The
Spanish Army (
Ejército de Tierra in
Spanish; literally, "Land Army") is
one of oldest active armies in the world and a branch of the
Spanish Armed Forces, in charge
of land operations. King Juan Carlos I is the Supreme
Commander-in-Chief of the Army.
Introduction
The Spanish Army has existed continuously since the reign of King
Ferdinand and Queen Isabella (late 15th century).
The oldest and largest
of the three services, its mission was the defense of peninsular
Spain, the Balearic
Islands
, the Canary Islands
, Melilla
, Ceuta
and the
Spanish islands and rocks off the northern coast of Africa.
The army is completing a major reorganization. It had previously
been organized into nine regional operational commands. These were
reduced to six commands in conjunction with a revised deployment of
forces: Central Command, Southern Command, Levante Command, Eastern
Pyrenees Command, Northwestern Command, and Western Pyrenees
Command. In addition there were the two military zones of the
Canary Islands and the Balearic Islands. Ceuta and Melilla fell
within the Southern Command. At the head of each regional and zonal
command was an officer of three-star rank. Although his authority
had been reduced, the regional commander, who held the title of
captain general, was still among the most senior officers of the
army.
Under its earlier organization, the army was grouped into two basic
categories: the Immediate Intervention Forces and the Territorial
Operational Defence Forces. In theory, the former, consisting of
three divisions and ten brigades, had the missions of defending the
Pyrenean and the Gibraltar frontiers and of fulfilling Spain's
security commitments abroad. The latter force, consisting of two
mountain divisions and fourteen brigades, had the missions of
maintaining security in the regional commands and of reinforcing
the Civil Guard and the police against subversion and terrorism. In
reality, most of the Immediate Intervention Forces were not
positioned to carry out their ostensible mission of protecting the
nation's borders. Many units were stationed near major cities--as a
matter of convenience for officers who held part-time jobs--from
which they also could be called upon to curb disturbances or
unrest.
In a gradual process that had not been fully completed, the
division of the army into the Immediate Intervention Forces and the
Territorial Operational Defence Forces was being abolished. The
brigade had become the fundamental tactical unit. The total number
of brigades had been reduced from twenty-four to fifteen by the
dismantling of nine territorial defence brigades. Eleven of the
brigades had been organized within the existing five divisions;
three brigades were to be independent, and one was to be in general
reserve.
The best
equipped of the five was the First Division, the Brunete Armored
Division, with its armored brigade in the Madrid
area and its
mechanized brigade farther to the southwest near Badajoz.
The motorized Second Division, Guzman el Bueno Division, which had
acquired a third brigade as a result of the reorganization, was the
major defensive force in the south, with full capability for rapid
maneuver. The mechanized Third Division, the Maestrazgo Division,
under the Levante Command, consisted of two brigades considered to
have a moderate degree of mobility. The two mountain divisions, the
Fourth Division--or Urgel Division and the Fifth Division--or
Navarra Division, each consisting of two mountain brigades,
remained in the Pyrenees border area of the north. Two of the four
independent brigades were armored cavalry, one was an airborne
brigade, and one was a paratroop brigade (in general
reserve).
Numerous other changes were introduced as well, including the
reorganization of artillery forces not included in the major combat
units. This involved the creation of a field artillery command that
consisted of a restructured and consolidated former artillery
brigade, the creation of a single straits coastal artillery command
that replaced two former coastal artillery regiments, and the
introduction of an antiaircraft artillery command that was expected
to benefit from significant modernizing of its weapons
inventory.
The personnel strength of the army, which previously had been
maintained at about 280,000, including 170,000 conscripts, had been
trimmed to 240,000 by 1987. This was achieved through lower intakes
of conscripts and volunteers and through cuts in the table of
organization for officers and NCOs. The government's goal was a
smaller but more capable army of 195,000 effective by 1991.
Outside
peninsular Spain, about 19,000 troops were stationed in Ceuta
and Melilla
.
These included, in addition to the Spanish Legion and other
specialized units, four regular regiments of North Africans. An
additional 5,800 troops were assigned to the Balearic Islands, and
10,000 were in the Canary Islands.
