THE SHARE OF THE SOVIET DEFENSE EFFORT ATTRIBUTABLE TO MEETING THE PRC THREAT (U)

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CIA-RDP83M00171R001100010003-2
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May 26, 1977
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REPORT
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Approved For Release 2004/0't/2'9: CIA-RDP8 SECRET DEFENSE INTELLIGENCE AGENCY SPECIAL DEFENSE INTELLIGENCE ESTIMATE THE SHARE OF THE SOVIET DEFENSE EFFORT ATTRIBUTABLE TO MEETING THE PRC THREAT (U) 26 MAY 1977 DIA review(s) completed. NATIONAL SECURITY INFORMATION Unauthorized Disclosure Subject to Criminal Sanctions SECRET 25X1 Approved For Release 2004/06/29 : CIA-RDP83M00171 R001100010003-2 Approved For Release 2004/06/29 : CIA-RDP83M00171 R001100010003-2 SECRET SPECIAL DEFENSE INTELLIGENCE ESTIMATE THE SHARE OF THE SOVIET DEFENSE EFFORT ATTRIBUTABLE TO MEETING THE PRC THREAT This Estimate has been coordinated with the Intelligence Chiefs of the Army, Navy, Air Force, and Marine Corps. All concur in the Estimate as written. Comments or questions concerning this Estimate should be referred to the author, Dr. John Ashton, Directorate for Estimates, OX4-8106. JAMES A. WILLIAMS Brigadier General, USA Deputy Director for Estimates SDIE SOV 1-77 26 May 1977 CLASSIFIED BY DIA-DE EXEMPT FROM GENERAL DECLASSIFICATION SCHEDULE OF EXECUTIVE ORDER 11652 EXEMPTION CATEGORY 2 DECLASSIFY ON 31DECEMBER2007 SECRET Approved For Release 2004/06/29 : CIA-RDP83MOOl71 R001100010003-2 Approved For Release 2004/06/29 : CIA-RDP83M00171 R001100010003-2 SECRET THE SHARE OF THE SOVIET DEFENSE EFFORT ATTRIBUTABLE TO MEETING THE PRC THREAT TABLE OF CONTENTS PAGE The Estimative Issue Conclusions Discussion Growth in Major Individual Force Elements 2 Implications for the Focus of the Soviet Defense Effort 6 Outlook 6 Annex A: "Methodology" The Approach to the Problem 9 Backup Analysis and Calculations 10 Annex B: "Cost Differentials of Soviet Forces Against the PRC" 21 SECRET Approved For Release 2004/06/29 : CIA-RDP83M00l71 R001100010003-2 Approved For Release 2004/06/29 : CIA-RDP83M00171 R001100010003-2 SECRET FIGURE 1. SHARE OF SOVIET DEFENSE EFFORT ATTRIBUTABLE TO MEETING THE PRC THREAT (IN PERCENT OF TOTAL SOVIET DEFENSE EXPENDITURES) TOTAL EFFORT SECRET Approved For Release 2004/06/29 : CIA-RDP83MOOl71 R001100010003-2 Approved For Release 2004/06/29 : CIA-RDP83M00171 R001100010003-2 SECRET THE SHARE OF THE SOVIET DEFENSE EFFORT ATTRIBUTABLE TO MEETING THE PRC THREAT (U) THE ESTIMATIVE ISSUE (U) In the context of relating US defense expenditures to those of the USSR, .a question often arises concerning the portion of Soviet defense expenditures that is directed against the PRC, and, by implication, not attributable to countering the US and its allies. The question persists in spite of the fact that, for whatever purpose raised, military forces can be used against any enemy.* A. (S) The Soviet defense effort directed against the PRC threat is estimated to have grown from about 5 percent of the total Soviet defense effort in 1964 to about 12 percent in 1971-1972, and then to have declined to about 11 percent in 1976-1977 (see Figure 1). We see the long term trend as favoring greater relative efforts against the US and NATO, and less against the PRC. B. (S) The rapid growth in the effort against the PRC is largely a thing of the past; it accounted for about 30 percent of the growth in Soviet military expenditures 1964-1972, but less than 5 percent in the years since 1972. C. (S) The slackening of the growth in the effort against the PRC has enabled the effort against the US and NATO to grow much more rapidly in the last five years than in the previous eight years. D. (S) The Soviet effort against the PRC has also been a highly selective one, accounting for some 40-50 percent of the total growth in Soviet expenditures for ground forces and Frontal Aviation, but for negligible amounts of the growth in expenditures for ICBMs, SLBMs, LRA, Navy, and research and development. *The presence of any Soviet forces in the Far East poses a threat to US bases, interests, and Asian allies, as well as to the PRC. Their mere existence would tend to pin down US forces in the Far East in the event NATO-Warsaw Pact hostilities were limited to the European theater. **The conclusions are based on a number of calculations, judgments, and assumptions, which are set forth in detail in Annexes A and B. SECRET Approved For Release 2004/06/29 : CIA-RDP83M00l71 R001100010003-2 Approved For Release 2004/06/29 : CIA-RDP83M00l71 R001100010003-2 SECRET GROWTH IN THE MAJOR INDIVIDUAL FORCE ELEMENTS 1. (S) The major Soviet defensive effort opposite the PRC, as measured by estimated Soviet military expenditures, has been the buildup of ground and Frontal Aviation forces along the border. This effort is estimated to have accounted for almost all of the growth in the total effort against the PRC in the years 1964-1972, and to be equivalent to about one-half of the total growth in Soviet expenditures for those force elements. The effort