Intelligence Briefing
Ask a question. Get a source-grounded answer with citations.
strong confidence
8 sources
extractive
Based on 8 verified sources covering Myanmar:
By SIMON ROUGHNEEN Tuesday, November 22, 2011 By SIMON ROUGHNEEN Tuesday, November 22, 2011 By SIMON ROUGHNEEN Tuesday, November 22, 2011 [5]
UN envoy in Myanmar, visits monastery and Insein Prison Yangon (AsiaNews) – The United Nations' Human Rights Envoy Paulo Sergio Pinheiro kicked off his Myanmar investigation with visits to a Buddhist monastery raided by the army and to the infamous I... [7]
[1]
MM
www2.irrawaddy.com
· 68% match
[2]
MM
www2.irrawaddy.com
· 61% match
[3]
MM
www2.irrawaddy.com
· 57% match
[4]
MM
www2.irrawaddy.com
· 54% match
[5]
MM
www2.irrawaddy.com
· 53% match
By SIMON ROUGHNEEN Tuesday, November 22, 2011 By SIMON ROUGHNEEN Tuesday, November 22, 2011 By SIMON ROUGHNEEN Tuesday, November 22, 2011
[6]
MM
www2.irrawaddy.com
· 52% match
[7]
MM
asianews.it
· 34% match
UN envoy in Myanmar, visits monastery and Insein Prison Yangon (AsiaNews) – The United Nations' Human Rights Envoy Paulo Sergio Pinheiro kicked off his Myanmar investigation with visits to a Buddhist monastery raided by the army and to the infamous I
[8]
MM
www2.irrawaddy.com
· 32% match
How this works
The briefing engine uses semantic search (pgvector embeddings) to find the most relevant articles in the corpus for your question, then extracts key passages with numbered citations. No generative AI is used — all text comes directly from published sources.
Confidence levels
Strong — 5+ relevant sources with high similarity (>50%). The corpus has substantial coverage.
Moderate — 3-4 relevant sources or moderate similarity. Coverage exists but may be incomplete.
Weak — 1-2 sources or low similarity. Evidence is limited — verify independently.
Insufficient — No relevant articles found in the monitored corpus.
Limitations
Briefings reflect only what is in the monitored corpus (689,051 articles). Coverage varies by country and topic. Recent events may not yet be indexed. This is extractive synthesis, not analysis — it shows what sources say, not what to conclude.