The
Spanish Legion, founded in Morocco
in 1920, has
always been under the direct command of the chief of the army
staff. It has had a reputation as the toughest combat unit
in the service, although modelled after the French Foreign Legion,
reduced in size in 1987, as a result of successive reorganizations,
the legion was scheduled to undergo further cuts to an overall
strength of 6,500. It had a higher number of career soldiers than
other units, but it was manned mostly by conscripts who had
volunteered for the legion. Recruitment of non-Spanish personnel,
who had never exceeded 10 percent of the group's manpower, ended in
1986. Foreign legionnaires already in the service were not
affected.
The Spanish Legion is grouped into four tercios (sing., tercio), a
unit intermediate between a regiment and a brigade, each commanded
by a colonel. The first and the second tercios constituted the core
of the military garrisons at Melilla and Ceuta (North Africa). Each
had been reduced by a motorized battalion, leaving it with a single
motorized battalion, a mechanized battalion, an antitank company,
and a headquarters company. They were equipped with BMR armored
personnel carriers. The Third Tercio, stationed in the Canary
Islands, consisted of two motorized battalions and a headquarters
company. The Fourth Tercio was being converted from a support role
to a combat unit at the legion headquarters in Ronda near Malaga.
Although, probably not as "glamorous" outside Spain as their French
counterparts, the Spanish legion has nothing to envy in
professionalism and "fiercy" to any other elite force in the
world.
The Ministry of Defence was planning the creation of a rapid
deployment force composed entirely of volunteers. This force, which
would include the Spanish Legion, the Paratroop Brigade, the
Airborne Brigade, and Marine units, would be available for use in
trouble spots on twelve hours' notice. Lack of adequate air and
naval transport would, however, be a limiting factor.
In spite of new procurement programs, introduced in the mid-1980s,
arms and equipment were not in sufficient supply, and they were not
up to the standards of other NATO armies. The inventory of medium
tanks was made up of nearly 700 American models, as well as about
Franco-Spanish 300
AMX-30s manufactured in
Spain between 1974 and 1983. Although the military felt that it was
essential to adopt a new main battle tank for the 1990s, some
considerations led to a postponement of the decision and the
upgrading of the AMX-30s with new German-designed diesel engines
and transmissions, reactive armor panels, and laser fire-control
systems.
Armored troop carriers included about 1,200
M-113s as well as
AML-60s and
AML-90s and
Pizarro
infantry fighting vehicle. The Spanish army is in the process of
being equipped with more than 1,200 BMRs, a new armored vehicle
designed and manufactured in Spain. A variety of towed and
self-propelled artillery was available, ranging from 105 mm to
203 mm guns and howitzers. The main antitank weapons were
recoilless rifles; 88.9 mm rocket launchers; Milan, Cobra, and
Dragon missiles; and a small number of TOW (tube-launched,
optically tracked, wireguided ) and HOT (high subsonic, optically
guided, tube-launched) antitank missile systems. A considerable
quantity of additional antitank missiles and rocket launchers was
on order. The army aircraft inventory included about 280
helicopters, about 40 of which were armed with 20 mm guns or
HOT antitank missiles.
Light Infantry in Afghanistan
Manpower
The army was about 135,000 troops (50,000 officers and 85,000
soldiers) by the end of 2001 when compulsory military service was
still in use. Currently, the Spanish Army is a fully
professionalized force (size 86,000). In case of war or siege
state, an additional force of 80,000
Civil Guards comes under the
Ministry of Defence command.
Ranks
The
military ranks of the Spanish Army
are as follows below, for a comparison with other NATO ranks see
Ranks and Insignia of
NATO.
- 1 Retained by His Majesty the King of Spain
as his constitutional role.
|
1985: situation and equipment
In this year the Spanish Army began a reorganization that included
a 45,000 organic unit reduction. It had, at the time, one Armoured
division (2 active armoured brigades and one reserve), one
Mechanized division, one Motorized division, and five separate
brigades (one each: airborne, armored, air-assault, infantry, heavy
artillery). These units, together with some separate regiments,
were in the active component (or FII).
In the Territorial Army (reserve forces, known in Spanish as FDOT)
there were:
- 2 Mountain divisions
- 1 Alpine brigade
- 9 infantry brigades (each based on: three battalions, one
artillery group, one scout company, one signal company, one
logistics company)
- 4 Tercio regiments
- 1 artillery brigade
- 1 brigade and five regiments coastal artillery
- 2 heavy artillery regiments, and some minor units.