levelled off in the years 1972-1977, except for a major Frontal Aviation effort in 1975. Preparation for deployment of the SS-X-20 has resulted in some growth in the effort against the PRC in the past few years. Developments in other Soviet force elements opposite the PRC have had a negligible effect on the growth in the overall Soviet defense effort (Figure 2 depicts the share of the effort in each individual force element estimated to be attributable to meeting the PRC threat.) As can be seen, over 50 percent of the Border Troops effort is against the PRC, about 25 percent of the ground and Frontal Aviation effort, and lesser shares of the effort in other force elements. Early Strengthening Of Border Troops 2. (S) The early Soviet reaction to the growing hostility of the PRC was to reorganize the border troops in 1962-64. The USSR has continued to strengthen the units opposite the PRC in the years since, supplying more APCs and other equipment to units opposite to the PRC than to border guards in other areas. This upgrading has in the years since been overshadowed by the effort in other force elements, particularly in ground forces. Major Growth In Ground Forces 3. (S) Soviet line divisions along the PRC border increased from 16 in 1964 to 40 in 1972, and to 41 in 1976. (Figure 3 shows the location of ground force divisions along the border.) They now make up 24 percent of the Soviet ground force line division strength and approximately the same share of divisional manpower. 4. (S) Soviet line divisions along the PRC border tend to cost less than does the average Soviet line division, however, and thus require less than their share of resources. Although the forces along the border account for 24 percent of ground force strength, they have received only some 20 percent of new ground force armaments over the past few years, and have only 15-18 percent of ground force ammunition and petroleum storage. SECRET Approved For Release 2004/06/29 : CIA-RDP83M00l71 R001100010003-2 Approved For Release 2004/06/29 : CIA-RDP83M00171 R001100010003-2 SECRET FIGURE 2. PERCENT OF INDIVIDUAL FORCE ELEMENT EFFORT THAT IS DIRECTED AGAINST THE PRC THREAT Force Element 1964 1966 1968 1970 1972 1974 1976 Border Troops 45 50 50 55 55 55 55 Ground Forces 10 20 20 25 25 25 25 Helicopter Aviation 10 10 10 30 40 30 30 Frontal Aviation 5 5 10 20 25 25 25 Transport Aviation 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 LRA 10 10 10 10 10 5 5 SRF 10 10 Negl 5 5 Air Defense - - Negl Negl 5 5 5 Navy 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 a/ EXCLUDES ONE DIVISION EACH IN SIBERIAN AND CENTRAL ASIA MDs WHICH WERE DROPPED SUBSEQUENT TO 1964. b/ ACTIVE FRONTAL AVIATION BASES ARE SHOWN. USUALLY ONE REGIMENT IS ASSIGNED PER BASE. GROUND FORCE DIVISION a/ o FRONTAL AVIATION UNITS b/ p 1 SECRET Approved For Release 2004/06/29 : CIA-RDP83MOOl71 R001100010003-2 Approved For Release 2004/06/29 : CIA-RDP83M00l71 R001100010003-2 SECRET 5. (S) In the past year, the Soviets have again increased their ground forces against the PRC, so that the share of the effort against the PRC has stopped its decline of the previous four years. In particular, the Soviets have since October 1975 expanded their ground forces in Outer Mongolia by activating an additional tank division at Bulgan. They have also introduced a mobilization division at Arvayheer and major elements of an unidentified division at Mandalgovi. 6. (S) The general upgrading of Soviet troops along the border has lagged behind that in the West, however, and new equipment has been introduced more slowly, as a substantially greater threat to the USSR emanates from NATO. Expansion And Modernization Of Frontal Aviation 7. (S) The growth in ground forces has been paralleled by growth in Frontal Aviation forces along the border. From a force of some 200 fixed-wing aircraft in 1964, Frontal Aviation grew to strength of some 1100 aircraft in 1972, mostly through the reactivation of older aircraft. (Figure 3 shows the location of new airfields along the PRC border.) The rate of growth slowed since then. The some 1200 aircraft along the border now account for about 26 percent of total fixed-wing aircraft in Frontal Aviation. 8. (S) The modernization of Frontal Aviation opposite the PRC clearly lagged until 1975. Then for a year, forces opposite the PRC were favored and in 1975-1976 almost one-half of new aircraft went to the border. Since mid-1976, the priority has again returned to the forces opposite NATO. 9. (S) The growth in fixed-wing aircraft in Frontal Aviation along the PRC border was accompanied by a rapid growth of helicopters in Frontal Aviation. In 1965, there were only some 60 helicopters near the PRC border, out of a total of over 600. Helicopters were added rapidly in the years 1969-1971 so that almost 40 percent of the Frontal Aviation helicopter force was opposite the PRC by 1972. Since then, however, the helicopter force has grown more rapidly in the west. At present, some 30 percent of the 3,000-plus helicopters in Frontal Aviation are opposite the PRC.