, 2024, during skirmishes at Mrauk U. All 10 battalions/regiments under its command suffered heavy casualties and are no longer combat effective. The division has neither been reinforced nor rebuilt. It has withdrawn from action.<ref>{{Cite news |title=အထိနာနေသော စစ်ကောင်စီတပ်-အပိုင်း ၁ |url=https://burma.irrawaddy.com/article/2024/05/28/384287.html |quote=၂၀၂၄ ခုနှစ်၊ ဖေဖော်ဝါရီလ ၇ ရက်နေ့ မြောက်ဦးတိုက်ပွဲတွင် တပ်မမှူး ဗိုလ်မှူးချုပ် မင်းမင်းထွန်း‌ သေဆုံးသည်။ ၂၀၂၃ ခုနှစ်၊ နိုဝင်ဘာလ ၁၃ ရက်မှ စတင်ခဲ့သော AA နှင့် တိုက်ပွဲများတွင် တပ်မမှူး၊ ဒုတပ်မမှူး၊ ဗျူဟာမှူးများနှင့် ရှေ့တန်းထွက်သော တပ်ရင်း ၁၀ ရင်းလုံး ထိခိုက်ပျက်စီးခဲ့သည်။ ၂၀၂၄ ခုနှစ်၊ မေလ ၁၁ ရက်အထိ တပ်မအား ပြန်လည်ဖွဲ့စည်းနိုင်ခြင်း မရှိသေးပါ။ လက်ရှိ တာဝန်ယူထားနိုင်သော သီးခြားစစ်ဆင်ရေးတာဝန် မရှိပါ။ |trans-quote=I translated it}}</ref>

No. (22) Light Infantry Division: The division, similar to No. (11), suffered heavy casualties in 2022. It withdrew from combat later and mostly operates as reserve. It is currently within Operation Aung Zeya.<ref>{{Cite news |title=အထိနာနေသော စစ်ကောင်စီတပ်-အပိုင်း ၁ |url=https://burma.irrawaddy.com/article/2024/05/28/384287.html |quote=၂၀၁၉၊ ၂၀၂၀ ပြည့်နှစ် AA နှင့် ဖြစ်ပွားသော စစ်ဆင်ရေးများတွင် ရခိုင်မြောက်ခြမ်း ဘူးသီးတောင်၊ မောင်တောဒေသ၌ တာဝန်ကျသည်။ ၂၀၂၁ ခုနှစ်တွင် ရခိုင်မြောက်ခြမ်း၌ တပ်အချို့ထားခဲ့ပြီး ကျန်တပ်များ အားလုံး ကော့ကရိတ်၊ ကျုံဒိုးဒေသတွင် စစ်ဆင်ရေးဝင်သည်။ ဖွဲ့စည်းပုံပျက်သွားသည်အထိ အထိနာသွားပြီး စစ်ဆင်ရေးများတွင် အဓိကနေရာမှ ဦးဆောင်နိုင်ခြင်း မရှိတော့ဘဲ အရန်အင်အားအနေဖြင့်သာ ဆောင်ရွက်နိုင်တော့၏။ ယခု မြဝတီစစ်ဆင်ရေးတွင် တပ်မ ၅၅၊ ၄၄ တို့နှင့်အတူ ပါဝင်၏။ |trans-quote=(It's translated within the article directly in a brief form)}}</ref>

=== Tactical Operation Commands ===
Additionally, nationwide there are around 23 permanent Tactical Operation Commands,<ref name=":1" /> which generally command a between two and four infantry battalions and a small number of support units which are all contiguous. Additional temporary Tactical Operation Commands may be headquartered at major fortified outposts to command specific battles.<ref>{{Cite web |title=AA captures Mel Taung tactical operation command in Ann |url=https://www.bnionline.net/en/news/aa-captures-mel-taung-tactical-operation-command-ann |access-date=2024-12-27 |website=Burma News International |language=en}}</ref>

The permanent Tactical Operation Commands are:
{| class="wikitable"
|+
!Name
!Location
!Command
!Notes
|-
|Mongmit Tactical Operations Command
|]
|Northern RMC
|Captured by the ] on 31 July 2024
|-
|Puta-O Tactical Operations Command
|]
|Northern RMC
|
|-
|Hakha Tactical Operations Command
|]
|North-Western RMC
|
|-
|Matupi Tactical Operations Command
|]
|North-Western RMC
|Captured by the ] on 29 June 2024
|-
|Hkamti Tactical Operations Command
|]
|North-Western RMC
|
|-
|Kutkai Tactical Operations Command
|]
|North-Eastern RMC
|Captured by the ] on 07 Jan 2024
|-
|Kunlong Tactical Operations Command
|]
|North-Eastern RMC
|Captured by the ] on 12 November 2023
|-
|Tangyan Tactical Operations Command
|]
|North-Eastern RMC
|
|-
|Bawlakhe Tactical Operations Command
|]
|Eastern RMC
|
|-
|Mongkhet Tactical Operations Command
|]
|Triangle Region RMC
|
|-
|Mongton Tactical Operations Command
|]
|Triangle Region RMC
|
|-
|Tachileik Tactical Operations Command
|]
|Triangle Region RMC
|
|-
|Kunhing Tactical Operations Command
|]
|Central-Eastern RMC
|
|-
|Langkho Tactical Operations Command
|]
|Central-Eastern RMC
|
|-
|Buthidaung Tactical Operations Command
|]
|Western RMC
|Captured by the ] on 18 May 2024
|-
|Mawyawaddy Tactical Operations Command
|]
|Western RMC
|Captured by the ] on 13 June 2024
|-
|Shwegyin Tactical Operations Command
|]
|Southern RMC
|
|-
|H'papun Tactical Operations Command
|]
|South-Eastern RMC
|
|-
|Hlaingbwe Tactical Operations Command
|]
|South-Eastern RMC
|
|-
|Kyainseikgyi Tactical Operations Command
|]
|South-Eastern RMC
|
|-
|Thin Gan Nyi Naung Tactical Operations Command
|]
|South-Eastern RMC
|Captured by the ] on 30 March 2024
|-
|Kawthoung Tactical Operations Command
|]
|Coastal Region RMC
|
|-
|No. 3 Tactical Operations Command
|]
|Yagon RMC
|
|} |}


===Missile, Artillery and armoured units=== ===Missile, Artillery and armoured units===


Missile, Artillery and armoured units were not used in an independent role, but were deployed in support of the infantry by the Ministry of Defence as required. The Directorate of Artillery and Armour Corps was also divided into separate corps in 2001. The Directorate of Artillery and Missile Corps was also divided into separate corps in 2009. A dramatic expansion of forces under these directorates followed with the equipment procured from China, Russia, ] and ].<ref name="Selth, Andrew 2002"/> Missile, artillery and armoured units were not used in an independent role, but were deployed in support of the infantry by the Ministry of Defence as required. The Directorate of Artillery and Armour Corps was also divided into separate corps in 2001. The Directorate of Artillery and Missile Corps was also divided into separate corps in 2009. A dramatic expansion of forces under these directorates followed with the equipment procured from China, Russia, ] and ].<ref name="Selth, Andrew 2002"/>
<ref name="Myoe, Maung Aung"/> <ref name="Myoe, Maung Aung"/>

=== Directorate of Missiles === === Directorate of Missiles (Myanmar Missile Artillery) ===


====No(1) Missile Operational Command MOC(1)==== ====No(1) Missile Operational Command MOC(1)====
* HQ battalion * HQ battalion
* 10 ] ]s: * 10 ] ]s
=== Directorate of Artillery ===


=== Directorate of Artillery (Myanmar Artillery) ===
]

]
No. 1 Artillery Battalion was formed in 1952 with three artillery batteries under the Directorate of Artillery Corps. A further three artillery battalions were formed in the late 1952. This formation remained unchanged until 1988. Since 2000, the Directorate of Artillery Corps has overseen the expansion of Artillery Operations Commands(AOC) from two to 10. ]'s stated intention is to establish an organic Artillery Operations Command in each of the 12 Regional Military Command Headquarters. Each Artillery Operation Command is composed of the following:{{citation needed|date=October 2020}} No. 1 Artillery Battalion was formed in 1952 with three artillery batteries under the Directorate of Artillery Corps. A further three artillery battalions were formed in the late 1952. This formation remained unchanged until 1988. Since 2000, the Directorate of Artillery Corps has overseen the expansion of Artillery Operations Commands(AOC) from two to 10. ]'s stated intention is to establish an organic Artillery Operations Command in each of the 12 Regional Military Command Headquarters. Each Artillery Operation Command is composed of the following:{{citation needed|date=October 2020}}

As of 2000, the Artillery wing of the Tatmadaw has about 60 battalions and 37 independent Artillery companies/batteries attached to various Regional Military Commands (RMC), Light Infantry Divisions (LID), Military Operation Command (MOC) and Regional Operation Command (ROC). For example, 314th Artillery Battery is under 44th LID, 326 Artillery Battery is attached to 5th MOC, 074 Artillery Battery is under the command of ROC (Bhamo) and 076 Artillery Battery is under North-Eastern RMC. Twenty of these Artillery battalions are grouped under 707th Artillery Operation Command (AOC) headquarters in ] and 808th Artillery Operation Command (AOC) headquarters in Oaktwin, near ]. The remaining 30 battalions, including 7 Anti-Aircraft artillery battalions are under the Directorate of Artillery Corps.<ref name="Selth, Andrew 2002"/> As of 2000, the Artillery wing of the Tatmadaw has about 60 battalions and 37 independent Artillery companies/batteries attached to various Regional Military Commands (RMC), Light Infantry Divisions (LID), Military Operation Command (MOC) and Regional Operation Command (ROC). For example, No. (314) Artillery Battery is under No. (44) LID, No. (326) Artillery Battery is attached to No. (5) MOC, No. (074) Artillery Battery is under the command of ROC (Bhamo) and No. (076) Artillery Battery is under North-Eastern RMC. Twenty of these Artillery battalions are grouped under No. (707) Artillery Operation Command (AOC) headquarters in ] and No. (808) Artillery Operation Command (AOC) headquarters in Oaktwin, near ]. The remaining 30 battalions, including 7 Anti-Aircraft artillery battalions are under the Directorate of Artillery Corps.<ref name="Selth, Andrew 2002"/>
<ref name="Myoe, Maung Aung"/> <ref name="Myoe, Maung Aung"/>


Line 489: Line 728:


Light field artillery battalions consists of 3 field artillery batteries with 36 field guns or howitzers (12 guns per battery). Medium artillery battalions consists of 3 medium artillery batteries of 18 field guns or howitzers (6 guns per one battery).{{citation needed|date=October 2020}} As of 2011, all field guns of Myanmar Artillery Corps are undergoing upgrade programs including GPS Fire Control Systems. Light field artillery battalions consists of 3 field artillery batteries with 36 field guns or howitzers (12 guns per battery). Medium artillery battalions consists of 3 medium artillery batteries of 18 field guns or howitzers (6 guns per one battery).{{citation needed|date=October 2020}} As of 2011, all field guns of Myanmar Artillery Corps are undergoing upgrade programs including GPS Fire Control Systems.

{| class="wikitable" {| class="wikitable"
|- |-
Line 496: Line 735:
! Notes ! Notes
|- |-
| 505th Artillery Operations Command || ] ({{lang|my|မြိတ်}}) || | No. (505) Artillery Operations Command || ] ({{lang|my|မြိတ်}}) ||
|- |-
| 707th Artillery Operations Command || ] ({{lang|my|ကျောက်ပန်းတောင်း}}) || | No. (707) Artillery Operations Command || ] ({{lang|my|ကျောက်ပန်းတောင်း}}) ||
|- |-
| 606th Artillery Operations Command || ] ({{lang|my|သထုံ}}) || | No. (606) Artillery Operations Command || ] ({{lang|my|သထုံ}}) ||
|- |-
| 808th Artillery Operations Command || ] ({{lang|my|အုပ်တွင်းမြို့|အုပ်တွင်း--တောင်ငူ}}) || | No. (808) Artillery Operations Command || ] ({{lang|my|အုပ်တွင်းမြို့|အုပ်တွင်း--တောင်ငူ}}) ||
|- |-
| 909th Artillery Operations Command || ]--]|| | No. (909) Artillery Operations Command || ]--]||
|- |-
| 901st Artillery Operations Command || ] ({{lang|my|ဘောနက်ကြီး--ပဲခူးတိုင်း}}) || | No. (901) Artillery Operations Command || ] ({{lang|my|ဘောနက်ကြီး--ပဲခူးတိုင်း}}) ||
|- |-
| 902nd Artillery Operations Command || [NAUNG HKIO) || | No. (902) Artillery Operations Command || ] ||
|- |-
| 903rd Artillery Operations Command || [AUNG BAN) || | No. (903) Artillery Operations Command || ] ||
|- |-
| 904th Artillery Operations Command || ] ({{lang|my|မိုးညှင်း}}) || | No. (904) Artillery Operations Command || ] ({{lang|my|မိုးညှင်း}}) ||
|- |-
| 905th Artillery Operations Command || ]--] || | No. (905) Artillery Operations Command || ]--] ||
|} |}


===Directorate of Armour=== ===Directorate of Armour (Myanmar Armored Corps) ===

No. 1 Armour Company and No. 2 Armour Company were formed in July 1950 under the Directorate of Armour and Artillery Corps with ]s, ]s, ]s, ]s and ]s. These two companies were merged on 1 November 1950 to become No. 1 Armour Battalion with headquarters in Mingalardon. On 15 May 1952 No. Tank Battalion was formed with 25 ]s acquired from the United Kingdom. The Armour Corps within Myanmar Army was the most neglected one for nearly thirty years since the Tatmadaw had not procured any new tanks or armoured carriers since 1961.{{citation needed|date=May 2015}}