Other forces were: Baleares (three infantry regiments and support
units), Canarias (one Tercio regiment and three infantry
regiments), Ceuta and Melilla (2 regiments of African troops and
three Tercio).
Weapons were (SP means Self Propelled):
- tanks: M47E/E1/E2, M48A5E, AMX-30E, M41
- Armoured: AML-60, AML-90, VEC, BMR-600, BLR, M113
- Artillery: M108 SP, Model 56 (105 mm), M109 SP, M44 SP,
M114, M59 (155 mm), M107 SP(175 mm), M110 SP
(203 mm), MLR Teruel 1 (140 mm), L21 (216 mm),
L10(300 mm).
- Coastal artillery: 88, 152, 203, 305, 381 mm
- Mortars: Esperanza 60, 81, 120 mm, M125 SP(81 mm),
M125A1 SP(120 mm)
- A.A. Weapons: M55 12,7 mm, GAO-B1 20 mm, GDF
35 mm, L70 40 mm, M117 90 mm. SAM AMX-30 Roland,
HAWK, Nike Hercules.
A.T weapons: rocket launchers M65 89 mm, M 40 RLC 106 mm,
ATGW Cobra, MILAN, HOT, TOW, M 47 Dragon
- Infantry weapons: M41/59 7,62 mm, CETME automatic rifles
7,62 mm.
- Aviation: UH-1B/H, Aluette III, BO 105, AB.212, O-58,
CH-47
1991: situation and reorganization
At that time there was a plan called META, in Spanish Modernization
of Army, that was discussed between
1982 and
1988. Military regions were reduced from 9 to
6, FII and DOT (Field Army and Territorial Army) were joined and
the brigades were reduced from 24 to 15. Men were recently reduced
from 279,000 to 230,000.
Five divisions, with 11 brigades, were organized as:
- 1st Armoured Division BRUNETE (XI Mechanized Brigade and XII
Armoured Brigade)
- 2nd Motorized Division GUZMAN EL BUENO (XXI Mechanized Brigade
and XXII and XXIII Motorized Brigades)
- 3rd Mechanized Division MAESTRAZGO (XXXII and XXXIII Mechanized
Brigades)
- 4th Mountain Division URGEL (XLI and XLII Mountain
Brigades)
- 5th Mountain Division NAVARRA (LI Mountain Brigade and LII
Motorized Brigade).
Three separate brigades were: JARMA Air-assault Brigade,
CASTILLEJOS Armoured Brigades, and BRICAP Airborne Brigade, this
latter with the General Reserve. Minor units with 14,000 men were
in Canaries, 9,000 in Baleares, 7,000 in Ceuta and Melilla. Six
groups and three companies were devoted to special operations (GOE
and COE). Standard divisional structure was:
12,000-17,000 men, with one HQ, one light armoured cavalry
regiment, two or three brigades, artillery regiment of two groups
(12 or 18 pieces each), one Bofors-armed AAA group, and several
support units (signal, NBC, transport).
Brigades were organized with a 3-5000 strength, 3 or 4 battalions,
one artillery group and support units.
As for weapons, at that time there was a total of 850 tanks: 299
AMX-30E. 164
M-48 A5E1,
325 M-47 E1 and 46 M-47E2. The CFE agreements downed it to a 794
maximum, but this has not happened at this time.
AMX-30E were license-built by Empresa Nacional Santa Barbara
between
1974 and
1983. They
were the mainstay of the Army, and despite their recent age they
were below expectations because of transmission problems. 150 were
predicted to be upgraded to AMX-30E2 with enhanced protection (with
ERA bricks), fire-control
systems (based on laser and ballistic computers), mobility
improvements. Total cost was planned 30 billions pesetas. Over 80%
of this bill was about the replacement of Hispano-Suiza HA-110
engine and mechanical transmission, with the same of
Leopard 1 (MTU 833, 840hp) and ZF LSG-3000
automatic transmission. FCS is Hughes Mk 9, while ERA is BLAZER,
Israeli-made.