* *This number includes those helicopters supporting two air mobile regiments. SECRET Approved For Release 2004/06/29 : CIA-RDP83M00l71 R001100010003-2 Approved For Release 2004/06/29 : CIA-RDP83M00171 R001100010003-2 SECRET Adjustment Of The SRF To The PRC Challenge 10. (S) Concerned that its missile complexes near the PRC border presented too tempting a target, the SRF in 1967-1970 removed its MRBMs and IRBMs from within range of PRC weapons, and stopped construction on ICBMs in the three eastern-most complexes. In the years 1967-1971, the USSR deployed 190 SS-11 in five complexes so oriented that their area of fire could cover the PRC. Eighty of these have been modernized with SS-1 1 Mod 2/3. The others will probably be converted to SS-17 and SS-19, when the SS-X-20 can take over their targeting responsibilities. 11. (S) During the past year, preparations for deployment of the SS-X-20, which has the range to cover all of the PRC, have been progressing at three complexes, two opposite the PRC. We estimate that some 30 percent of the final total SS-X-20 force will be allocated against the PRC. 12. (S) There is little indication, however, that concern with the PRC has caused the USSR significantly to change the deployment of other force elements over the past decade. -- Soviet strategic air defenses along the border have accounted for about 17 percent of PVO Strany air defense resources from the mid-1960s to the present, and have lagged air defense forces in the west in getting new equipment. -- Soviet general purpose naval forces deployed in the Pacific Fleet have remained close to 28 percent of the total since 1964. Even this fleet is structured and trained primarily against the US. The newest ships, submarines, and aircraft have been deployed to the Northern and Black Sea fleets in the west. -- Fixed-wing transport aircraft opposite the PRC have remained at about 14 percent of the total 1964-1976; again the newest aircraft have been deployed against the West. -- Numbers of LRA BADGER deployed opposite the PRC (no BLINDER are so deployed) have remained at 14-15 percent of the BADGER force since 1964. BACKFIRE has been deployed only in the west, and the BEAR and BISON force was developed and deployed primarily for use against the US. SECRET Approved For Release 2004/06/29 : CIA-RDP83M00l71 R001100010003-2 Approved For Release 2004/06/29 : CIA-RDP83M00171 R001100010003-2 SECRET IMPLICATIONS FOR THE FOCUS OF THE SOVIET DEFENSE EFFORT 13. (S) These force element programs against the PRC are estimated to have accounted for 30 percent of the growth in the Soviet defense effort (as measured by expenditures for defense) in the years 1964-1972. As a result, resources attributable to meeting the PRC threat are estimated to have grown from 5 percent of the total Soviet defense effort in 1964 to some 12 percent in 1972. 14. (S) During the years 1972-1974, however, the effort is estimated to have remained at about the 1972 level. The increments in the Soviet defense effort during those years were directed at meeting the US and NATO threats, and the share of the effort against the PRC declined. In 1975, however, the effort against the PRC spurted as a result of the extensive Frontal Aviation deployments mid-1975 to mid-1976. Since then, Frontal Aviation deployments have been below normal. Despite new ground force deployments, the share of the effort against the PRC has fallen to less than 11 percent. 15. (S) Figure 1 graphically shows the importance of the impetus given by expansion of Soviet ground forces and Frontal Aviation along the PRC border to the growth of the effort against the PRC in the late 1960s and the slackening of the relative effort in the 1970s. 16. (S) As the growth in the Soviet effort against the PRC has slowed in the past few years, and as the share of the Soviet defense effort attributable to meeting the PRC threat has dropped, the effort against the US and NATO has grown more rapidly and claimed an increasing share of Soviet defense resources. During the past five years, the average annual rate of growth in the cost of the effort against NATO and the US has grown over the average for the years 1964-1972. In the past five years, over 95 percent of the growth in the Soviet military effort is to be attributed to meeting the US and NATO threats, and less than 5 percent to meeting the threat from the PRC. 17. (S) We believe the effort against the PRC will require a decreasing share of Soviet defense resources in the future. -- With creation of a combined arms army in Mongolia, current ground force requirements will apparently have been met. -- Ground force and Frontal Aviation modernization will continue opposite the PRC, but, in the long run, with lower priority than opposite NATO in the west. SECRET Approved For Release 2004/06/29 : CIA-RDP83M00l71 R001100010003-2 Approved For Release 2004/06/29 : CIA-RDP83M00171 R001100010003-2 SECRET In the next several years, deployment of the SS-X-20 opposite the PRC will require substantial resources, but not more than 10 percent of total expenditures for the SRF, whose effort will remain almost wholly to meet the US and NATO threat. -- Some YANKEE-class SSBNs may be allotted PRC targets, but this will involve no great expenditures of resources. -- Expensive Soviet military R&D, strategic offensive and defensive, and naval forces will continue to be preponderantly developed and maintained to meet the US and NATO threats. 