No. 1 Armour Company and No. 2 Armour Company were formed in July 1950 under the Directorate of Armour and Artillery Corps with ]s, ]s, ]s, ]s and ]. These two companies were merged on 1 November 1950 to become No. 1 Armour Battalion with headquarters in Mingalardon. On 15 May 1952 No. Tank Battalion was formed with 25 ]s acquired from the United Kingdom. The Armour Corps within Myanmar Army was the most neglected one for nearly thirty years since the Tatmadaw had not procured any new tanks or armoured carriers since 1961.{{citation needed|date=May 2015}}
Armoured divisions, known as Armoured Operations Command (AROC), under the command of Directorate of Armour Corps, were also expanded in number from one to two, each with four Armoured Combat battalions equipped with ]s and armoured personnel carriers, three tank battalions equipped with main battle tanks and three Tank battalions equipped with light tanks. Armoured divisions, known as Armoured Operations Command (AROC), under the command of Directorate of Armour Corps, were also expanded in number from one to two, each with four Armoured Combat battalions equipped with ]s and armoured personnel carriers, three tank battalions equipped with main battle tanks and three Tank battalions equipped with light tanks.
<ref name="Myoe, Maung Aung"/> In mid-2003, Tamadaw acquired 139+ ] ]s from Ukraine and signed a contract to build and equip a factory in Myanmar to produce and assemble 1,000 ] armoured personnel carriers in 2004.<ref name="irrawaddy.org">{{cite web |url=http://www.irrawaddy.org/article.php?art_id=954 |title=Archived copy |access-date=2011-09-13 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110605143420/http://www.irrawaddy.org/article.php?art_id=954 |archive-date=5 June 2011 |df=dmy-all }}</ref> In 2006, the ] transferred an unspecified number of ] main battle tanks that were being phased out from active service to Tatmadaw along with 105&nbsp;mm light field guns, armoured personnel carriers and indigenous ]s in return for Tatmadaw's support and co-operation in flushing out Indian insurgent groups operating from its soil.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.india-defence.com/reports-2576|title=Defense19|access-date=29 November 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150924034257/http://www.india-defence.com/reports-2576|archive-date=24 September 2015|url-status=live|df=dmy-all}}</ref> <ref name="Myoe, Maung Aung"/> In mid-2003, Tamadaw acquired 139+ ] ]s from Ukraine and signed a contract to build and equip a factory in Myanmar to produce and assemble 1,000 ] armoured personnel carriers in 2004.<ref name="irrawaddy.org">{{cite web |url=http://www.irrawaddy.org/article.php?art_id=954 |title=The Kiev Connection |access-date=2011-09-13 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110605143420/http://www.irrawaddy.org/article.php?art_id=954 |archive-date=5 June 2011 }}</ref> In 2006, the ] transferred an unspecified number of ] main battle tanks that were being phased out from active service to Tatmadaw along with 105&nbsp;mm light field guns, armoured personnel carriers and indigenous ]s in return for Tatmadaw's support and co-operation in flushing out Indian insurgent groups operating from its soil.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.india-defence.com/reports-2576|title=Defense19|access-date=29 November 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150924034257/http://www.india-defence.com/reports-2576|archive-date=24 September 2015|url-status=live}}</ref>

====Armoured Operations Command (AROC)==== ====Armoured Operations Command (AROC)====


Armoured Operations Commands (AROC) are equivalent to Independent armoured divisions in western terms. Currently there are 5 Armoured Operations Commands under Directorate of Armoured Corps in the Tatmadaw order of battle. Tatmadaw planned to establish an AROC each in 7 Regional Military Commands.{{citation needed|date=October 2020}} Typical armoured divisions in the Myanmar Army are composed of Headquarters, Three Armored Tactical Operations Command – each with one mechanised infantry battalion equipped with 44 ] or MAV-1 Infantry Fighting Vehicles, Two Tank Battalions equipped with 44 main battle tanks each, one armoured reconnaissance battalion equipped with 32 Type-63A Amphibious Light Tanks, one field artillery battalion and a support battalion. The support battalion is composed of an ] ], two logistic squadrons, and a signal company.{{citation needed|date=October 2020}} Armoured Operations Commands (AROC) are equivalent to Independent armoured divisions in western terms. Currently there are 5 Armoured Operations Commands under Directorate of Armoured Corps in the Tatmadaw order of battle. Tatmadaw planned to establish an AROC each in 7 Regional Military Commands.{{citation needed|date=October 2020}} Typical armoured divisions in the Myanmar Army are composed of Headquarters, Three Armored Tactical Operations Command – each with one mechanised infantry battalion equipped with 44 ] or MAV-1 Infantry Fighting Vehicles, Two Tank Battalions equipped with 44 main battle tanks each, one armoured reconnaissance battalion equipped with 32 Type-63A Amphibious Light Tanks, one field artillery battalion and a support battalion. The support battalion is composed of an ] ], two logistic squadrons, and a signal company.{{citation needed|date=October 2020}}

The Myanmar Army acquired about 150 refurbished ] ] from an Israeli firm in 2005.<ref name="Rus">{{cite web|url=http://www.badasf.org/2007/WhyRussia.htm |title=Why Russia |access-date=12 March 2015 |url-status=unfit |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141205081403/http://www.badasf.org/2007/WhyRussia.htm |archive-date=5 December 2014 }}</ref> Classified in the army's service as a light tank, the Cascavel is currently deployed in the eastern Shan State and triangle regions near the Thai border. The Myanmar Army acquired about 150 refurbished ] ] from an Israeli firm in 2005.<ref name="Rus">{{cite web|url=http://www.badasf.org/2007/WhyRussia.htm |title=Why Russia |access-date=12 March 2015 |url-status=unfit |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141205081403/http://www.badasf.org/2007/WhyRussia.htm |archive-date=5 December 2014 }}</ref> Classified in the army's service as a light tank, the Cascavel is currently deployed in the eastern Shan State and triangle regions near the Thai border.

{| class="wikitable" {| class="wikitable"
|- |-
Line 536: Line 775:
! Notes ! Notes
|- |-
| 71st Armoured Operations Command || ] ({{lang|my|ပျော်ဘွယ်}}) || | No. (71) Armoured Operations Command || ] ({{lang|my|ပျော်ဘွယ်}}) ||
|- |-
| 72nd Armoured Operations Command || ({{lang|my|အုန်းတော}}) || | No. (72) Armoured Operations Command || Ohntaw ({{lang|my|အုန်းတော}}) ||
|- |-
| 73rd Armoured Operations Command || ({{lang|my|မလွန်}}) || | No. (73) Armoured Operations Command || Malun ({{lang|my|မလွန်}}) ||
|- |-
| 74th Armoured Operations Command || ({{lang|my|အင်းတိုင်}}) || | No. (74) Armoured Operation Command || Intaing ({{lang|my|အင်းတိုင်}}) ||
|- |-
| 75th Armoured Operations Command || ({{lang|my|သာဂရ}})|| | No. (75) Armoured Operations Command || Thagara ({{lang|my|သာဂရ}})||
|} |}

=== Office of the Chief of Air Defence === === Office of the Chief of Air Defence (Myanmar Air Defence Artillery) ===
{{Main|Office of the Chief of Air Defence (Myanmar)}} {{Main|Office of the Chief of Air Defence (Myanmar)}}


The Office of the chief of Air Defence ({{my|လေကြောင်းရန်ကာကွယ်ရေးတပ်ဖွဲ့အရာရှိချုပ်ရုံး}}) is one of the major branches of Tatmadaw. It was established as the Air Defence Command in 1997, but was not fully operational until late 1999. It was renamed the Bureau of Air Defence in the early 2000s. In early 2000, Tatmadaw established the Myanmar Integrated Air Defence System (MIADS) ({{my|မြန်မာ့အလွှာစုံပေါင်းစပ်လေကြောင်းရန်ကာကွယ်ရေးစနစ်}}) with help from ] and ]. It is a tri-service bureau with units from all three branches of the armed forces. All air defence assets except anti-aircraft artillery are integrated into MIADS.<ref name="Indrastra MIADS">{{cite web|url=https://www.indrastra.com/2015/12/ANALYSIS-Myanmar-Integrated-Air-Defense-System-0516.html?m=1|title=Myanmar Integrated Air Defense System|author=IndraStra Global Editorial Team|access-date=7 December 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201031065753/https://www.indrastra.com/2015/12/ANALYSIS-Myanmar-Integrated-Air-Defense-System-0516.html?m=1|archive-date=31 October 2020|url-status=live|df=dmy-all|date=2020-10-30}}</ref> The Office of the chief of Air Defence ({{lang|my|လေကြောင်းရန်ကာကွယ်ရေးတပ်ဖွဲ့အရာရှိချုပ်ရုံး}}) is one of the major branches of Tatmadaw. It was established as the Air Defence Command in 1997, but was not fully operational until late 1999. It was renamed the Bureau of Air Defence in the early 2000s. In early 2000, Tatmadaw established the Myanmar Integrated Air Defence System (MIADS) ({{lang|my|မြန်မာ့အလွှာစုံပေါင်းစပ်လေကြောင်းရန်ကာကွယ်ရေးစနစ်}}) with help from ] and ]. It is a tri-service bureau with units from all three branches of the armed forces. All air defence assets except the Army's anti-aircraft artillery battalions are integrated into the MIADS.<ref name="Indrastra MIADS">{{cite web|url=https://www.indrastra.com/2015/12/ANALYSIS-Myanmar-Integrated-Air-Defense-System-0516.html?m=1|title=Myanmar Integrated Air Defense System|author=IndraStra Global Editorial Team|access-date=7 December 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201031065753/https://www.indrastra.com/2015/12/ANALYSIS-Myanmar-Integrated-Air-Defense-System-0516.html?m=1|archive-date=31 October 2020|url-status=live|date=2020-10-30}}</ref>

=== Directorate of Signals (Myanmar Signal Corps) ===

Soon after the independence in 1948, Myanmar Signal Corps was formed with units from Burma Signals, also known as "X" Branch. It consisted HQ Burma Signals, Burma Signal Training Squadron (BSTS) and Burma Signals Squadron. HQ Burma Signals was located within War Office. BSTS based in Pyin Oo Lwin was formed with Operating Cipher Training Troop, Dispatch Rider Training Troop, Lineman Training Troop, Radio Mechanic Training Troop and Regimental Signals Training Troop. BSS, based in Mingalardon, had nine sections: Administration Troop, Maintenance Troop, Operating Troop, Cipher Troop, Lineman and Dispatch Rider Troop, NBSD Signals Troop, SBSD Signals Troop, Mobile Brigade Signals Toop and Arakan Signals Toop. The then Chief of Signal Staff Officer (CSO) was Lieutenant Colonel Saw Aung Din. BSTS and BSS were later renamed No. 1 Signal Battalion and No.1 Signal Training Battalion. In 1952, the Infantry Divisional Signals Regiment was formed and later renamed to No. 2 Signal Battalion. HQ Burma Signals was reorganised and became Directorate Signal and the director was elevated to the rank of Colonel. In 1956, No. 1 Signal Security Battalion was formed, followed by No. 3 Signal Battalion in November 1958 and No.4 Signal Battalion in October 1959.

In 1961, signal battalions were reorganised as No. 11 Signal Battalion under Northeastern Regional Military Command, No. 121 Signal Battalion under Eastern Command, No. 313 Signal Battalion under Central Command, No.414 Signal Battalion under Southwestern Command, and No. 515 Signal Battalion under Southeastern Command. No.1 Signal Training Battalion was renamed Burma Signal Training Depot (Baho-Setthweye-Tat).


=== Directorate of Signal ===
<!-- Deleted image removed: ] -->
Soon after the independence in 1948, Myanmar Signal Corps was formed with units from Burma Signals, also known as "X" Branch. It consisted HQ Burma Signals, Burma Signal Training Squadron (BSTS) and Burma Signals Squadron. HQ Burma Signals was located within War Office. BSTS based in Pyain Oo Lwin was formed with Operating Cipher Training Troop, Dispacth Rider Training Troop, Lineman Training Troop, Radio Mechanic Training Troop and Regimental Signals Training Troop. BSS, based in Mingalardon, had nince sections: Administration Troop, Maintenance Troop, Operating Troop, Cipher Troop, Lineman and Dispatch Rider Troop, NBSD Signals Troop, SBSD Signals Troop, Mobile Brigade Signals Toop and Arakan Signals Toop. The then Chief of Signal Staff Officer (CSO) was Lieutenant Colonel Saw Aung Din. BSTS and BSS were later renamed No. 1 Signal Battalion and No.1 Signal Training Battalion. In 1952, the Infantry Divisional Signals Regiment was formed and later renamed to No. 2 Signal Battalion. HQ Burma Signals was reorganised and became Directorate Signal and the director was elevated to the rank of Colonel. In 1956, No. 1 Signal Security Battalion was formed, followed by No. 3 Signal Battalion in November 1958 and No.4 Signal Battalion in October 1959.
In 1961, signal battalions were reorganised as No. 11 Signal Battalion under North Eastern Regional Military Command, No. 121 Signal Battalion under Eastern Command, No. 313 Signal Battalion under Central Command, No.414 Signal Battalion under South Western Command, and No. 515 Signal Battalion under South Eastern Command. No.1 Signal Training Battalion was renamed Burma Signal Training Depot (Baho-Setthweye-Tat).
By 1988, Directorate of Signals command one training depot, eight signal battalions, one signal security battalion, one signal store depot and two signal workshops. Signal Corps under Directorate of Signal further expanded during 1990 expansion and reorganisation of Myanmar Armed Forces. By 2000, a signal battalion is attached to each Regional Military Command and signal companies are now attached to Light Infantry Divisions and Military Operations Commands. By 1988, Directorate of Signals command one training depot, eight signal battalions, one signal security battalion, one signal store depot and two signal workshops. Signal Corps under Directorate of Signal further expanded during 1990 expansion and reorganisation of Myanmar Armed Forces. By 2000, a signal battalion is attached to each Regional Military Command and signal companies are now attached to Light Infantry Divisions and Military Operations Commands.