M-47 E1 and E2 had diesel powerplants instead of original gasoline
engines, M-47 E2 and M-48 A5E1 had 105 mm guns, with the
latter a computerized FCS Hughes Mk 7. Advanced night-vision
sistems were also in program. To replace many of these tanks there
was a program for 272
M60A1 and 260 M60A3 ex-US
Army main battle tanks. This meant that all M-47 and M-48 will been
phased out and sent to Pakistan and Bolivia.
Cavalry had at the time 13 regiments (infantry had around 40), 7
light (RCLAC), 4 armoured (RCAC) and one school. They had several
units: 1 with
M113 and one tank squadron with
30 vehicles (13 tanks and 17 M113 basic or with 120 mm SP
mortar). BMR VEC were the mainstay of cavalry squadrons (three for
each regiment). These 6x6 armoured were built in Spain, had
OTO-Melara turrets and different weapons: 20 had the relatively
weak 20 mm Rh-202, while 70 had Cockerill 90 mm gun, far
powerful also for anti-tank actions. But the majority had M-242
Bushmaster gun, the same as the M2 Bradley (Without DU ammunition),
for a total of 208 out 298. M242 have range and power to threat
many tanks and all light AFV with
APDS
ammunition. Other valuable machines were 1,200 M113, included
special versions like 81 and 120 mortar-carriers.
MAAA (Anti-aircraft Command) and MACA (Field artillery command)
were also commanded by General Reserve, directly dependent by ET
HQ.
The six regiments of MAAA had 12 groups. Six had Bofors guns, 3 had
Oerlikon 35 mm, 1
HAWK and NIKE-HERCULES,
1 Roland, and 1 with TOLEDO, a combination of 35/90 mm gun and
ASPIDE missiles.
All the units had:
- SAM: 9 launchers for Hercules, the heavier and older of all the
Army a.a. weapons. This normally served in Air forces, but in Spain
it's used by Army. 24 HAWK launchers (recently modernized, with 5
billions pesetas) were a minimal force with around four batteries
fielded. Mistral missile was evaluated at the time together with
Stinger and RBS-70, and resulted in a first order of 500 missiles
and 100 launchers. They were the first for ET, before never
equipped with SHORAD systems. As medium-range missiles, there were
also Aspide and Roland. Roland was in 71st regiment. There were 19
launchers, 16 of them used for the armoured division. Only nine had
all-weather capability with AMX-30 chassis, that allowed high
mobility. All the program (19 AMX-30 launchers, and 414 missiles)
cost 29 billions pesetas. Aspide missiles were for 73 Regiment,
with three batteries: 12 x 35 mm guns and 12 quad-launchers
for Aspide missiles. The system was called TOLEDO and had
Super-Fledermaus radars. 13 ASPIDE launchers were bough, with 200
missiles and 7 Super-Fledermaus FCS. Total cost, 22 billions
(average cost for each Aspide, twice than Roland). Aspide are much
less mobile, and used for static target defences, like Cartagena
naval base, and 3rd Division.
- Guns: on the contrary, the successful Bofors L/70 guns were
well 243, produced in Spain under license. Their production took
place between 1956 and 1962, and the modernization at the time was
planned for 1,6 billions pesetas. This program was about 164
artilleries, 82 fire-direction FELIS, PFHE ammunitions, LPD-20
radars, and the boosting from 230 to 300 rpm. FELIS was projected
by CETME and produced by INISEL. LPD-20 radar was already in
service (34 pieces) in 35 mm batteries, with Super-Fledermaus
FCS.
MACA was organized with an HQ and several regiments: 61
localization Regiment, 62 MLR Regiment and 63 Artillery Regiment.
62 was organized with one group TERUEL MLR (12 140 mm
launchers, 40 tubes each) and two groups with old 122/46 mm
guns. 63rd had one group with 122 mm guns and one with 203/25
M115 guns. Programs at the time saw the
increasing to 64 TERUEL launchers and 60 new cannons with two
different Spanish models, Santa Barbara REMA (155/39 mm) and
SITECSA ST-102 with longer range , 40 km with Base-Bleed
projectiles(155/45 mm) compared to 30 km of REMA gun. FCS
for artillery was AN/TPQ-36 (four) and SORAS (Swedish model).
