Military Intelligence Agency
Structure
Leadership
The Military Intelligence Agency is headed by a Director and a Deputy Director, the first is appointed by the Secretary of Defense when the former must be replaced. The Director of the MIA receives from Joint Chiefs of Staff the priorities to provide intelligence to the armed forces in an effective way although he is appointed and reports to the Secretary of Defense.
Operational Intelligence Section
The Operational Intelligence Section is the frontline brain of the MIA. It produces actionable intelligence for ongoing military operations, including enemy force movements, battlefield conditions, vulnerabilities in defensive networks, and predictions of hostile intent on short time scales. This section works directly with fleet commanders, ground force generals, air wings, Marine Force detachments, and forward operating bases. Its assessments guide offensive strikes, defensive preparations, and real-time decision-making during battles. It is designed to operate under extreme pressure, maintaining a continuous intelligence picture from the moment hostilities begin until they cease. The section includes the Operations Support Unit, the Battlefield Analysis Unit, the Target Intelligence Unit and the Tactical Reconnaissance Unit.
Security and Counterintelligence Section
The Security and Counterintelligence Section protects the Republic’s armed forces from espionage, sabotage, infiltration, and internal compromise. Its mission covers everything from shielding bases and shipyards from foreign penetration to preventing leaks of classified military information and ensuring the loyalty and reliability of personnel in sensitive positions. During wartime, it plays an essential role in screening prisoners, evaluating local collaborators, securing captured infrastructure, and protecting frontline command centers from covert hostile activity. The section’s work ensures that the enemy cannot exploit the Republic’s own ranks, technology, or communication systems. It includes the Military Counter Espionage Unit, the Base Security Unit, the Personnel Screening Unit, the Communications Protection Unit and the Technical Safeguard Unit.
Technical and Signals Intelligence Section
The Technical and Signals Intelligence Section focuses on the electronic and technological dimensions of warfare. It intercepts enemy communications across space, analyzes emissions from hostile fleets and bases, detects long-range sensor signatures, and exploits captured or recovered technology. It supports fleet operations by providing early warning of hostile movements, identifying enemy targeting systems, and assisting in electronic warfare efforts during battles. This section is also responsible for decoding advanced communications, analyzing jamming patterns, and supporting Republic forces in both defensive and offensive electronic engagements. It includes the Signals Intercept Unit, the Electronic Warfare Unit, the Sensor Analysis Unit and the Technical Recovery Unit.
Field Intelligence Section
The Field Intelligence Section deploys intelligence teams directly alongside combat forces. It embeds observers, analysts, and reconnaissance specialists on capital ships, expeditionary groups, planetary bases, and forward operating positions in contested environments. This section conducts planetary reconnaissance prior to invasions, maps local geography and population dynamics, monitors insurgent activity, and produces intelligence for units engaged in peacekeeping or stabilization operations. It acts as the bridge between tactically deployed forces and the Republic’s wider intelligence system, ensuring that commanders in the field receive the information they need to adapt quickly to battlefield realities. It includes the Field Recon Unit, the Expeditionary Support Unit, the Planetary Survey Unit and the Forward Intelligence Unit.
Public Agenda
Assets
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