7 (Reverse Blank) SECRET Approved For Release 2004/06/29 : CIA-RDP83M00l71 R001100010003-2 Approved For Release 2004/06/29 : CIA-RDP83M00171 R001100010003-2 SECRET 25X1A ANNEX A METHODOLOGY THE APPROACH TO THE PROBLEM 1. (U) A study was made of each of the force elements of the Soviet military establishment. Judgments were then reached about the share of the effort for each force that, in Soviet eyes, would reasonably be allocated to defense against the PRC rather than against US and NATO. The shares ran all the way from over a half for border troops to negligible amounts for the military RDT&E effort, which was considered to be wholly oriented against the challenge of western military technology. 2. (U) The shares for each force element were aggregated for the USSR by using ruble expenditure figures as a common denominator. In general, the share of the force element effort, in percent, was applied to CIA figures for expenditures for each force element, as measured in constant 1970 rubles, to arrive at ruble expenditures in each force element attributable to the effort against the PRC.* These force element expenditures were, in turn, summed to arrive at the total expenditures against the PRC for the force elements involved. The sum of the expenditures against the PRC, so derived, was then compared to the total expenditures for those force elements in order to arrive at a percentage of the total effort against the PRC. It was assumed that the share of expenditures for command, support, reserve and retired was probably close to the share for other force elements, taken together, and was not explicitly calculated. 3. (U) As the ruble estimates were used only as a means of aggregation, and involved no independent judgments, they are not reproduced here. The ruble figures and the calculations can be seen by arrangement with the author of this report, 4. (U) The conclusions about the shares of the force element efforts directed against the PRC were not based only upon location of forces. The Soviet Pacific Fleet, for instance, is located so that it can attack the PRC. But its major concern remains the US Pacific Fleet; its effort cannot thus be wholly allocated against the PRC. The assumptions, estimates and calculations for each element and for the total effort are addressed in the following pages of this Annex. x *The ruble costs used in this analysis are those calculated by CIA in April 1977. These figures are considered by CIA to be subject to further revision. Later studies by CIA may thus adjust the conclusions of this paper to some degree. 9 Approved For Release 2004/09CCIAD P83M00171 R001100010003-2 Approved For Release 2004/06/29 : CIA-RDP83M00171 R001100010003-2 SECRET 5. (FOUO) A study was also made to ascertain what regional factors should be applied to the expenditures, if any, to account for the fact that much of the buildup against the PRC was in high cost eastern areas. It was found that, because forces against the US and NATO were of higher quality and average cost and were also deployed in high cost areas, no adjustment need be made. The bases for this judgment are addressed in Annex B. 6. (U) Figure A-1 summarizes the shares of the total Soviet force element effort which is estimated to be attributable to meeting the PRC threat to the USSR. The supporting data, analysis, and assumptions for the PRC-oriented share are presented in backup sections for each force element following the table. As is clear, the analytical approach to a great extent drives the answer. For this reason, the approach and the assumption have been explicitly set forth. FIGURE A-1. SOVIET DEFENSE EFFORT AGAINST THE PRC, AS PERCENT OF INDIVIDUAL FORCE ELEMENT EFFORT 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 SRF - - - - 8 16 12 - - - 4 10 7 7 LRA 10 11 11 11 11 10 10 9 8 7 7 7 7 7 Air Defense - - - - 1 1 1 3 4 5 5 5 6 6 Ground Forces 10 17 19 20 21 24 26 27 26 25 25 23 25 25 Frontal Aviation 6 5 6 9 11 16 21 25 25 25 25 37 21 22 Helicopters 9 9 9 9 9 20 30 38 39 34 29 30 31 32 Transport Aviation 14 14 14 14 14 14 14 14 14 14 14 14 14 14 General Purpose Navy 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 4 4 4 Border Troops 45 50 50 55 55 55 55 55 55 55 55 55 55 55 TOTAL DEFENSE 5 6 7 7 8 10 11 12 12 11 11 13 11 11 7. (S) The only ICBMs specifically deployed to counter the PRC are 190 SS-11 deployed 1967-1971 with all the PRC in their sector of fire. While they could reach other targets, ability to hit the PRC was a primary consideration in their deployment. And while some other ICBMs could reach parts of the PRC, they were clearly deployed for other purposes. The silo groups involved originally contained SS-11 Mod 1, which has now been replaced by the SS-11 Mod 2/3 at two complexes. Conversion at the other complexes is moving more slowly; missiles 10 SECRET Approved For Release 2004/06/29 : CIA-RDP83MOOl71 R001100010003-2 Approved For Release 2004/06/29 : CIA-RDP83M00171 R001100010003-2 SECRET oriented, against the PRC will probably be replaced, after SS-X-20 IOC, by SS-17 and SS-19 deployed against the US. Although the latter missiles, and the SS-18, can hit the PRC because of their greater flexibility, they were not developed and deployed for that purpose. 