Totally, at the time ET had: 90 OTO Model 56 howitzers
(105/26 mm), 64 122/46 mm, 64 203/25 mm M-115, 12
M110A2, 48 M108 (105/30 mm), 96 M-109, 12 TERUEL for a total
of 442 pieces. Cleary, the field artillery of ET was obsolete and
modest compared with a.a artillery. Other artillery were in Command
coastal defence, serving in 30 batteries. These weapons were
obsolete but powerful having 150, 152, 305 and even 381 mm
guns. Also for them it was planned a replacement with missiles and
modern artillery.
Many small weapons were projected or
manifactured in Spain
, among them
40 mm grenade-launchers and ECIA 81 mm mortars, both self
propelled and ground used. CETMA 7,62 mm automatic
rifles were the standard.
FAMET was also a part of General Reserve. This service had as main
tasks the air mobility, recognition and attack for the Army and was
organized with several units, among them five support and six
flight units. One attack battalion was BHELA I (mainly with
BO-105), One BHELTRA for transport (CH-47 and UH-1H), four BELMHA
multi-role. Over 180 helicopters were in charge, making FAMET one
of the most modern and effective among the ET forces. 71 BO-105, 17
OH-58, 60 UH-1H, 6 AB-212, 18 CH-47, 18 Super Puma (under license
built by CASA). Weapons were HOT missiles (for 28 BO-105),
20 mm guns (for 18 BO-105), 70 mm M-158 and M-9
launchers, 7,62 (also gatling model) and 12,7 mm weapons,
40 mm Mk 94 automatic grenade-launchers.
Spanish Legion had 7,000 men among SLEG and four Tercios: 1, 2, 3,
4.
Current Structure
The Spanish Army undertook a major restructuring; augmenting its
capabilities and expanding its strength. The reorganization started
in 2006 and was complete in early 2009.

Current Structure of the Spanish Army
(click to enlarge).
Land Forces Command
1st Land Force Command – Heavy Forces
- 10th Mechanized Infantry
Brigade “Guzmán el
Bueno” (Cerro Muriano, Córdoba
)
- HQ Battalion
- 1-2nd Mechanized Infantry Battalion “Princesa”
- 10th Armoured Infantry Rgt. “Córdoba”
- 2-10th
Tank Infantry Battalion “Almansa
”
- 3-10th
Tank Infantry Battalion “Málaga
"
- 10th Reconnaissance Battalion
- 10th Self Propelled Field Artillery Battalion
- 10th Armoured Engineer Battalion
- 10th Logistics Group
- 10th Signals Company
- 11th Mechanized Infantry
Brigade “Extremadura
” (Botoa, Badajoz
).
- HQ Battalion
- 3-16th Mechanized Infantry Battalion
“Alcántara
”
- 6th Mechanized Infantry Rgt. “Saboya”
- 1-6th Mechanized Infantry Battalion “Cantabria”
- 2-6th
Mechanized Infantry Battalion “Las
Navas
”
- 11th Reconnaissance Battalion
- 11th Self Propelled Field Artillery Battalion
- 11th Armoured Engineer Battalion
- 11th Logistics Group
- 11th Signals Company
- 12th Mechanized Infantry
Brigade “Guadarrama” (Colmenar
Viejo, Madrid
).