In 2000, ] system of Myanmar Army has been substantially upgraded by setting up the military ] communication network managed by Directorate of Signal throughout the country. Since 2002 all Myanmar Army Regional Military Command HQs used its own telecommunication system. ] are also provided to forward-deployed infantry battalions. However, battle field communication systems are still poor. Infantry units are still using TRA 906 and PRM 4051 which were acquired from UK in the 1980s. Myanmar Army also uses the locally built TRA 906 Thura and Chinese XD-D6M radio sets. Frequency hopping handsets are fitted to all front line units.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.burmanet.org/news/2010/08/13/jane%E2%80%99s-intelligence-review-radio-active-%E2%80%93-desmond-ball-and-samuel-blythe/|title=Burmanet " Jane's Intelligence Review: Radio active – Desmond Ball and Samuel Blythe|access-date=29 November 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141206031853/http://www.burmanet.org/news/2010/08/13/jane%E2%80%99s-intelligence-review-radio-active-%E2%80%93-desmond-ball-and-samuel-blythe/|archive-date=6 December 2014|url-status=dead|df=dmy-all}}</ref> In 2000, ] system of Myanmar Army has been substantially upgraded by setting up the military ] communication network managed by Directorate of Signal throughout the country. Since 2002 all Myanmar Army Regional Military Command HQs used its own telecommunication system. ] are also provided to forward-deployed infantry battalions. However, battle field communication systems are still poor. Infantry units are still using TRA 906 and PRM 4051 which were acquired from UK in the 1980s. Myanmar Army also uses the locally built TRA 906 Thura and Chinese XD-D6M radio sets. Frequency hopping handsets are fitted to all front line units.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.burmanet.org/news/2010/08/13/jane%E2%80%99s-intelligence-review-radio-active-%E2%80%93-desmond-ball-and-samuel-blythe/|title=Burmanet " Jane's Intelligence Review: Radio active – Desmond Ball and Samuel Blythe|access-date=29 November 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141206031853/http://www.burmanet.org/news/2010/08/13/jane%E2%80%99s-intelligence-review-radio-active-%E2%80%93-desmond-ball-and-samuel-blythe/|archive-date=6 December 2014|url-status=dead}}</ref>

Between 2000 and 2005, Myanmar army bought 50 units of Brett 2050 Advanced Tech radio set from Australia through third party from Singapore. Those units are distributed to ROCs in central & upper regions to use in counterinsurgency operations.<ref name="Myoe, Maung Aung"/> Between 2000 and 2005, Myanmar Army bought 50 units of Brett 2050 Advanced Tech radio set from Australia through third party from Singapore. Those units are distributed to ROCs in central & upper regions to use in counterinsurgency operations.<ref name="Myoe, Maung Aung"/>


===Directorate of Medical Services=== ===Directorate of Medical Services===
{{Main|Directorate of Medical Services}} {{Main|Directorate of Medical Services}}
At the time of independence in 1948, the medical corps has two Base Military Hospitals, each with 300 beds, in ] and ], a Medical Store Depot in ], a Dental Unit and six Camp Reception Stations located in ], ], ], ], ] and ]. Between 1958 and 1962, the medical corps was restructured and all Camp Reception Stations were reorganised into Medical Battalions.
<!-- Deleted image removed: ] -->

At the time of independence in 1948, the medical corps has two Base Military Hospitals, each with 300 beds, in Mingalardon and Pyin Oo Lwin, a Medical Store Depot in Yangon, a Dental Unit and six Camp Reception Stations located in Myitkyina, Sittwe, Taungoo, Pyinmana, Bago and Meikhtila. Between 1958 and 1962, the medical corps was restructured and all Camp Reception Stations were reorganised into Medical Battalions.
In 1989, Directorate of Medical Services has significantly expanded along with the infantry. In 2007, there are two 1,000-bed Defence Services General Hospitals (] and ]), two 700-bed hospitals in ] and ], two 500-bed military hospitals in ] and ], one 500-bed Defence Services Orthopedic Hospital in Mingalardon, two 300-bed Defence Services Obstetric, Gynecological and Children hospitals (] and ]), three 300-bed Military Hospitals (], ] and Kengtung), eighteen 100-bed Military Hospitals (], Baan, ], Bahtoo, ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], and ]), fourteen field medical battalions, which are attached to various Regional Military Commands throughout the country. Each Field Medical Battalion consists of 3 Field Medical Companies with 3 Field Hospital Units and a specialist team each. Health & Disease Control Unit (HDCU) is responsible for prevention, control & eradication of diseases.

In 1989, Directorate of Medical Services has significantly expanded along with the infantry. In 2007, there are two 1,000-bed Defence Services General Hospitals (Mingalardon and Naypyitaw), two 700-bed hospitals in Pyin Oo Lwin and Aung Ban, two 500-bed military hospitals in Meikhtila and Yangon, one 500-bed Defence Services Orthopedic Hospital in Mingalardon, two 300-bed Defence Services Obstetric, Gynecological and Children hospitals (Mingalardon and Naypyitaw), three 300-bed Military Hospitals (Myitkyina, Ann and Kengtung), eighteen 100-bed Military Hospitals (Mongphyet, Baan, Indaing, Bahtoo, Myeik, Pyay, Loikaw, Namsam, Lashio, Kalay, Mongsat, Dawai, Kawthaung, Laukai, Thandaung, Magway, Sittwe, and Hommalin), fourteen field medical battalions, which are attached to various Regional Military Commands throughout the country. Each Field Medical Battalion consist of 3 Field Medical Companies with 3 Field Hospital Units and a specialist team each. Health & Disease Control Unit (HDCU) is responsible for prevention, control & eradication of diseases.
{| class="wikitable" {| class="wikitable"
|- |-
Line 585: Line 823:
| No.(3) Field Medical Battalion ||] || Southern Command | No.(3) Field Medical Battalion ||] || Southern Command
|- |-
| No.(4) Field Medical Battalion ||] || South Western Command | No.(4) Field Medical Battalion ||] || Southwestern Command
|- |-
| No.(5) Field Medical Battalion ||]|| South Eastern Command | No.(5) Field Medical Battalion ||]|| Southeastern Command
|- |-
| No.(6) Field Medical Battalion || Hmawbi || Yangon Command | No.(6) Field Medical Battalion || ]|| Yangon Command
|- |-
| No.(7) Field Medical Battalion || ] || North Western Command | No.(7) Field Medical Battalion || ] || Northwestern Command
|- |-
| No.(8) Field Medical Battalion ||] || Western Command | No.(8) Field Medical Battalion ||] || Western Command
Line 597: Line 835:
| No.(9) Field Medical Battalion ||] || Northern Command | No.(9) Field Medical Battalion ||] || Northern Command
|- |-
| No.(10) Field Medical Battalion ||] || North Eastern Command | No.(10) Field Medical Battalion ||] || Northeastern Command
|- |-
| No.(11) Field Medical Battalion ||]|| Northern Command | No.(11) Field Medical Battalion ||]|| Northern Command
Line 613: Line 851:
==Training== ==Training==
{{main|Military Training in Myanmar}} {{main|Military Training in Myanmar}}
<ref name="Selth, Andrew 2002"/><ref name="Myoe, Maung Aung"/>
===Defence academies and colleges===


=== Defence academies & colleges ===
{| class="wikitable" {| class="wikitable"
|- |-
! Flags
! Academies ! Academies
! Locations ! Locations
|- |-
|<!-- Deleted image removed: ] -->|| ] – NDC || ] ({{lang|my|နေပြည်တော်}}) | ] – NDC || ] ({{lang|my|နေပြည်တော်}})
|- |-
|<!-- Deleted image removed: ] -->|| ] – DSCGSC || ] ({{lang|my|ကလော}}) | ] – DSCGSC || ] ({{lang|my|ကလော}})
|- |-
|<!-- Deleted image removed: ] -->|| ] – DSA || ] ({{lang|my|ပြင်ဦးလွင်}}) | ] – DSA || ] ({{lang|my|ပြင်ဦးလွင်}})
|- |-
|<!-- Deleted image removed: ] -->|| ] – DSTA ||Pyin U Lwin ({{lang|my|ပြင်ဦးလွင်}}) | ] – DSTA ||Pyin U Lwin ({{lang|my|ပြင်ဦးလွင်}})
|- |-
|<!-- Deleted image removed: ] -->|| ] – DSMA || ] ({{lang|my|ရန်ကုန်}}) | ] – DSMA || ] ({{lang|my|ရန်ကုန်}})
|- |-
|<!-- Deleted image removed: ] -->|| ] – MINP || Yangon ({{lang|my|ရန်ကုန်}}) | ] – MINP || Yangon ({{lang|my|ရန်ကုန်}})
|- |-
|<!-- Deleted image removed: ] -->|| ] – MCTI (Former ||] ({{lang|my|ဟိုပုံး}}) | ] – MCTI (Former ||] ({{lang|my|ဟိုပုံး}})
|} |}

===Training schools=== ===Training schools===


{| class="wikitable" {| class="wikitable"
|- |-
! Badge
! Training Schools ! Training Schools
! Locations ! Locations
|- |-
|<!-- Deleted image removed: ] --> | ] (OTS) || ]
| Officer Training School – OTS || ]
|- |-
|<!-- Deleted image removed: ] --> | Basic Army Combat Training School || ]
| Basic Army Combat Training School || Fort Ba Htoo
|- |-
|<!-- Deleted image removed: ] --> | 1st Army Combat Forces School || ]
| 1st Army Combat Forces School || Fort Ba Htoo
|- |-
|<!-- Deleted image removed: ] -->
| 2nd Army Combat Forces School || ] | 2nd Army Combat Forces School || ]
|- |-
|<!-- Deleted image removed: ] -->
| Artillery Training School || Mone Tai | Artillery Training School || Mone Tai
|- |-
||
| Armour Training School || Maing Maw | Armour Training School || Maing Maw
|- |-
||
| Electronic Warfare School || ] | Electronic Warfare School || ]
|- |-
||
| Engineer School || Pyin U Lwin | Engineer School || Pyin U Lwin
|- |-
||
| Information Warfare School || ] | Information Warfare School || ]
|- |-
|<!-- Deleted image removed: ] -->
| Air, Land and Paratroops Training School || ] | Air, Land and Paratroops Training School || ]
|- |-
||
| Special Forces School || ] | Special Forces School || ]
|} |}

==Ranks and insignia== ==Ranks and insignia==
{{main|Army ranks and insignia of Myanmar}} {{main|Military ranks of Myanmar}}
The various rank of the Myanmar Army are listed below in descending order:{{citation needed|date=October 2020}}
===Commissioned officers===


===Commissioned officer ranks===
Note: Senior General (OF-10) is the highest rank in Myanmar Armed Forces.
The rank insignia of ]s.
{| style="border:1px solid #8888aa; background-color:#f7f8ff; padding:5px; font-size:95%; margin: 0px 12px 12px 0px;"
{| class="wikitable"
{{Ranks and Insignia of Non NATO Armed Forces/OF/Blank}}
|- align="center"
{{Ranks and Insignia of Non NATO Armies/OF/Myanmar}}
! ]
| style="text-align:center;"| {{lang|my|ဗိုလ်ချုပ်မှူးကြီး}}
| style="text-align:center;"| {{lang|my|ဒုတိယ ဗိုလ်ချုပ်မှူးကြီး}}
| style="text-align:center;"| {{lang|my|ဗိုလ်ချုပ်ကြီး}}
| style="text-align:center;"| {{lang|my|ဒုတိယ ဗိုလ်ချုပ်ကြီး}}
| style="text-align:center;"| {{lang|my|ဗိုလ်ချုပ်}}
| style="text-align:center;"| {{lang|my|ဗိုလ်မှူးချုပ်}}
|-
! ]
| {{lang|my|Bo Gyoke Hmu Gyi}}
| {{lang|my|Du Bo Gyoke Hmu Gyi}}
| {{lang|my|Bo Gyoke Kyee}}
| {{lang|my|Du Bo Gyoke Kyee}}
| {{lang|my|Bo Gyoke}}
| {{lang|my|Bo Hmu Gyoke}}
|-
! Abbreviation
| {{lang|my|ဗခမက}}
| {{lang|my|ဒုဗခမက}}
| {{lang|my|ဗခက}}
| {{lang|my|ဒုဗခက}}
| {{lang|my|ဗခ}}
| {{lang|my|ဗမခ}}
|-
! Western Version
|]||Vice Senior General|| General ||]||]||]
|-
|- align = center
! ]
| ]
| nil
| General
| ]
| ]
| ]
|-
!NATO Code||OF-10||colspan=2|OF-9||OF-8||OF-7||OF-6
|} |}

===Other ranks===
{| class="wikitable"
The rank insignia of ]s and ].
|-
{| style="border:1px solid #8888aa; background-color:#f7f8ff; padding:5px; font-size:95%; margin: 0px 12px 12px 0px;"
! ]
{{Ranks and Insignia of Non NATO Armies/OR/Blank}}
| style="text-align:center;"| {{lang|my|ဗိုလ်မှူးကြီး}}
{{Ranks and Insignia of Non NATO Armies/OR/Myanmar}}
| style="text-align:center;"| {{lang|my|ဒုတိယ ဗိုလ်မှူးကြီး}}
| style="text-align:center;"| {{lang|my|ဗိုလ်မှူး}}
| style="text-align:center;"| {{lang|my|ဗိုလ်ကြီး}}
| style="text-align:center;"| {{lang|my|ဗိုလ်}}
| style="text-align:center;"| {{lang|my|ဒုတိယဗိုလ်}}
|-
! ]
| {{lang|my|Bo Hmu Gyi}}
| {{lang|my|Du Bo Hmu Gyi}}
| {{lang|my|Bo Hmu}}
| {{lang|my|Bo Gyi}}
| {{lang|my|Bo}}
| {{lang|my|Du Bo}}
|-
! Abbreviation
| {{lang|my|ဗမက}}
| {{lang|my|ဒုဗမက}}
| {{lang|my|ဗမ}}
| {{lang|my|ဗက}}
| {{lang|my|ဗ}}
| {{lang|my|ဒုဗ}}
|-
! Western Version
|]||]||Major||]||Lieutenant||]
|-
|- align = center
! ]
| ]
| ]
| Major
| ]
| ]
| ]
|-
!NATO Code||OF-5||OF-4||OF-3||OF-2||colspan=2|OF-1
|} |}