8. (S) No allocation of MR/IRBM effort was made against the PRC until 1974. (S) The 43 M RBMs and I RBMs in the Far East, removed in 1967-1970, were deployed against US and allied forces, and were not part of the forces opposing the PRC. (S) Preparations for deployment of the SS-X-20 are underway to replace all or part of the MR/IRBM force. Early preparations indicate some 50 percent of the current SS-X-20 effort is against the PRC. We estimate some 30 percent of the total SS-X-20 force will eventually be deployed opposite the PRC. 9. (S) Soviet SLBMs were developed and deployed with the intent that they be used against the US and its allies, although they can, of course, be directed against the PRC. The SS-N-8 on DELTA-class SSBNs can hit both the US and the PRC from home bases. As YANKEE-class SSBNs took up patrol stations off the US, patrols of GOLF- and HOTEL-class submarines were limited to areas closer to the USSR. One-half of the GOLF-class SSBs iq the Pacific Fleet were assumed to have attacking PRC targets as their primary mission from 1970 on; the other one-half of the GOLF-class in the Pacific Fleet were assumed to have targets of US bases in Korea, Japan, and the Pacific Islands. All HOTEL-class SSBNs are in the Atlantic or at Petropavlovsk, and were considered to be targeted primarily against peripheral targets. 10. (S) The operating expenditures for the 6 GOLF-class submarines directed against the PRC are negligible in terms of the total SLBM effort which was dominated by the cost of procuring SSBNs, SLBMs, and warheads. 11. (S) The primary mission of LRA, even in the Far East, was against the US and its allies during the period in which the present force was deployed. We have no basis upon which to judge any change in orientation, although there has certainly been greater concern with attack on the PRC since 1965. 11 SECRET Approved For Release 2004/06/29 : CIA-RDP83MOOl71 R001100010003-2 Approved For Release 2004/06/29 : CIA-RDP83M00171 R001100010003-2 SECRET 12. (S) In this study, all the efforts of the two bomber Corps in the western USSR were allocated against the US and its NATO allies. In the Far East Bomber Corps (FEBC), the BADGERS at Belaya were allocated against the PRC; other BADGERS in the FEBC were divided 50:50 against the PRC and against US targets in Korea, Japan, and the Islands. BEAR and BISON have exercised against the PRC; however, this is mostly reconnaissance activity (see Figure A-2). 13. (S) No BACKFIRE have been deployed to the FEBC. The costs of deployment of BACKFIRE have been attributed to meeting the US and NATO threat. FIGURE A-2. THE SHARE OF THE LRA ORIENTED AGAINST THE PRC 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 PERIPHERAL BOMBERS BADGER vs PRCa/b/ 110 105 105 105 105 95 90 90 90 90 90 90 90 Total Bombers 770 725 690 670 665 660 655 645 625 620 590 590 590 Percent vs PRC 14.3 14.5 15.2 15.7 15.0 14.4 13.7 14.0 14.4 14.5 15.3 15.3 15.3 INTERCONTINENTAL BOMBERS Against PRC (Reconnaissance) Percent of Total Effort - - - - - - - - 1 2 3 3 3 14. (S) Soviet strategic air defense forces were expanded during the 1950s and early 1960s when the US and NATO, not the PRC, were the threat to the USSR. The growth of a PRC nuclear-capable bomber force after the mid-1960s presented a strategic threat to the Eastern USSR, but US strategic and tactical forces still remain a much greater threat in the Far East. We have no information on how the Soviets evaluated the relative effort that should be allocated to combat these two threats. The share of air defense resources going to areas east of the Urals has not appreciably changed over the past 10 years, indicating no high Soviet air defense effort primarily against the PRC (see Figure A-3). 12 SECRET Approved For Release 2004/06/29 : CIA-RDP83MOOl71 R001100010003-2 Approved For Release 2004/0SECRETP83M00171 R001100010003-2 FIGURE A-3. CALCULATION OF THE STRATEGIC NUCLEAR AIR THREAT TO THE USSR 1968 a/ 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 FIRST APPROACH US: SAC 648 599 565 525 517 500 500 498 498 Forward-Based 845 851 851 765 705 819 753 753 753 UK & France 166 132 116 118 122 128 134 142 152 Total US and NATO 1659 1582 1532 1408 1343 1447 1389 1393 1403 PRC 15 15 20 42 62 71 73 75 85 Total Aircraft 1674 1587 1552 1450 1405 1518 1462 1468 1488 PRC as Percent of Total Threat 0.9 0.9 1.3 3.0 4.6 4.9 5.3 5.4 6.0 SECOND APPROACH US Forward-Based West Pacific 293 299 299 213 201 207 207 207 207 PRC 15 15 20 42 62 71 73 75 85 Total Aircraft 308 314 319 255 263 278 280 282 292 PRC as Percent of Asian Threat 5 5 6 17 23 26 26 27 29 Soviet Asian Air Defense as Percent of Total Air Defenseb/ 16.7 16.8 16.9 17.0 17.1 17.2 17.3 17.4 17.5 PRC as Percent of Total Threat 0.8 0.8 1.1 2.8 4.0 4.4 4.5 4.6 5.1 a/The PRC strategic nuclear air threat started in 1968 b/ 1965, 1970, and 1975 calculated. Other years interpolated or extrapolated. 