High-integrity systems are deployed in order to realize safety-critical applications. To meet the rigorous requirements in this domain, these systems require a sophisticated approach to design, verification, and certification. Not only safety consideration shave an impact on a product's overall dependability, but also security has to be taken into account. In this paper we analyze the Time-Triggered System-on-Chip (TTSoC) architecture, which is a novel architecture for Multi-Processor System-on-Chip (MPSoC) devices, regarding its security properties. We discuss essential compliance criteria to the Multiple Independent Layers of Security (MILS) architecture, which is a industry-ready architecture for embedded high-integrity systems. We found that both architectures share intrinsic properties and we are able to show that the TTSoC architecture implements the core requirements of a MILS Separation Kernel and thus realizes its elementary security policies by design.