===Non-commissioned officers===
]s (NCOs) are referred to as Saya ({{lang|my|ဆရာ}}), meaning "teacher", by both ] and officers. ], ]s are {{lang|my|bo lay}} ({{lang|my|ဗိုလ်လေး}}). This ]/ ] are referred to as {{lang|my|Sayagyi}} ({{lang|my|ဆရာကြီး}}), literally meaning "Old Teacher", are referred to as Saya and ]/] as {{lang|my|Sayalay}} ({{lang|my|ဆရာလေး}}). These unofficial ranks are used throughout the daily life of all branches. Non-commissioned officers (NCO) within the Myanmar Armed Forces are usually seasoned veteran soldiers. Thus both Officers and enlisted men refer to them as "teacher" out of respect.
{| class="wikitable" 1px solid #8888aa; background-color:#f7f8ff; padding:5px; font-size:95%; margin: 0px 12px 12px 0px;"
|- bgcolor="#CCCCCC"
|- align="center"
! ]
| {{lang|my|အရာခံဗိုလ်}}
| {{lang|my|ဒုအရာခံဗိုလ်}}
| {{lang|my|တပ်ခွဲတပ်ကြပ်ကြီး}}
| {{lang|my|တပ်ကြပ်ကြီး}}
| {{lang|my|တပ်ကြပ်}}
| {{lang|my|ဒုတပ်ကြပ်}}
| {{lang|my|တပ်သား}}
| {{lang|my|တပ်သားသစ်}}
|-
|- align = center
! ]
| {{lang|my|Ayagan Bo}}
| {{lang|my|Du-Ayagan Bo}}
| {{lang|my|Tatkhwè Tatkyatkyi}}
| {{lang|my|Tatkyatkyi}}
| {{lang|my|Tatkyat}}
| {{lang|my|Du-Tatkyat}}
| {{lang|my|Tet Thar}}
| {{lang|my|Tet Thar Teet}}
|-
|- align = center
! Western version
| ]
| ]
| ]
| ]
| ]
| ]
| ]
| ]
|-
|- align = center
! ]
| ]
| ]
| ]
| ]
| ]
| ]
| ]
| ]
|- bgcolor="#CCCCCC"
|-
|}
==Order of battle== ==Order of battle==
* 14 × Regional Military Commands (RMC) organised in 6 Bureau of Special Operations (BSO)

* 6 × Regional Operations Commands (ROC)
<ref name="Myoe, Maung Aung"/>
* 14 x Regional Military Commands (RMC) organised in 6 Bureau of Special Operations (BSO) * 20 × Military Operations Commands (MOC) including 1 × Airborne Infantry Division
* 6 x Regional Operations Commands (ROC) * 10 × Light Infantry Divisions (LID)
* 20 × Military Operations Commands (MOC) including 1 x Airborne Infantry Division * 5 × Armoured Operation Commands (AOC) (Each with 6 ] Battalions and 4 Armoured Infantry Battalions (]s/]).)
* 10 × Artillery Operation Commands (AOC) (with of 113 Field Artillery Battalions)
* 10 x Light Infantry Divisions (LID)
* 9 × Air Defence Operation Commands
* 5 x Armoured Operation Commands (AOC) (Each with 6 ] Battalions and 4 Armoured Infantry Battalions (]s/]).)
* 10 x Artillery Operation Commands (AOC) (with of 113 Field Artillery Battalions) * 1 × Missile Operation Commands
* 40+ × Military Affairs Security Companies (MAS Units replaces former Military Intelligence Units after the disbandment of the Directorate of Defence Service Intelligence (DDSI))
* 9 x Air Defence Operation Commands
* 45 × Advanced Signal Battalions
* 1 x Missile Operation Commands
* 54 × Field Engineer Battalions
* 40+ Military Affair Security Companies (MAS Units replaces former Military Intelligence Units after the disbandment of the Directorate of Defence Service Intelligence (DDSI))
* 45 Advanced Signal Battalions * 4 × Armoured Engineer Battalions
* 54 Field Engineer Battalions * 14 × Medical Battalions<ref name="Myoe, Maung Aung"/>
* 4 Armoured Engineer Battalions
* 14 Medical Battalions


==Equipment== ==Equipment==
{{See also|List of equipment of the Myanmar Army}} {{See also|List of equipment of the Myanmar Army}}

== Gallery ==
<gallery mode= "packed">
File:Myanmar Army T-72S tank.jpg|thumb|T-72S main battle tank of ]
File:MA-MMT-40.jpg|thumb|Locally made MMT-40 light tank with 105mm gun
File:Thunder armoured vehicle of Myanmar Army.jpg|thumb|Licence-built Thunder armoured personnel carrier of Myanmar Army
File:PTL-02 Myanmar.jpg|thumb|PTL-02(WMA-301) tank destroyers of Myanmar Army
File:Panhard AML 90 of Myanmar Army.jpg|thumb|Panhard AML 90 of Myanmar Army
File:MA-ARV-1.jpg|thumb|Type-92ARV(ZSL-92) armoured recovery vehicle of Myanmar Army
File:MA-GSL-130.jpg|thumb|GSL-130 mine clearance vehicle of Myanmar Army
File:MA-NY-V-1.jpg|thumb|Naung Yoe (Humvee version) light armoured vehicle of Myanmar Army
File:Myanmar Army BAAC-87 APC.jpg|thumb|BAAC-87 armoured personnel carrier of Myanmar Army
File:MA-MAV-2.jpg|thumb|MAV-2 armoured personnel carrier of Myanmar Army
File:25mm Self-propelled anti-aircraft guns of Myanmar Army.jpg|thumb|25mm Self-propelled anti-aircraft guns of Myanmar Army
File:MA-SH-1(1).jpg|thumb|SH-1 self-propelled artillery systems of Myanmar Army
File:MA-SH-1(2).jpg|thumb|SH-1 self-propelled artillery systems of Myanmar Army
File:MA-Nora-B-52.jpg|thumb|Nora B52 self-propelled artillery system of Myanmar Army
File:MA-9P138.jpg|thumb|Upgraded 9P138 "Grad-1" rocket artillery system of Myanmar Army
File:MA-Type-81-MLR.jpg|thumb|Type-81 rocket artillery system of Myanmar Army
File:MAM-01B.jpg|thumb|MAM-01B rocket artillery systems of Myanmar Army
File:MAM01 Early Version.jpg|thumb|MAM01(Early Version) rocket artillery system of Myanmar Army
File:MA-MAM-01.jpg|thumb|MAM-01(Upgraded Version) rocket artillery system of Myanmar Army
File:MA-MAM-production.jpg|thumb|Production of MAM-01 rocket artillery systems by Myanmar Army
File:MA-MAM-01-preparing.jpg|thumb|MAM-01 MLRS which is being prepared to fire.
File:MA-MLRS-2.jpg|thumb|M-1991 rocket artillery system of Myanmar Army
File:MAM-02 in 2015.jpg|thumb|MAM-02 240mm multiple launch rocket systems of Myanmar Army at the Armed Force Day Parade,2015
File:MA-KS-1M.jpg|thumb|GYD-1B(KS-1M) missile production facility of Myanmar Army
File:Myanmar Missile Production Facility.jpg|thumb|GYD-1B(KS-1M) missile production facility of Myanmar Army
File:MA-NY-MADV.jpg|thumb|MADV self-propelled short range air defence system of Myanmar Army
File:MA-SAM-6.jpg|thumb|2K22M Tunguska air defence system of Myanmar Army
File:MA-SAM-5.jpg|thumb|S-75M3 Volga-2 air defence system of Myanmar Army
File:MA-SAM-1.jpg|thumb|Kub 2K12M2 air defence ststem of Myanmar Army
File:MA-radar-1.jpg|thumb|1S91 "Straight Flush" radar of Myanmar Army
File:MA-SAM-3.jpg|thumb|Kavadat-M air defence systems of Myanmar Army
File:MA-SAM-2.jpg|thumb|Pechora-2M air defence systems of Myanmar Army
File:MA-SAM-4.jpg|thumb|KS-1B air defence system of Myanmar Army
File:MA-KS-1M-2.jpg|thumb|KS-1M SAM of Myanmar Army
</gallery>


==See also== ==See also==
{{portal|Myanmar}}
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== Note ==
{{Notelist}}


==References== ==References==
{{reflist|colwidth=30em}} {{reflist}}
* http://www.strategypage.com/htmw/htada/articles/20081229.aspx?comments=Y *
* http://www.enotes.com/topic/Myanmar_Armed_Forces *

==Further reading== ==Further reading==
* Samuel Blythe, 'Army conditions leave Myanmar under strength,' ], Vol. 43, Issue 14, 5 April 2006, 12. * Samuel Blythe, 'Army conditions leave Myanmar under strength,' ], Vol. 43, Issue 14, 5 April 2006, 12.
* {{cite news |last1=Beech |first1=Hannah |title=Inside Myanmar’s Army: ‘They See Protesters as Criminals’ |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2021/03/28/world/asia/myanmar-army-protests.html |access-date=11 April 2021 |work=New York Times |date=4 April 2021}} <!--I parked this article here for later incorporation in the article. Specifics re: the place of the army in society.--> * {{cite news |last1=Beech |first1=Hannah |title=Inside Myanmar's Army: 'They See Protesters as Criminals' |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2021/03/28/world/asia/myanmar-army-protests.html |access-date=11 April 2021 |work=The New York Times |date=4 April 2021}} <!--I parked this article here for later incorporation in the article. Specifics re: the place of the army in society.-->


==External links== ==External links==
* Bo Htet Min, '']'', 23 January 2010 * {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120225082211/http://www.mizzima.com/edop/commentary/3424-role-of-officers-in-burmese-army-part-1.html |date=25 February 2012 }} Bo Htet Min, '']'', 23 January 2010

{{Association of SouthEast Asian Nations Armed Forces}} {{Association of SouthEast Asian Nations Armed Forces}}



Latest revision as of 13:25, 27 December 2024

Ground forces branch of the armed forces of Myanmar "Burmese Army" redirects here. For other uses, see Burma Army (disambiguation).

Myanmar Army
တပ်မတော် (ကြည်း) (Burmese)
lit. 'Tatmadaw (Kyi)'
'Armed Forces (Army)'
Emblem of the Myanmar Army
Founded1945; 80 years ago (1945)
Country Myanmar
TypeArmy
RoleGround warfare
Size
  • Active personnel: 150,000
  • Reserve personnel: 20,000
  • Paramilitary personnel: 55,000
  • Draftees: ~5,000 (estimates of the first batch of the service)
  • Reserves: Border Guard Forces (23 battalions) People’s militia groups (46 groups) University Training Corps (5 corps)
Part of Myanmar Armed Forces
Nickname(s)Tatmadaw (Kyi)
Motto(s)
  • ရဲသော်မသေ၊ သေသော်ငရဲမလား။ ("If you are brave, you will not die, and if you die, hell will not come to you.")
  • ရဲရဲတက်၊ ရဲရဲတိုက်၊ ရဲရဲချေမှုန်း။ ("Bravely charge, bravely fight, and bravely annihilate.")
  • လေ့လာပါ၊ လေ့ကျင့်ပါ၊ လိုက်နာပါ။ ("Study, Practice and Follow Up.")
  • တပ်မတော်အင်အားရှီမှ တိုင်ပြည်အင်အားရှီမည်။ ("Only when the military is strong will the nation be strong.")
  • အသက်သွေးချွေး စဉ်မနှေးပေးဆပ်သည်မှာတပ်မတော်ပါ။ ("Never hesitating always ready to sacrifice blood and sweat is the Tatmadaw.)"
  • တပ်နှင့်ပြည်သူမြဲကြည်ဖြူ သွေးခွဲလာသူတို့ရန်သူ။ ("Military and the people join in eternal unity, anyone attempting to divide them is our enemy.")
  • တစ်သွေးတည်း၊ အသံတစ်သံ၊ အမိန့်တစ်ခု။ ("One blood, one voice, one command.")
  • တပ်မတော်သည်အမျိုးသားရေးကိုဘယ်တော့မှသစ္စာမဖောက်။ ("The military shall never betray the national cause.")
  • တပ်နှင့်ပြည်သူ လက်တွဲကူပြည်ထောင်စုဖြိုခွဲသူမှန်သမျှချေမှုန်းကြ။ ("Military and the people, cooperate and crush all those harming the union.")
  • စည်းကမ်းရှီမှတိုးတက်မည်။ (Only when there is discipline will there be progress.")
  • အမိနိုင်ငံတော်ကိုချစ်ပါ။ ဥပဒေကိုလးစားပါ။ ("Love your motherland. Respect the law.")
Colours
  •   Olive green
  •   Light green
  •   Red
  •   Desert
Anniversaries27 March 1945
Engagements
Commanders
Commander-in-Chief (Army) Senior General Min Aung Hlaing
Deputy Commander-in-Chief (Army) Vice-Senior General Soe Win
Spokesperson of the Commander-in-Chief (Army) Major General Zaw Min Tun
Notable
commanders
Insignia
Flag of the Myanmar Army
Shoulder sleeve of Office of the Commander-in-Chief of Army
Shoulder sleeve infantry and light infantry
Former flag (1948–1994)
Military unit This article contains Burmese script. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Burmese script.

The Myanmar Army (Burmese: တပ်မတော်(ကြည်း); pronounced [taʔmədɔ̀ tɕí]) is the largest branch of the Tatmadaw, the armed forces of Myanmar, and has the primary responsibility of conducting land-based military operations. The Myanmar Army maintains the second largest active force in Southeast Asia after the People's Army of Vietnam. It has clashed against ethnic and political insurgents since its inception in 1948.

The force is headed by the Commander-in-Chief of Myanmar Army, currently Vice-Senior General Soe Win, concurrently Deputy Commander-in-Chief of the Defence Services, with Senior General Min Aung Hlaing as the Commander-in-Chief of Defence Services. The highest rank in the Myanmar Army is Senior General, equivalent to field marshal in Western armies and is currently held by Min Aung Hlaing after being promoted from Vice-Senior General. With Major General Zaw Min Tun serving as the official spokesperson for the Myanmar Army.