15. (S) In this study, it is assumed that the orientation of the Soviet strategic air defense effort can be considered to be in proportion to the threat. The threat to the USSR is defined as the numbers of strategic and nuclear-capable aircraft, in the PRC as opposed to those in US and NATO strategic nuclear forces and in forward-based US general purpose forces that can deliver a nuclear attack on the USSR from their normal bases. 16. (S) The first approach to estimating the PRC share in the strategic nuclear threat to the USSR related PRC forces to total US/NATO strategic and forward-based nuclear air forces. As a check on this approach, a second approach related PRC forces to US forward-based forces in the Far East. The results were in general agreement -- that the strategic air attack threat to the USSR from the PRC grew from about one percent of the total threat through 1969 to three percent in 1971 and six percent in 1976. 17. (S) In 1968-1969 the Soviets started construction of six BMEWs radars at two locations which could detect missiles launched from the PRC. These were operational by 1973. In 1971, a second side -- facing toward the PRC -- was started for the Chekhov radar near Moscow; it may become operational in 1977. The major expenditures were for construction of these radars, and are estimated to have required negligible percentages of the total Soviet effort. 13 SECRET Approved For Release 2004/06/29 : CIA-RDP83MOOl71 R001100010003-2 Approved For Release 2004/06/29 : CIA-RDP83M00171 R001100010003-2 SECRET Ground Forces 18. (S) The major Soviet effort against the PRC was for building up the ground forces along the PRC border, backed up by reinforcing elements in the Siberian MD. Although there were forces in these areas prior to 1960, it is probable that, since the mid-1960s, the Soviets have seen those forces as primarily for PRC contingencies, and think of area force level requirements in terms of the PRC threat. 19. (S) In the calculations that follow, all Soviet divisions in the Siberian, Central Asian, Transbaikal, and Far Eastern MDs and in Mongolia are counted as opposed to the PRC, except for two divisions on Sakhalin and one division on Kamchatka. These could, of course, be used to reinforce the border, as could divisions in the western USSR, but this is unlikely. They received no augmentation in the past ten years (as did the reinforcing divisions in the Siberian MD) and are not considered to be oriented toward the PRC in Soviet force planning. The buildup opposite the PRC is shown in Figure A-4. The assumption was made that the numbers of divisions were an appropriate measure of ground force strength. Troop strength in divisions forces along the PRC border is believed to average about the same per division as in Soviet forces as a whole. It was assumed in this study that the support slice was the same for forces opposite the PRC as elsewhere. To the degree that this is not so, there is a slight bias in the results.* FIGURE A-4. GROWTH OF SOVIET LINE DIVISIONS OPPOSITE PRC BORDER 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 Siberian MD 3 3 3 3 3 4 4 4 5 5 5 5 5 Central Asian MD a/ 2 2 2 3 4 4 5 6 7 7 7 7 7 Transbaikal MD 5 5 5 7 9 8 8 9 10 10 10 10 10 b/ Mongolia - - 1 1 1 1 2 2 2 2 2 2 3 Far Eastern MD c/ 6 7 8 8 9 13 15 16 16 16 16 16 16 Total 16 17 19 22 26 30 34 37 40 40 40 40 41 Added during year - 1 2 3 4 4 4 3 3 - - - 1 Cumulative additions 1 3 6 10 14 18 21 24 24 24 24 25 a/Numbers 1964-1968 are divisions in that portion of the Turkestan MD that became the Central Asian MD in 1969. b/Another division is in the process of formation. '/Excludes 1 division on Kamchatka and 2 on Sakhalin *POL and ammunition storage is in fact estimated to be less extensive along the PRC border, in relation to ground forces, than in the west. Artillery support, however, is greater. 14 SECRET Approved For Release 2004/06/29 : CIA-RDP83MOOl71 R001100010003-2 Approved For Release 2004/06/29 : CIA-RDP83M00171 R001100010003-2 SECRET 20. (S) CIA figures indicate that Soviet expenditures for ground forces per man grew slightly from 1964 to 1975. This figure is derived by dividing the total expenditures (in constant 1970 rubles) for ground forces by the number of men in the ground forces, both before the buildup opposite the PRC (1964) and after three years of no further divisional growth (1975). This factor, applied to the growth in manpower, gives the "normal" expenditures for the ground forces. Over and above these expenditures are (1) the cost of the buildup for Czechoslovakian invasion and (2) the cost of expanding Soviet forces along the PRC border. These relationships are shown in Figure A-5. FIGURE A-5. REPRESENTATION OF THE EXPENDITURES FOR THE SOVIET GROUND FORCE BUILDUP ALONG THE PRC BORDER SECRET ADDITIONAL INVESTMENT NEEDED FOR EXPANSION OF SOVIET GROUND FORCES EXTRAORDINARY COST OF INVASION OF CZECHOSLOVAKIA ONGOING COST OFSOVIET GROUND FORCE OP' RATIONS, . 