- HQ Battalion
- 1-31st Mechanized Infantry Battalion “Covadonga”
- 61st Armoured Infantry Rgt. “Alcázar de Toledo
”
- 2-61st Tank Infantry Battalion “Wad-Ras”
- 3-61st Tank Infantry Battalion “León
”
- 12th Reconnaissance Battalion
- 12th Self Propelled Field Artillery Battalion
- 12th Armoured Engineer Battalion
- 12th Logistics Group
- 12th Signals Company
2nd Land Force Command – Light Forces
- 2nd Cavalry Brigade
“Castillejos
” (Zaragoza
)
- HQ Battalion
- 8th
Light Armoured Cavalry Regiment “Lusitania”
(Marines, Valencia
)
- 11th Light Armoured Cavalry Regiment “España”
- 12th
Light Armoured Cavalry Regiment “Farnesio” (Santovenia de
Pisuerga, Valladolid
)
- 20th Field Artillery Regiment
- 22nd Armoured Engineer Battalion
- 2nd Logistics Group
- 2nd Signals Company
- 5th Light Infantry Brigade
“San Marcial” (Vitoria, Alava
)
- HQ Battalion
- 1-5th Tank Infantry Battalion “Flandes”
- 45th Light Infantry Regiment “Garellano” (Munguía, Biscay)
- 67th
Light Infantry Regiment “Tercio Viejo de Sicilia” (San Sebastián
, Guipúzcoa)
- 3-67th Light Infantry Battalion “Legazpi”
- 4-67th Light Infantry Battalion “Colón”
- 5th Reconnaissance Battalion
- 5th Field Artillery Battalion
- 5th Engineer Battalion
- 5th Logistics Group
- 5th Signals Company
- 7th Light Infantry Brigade
“Galicia
” (Figueirido, Pontevedra
)
- HQ Battalion
- 3-29th Light Infantry Battalion “Zaragoza” (Figueirido)
- 3rd
Light Infantry Regiment “Príncipe” (Siero
, Asturias
)
- 7th Reconnaissance Battalion
- 7th Field Artillery Battalion
- 7th Engineer Battalion
- 7th Logistics Group
- 7th Signals Company
- 6th Parachute Infantry Brigade “Almogávares” (Paracuellos del Jarama,
Madrid)
- HQ Battalion
- 1st Air-Transportable Battalion “Roger
de Flor”
- 2nd Air-Assault Battalion “Roger de
Lauria”
- 3rd
Parachute Infantry Battalion “Ortiz de Zárate” (Murcia
)
- 6th Parachute Artillery Battalion Paracaidista
- 6th Parachute Engineer Battalion Paracaidista
- 6th Logistics Group
- 6th Parachute Signals Company
- Mountain Units Command
(Jaca
, Huesca
)
- Support Battalion
- 62nd
Mountain Infantry Regiment “Arapiles
” (San Clemente de Sasebas, Gerona)
- 66th
Mountain Infantry Regiment “América” (Pamplona
)
- 1-64th Mountain Infantry Battalion “Pirineos
” (Jaca, Huesca)
- 2-66th Mountain Infantry Battalion “Montejurra
”
- Skiing and Climbing Company
- 1st Mountain Artillery Battalion
- 1st Mountain Engineer Battalion
- 1st Logistics Group
- 1st Mountain Signals Company
Ceuta
General
Command
- Infantry Brigade “Teniente Ruiz”
- HQ Battalion
- 2nd Tercio “Duque de
Alba”
- 54th Regulares Light Infantry Regiment
“Ceuta”
- 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment “Montesa”
- 30th Mixed Artillery Regiment (Field & Air Defence
Artillery)
- 7th Engineer Regiment
- 23rd Logistics Group
- Signals Company
Melilla
General
Command
- Infantry Brigade “Melilla”
- HQ Battalion
- 1st Tercio “Gran Capitán”
- 52nd Regulares Light Infantry Regiment
“Melilla”
- 10th
Armored Cavalry Regiment “Alcántara
”
- 32nd Mixed Artillery Regiment (Field & Air Defence
Artillery)
- 8th Engineer Regiment
- 24th Logistics Group
- Signals Company
- 47th Palma Light
Infantry Regiment
- 1-47th Philippines
Light Infantry Battalion
- Service Company
- Command and Support Company
- Rifle Company
- 91st Mixed Artillery Regiment (Field and Air Defence
Artillery)
- HQ Battalion
- 14th Engineer Unit
- 71st Logistics Unit
- General Asensio Base Service Unit
Support Units of the Land Forces
- Special
Operations Command
- HQ Battalion
- Special Forces Battalion "Valencia" III
- Special Forces Battalion "Tercio del Ampurdán" IV
- Special Forces Battalion "Maderal Oleaga" XIX
- Signals Company
- Field Artillery Command
(San Andrés del Rabanedo), León
)
- 11th