In 2011, following a transition from military government to civilian parliamentary government, the Myanmar Army imposed a military draft on all citizens: all males from age 18 to 35 and all females from 18 to 27 years of age can be drafted into military service for two years as enlisted personnel in time of national emergency. The ages for professionals are up to 45 for men and 35 for women for three years service as commissioned and non-commissioned officers.

The Government Gazette reported that 1.8 trillion kyat (about US$2 billion), or 23.6 percent of the 2011 budget was for military expenditures.

Brief history

Burmese troops surveying the Burma–China border, circa April 1954, on the lookout for Chinese Nationalist troops who fled to Burma following their defeat in the Chinese Civil War.

British and Japanese rule

In the late 1930s, during the period of British rule, a few Myanmar organizations or parties formed an alliance named Burma's Htwet Yet (Liberation) Group, one of them being Dobama Asiayone. Since most of the members were Communist, they wanted help from Chinese Communists; but when Thakhin Aung San and a partner secretly went to China for help, they only met with a Japanese general and made an alliance with Japanese Army. In the early 1940s, Aung San and other 29 participants secretly went for the military training under Japanese Army and these 30 people are later known as the "30 Comrades" in Myanmar history and can be regarded as the origin of the modern Myanmar Army.

When the Japanese invasion of Burma was ready, the 30 Soldiers recruited Myanmar people in Thailand and founded Burmese Independence Army (BIA), which was the first phase of Myanmar Army. In 1942, BIA assisted Japanese Army in their conquest of Burma, which succeeded. After that, Japanese Army changed BIA to Burmese Defense Army (BDA), which was the second phase. In 1943, Japan officially declared Burma an independent nation, but the new Burmese government did not possess de facto rule over the country.

While assisting the British Army in 1945, the Myanmar Army entered into its third phase, as the Patriotic Burmese Force (PBF), and the country became under British rule again. Afterwards, the structure of the army fell under British authority; hence, for those who were willing to serve the nation but not in that army, General Aung San organized the People's Comrades Force.

Post-Independence era

Myanmar Army Honour Guards saluting the arrival of the Thai delegation in October 2010

At the time of Myanmar's independence in 1948, the Tatmadaw was weak, small and disunited. Cracks appeared along the lines of ethnic background, political affiliation, organisational origin and different services. Its unity and operational efficiency was further weakened by the interference of civilians and politicians in military affairs, and the perception gap between the staff officers and field commanders. The most serious problem was the tension between ethnic Karen Officers, coming from the British Burma Army and Bamar officers, coming from the Patriotic Burmese Forces (PBF).

In accordance with the agreement reached at Kandy Conference in September 1945, the Tatmadaw was reorganised by incorporating the British Burma Army and the Patriotic Burmese Forces. The officer corps shared by ex-PBF officers and officers from British Burma Army and Army of Burma Reserve Organisation (ARBO). The colonial government also decided to form what were known as "Class Battalions" based on ethnicity. There were a total of 15 rifle battalions at the time of independence and four of them were made up of former members of PBF. All influential positions within the War Office and commands were manned with non-former PBF Officers. All services including military engineers, supply and transport, ordnance and medical services, Navy and Air Force were all commanded by former officers from ABRO and British Burma Army.

Composition of the Tatmadaw in 1948
Battalion Composition
No. 1 Burma Rifles Bamar (Burma Military Police)
No. 2 Burma Rifles Karen majority + other Non-Bamar Nationalities (commanded by then Lieutenant Colonel Saw Chit Khin )
No. 3 Burma Rifles Bamar / former members of Patriotic Burmese Forces
No. 4 Burma Rifles Bamar / former members of Patriotic Burmese Force – Commanded by then Lieutenant Colonel Ne Win
No. 5 Burma Rifles Bamar / former members of Patriotic Burmese Force
No. 6 Burma Rifles Bamar / former members of Patriotic Burmese Force
No. 1 Karen Rifles Karen / former members of British Burma Army and ABRO
No. 2 Karen Rifles Karen / former members of British Burma Army and ABRO
No. 3 Karen Rifles Karen / former members of British Burma Army and ABRO
No. 1 Kachin Rifles Kachin / former members of British Burma Army and ABRO
No. 2 Kachin Rifles Kachin / former members of British Burma Army and ABRO
No. 1 Chin Rifles Chin / former members of British Burma Army and ABRO
No. 2 Chin Rifles Chin / former members of British Burma Army and ABRO
No. 4 Burma Regiment Gurkha
Chin Hill Battalion Chin

Formation and structure

The army has always been by far the largest service in Myanmar and has always received the lion's share of the defence budget. It has played the most prominent part in Myanmar's struggle against the 40 or more insurgent groups since 1948 and acquired a reputation as a tough and resourceful military force. In 1981, it was described as 'probably the best army in Southeast Asia, apart from Vietnam's'. The judgement was echoed in 1983, when another observer noted that "Myanmar's infantry is generally rated as one of the toughest, most combat seasoned in Southeast Asia". In 1985, a foreign journalist with the rare experience of seeing Burmese soldiers in action against ethnic insurgents and narco-armies was "thoroughly impressed by their fighting skills, endurance and discipline". Other observers during that period characterised the Myanmar Army as "the toughest, most effective light infantry jungle force now operating in Southeast Asia". Even the Thai people, not known to praise the Burmese lightly, have described the Myanmar Army as "skilled in the art of jungle warfare".

Organisation

The Myanmar Army had reached some 370,000 active troops of all ranks in 2000. There were 337 infantry battalions, including 266 light infantry battalions as of 2000. Although the Myanmar Army's organisational structure was based upon the regimental system, the basic manoeuvre and fighting unit is the battalion, known as Tat Yinn (တပ်ရင်း) in Burmese. This is composed of a headquarters company and four rifle companies Tat Khwe (တပ်ခွဲ) with three rifle platoons Tat Su (တပ်စု) each; headquarters company has medical, transport, logistics, and signals units; a heavy weapons company including mortar, machine gun, and recoilless gun platoons. Each battalion is commanded by a lieutenant colonel Du Ti Ya Bo Hmu Gyi or Du Bo Hmu Gyi with a major (Bo Hmu) as second in command. In 1966 structure, ကဖ/၇၀(၈)/၆၆, a battalion has an authorised strength of 27 Officers and 750 Other Ranks, totaling at 777. Light infantry battalions in the Myanmar Army have much lower establishment strength of around 500; this often leads to these units being mistakenly identified by observers as under-strength infantry battalions. Both Infantry Battalions and Light Infantry Battalions were reorganised as 857 men units, 31 Officers and 826 Other Ranks, in 2001 under structure of ကဖ/၇၀-/၂၀၀၁. However, currently, most battalions are badly undermanned and have less than 150 men in general.

With its significantly increased personnel numbers, weaponry, and mobility, today's Tatmadaw Kyi (တပ်မတော်(ကြည်း)) is a formidable conventional defence force for the Union of Myanmar. Troops ready for combat duty have at least doubled since 1988. Logistics infrastructure and artillery fire support have been greatly increased. Its newly acquired military might was apparent in the Tatmadaw's dry season operations against Karen National Union (KNU) strongholds in Manerplaw and Kawmoora. Most of the casualties at these battles were the result of intense and heavy bombardment by the Myanmar Army. The Myanmar Army is now much larger than it was before 1988, it is more mobile and has greatly improved armour, artillery, and air defence inventories. Its C3I (Command, Control, Communications, Computers and Intelligence) systems have been expanded and refined. It is developing larger and more integrated, self-sustained formations to improve coordinated action by different combat arms. The army may still have relatively modest weaponry compared to its larger neighbours, but it is now in a much better position to deter external aggression and respond to such a threat should it ever arise, although child soldiers may not perform very well in combating with enemies.

Expansion

The first army division to be formed after the 1988 military coup was the No. (11) Light Infantry Division (LID) in December 1988 with Colonel Win Myint as commander. In March 1990, a new regional military command was created in Monywa with Brigadier Kyaw Min as commander and named the North-Western Regional Military Command. A year later, 101st LID was formed in Pakokku with Colonel Saw Tun as commander. Two Regional Operations Commands (ROC) were formed in Myeik and Loikaw to improve command and control. They were commanded respectively by Brigadier Soe Tint and Brigadier Maung Kyi. March 1995 saw a dramatic expansion of the Tatmadaw as it established 11 Military Operations Commands (MOC)s in that month. MOC are similar to mechanised infantry divisions in Western armies, each with 10 regular infantry battalions (Chay Hlyin Tatyin), a headquarters, and organic support units including field artillery. In 1996, two new RMC were opened, Coastal Region RMC was opened in Myeik with Brigadier Sit Maung as commander and Triangle Region RMC in Kengtung with Brigadier Thein Sein as commander. Three new ROCs were created in Kalay, Bhamo and Mongsat. In late 1998, two new MOCs were created in Bokepyin and Mongsat.

The most significant expansion after the infantry in the army was in armour and artillery. Beginning in 1990, the Tatmadaw procured 18 T-69II main battle tanks and 48 T-63 amphibious light tanks from China. Further procurements were made, including several hundred Type 85 and Type 92 armoured personnel carriers (APC). By the beginning of 1998, the Tatmadaw had about 100 T-69II main battle tanks, a similar number of T-63 amphibious light tanks, and several T-59D tanks. These tanks and armoured personnel carriers were distributed throughout five armoured infantry battalions and five tank battalions and formed the first armoured division of the Tatmadaw as the 71st Armoured Operations Command with its headquarters in Pyawbwe.

Bureau of Special Operations (BSO)

Bureau of Special Operations

The Bureau of Special Operations (ကာကွယ်ရေးဌာန စစ်ဆင်ရေး အထူးအဖွဲ့) in the Myanmar Army are high-level field units equivalent to field armies in Western terms and consist of two or more regional military commands (RMC) commanded by a lieutenant general and six staff officers.

The units were introduced under the General Staff Office on 28 April 1978 and 1 June 1979. In early 1978, the Chairman of BSPP, General Ne Win, visited the Northeastern Command Headquarters in Lashio to receive a briefing about Burmese Communist Party (BCP) insurgents and their military operations. He was accompanied by Brigadier General Tun Ye from the Ministry of Defence. Brigadier General Tun Ye was the regional commander of the Eastern Command for three years and before that he served in Northeastern Command areas as commander of Strategic Operation Command (SOC) and commander of Light Infantry Divisions for four years. As BCP military operations were spread across three Regional Military Command (RMC) areas (Northern, Eastern, and Northeastern), Brigadier General Tun Ye was the most informed commander about the BCP in the Myanmar Army at the time. At the briefing, General Ne Win was impressed by Brigadier General Tun Ye and realised that co-ordination among various Regional Military Commands (RMC) was necessary; thus, decided to form a bureau at the Ministry of Defence.

Originally, the bureau was for "special operations", wherever they were, that needed co-ordination among various Regional Military Commands (RMC). Later, with the introduction of another bureau, there was a division of command areas. The BSO-1 was to oversee the operations under the Northern Command, Northeastern Command, the Eastern Command, and the Northwestern Command. BSO-2 was to oversee operations under the Southeastern Command, Southwestern Command, Western Command and Central Command.

Initially, the chief of the BSO had the rank of brigadier general. The rank was upgraded to major general on 23 April 1979. In 1990, it was further upgraded to lieutenant general. Between 1995 and 2002, Chief of Staff (Army) jointly held the position of Chief of BSO. However, in early 2002, two more BSO were added to the General Staff Office; therefore there were altogether four BSOs. The fifth BSO was established in 2005 and the sixth in 2007.

Currently there are six Bureaus of Special Operations in the Myanmar order of battle.

Regional Military Commands in 2010
Bureau of Special Operations Regional Military Commands (RMC) Chief of Bureau of Special Operations Notes
Bureau of Special Operations 1 Central Command
Northwestern Command
Northern Command
Lt. Gen. Ko Ko Oo
Bureau of Special Operations 2 Northeastern Command
Eastern Command
Triangle Region Command
Eastern Central Command
Lt. Gen. Naing Naing Oo
Bureau of Special Operations 3 Southwestern Command
Southern Command
Western Command
Lt. Gen. Phone Myat
Bureau of Special Operations 4 Coastal Command
Southeastern Command
Lt. Gen. Nyunt Win Swe
Bureau of Special Operations 5 Yangon Command Lt. Gen. Thet Pon
Bureau of Special Operations 6 Naypyidaw Command Lt. Gen. Tay Za Kyaw

Regional Military Commands (RMC)

For a better command and communication, the Tatmadaw formed a Regional Military Commands (တိုင်း စစ်ဌာနချုပ်) structure in 1958. Until 1961, there were only two regional commands, they were supported by 13 infantry brigades and an infantry division. In October 1961, new regional military commands were opened and leaving only two independent infantry brigades. In June 1963, the Naypyidaw Command was temporarily formed in Yangon with the deputy commander and some staff officers drawn from Central Command. It was reorganised and renamed as Yangon Command on 1 June 1965.

A total of 517 infantry and light infantry battalions are commanded by the Regional Military Commands, and organised under the direct control of RMCs, into Military Operation Commands, Light Infantry Divisions and Tactical Operations Commands. Additionally, nationwide there are 100 Artillery Battalions, 24 Armoured/tank Battalions and 9 Missile Battalions.

RMCs are similar to corps formations in Western armies. The RMCs, commanded by major general, are managed through a framework of Bureau of Special Operations (BSOs), which are equivalent to field army group in Western terms..