4AINT NANCE, AND MODERNIZATION A STEADILY GROWING COST PER MAX) 21. (S) The methodology utilized DIA estimates of divisions present on the border; these estimates tend to count groups of men and equipment as active divisions sooner than do CIA estimates. Moreover, the methodology considered a division to have its complement of equipment and manpower the first year it was carried in the order of battle; this was not usually true. On both counts, the methodology used here tends to ascribe resources to support of ground forces opposite the PRC more rapidly than might have taken place, by perhaps as much as two years. On the other hand, CIA estimates that ground forces investment grew much more rapidly than DIA divisional counts in the years 1964-1966, but tended to grow at about the same pace thereafter, thereby indicating a possible two-year investment lead over division activation. Given these two possible indications of systematic error in the timing of the resource allocation, suggesting adjustment in opposite directions, the calculations were not adjusted. These 25X1 15 SECRET Approved For Release 2004/06/29 : CIA-RDP83MOOl71 R001100010003-2 Approved For Release 2004/06/29 : CIA-RDP83M00171 R001100010003-2 SECRET 22. (S) Before 1965 the only Frontal Aviation in the area of the PRC was an air army in the Far Eastern MD with less than 200 aircraft. By the end of 1969, there were three air armies with some 650 aircraft. By 1972 this number had grown to 1130 aircraft, and has grown relatively little since then, although the force has undergone considerable modernization with FITTER, FLOGGER, and FENCER. 23. (S) As in the case of the ground forces, although there were forces in being before the PRC became a threat to the USSR, the rapid augmentation of the forces opposite the PRC indicated the high priority put on building a Frontal Aviation capability opposite the PRC. In view of this priority, and the lack of other land threats to the USSR in the Far East, the entire Frontal Aviation force along the border was considered to be allocated to meeting the PRC threat. 24. (S) The early buildup in 1967-1969 was accomplished by bringing older FRESCO and BEAGLE out of storage, and was thus relatively inexpensive. New model aircraft started going to the border in 1970-1971, and resulted in a rapid growth in costs. 25. (S) In the year from mid-1975 to mid-1976 Frontal Aviation forces opposite the PRC received about 40 percent of the expensive new aircraft going to Frontal Aviation. These had been procured in 1975; consequently expenditures for Frontal Aviation opposite the PRC jumped in 1975. Since mid-1976, however, new aircraft deployments to the area have dropped below a proportionate level. 26. (S) The effort is calculated as a percentage of the total Frontal Aviation combat aircraft capability, as indicated in Figure A-6. 27. (S) Construction of facilities for Soviet Frontal Aviation opposite the PRC is estimated by CIA to have cost about 22 percent of total FA construction over the period 1964-75. FIGURE A-6. CALCULATION OF THE SHARE OF FRONTAL AVIATION FIXED-WING AIRCRAFT OPPOSITE THE PRC Total 3230 3280 3230 3310 3540 3780 4040 4280 4540 4590 4660 4620 4600 Border 180 160 180 300 380 605 850 1065 1130 1130 1150 1230 1210 16 SECRET Approved For Release 2004/06/29 : CIA-RDP83MOOl71 R001100010003-2 Approved For Release 2004/06/29 : CIA-RDP83M00171 R001100010003-2 SECRET Helicopter Aviation 28. (S) Most helicopters in Frontal Aviation are subordinate to tactical air armies in the USSR. In 1965, there was one helicopter regiment and a smaller unit near the PRC border out of a total of 16 units; the units near the border had nine percent of the helicopters. Since 1968 there has been a steady growth in the numbers of helicopters in Frontal Aviation opposite the PRC. The growth was particularly rapid in the years following the border incidents of 1969. Since 1972, however, numbers of helicopters have been growing more rapidly opposite NATO, with the result that the share opposite the PRC has declined, as shown in Figure A-7. FIGURE A-7. HELICOPTERS IN FRONTAL AVIATION 1967a/ 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 Total 720 770 860 920 981 1047 1302 2313 2584 3012 3079 Opposite PRC 67 67 173 270 371 409 439 674 794 934 977 Percent 9 9 20 30 38 39 34 29 30 31 32 Transport Aviation 29. (S) Of all the force components, Military Transport Aviation (VTA) is best suited to rapid redeployment, and the long distances in Soviet Asia make VTA useful in Asian operations. By the end of the buildup opposite the PRC in 1973, there were some 60 medium-range transports (AN-12/CUB) of VTA in the Transbaikal and Far East MDs and 45 in the Turkestan MD, out of a total of 740 medium-range transports. In addition, there were some 20 long-range transports (An-22/COCK) in the Western USSR. About 14 percent of the VTA effort thus could be considered to be allocated to PRC defense in 1973; this portion remained the same as in 1969 and in 1965. By 1976 the total number of VTA transports had changed little. Long-range AN-22/COCK and IL-76/CANDID replaced older and medium-range CUB in the west, but the composition of the force opposite the PRC remained about the same as it had been in 1973. General Purpose Naval Forces 30. (S) Of the four Soviet fleets, only the Pacific Fleet could, by reason of geography, be concerned with the PRC; nevertheless, the US Pacific Fleet remains its overwhelming concern. The PRC Navy is not an ocean-going force; it is primarily for defense of its own coastal waters. 