Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Canadian Military Police Branch can trace its roots to the formation of the Canadian Military Police Corps (CMPC), which was authorized on September 15, 1917, by Militia General Orders 93 & 94. The initial establishment was set at 30 officers and 820 warrant officers and NCOs within 13 detachments, designated No. 1 through No. 13.
The Canadian Intelligence Corps (C Int C) is an administrative corps of the Canadian Army (CA); it includes all CA members of the Canadian Armed Forces' Intelligence Branch. Prior to the Unification of the Canadian Armed Forces in 1968, it enjoyed the same status as an administrative corps of the Canadian Army . [ 2 ]
Canadian Forces Intelligence Command; Commandement du renseignement des Forces canadiennes: Active: 2013–present: Country: Canada: Branch: Canadian Armed Forces: Type: Military intelligence Command: Role: Intelligence collection and assessment: Part of: Canadian Armed Forces: Garrison/HQ: Ottawa: Motto(s) Scientia est vis (Latin for 'From ...
The SOS provides support in these fields to all regional CFNIS detachments as well as the Canadian Forces Military Police as a whole. Military Police Criminal Intelligence Section (MPCIS), based in Ottawa, Ontario, which provides criminal intelligence support to all CFNIS regional offices as well as the Canadian Forces Military Police as a
Foreign & Domestic Military Intelligence (Defence Forces) Directorate of Military Intelligence (G2) Communications and Information Services Corps (CIS) SIGINT Section; Domestic Police Intelligence (Garda Síochána) Crime & Security Branch (CSB) Special Detective Unit (SDU) National Surveillance Unit (NSU) Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU)
Logo of the Canadian Security Intelligence Service. In 1981, Royal Commission of Inquiry into Certain Activities of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, commonly referred to as the McDonald Commission released a scathing report. This report included a recommendation that the RCMP's Security Service be completely removed and a new civilian agency ...
Prior to 1984, security intelligence in Canada was the purview of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP). However, during the 1970s, there were allegations that the RCMP Security Service – the predecessor to CSIS – had been involved in numerous illegal activities.
Abwehr (military intelligence) Empire of Japan. Kenpeitai - Army military police; Tokubetsu Keisatsutai - Navy military police; Tokubetsu Kōtō Keisatsu (特別高等警察, Special Higher Police) - civil police; Poland. Wojskowe Służby Informacyjne (WSI) — dissolved in 2006 for having been involved in illegal activities; Yugoslavia