Regional Military Command (RMC) Badge States & Regions Headquarters Strength Notes
Northern Command

(မြောက်ပိုင်းတိုင်းစစ်ဌာနချုပ်)

Kachin State Myitkyina 46 Infantry Battalions plus an additional 3 Battalions as Border Guard Force units 11 Battalions have been captured by the National Resistance by the end of 2024.
Northeastern Command

(အရှေ့မြောက်ပိုင်းတိုင်းစစ်ဌာနချုပ်)

Northern Shan State Lashio 45 Infantry Battalions Captured by the Myanmar National Democratic Alliance Army on 3 August 2024. 32 Battalions have been captured by the National Resistance by the end of 2024.
Eastern Command

(အရှေ့ပိုင်းတိုင်းစစ်ဌာနချုပ်)

Southern Shan State and Kayah State Taunggyi 35 Infantry Battalions
plus an additional 2 Battalions as Border Guard Force units
1 Battalion has been captured by the National Resistance by the end of 2024
Southeastern Command

(အရှေ့တောင်တိုင်းစစ်ဌာနချုပ်)

Mon State and Kayin State Mawlamyine 56 Infantry Battalions plus an additional 13 Battalions as Border Guard Force units 5 Battalions have been captured by the National Resistance by the end of 2024
Southern Command

(တောင်ပိုင်းတိုင်းစစ်ဌာနချုပ်)

Bago and Magwe Regions Toungoo 32 Infantry Battalions
Western Command

(အနောက်ပိုင်းတိုင်းစစ်ဌာနချုပ်)

Rakhine State and Chin State Ann 43 Infantry Battalions Captured by the Arakan Army on 20 December 2024. 33 Battalions have been captured by the National Resistance by the end of 2024
Southwestern Command

(အနောက်တောင်တိုင်းစစ်ဌာနချုပ်)

Ayeyarwady Region Pathein 11 Infantry Battalions
Northwestern Command

(အနောက်မြောက်တိုင်းစစ်ဌာနချုပ်)

Sagaing Region Monywa 49 Infantry Battalions 4 Battalions have been captured by the National Resistance by the end of 2024
Yangon Command

(ရန်ကုန်တိုင်းစစ်ဌာနချုပ်)

Yangon Region Mayangone Township-Kone-Myint-Thar 41 Infantry Battalions
Coastal Region Command

(ကမ်းရိုးတန်းတိုင်းစစ်ဌာနချုပ်)

Tanintharyi Region Myeik 45 Infantry Battalions
Triangle Region Command

(တြိဂံတိုင်းစစ်ဌာနချုပ်)

Eastern Shan State Kyaingtong (Kengtung) 40 Infantry Battalions plus an additional 4 Battalions as Border Guard Force units
Central Command

(အလယ်ပိုင်းတိုင်းစစ်ဌာနချုပ်)

Mandalay Region Mandalay 25 Infantry Battalions 1 Battalion has been captured by the National Resistance by the end of 2024
Naypyidaw Command

(နေပြည်တော်တိုင်းစစ်ဌာနချုပ်)

Naypyidaw Pyinmana Formed in 2006 – 18 Infantry Battalions
Eastern Central Command

(အရှေ့အလယ်ပိုင်းတိုင်းစစ်ဌာနချုပ်)

Middle Shan State Kholam Formed in 2011 – 31 Infantry Battalions

Commanders of Regional Military Commands

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Regional Military Command (RMC) Established First Commander Current Commander Notes
Eastern Command 1961 Brigadier General San Yu Major General Zaw Min Latt Initially in 1961, San Yu was appointed as Commander of Eastern Command but was moved to NW Command and replaced with Col. Maung Shwe then.
Southeastern Command 1961 Brigadier General Sein Win Brigadier General Soe Min In 1961 when SE Command was formed, Sein Win was transferred from former Southern Command but was moved to Central Command and replaced with Thaung Kyi then.
Central Command 1961 Colonel Thaung Kyi Major General Kyi Khaing Original NW Command based at Mandalay was renamed Central Command in March 1990 and original Central Command was renamed Southern Command
Northwestern Command 1961 Brigadier General Kyaw Min Major General Than Htike Southern part of original Northwestern Command in Mandalay was renamed Central Command in March 1990 and northern part of original NW Command was renamed NW Command in 1990.
Southwestern Command 1961 Colonel Kyi Maung Brigadier General Wai Linn Kyi Maung was sacked in 1963 and was imprisoned a few times. He became Deputy Chairman of NLD in the 1990s.
Yangon Command 1969 Colonel Thura Kyaw Htin Major General Zaw Hein Formed as Naypyidaw Command in 1963 with deputy commander and some staff officers from Central Command. Reformed and renamed Yangon Command on 1 June 1969.
Western Command 1969 Colonel Hla Tun Brigadier General Kyaw Swar Oo
Northeastern Command 1972 Colonel Aye Ko Major General Soe Tint
Northern Command 1947 Brigadier Ne Win Brigadier General Aung Zaw Htwe Original Northern Command was divided into Eastern Command and NW Command in 1961. Current Northern Command was formed in 1969 as a part of reorganisation and is formed northern part of previous NW Command
Southern Command 1947 Brigadier Saw Kya Doe Brigadier General Kyi Theik Original Southern Command in Mandalay was renamed Central Command in March 1990
Triangle Region Command 1996 Brigadier General Thein Sein Major General Aung Khaing Win Thein Sein later became Prime Minister and elected as president in 2011
Coastal Region Command 1996 Brigadier General Thiha Thura Thura Sit Maung Major General Soe Min
Naypyidaw Command 2005 Brigadier Wei Lwin Major General Saw Than Hlaing
Eastern Central Command 2011 Brigadier Mya Tun Oo Major General Myo Min Tun

Regional Operations Commands (ROC)

Regional Operations Commands (ROC) (ဒေသကွပ်ကဲမှု စစ်ဌာနချုပ်) are commanded by a brigadier general, are similar to infantry brigades in Western Armies. Each consists of 4 Infantry battalions (Chay Hlyin Tatyin), HQ and organic support units. Commander of ROC is a position between LID/MOC commander and tactical Operation Command (TOC) commander, who commands three infantry battalions. The ROC commander holds financial, administrative and judicial authority while the MOC and LID commanders do not have judicial authority. ROC (Laukkai) was captured by MNDAA on Jan 5, 2024.

Regional Operation Command (ROC) Headquarters Strength Notes
Loikaw Regional Operations Command Loikaw (လွိုင်ကော်) Kayah State 8 Infantry Battalions
Laukkai Regional Operations Command Laukkai (လောက်ကိုင်), Shan State 7 Infantry Battalions Captured by the Myanmar National Democratic Alliance Army on 5 January 2024
Kalay Regional Operations Command Kalay (ကလေး), Sagaing Division 4 Infantry Battalions
Sittwe Regional Operations Command Sittwe (စစ်တွေ), Rakhine State 4 Infantry Battalions
Pyay Regional Operations Command Pyay (ပြည်), Bago Division 2 Infantry Battalions
Tanai Regional Operations Command Tanai (တနိုင်း), Kachin State 5 Infantry Battalions Formerly ROC Bhamo
Wanhseng Regional Operations Command Wanhseng, Shan State Formed in 2011

Military Operations Commands (MOC)

Military Operations Commands (MOC) (စစ်ဆင်ရေးကွပ်ကဲမှုဌာနချုပ်), commanded by a brigadier-general are similar to Infantry Divisions in Western Armies. Each consists of 10 Mechanised Infantry battalions equipped with BTR-3 armoured personnel carriers, Headquarters and support units including field artillery batteries. These ten battalions are organised into three Tactical Operations Commands: one Mechanised Tactical Operations Command with BTR-3 armoured personnel carriers, and two Motorised Tactical Operations Command with EQ-2102 6x6 trucks.

MOC are equivalent to Light Infantry Divisions (LID) in the Myanmar Army order of battle as both command 10 infantry battalions through three TOC's (Tactical Operations Commands). However, unlike Light Infantry Divisions, MOC are subordinate to their respective Regional Military Command (RMC) Headquarters. Members of MOC does not wear distinguished arm insignias and instead uses their respective RMC's arm insignias. For example, MOC-20 in Kawthaung wore the arm insignia of Coastal Region Military Command. No. (15) MOC and No. (9) MOC has been captured by AA. No. (16) MOC has been captured by MNDAA.

Military Operation Command (MOC) Headquarters Strength Notes
No. (1) Military Operations Command (MOC-1) Kyaukme, Shan State 11 Infantry Battalions
No. (2) Military Operations Command (MOC-2) Mong Nawng, Shan State 11 Infantry Battalions
No. (3) Military Operations Command (MOC-3) Mogaung, Kachin State 10 Infantry Battalions Renamed as No. (3) Infantry Brigade
No. (4) Military Operations Command (MOC-4) Hpugyi, Yangon Region 10 Infantry Battalions Designated Airborne Division. Renamed as No. (4) Infantry Brigade
No. (5) Military Operations Command (MOC-5) Taungup, Rakhine State 10 Infantry Battalions
No. (6) Military Operations Command (MOC-6) Pyinmana (ပျဉ်းမနား), Mandalay Region 10 Infantry Battalions
No. (7) Military Operations Command (MOC-7) Pekon (ဖယ်ခုံ), Shan State 10 Infantry Battalions
No. (8) Military Operations Command (MOC-8) Dawei (ထားဝယ်), Tanintharyi Region 10 Infantry Battalions
No. (9) Military Operations Command (MOC-9) Kyauktaw (ကျောက်တော်), Rakhine State 10 Infantry Battalions Captured by Arakha Army on 10 February 2024. Commanded by Brigadier General Zaw Min Htun.
No. (10) Military Operations Command (MOC-10) Kalay (ကျီကုန်း (ကလေးဝ)), Sagaing Region 10 Infantry Battalions
No. (12) Military Operations Command (MOC-12) Kawkareik (ကော့ကရိတ်), Kayin State 10 Infantry Battalions Previously commanded by Brigadier General Aung Zaw Lin Current Commander, Colonel Myo Min Htwe
No. (13) Military Operations Command (MOC-13) Bokpyin (ဘုတ်ပြင်း), Tanintharyi Region 10 Infantry Battalions
No. (14) Military Operations Command (MOC-14) Mong Hsat (မိုင်းဆတ်), Shan State 10 Infantry Battalions
No. (15) Military Operations Command (MOC-15) Buthidaung (ဘူးသီးတောင်), Rakhine State 10 Infantry Battalions Captured by Arakha Army on 4 May 2024.
No. (16) Military Operations Command (MOC-16) Theinni (သိန်းနီ), Shan State 10 Infantry Battalions Captured by the Three Brotherhood Alliance on 7 January 2024 Previously commanded by Brigadier General Thaw Zin Oo Currently commanded by Colonel Maung Maung Lay. Unit renamed as No 16 Infantry Brigade
No. (17) Military Operations Command (MOC-17) Mong Pan (မိုင်းပန်), Shan State 10 Infantry Battalions
No. (18) Military Operations Command (MOC-18) Mong Hpayak (မိုင်းပေါက်), Shan State 11 Infantry Battalions
No. (19) Military Operations Command (MOC-19) Ye (ရေး), Mon State 10 Infantry Battalions
No. (20) Military Operations Command (MOC-20) Kawthaung (ကော့သောင်း), Tanintharyi Region 10 Infantry Battalions
No. (21) Military Operations Command (MOC-21) Bhamo (ဗန်းမော်), Kachin State 8 Infantry Battalions

Light Infantry Divisions (LID)

Light Infantry Division (ခြေမြန်တပ်မ or တမခ), commanded by a brigadier general, each with 10 Light Infantry Battalions organised under 3 Tactical Operations Commands, commanded by a Colonel (3 battalions each and 1 reserve), 1 Field Artillery Battalion, 1 Armour Squadron and other support units.

These divisions were first introduced to the Myanmar Army in 1966 as rapid reaction mobile forces for strike operations. No. (77) Light Infantry Division was formed on 6 June 1966, followed by No. (88) Light Infantry Division and No. (99) Light Infantry Division in the two following years. No. (77) LID was largely responsible for the defeat of the Communist forces of the CPB (Communist Party of Burma) based in the forested hills of the central Bago Mountains in the mid-1970s. Three more LIDs were raised in the latter half of the 1970s (the No. (66), No. (44) and No. (55)) with their headquarters at Pyay, Aungban and Thaton. They were followed by another two LIDs in the period prior to the 1988 military coup (the No. (33) LID with headquarters at Sagaing and the No. (22) LID with headquarters at Hpa-An). No. (11) LID was formed in December 1988 with headquarters at Inndine, Bago Division and No. (101) LID was formed in 1991 with its headquarters at Pakokku.

Each LID, commanded by Brigadier General (Bo hmu gyoke) level officers, consists of 10 light infantry battalions specially trained in counter-insurgency, jungle warfare, "search and destroy" operations against ethnic insurgents and narcotics-based armies. These battalions are organised under three Tactical Operations Commands (TOC; Nee byu har). Each TOC, commanded by a Colonel (Bo hmu gyi), is made up of three or more combat battalions, with command and support elements similar to that of brigades in Western armies. One infantry battalion is held in reserve. As of 2000, all LIDs have their own organic Field Artillery units. For example, 314th Field Artillery Battery is now attached to 44th LID. Some of the LID battalions have been given Parachute and Air Borne Operations training and two of the LIDs have been converted to mechanised infantry formation with divisional artillery, armoured reconnaissance and tank battalions

LIDs are considered to be a strategic asset of the Myanmar Army, and after the 1990 reorganisation and restructuring of the Tatmadaw command structure, they are now directly answerable to Chief of Staff (Army).

