"INDEX", Building the Tatmadaw, ISEAS Publishing, pp. 247–254, 2009-12-31, doi:10.1355/9789812308498-014, ISBN978-981-230-849-8, retrieved 2024-06-22
Found on page 80/95 (depending on how you count)
"While the MOC is equivalent to the LID, as both command ten battalions, the ROC is much smaller in size, with merely four battalions; thus it is the regiment level with a brigadier general as commander. It is a position between LID/MOC commander and Tactical Operation Command (TOC) commander, who commands only three infantry battalions with a small TOC HQ of Coordination officer, GS, AQ and 4 sergeant (clerks). Yet, the ROC commander enjoys financial, administrative, and judicial authority while the MOC commander does not have judicial authority."
doi.org
"INDEX", Building the Tatmadaw, ISEAS Publishing, pp. 247–254, 2009-12-31, doi:10.1355/9789812308498-014, ISBN978-981-230-849-8, retrieved 2024-06-22
Found on page 80/95 (depending on how you count)
"While the MOC is equivalent to the LID, as both command ten battalions, the ROC is much smaller in size, with merely four battalions; thus it is the regiment level with a brigadier general as commander. It is a position between LID/MOC commander and Tactical Operation Command (TOC) commander, who commands only three infantry battalions with a small TOC HQ of Coordination officer, GS, AQ and 4 sergeant (clerks). Yet, the ROC commander enjoys financial, administrative, and judicial authority while the MOC commander does not have judicial authority."
The Brigade: A History: Its Organization and Employment in the US Army, Chapter 6, The Early Modern Brigade, 1958–1972, ROAD Brigades and Airmobile Brigades, p. 63 and Appendix 1, Divisional Versus Separate Brigades, p. 159. [1] . Retrieved 21 December 2016.