Field Artillery Regiment (Castrillo del Val, Burgos
)
- 1-11th Self Propelled Field Artillery Battalion (M109A5)
- 2-11th Self Propelled Field Artillery Battalion (M109A5)
- 62nd
MLRS and Field Artillery Regiment (Astorga
, León)
- 1-62nd Field Rocket Launcher Battalion (Teruel MRL; currently being replaced by HIMARS)
- 2-62nd Field Artillery Battalion (155/52 Howitzer)
- 63rd Field Artillery Regiment
- 1-63rd Self Propelled Field Artillery Battalion (M110A2)
- 2-63rd Self Propelled Field Artillery Battalion (M110A2)
- 3-63rd Light Field Artillery Battalion (UAV Target Acquisition Unit)
- Coastal
Artillery Command (Tarifa
, Cádiz
)
- 4th Coastal Artillery Regiment (San Fernando, Cádiz)
- 1-4th Coastal Artillery Battery
- 2-4th Coastal Artillery Battery
- 5th Surveillance and Target Acquisition Battery (San Roque, Cádiz)
- Air Defence Command (Madrid)
- 71st Air Defence Artillery Regiment
- 72nd Air Defence Artillery Regiment (Zaragoza)
- 73rd
Air Defence Artillery Regiment (Cartagena
, Murcia
)
- 74th
Air Defence Artillery Regiment (Dos Hermanas
, Sevilla
)
- 81st
Air Defence Artillery Regiment (Marines
, Valencia
)
- Air Defence Artillery Regiment (San Fernando, Cádiz)
- Signals Platoon (Madrid)
- Engineer Command (Salamanca
)
- 1st Engineer Regiment (Cáceres)
- 11th Special Engineer Regiment
- Road Building Battalion
- Shelter Building Battalion
- 12th Special and Bridging Engineer Regiment (Zaragoza)
- Aviation Forces of the Army “FAMET”
- 1st
Attack Helicopter Battalion (Almagro,
Ciudad
Real
)
- 3rd
Assault Battalion” (Agoncillo
, La
Rioja
)
- 4th Assault Helicopter Battalion (El Copero, Sevilla)
- 5th
Transport Helicopter Battalion (Colmenar Viejo
, Madrid)
- FAMET Signals Battalion (Colmenar Viejo, Madrid)
- FAMET Logistic Battalion (Colmenar Viejo, Madrid)
- Signals Brigade (Bétera
, Valencia)
- 1st
Signals Regiment (Castrillo del Val, Burgos
)
- 2nd
Signals Regiment (Alcalá de Henares
, Madrid)
- 21st Signals Regiment (Marines, Valencia)
- 31st
Electronic Warfare Regiment
(El
Pardo
, Madrid)
- 32nd Electronic Warfare Regiment (Dos Hermanas, Sevilla)
Other Units of the Land Forces:
- Light Infantry Brigade
“Canarias” (Las Palmas de Gran Canaria
, Las Palmas)
- HQ Battalion
- 9th
Light Infantry Regiment “Soria
” (Fuerteventura
, Las Palmas)
- 49th
Light Infantry Regiment “Tenerife
” (Santa Cruz de Tenerife
, Tenerife)
- 50th Light Infantry Regiment “Canarias”
- 93rd Field Artillery Regiment (San Cristóbal de La Laguna,
Tenerife)
- 94th Air Defence Artillery Regiment
- 15th Engineer Battalion (San Cristóbal de La Laguna,
Tenerife)
- 82nd Logistics Group
- 6th Helicopter Battalion (San Cristóbal de La Laguna,
Tenerife)
- Signals Company
Logistic Operation Forces
- Logistic Support Command (Valencia)
- 1st Logistics Forces (Sevilla)
- 11th Logistic Support Group (Colmenar Viejo, Madrid).
- 21st Logistic Support Group
- 81st Logistic Support Group (San Cristóbal de la Laguna, Santa
Cruz de Tenerife)
- 22nd Logistic & Service Support Group (Granada)
- 2nd Logistics Forces (Zaragoza)
- 31st
Logistic Support Group (Paterna
, Valencia)
- 41st Logistic Support Group
- 61st
Logistic Support Group (Valladolid
)
- Medical Brigade (Pozuelo de Alarcón, Madrid)
- 1st Medical Battalion
- 2nd
Medical Battalion (Mislata
, Valencia)
- 3rd Medical Battalion (Zaragoza)
- Field Hospital
- Medical Support Battalion
Equipment
Weapons
Combat vehicles
Artillery
Helicopters
Unmaned Aerial Vehicles
See also
References
- Instruction no. 59/2005, of 4 April
2005, from the Chief of the Army Staff on Army
Organisation and Function Regulations, published in B.O.D. NO. 80
of 26 April 2005
- Lehardy, Diego, Spanish Army in a difficult phase of its
transformation, RID magazine, July
1991.
External links and Further Reading