Light Infantry Division (LID) Badge Year formed Headquarters First commander Current commander Notes
No. (11) Light Infantry Division
11th Light Infantry Division
11th Light Infantry Division
1988 Inndine Col. Win Myint Brigadier General Formed after 1988 military coup. Previous Commander, Brigadier General Min Min Htun (not to be confused with 101) was killed in action
No. (22) Light Infantry Division
22nd Light Infantry Division
22nd Light Infantry Division
1987 Hpa-An Col. Tin Hla Brigadier General Toe Win Involved in crackdown of unarmed protestors during 8.8.88 democracy uprising
No. (33) Light Infantry Division
33rd Light Infantry Division
33rd Light Infantry Division
1984 Mandalay/later Sagaing Col. Kyaw Ba Colonel Kyaw Set Myint Involved in crackdown against the Rohingya in northern Rakhine state

Involved in the Kachin conflict

No. (44) Light Infantry Division
44th Light Infantry Division
44th Light Infantry Division
1979 Thaton Col. Myat Thin Colonel Soe Min Htet Previou Commander, Brigadier General Aye Min Naung was killed after helicopter got shot down in 2023.
No. (55) Light Infantry Division
55th Light Infantry Division
55th Light Infantry Division
1980 Sagaing/later Kalaw Col. Phone Myint Colonel Aung Soe Min Surrendered to the Myanmar National Democratic Alliance Army on 26 December 2023, which included the Division Commander Brigadier General Zaw Myo Win
No. (66) Light Infantry Division
66th Light Infantry Division
66th Light Infantry Division
1976 Innma Col. Taung Zar Khaing Colonel Kyaw Soe Lin
No. (77) Light Infantry Division
77th Light Infantry Division
77th Light Infantry Division
1966 Hmawbi/later Bago Col. Tint Swe Brigadier General Kyaw Kyaw Han
No. (88) Light Infantry Division
88th Light Infantry Division
88th Light Infantry Division
1967 Magway Col. Than Tin Brigadier General Aung Hein Win Units of 88th LID were deployed in Yangon and other regions to crackdown on protesters in 2021
No. (99) Light Infantry Division
99th Light Infantry Division
99th Light Infantry Division
1968 Meiktila Col. Kyaw Htin Colonel Aung Kyaw Lwin Involved in crackdown against the Rohingya in northern Rakhine state
No. (101) Light Infantry Division
101st Light Infantry Division
101st Light Infantry Division
1991 Pakokku Col. Saw Tun Colonel Myint Swe Units of 101st LID were deployed during the purge of Military Intelligence faction in 2004.

Division Commander Brigadier General Min Min Htun was captured by TNLA

No. (11) Light Infantry Division: The Division GOC Brigadier General Min Min Htun was killed on Feb 7, 2024, during skirmishes at Mrauk U. All 10 battalions/regiments under its command suffered heavy casualties and are no longer combat effective. The division has neither been reinforced nor rebuilt. It has withdrawn from action.

No. (22) Light Infantry Division: The division, similar to No. (11), suffered heavy casualties in 2022. It withdrew from combat later and mostly operates as reserve. It is currently within Operation Aung Zeya.

Tactical Operation Commands

Additionally, nationwide there are around 23 permanent Tactical Operation Commands, which generally command a between two and four infantry battalions and a small number of support units which are all contiguous. Additional temporary Tactical Operation Commands may be headquartered at major fortified outposts to command specific battles.

The permanent Tactical Operation Commands are:

Name Location Command Notes
Mongmit Tactical Operations Command Mongmit, North Shan State Northern RMC Captured by the Kachin Independence Army on 31 July 2024
Puta-O Tactical Operations Command Puta-O, Kachin State Northern RMC
Hakha Tactical Operations Command Hakha, Chin State North-Western RMC
Matupi Tactical Operations Command Matupi, Chin State North-Western RMC Captured by the Chin Brotherhood Alliance on 29 June 2024
Hkamti Tactical Operations Command Hkamti, Sagaing Region North-Western RMC
Kutkai Tactical Operations Command Kutkai, North Shan State North-Eastern RMC Captured by the Ta'ang National Liberation Army on 07 Jan 2024
Kunlong Tactical Operations Command Kunlong, North Shan State North-Eastern RMC Captured by the Myanmar National Democratic Alliance Army on 12 November 2023
Tangyan Tactical Operations Command Tangyan, North Shan State North-Eastern RMC
Bawlakhe Tactical Operations Command Bawlakhe, Kayah State Eastern RMC
Mongkhet Tactical Operations Command Mongkhet, South Shan State Triangle Region RMC
Mongton Tactical Operations Command Mongton, South Shan State Triangle Region RMC
Tachileik Tactical Operations Command Tachileik, South Shan State Triangle Region RMC
Kunhing Tactical Operations Command Kunhing, Shan State Central-Eastern RMC
Langkho Tactical Operations Command Langkho, Shan State Central-Eastern RMC
Buthidaung Tactical Operations Command Buthidaung, Rakhine Western RMC Captured by the Arakan Army on 18 May 2024
Mawyawaddy Tactical Operations Command Maungdaw, Rakhine Western RMC Captured by the Arakan Army on 13 June 2024
Shwegyin Tactical Operations Command Shwegyin, Bago Southern RMC
H'papun Tactical Operations Command H'papun, Kayin South-Eastern RMC
Hlaingbwe Tactical Operations Command Hlaingbwe, Kayin South-Eastern RMC
Kyainseikgyi Tactical Operations Command Kyainseikgyi, Kayin South-Eastern RMC
Thin Gan Nyi Naung Tactical Operations Command Myawaddy, Kayin South-Eastern RMC Captured by the Karen National Liberation Army on 30 March 2024
Kawthoung Tactical Operations Command Kawthoung, Tanintharyi Coastal Region RMC
No. 3 Tactical Operations Command Yangon Yagon RMC

Missile, Artillery and armoured units

Missile, artillery and armoured units were not used in an independent role, but were deployed in support of the infantry by the Ministry of Defence as required. The Directorate of Artillery and Armour Corps was also divided into separate corps in 2001. The Directorate of Artillery and Missile Corps was also divided into separate corps in 2009. A dramatic expansion of forces under these directorates followed with the equipment procured from China, Russia, Ukraine and India.

Directorate of Missiles (Myanmar Missile Artillery)

No(1) Missile Operational Command MOC(1)

Directorate of Artillery (Myanmar Artillery)

Artillery Operation Command

No. 1 Artillery Battalion was formed in 1952 with three artillery batteries under the Directorate of Artillery Corps. A further three artillery battalions were formed in the late 1952. This formation remained unchanged until 1988. Since 2000, the Directorate of Artillery Corps has overseen the expansion of Artillery Operations Commands(AOC) from two to 10. Tatmadaw's stated intention is to establish an organic Artillery Operations Command in each of the 12 Regional Military Command Headquarters. Each Artillery Operation Command is composed of the following:

As of 2000, the Artillery wing of the Tatmadaw has about 60 battalions and 37 independent Artillery companies/batteries attached to various Regional Military Commands (RMC), Light Infantry Divisions (LID), Military Operation Command (MOC) and Regional Operation Command (ROC). For example, No. (314) Artillery Battery is under No. (44) LID, No. (326) Artillery Battery is attached to No. (5) MOC, No. (074) Artillery Battery is under the command of ROC (Bhamo) and No. (076) Artillery Battery is under North-Eastern RMC. Twenty of these Artillery battalions are grouped under No. (707) Artillery Operation Command (AOC) headquarters in Kyaukpadaung and No. (808) Artillery Operation Command (AOC) headquarters in Oaktwin, near Taungoo. The remaining 30 battalions, including 7 Anti-Aircraft artillery battalions are under the Directorate of Artillery Corps.

Artillery Operations Command (AOC)

Light field artillery battalions consists of 3 field artillery batteries with 36 field guns or howitzers (12 guns per battery). Medium artillery battalions consists of 3 medium artillery batteries of 18 field guns or howitzers (6 guns per one battery). As of 2011, all field guns of Myanmar Artillery Corps are undergoing upgrade programs including GPS Fire Control Systems.

Artillery Operations Command (AOC) Headquarters Notes
No. (505) Artillery Operations Command Myeik (မြိတ်)
No. (707) Artillery Operations Command Kyaukpadaung (ကျောက်ပန်းတောင်း)
No. (606) Artillery Operations Command Thaton (သထုံ)
No. (808) Artillery Operations Command Oktwin ( Error: {{Lang}}: invalid parameter: |3= (help))
No. (909) Artillery Operations Command Mong Khon--Kengtung
No. (901) Artillery Operations Command Baw Net Gyi (ဘောနက်ကြီး--ပဲခူးတိုင်း)
No. (902) Artillery Operations Command Nawnghkio
No. (903) Artillery Operations Command Aungban
No. (904) Artillery Operations Command Mohnyin (မိုးညှင်း)
No. (905) Artillery Operations Command Padein--Ngape

Directorate of Armour (Myanmar Armored Corps)

No. 1 Armour Company and No. 2 Armour Company were formed in July 1950 under the Directorate of Armour and Artillery Corps with Sherman tanks, Stuart light tanks, Humber scout cars, Ferret armoured cars and Universal carriers. These two companies were merged on 1 November 1950 to become No. 1 Armour Battalion with headquarters in Mingalardon. On 15 May 1952 No. Tank Battalion was formed with 25 Comet tanks acquired from the United Kingdom. The Armour Corps within Myanmar Army was the most neglected one for nearly thirty years since the Tatmadaw had not procured any new tanks or armoured carriers since 1961.

Armoured divisions, known as Armoured Operations Command (AROC), under the command of Directorate of Armour Corps, were also expanded in number from one to two, each with four Armoured Combat battalions equipped with Infantry fighting vehicles and armoured personnel carriers, three tank battalions equipped with main battle tanks and three Tank battalions equipped with light tanks. In mid-2003, Tamadaw acquired 139+ T-72 main battle tanks from Ukraine and signed a contract to build and equip a factory in Myanmar to produce and assemble 1,000 BTR armoured personnel carriers in 2004. In 2006, the Government of India transferred an unspecified number of T-55 main battle tanks that were being phased out from active service to Tatmadaw along with 105 mm light field guns, armoured personnel carriers and indigenous HAL Light Combat Helicopters in return for Tatmadaw's support and co-operation in flushing out Indian insurgent groups operating from its soil.

Armoured Operations Command (AROC)

Armoured Operations Commands (AROC) are equivalent to Independent armoured divisions in western terms. Currently there are 5 Armoured Operations Commands under Directorate of Armoured Corps in the Tatmadaw order of battle. Tatmadaw planned to establish an AROC each in 7 Regional Military Commands. Typical armoured divisions in the Myanmar Army are composed of Headquarters, Three Armored Tactical Operations Command – each with one mechanised infantry battalion equipped with 44 BMP-1 or MAV-1 Infantry Fighting Vehicles, Two Tank Battalions equipped with 44 main battle tanks each, one armoured reconnaissance battalion equipped with 32 Type-63A Amphibious Light Tanks, one field artillery battalion and a support battalion. The support battalion is composed of an engineer squadron, two logistic squadrons, and a signal company.

The Myanmar Army acquired about 150 refurbished EE-9 Cascavel armoured cars from an Israeli firm in 2005. Classified in the army's service as a light tank, the Cascavel is currently deployed in the eastern Shan State and triangle regions near the Thai border.

Armoured Operations Command (ArOC) Headquarters Notes
No. (71) Armoured Operations Command Pyawbwe (ပျော်ဘွယ်)
No. (72) Armoured Operations Command Ohntaw (အုန်းတော)
No. (73) Armoured Operations Command Malun (မလွန်)
No. (74) Armoured Operation Command Intaing (အင်းတိုင်)
No. (75) Armoured Operations Command Thagara (သာဂရ)

Office of the Chief of Air Defence (Myanmar Air Defence Artillery)

Main article: Office of the Chief of Air Defence (Myanmar)

The Office of the chief of Air Defence (လေကြောင်းရန်ကာကွယ်ရေးတပ်ဖွဲ့အရာရှိချုပ်ရုံး) is one of the major branches of Tatmadaw. It was established as the Air Defence Command in 1997, but was not fully operational until late 1999. It was renamed the Bureau of Air Defence in the early 2000s. In early 2000, Tatmadaw established the Myanmar Integrated Air Defence System (MIADS) (မြန်မာ့အလွှာစုံပေါင်းစပ်လေကြောင်းရန်ကာကွယ်ရေးစနစ်) with help from Russia and China. It is a tri-service bureau with units from all three branches of the armed forces. All air defence assets except the Army's anti-aircraft artillery battalions are integrated into the MIADS.

Directorate of Signals (Myanmar Signal Corps)

Soon after the independence in 1948, Myanmar Signal Corps was formed with units from Burma Signals, also known as "X" Branch. It consisted HQ Burma Signals, Burma Signal Training Squadron (BSTS) and Burma Signals Squadron. HQ Burma Signals was located within War Office. BSTS based in Pyin Oo Lwin was formed with Operating Cipher Training Troop, Dispatch Rider Training Troop, Lineman Training Troop, Radio Mechanic Training Troop and Regimental Signals Training Troop. BSS, based in Mingalardon, had nine sections: Administration Troop, Maintenance Troop, Operating Troop, Cipher Troop, Lineman and Dispatch Rider Troop, NBSD Signals Troop, SBSD Signals Troop, Mobile Brigade Signals Toop and Arakan Signals Toop. The then Chief of Signal Staff Officer (CSO) was Lieutenant Colonel Saw Aung Din. BSTS and BSS were later renamed No. 1 Signal Battalion and No.1 Signal Training Battalion. In 1952, the Infantry Divisional Signals Regiment was formed and later renamed to No. 2 Signal Battalion. HQ Burma Signals was reorganised and became Directorate Signal and the director was elevated to the rank of Colonel. In 1956, No. 1 Signal Security Battalion was formed, followed by No. 3 Signal Battalion in November 1958 and No.4 Signal Battalion in October 1959.

In 1961, signal battalions were reorganised as No. 11 Signal Battalion under Northeastern Regional Military Command, No. 121 Signal Battalion under Eastern Command, No. 313 Signal Battalion under Central Command, No.414 Signal Battalion under Southwestern Command, and No. 515 Signal Battalion under Southeastern Command. No.1 Signal Training Battalion was renamed Burma Signal Training Depot (Baho-Setthweye-Tat).

By 1988, Directorate of Signals command one training depot, eight signal battalions, one signal security battalion, one signal store depot and two signal workshops. Signal Corps under Directorate of Signal further expanded during 1990 expansion and reorganisation of Myanmar Armed Forces. By 2000, a signal battalion is attached to each Regional Military Command and signal companies are now attached to Light Infantry Divisions and Military Operations Commands.

In 2000, Command, Control and Communication system of Myanmar Army has been substantially upgraded by setting up the military fibre optic communication network managed by Directorate of Signal throughout the country. Since 2002 all Myanmar Army Regional Military Command HQs used its own telecommunication system. Satellite communication links are also provided to forward-deployed infantry battalions. However, battle field communication systems are still poor. Infantry units are still using TRA 906 and PRM 4051 which were acquired from UK in the 1980s. Myanmar Army also uses the locally built TRA 906 Thura and Chinese XD-D6M radio sets. Frequency hopping handsets are fitted to all front line units.

Between 2000 and 2005, Myanmar Army bought 50 units of Brett 2050 Advanced Tech radio set from Australia through third party from Singapore. Those units are distributed to ROCs in central & upper regions to use in counterinsurgency operations.

Directorate of Medical Services

Main article: Directorate of Medical Services

At the time of independence in 1948, the medical corps has two Base Military Hospitals, each with 300 beds, in Mingalardon and Pyin Oo Lwin, a Medical Store Depot in Yangon, a Dental Unit and six Camp Reception Stations located in Myitkyina, Sittwe, Taungoo, Pyinmana, Bago and Meikhtila. Between 1958 and 1962, the medical corps was restructured and all Camp Reception Stations were reorganised into Medical Battalions.

In 1989, Directorate of Medical Services has significantly expanded along with the infantry. In 2007, there are two 1,000-bed Defence Services General Hospitals (Mingalardon and Naypyidaw), two 700-bed hospitals in Pyin Oo Lwin and Aung Ban, two 500-bed military hospitals in Meikhtila and Yangon, one 500-bed Defence Services Orthopedic Hospital in Mingalardon, two 300-bed Defence Services Obstetric, Gynecological and Children hospitals (Mingalardon and Naypyidaw), three 300-bed Military Hospitals (Myitkyina, Ann and Kengtung), eighteen 100-bed Military Hospitals (Mongphyet, Baan, Indaing, Bahtoo, Myeik, Pyay, Loikaw, Namsam, Lashio, Kalay, Mongsat, Dawei, Kawthaung, Laukkai, Thandaung, Magway, Sittwe, and Homalin), fourteen field medical battalions, which are attached to various Regional Military Commands throughout the country. Each Field Medical Battalion consists of 3 Field Medical Companies with 3 Field Hospital Units and a specialist team each. Health & Disease Control Unit (HDCU) is responsible for prevention, control & eradication of diseases.

Units Headquarter RMC
Medical Corps Centre Hmawbi Yangon Command
No.(1) Field Medical Battalion Mandalay Central Command
No.(2) Field Medical Battalion Taunggyi Eastern Command
No.(3) Field Medical Battalion Taungoo Southern Command
No.(4) Field Medical Battalion Pathein Southwestern Command
No.(5) Field Medical Battalion Mawlamyaing Southeastern Command
No.(6) Field Medical Battalion Hmawbi Yangon Command
No.(7) Field Medical Battalion Monywa Northwestern Command
No.(8) Field Medical Battalion Sittwe Western Command
No.(9) Field Medical Battalion Mohnyin Northern Command
No.(10) Field Medical Battalion Lashio Northeastern Command
No.(11) Field Medical Battalion Bhamo Northern Command
No.(12) Field Medical Battalion Kengtung Triangle Region Command
No.(13) Field Medical Battalion Myeik Coastal Region Command
No.(14) Field Medical Battalion Taikkyi Yangon Command
Health and Disease Control Unit Mingaladon Yangon Command

Training

Main article: Military Training in Myanmar

Defence academies & colleges

Academies Locations
National Defence College – NDC Naypyidaw (နေပြည်တော်)
Defence Services Command and General Staff College – DSCGSC Kalaw (ကလော)
Defence Services Academy – DSA Pyin U Lwin (ပြင်ဦးလွင်)
Defence Services Technological Academy – DSTA Pyin U Lwin (ပြင်ဦးလွင်)
Defence Services Medical Academy – DSMA Yangon (ရန်ကုန်)
Military Institute of Nursing and Paramedical Science – MINP Yangon (ရန်ကုန်)
Military Computer And Technological Institute – MCTI (Former Military Technological College-MTC, Pyin Oo Lwin Hopong (ဟိုပုံး)

Training schools

Training Schools Locations
Officer Training School (OTS) Bahtoo Station
Basic Army Combat Training School Bahtoo Station
1st Army Combat Forces School Bahtoo Station
2nd Army Combat Forces School Fort Bayinnaung
Artillery Training School Mone Tai
Armour Training School Maing Maw
Electronic Warfare School Pyin U Lwin
Engineer School Pyin U Lwin
Information Warfare School Yangon
Air, Land and Paratroops Training School Hmawbi
Special Forces School Fort Ye Mon

Ranks and insignia

Main article: Military ranks of Myanmar

Commissioned officer ranks

The rank insignia of commissioned officers.

Rank group General / flag officers Senior officers Junior officers
 Myanmar Army
General
ဗိုလ်ချုပ်မှူးကြီး
Builʻkhyupʻmhūʺkrīʺ
ဒုတိယ ဗိုလ်ချုပ်မှူးကြီး
Dutiya builʻkhyupʻmhūʺkrīʺ
ဗိုလ်ချုပ်ကြီး
Builʻkhyupʻkrīʺ
ဒုတိယ ဗိုလ်ချုပ်ကြီး
Dutiya builʻkhyupʻkrīʺ
ဗိုလ်ချုပ်
Builʻkhyupʻ
ဗိုလ်မှူးချုပ်
Builʻmhūʺkhyupʻ
ဗိုလ်မှူးကြီး
Builʻmhūʺkrīʺ
ဒုတိယ ဗိုလ်မှူးကြီး
Dutiya builʻmhūʺkrīʺ
ဗိုလ်မှူး
Builʻmhūʺ
ဗိုလ်ကြီး
Builʻkrīʺ
ဗိုလ်
Builʻ
ဒုတိယ ဗိုလ်
Dutiyabuilʻ

Other ranks

The rank insignia of non-commissioned officers and enlisted personnel.

Rank group Senior NCOs Junior NCOs Enlisted
 Myanmar Army
No insignia No insignia
အရာခံဗိုလ်
’araākhaṃ bauilaʻ
ဒုတိယအရာခံဗိုလ်
dautaiya ’araākhaṃ bauilaʻ
တပ်ခွဲတပ်ကြပ်ကြီး
tapaʻ khavai tapaʻ karpaʻ karīʺ
တပ်ကြပ်ကြီး
tapaʻ karpaʻ karīʺ
တပ်ကြပ်
tapaʻ karpaʻ
ဒုတိယတပ်ကြပ်
dautaiya tapaʻ karpaʻ
တပ်သား
tapaʻ saāʺ
တပ်သားသစ်
tapaʻ saāʺ sacaʻ

Order of battle

  • 14 × Regional Military Commands (RMC) organised in 6 Bureau of Special Operations (BSO)
  • 6 × Regional Operations Commands (ROC)
  • 20 × Military Operations Commands (MOC) including 1 × Airborne Infantry Division
  • 10 × Light Infantry Divisions (LID)
  • 5 × Armoured Operation Commands (AOC) (Each with 6 Tank Battalions and 4 Armoured Infantry Battalions (IFVs/APCs).)
  • 10 × Artillery Operation Commands (AOC) (with of 113 Field Artillery Battalions)
  • 9 × Air Defence Operation Commands
  • 1 × Missile Operation Commands
  • 40+ × Military Affairs Security Companies (MAS Units replaces former Military Intelligence Units after the disbandment of the Directorate of Defence Service Intelligence (DDSI))
  • 45 × Advanced Signal Battalions
  • 54 × Field Engineer Battalions
  • 4 × Armoured Engineer Battalions
  • 14 × Medical Battalions

Equipment

See also: List of equipment of the Myanmar Army

See also

Note

  1. This representative emblem is also the Shoulder Sleeve Insignia (SSI) of the office of Commander-in-Chief of Myanmar Army.

References

  1. "Official site of Commander-in-Chief's Office of the Myanmar Armed Forces". Archived from the original on 14 June 2022. Retrieved 17 June 2022.
  2. "2024 Myanmar Military Strength". Global Fire Power. Retrieved 17 September 2024.
  3. "2024 Myanmar Military Strength". Global Fire Power. Retrieved 17 September 2024.
  4. "2024 Myanmar Military Strength". Global Fire Power. Retrieved 17 September 2024.
  5. "Myanmar will start drafting 5,000 people a month into the military soon".
  6. "First batch of military service arrive at training schools nationwide".
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  8. Maung Zaw (18 March 2015). "Taint of 1988 still lingers for rebooted student militia". The Myanmar Times. Archived from the original on 19 February 2021. Retrieved 8 August 2020.
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  10. "သူရဦးတင်ဦး - ပြည်သူလွမ်းနေရမယ့် ရှားရှားပါးပါးကာချုပ်ဟောင်း- DVB News". YouTube. 3 June 2024.
  11. The Asian Conventional Military Balance 2006 (PDF), Center for Strategic and International Studies, 26 June 2006, p. 4, archived (PDF) from the original on 29 April 2011, retrieved 20 March 2011
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  31. မိုးဦး, ရောင်နီ (8 February 2024). "စကခ (၉) လက်အောက်ခံ ခြေမြန်တပ်ရင်း ၁၀ ရင်းလုံး AA သိမ်းယူ". Myanmar Now. Retrieved 7 April 2024.
  32. ^ "ရက္ခိုင်တပ်တော်၏ ၃ လတာ တိုက်ပွဲအတွင်း တပ်မမှူးနှင့် ဗျူဟာမှူးအဆင့် ၂ ဦးအား အရှင်ဖမ်းမိပြီး ၂ ဦးအားအသေမိ". Narinjara News (in Burmese). Retrieved 7 April 2024.
  33. ^ "လောက်ကိုင်မှာ လက်နက်ချတဲ့ တပ်မှူးတွေ သေဒဏ်တကယ်ပေးခံရသလား" (in Burmese). BBC News မြန်မာ. 24 January 2024. Retrieved 7 April 2024.
  34. views, MLAT in သတင်း | သတင်းတို 19 January 2024 • 1110. "ရှမ်းမြောက်မှာ လက်နက်ချ၊ ဖမ်းဆီးခံရတဲ့ ဗိုလ်မှူးချုပ်တွေနေရာကို လူစားထိုးခန့်". myaelattathan.org. Retrieved 7 April 2024.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
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  36. "Myanmar's Brotherhood Alliance Seizes Two More Towns in Shan State".
  37. "သိန္နီမြို့၌ သဘာဝဘေးအန္တရာယ်ကြိုတင်ကာကွယ်ရေး ပြင်ဆင်စုဖွဲ့ခြင်းလုပ်ငန်းဆောင်ရွက် | Information and Public Relations Department". moi.gov.mm. Retrieved 7 April 2024.
  38. ^ "How Myanmar's shock troops led the assault that expelled the Rohingya". Reuters. 26 June 2018. Archived from the original on 17 July 2018. Retrieved 28 August 2018.
  39. "Myanmar Infantry Division Surrenders in Laukkai, Shan State: Reports".
  40. ကိုထက်မြတ်ပြောတဲ့ (၁၀၁) တပ်မမှူးမင်းမင်းထွန်းအကြောင်း. Archived from the original on 9 April 2024. Retrieved 7 April 2024 – via YouTube.
  41. "အထိနာနေသော စစ်ကောင်စီတပ်-အပိုင်း ၁". ၂၀၂၄ ခုနှစ်၊ ဖေဖော်ဝါရီလ ၇ ရက်နေ့ မြောက်ဦးတိုက်ပွဲတွင် တပ်မမှူး ဗိုလ်မှူးချုပ် မင်းမင်းထွန်း‌ သေဆုံးသည်။ ၂၀၂၃ ခုနှစ်၊ နိုဝင်ဘာလ ၁၃ ရက်မှ စတင်ခဲ့သော AA နှင့် တိုက်ပွဲများတွင် တပ်မမှူး၊ ဒုတပ်မမှူး၊ ဗျူဟာမှူးများနှင့် ရှေ့တန်းထွက်သော တပ်ရင်း ၁၀ ရင်းလုံး ထိခိုက်ပျက်စီးခဲ့သည်။ ၂၀၂၄ ခုနှစ်၊ မေလ ၁၁ ရက်အထိ တပ်မအား ပြန်လည်ဖွဲ့စည်းနိုင်ခြင်း မရှိသေးပါ။ လက်ရှိ တာဝန်ယူထားနိုင်သော သီးခြားစစ်ဆင်ရေးတာဝန် မရှိပါ။ [I translated it]
  42. "အထိနာနေသော စစ်ကောင်စီတပ်-အပိုင်း ၁". ၂၀၁၉၊ ၂၀၂၀ ပြည့်နှစ် AA နှင့် ဖြစ်ပွားသော စစ်ဆင်ရေးများတွင် ရခိုင်မြောက်ခြမ်း ဘူးသီးတောင်၊ မောင်တောဒေသ၌ တာဝန်ကျသည်။ ၂၀၂၁ ခုနှစ်တွင် ရခိုင်မြောက်ခြမ်း၌ တပ်အချို့ထားခဲ့ပြီး ကျန်တပ်များ အားလုံး ကော့ကရိတ်၊ ကျုံဒိုးဒေသတွင် စစ်ဆင်ရေးဝင်သည်။ ဖွဲ့စည်းပုံပျက်သွားသည်အထိ အထိနာသွားပြီး စစ်ဆင်ရေးများတွင် အဓိကနေရာမှ ဦးဆောင်နိုင်ခြင်း မရှိတော့ဘဲ အရန်အင်အားအနေဖြင့်သာ ဆောင်ရွက်နိုင်တော့၏။ ယခု မြဝတီစစ်ဆင်ရေးတွင် တပ်မ ၅၅၊ ၄၄ တို့နှင့်အတူ ပါဝင်၏။ [(It's translated within the article directly in a brief form)]
  43. "AA captures Mel Taung tactical operation command in Ann". Burma News International. Retrieved 27 December 2024.
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Further reading

External links

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