17 SECRET Approved For Release 2004/06/29 : CIA-RDP83MOOl71 R001100010003-2 Approved For Release 2004/06/29 : CIA-RDP83M00171 R001100010003-2 SECRET 31. (S) There has been no perceptible trend in the portion of general purpose naval forces allocated to the Pacific Fleet since 1964. The Pacific Fleet has held the following percentages of deployed Soviet naval forces. 1964 1966 1971 1973 1975 1976 Total 28 27 29 27 27 27 Submarines 25 27 34 30 31 32 Major Surface 28 27 24 25 25 25 Naval Air 32 27 29 28 28 30 Small Surface - - - 25 25 23 If concern for the PRC were a major force behind the planning for naval dispositions, the Pacific Fleet would have received some preference. Apparently the Soviets think they can quite handily take care of any operations they are charged with against China, and still maintain a viable capability against the US 7th Fleet with the same share of naval resources in the Pacific Fleet as in the early 1960s. It is, of course, difficult to decide the share of effort the Soviet Pacific Fleet devotes to meeting the PRC threat. For purposes of this paper, a rather arbitrary figure of one-sixth of the effort of the Pacific Fleet has been used. The Pacific Fleet has been considered to represent 27 percent of the Soviet naval effort. Thus some 4 1/2 percent of the Soviet general purpose naval effort is considered to be allocated against the PRC in this study. 32. (S) The growth of Soviet Naval expenditures in 1975 and 1976 is attributable in large part to deployment of BACKFIRE and CHARLIE II and VICTOR 11 submarines -- none of which were deployed to the Pacific Fleet. Therefore, no significant increase in the effort against the PRC is estimated for these years. Border Troops 33. (S) While not Ministry of Defense forces, the border guards have long contributed to the defense of the PRC border. Moreover the border guards opposite the PRC were reorganized from 5 of 13 (38 percent) Districts in 1960, to 4 of 8 in 1967 (50 percent). This change largely took place 1962-1964. The number of men in border guards (along with their signal support) has not changed appreciably. The numbers of men in border units along the PRC border are estimated to be about 60,000 out of a total of 130,000 in border units. But the border units opposite the PRC are much better equipped than elsewhere. They have, for example, about three-fourths of the border guard APCs. Nevertheless, about 80 percent of border guards expenditures are manpower-related. Building upon these general considerations, the share of the resources in support of border guards opposite the PRC has been estimated as follows: 18 SECRET Approved For Release 2004/06/29 : CIA-RDP83M00l71 R001100010003-2 Approved For Release 2004/06/29 : CIA-RDP83M00171 R001100010003-2 SECRET 1964 -- 45 percent (manpower-related) 1968 -- 50 percent 1970 -- 55 percent (reflecting more APCs and combat and later teams after border incidents) Research, Development, Test, And Evaluation 34. (S) The technological challenge to the Soviet armed forces is from NATO and the US, not from the PRC. The entire effort of RDT&E would thus have developed such as it has even without a PRC threat. In fact, without that threat, RDT&E funds may have been larger in the years 1966-1970, when large amounts of MOD resources were being devoted to building up defenses against the PRC. In this paper, the RDT&E effort is allocated entirely against the US and NATO. Command And Support, Reserve And Retired 35. (S) It is assumed that command and control, DOSAAF, general support, military space operations, and reserve and retired expenditures support Soviet forces across the board. Expenditures for these programs are therefore allocated in the same proportion as the total of the expenditures enumerated above. 19 (Reverse Blank) SECRET Approved For Release 2004/06/29 : CIA-RDP83MOOl71 R001100010003-2 Approved For Release 2004/06/29 : CIA-RDP83M00171 R001100010003-2 SECRET COST DIFFERENTIALS OF SOVIET FORCES AGAINST THE PRC 1. (U) The approach used so far in this estimate attributes average cost to the Soviet forces opposite the PRC. But the border regions are higher cost areas, and the average may have to be adjusted in order to get a truer picture of the relative burden of the Soviet buildup against the PRC. This calculation involves several steps: -- Calculation of the cost differential of forces in Siberia and the Soviet Far East, relative to central USSR (Moscow area) and other areas. -- From this, a calculation of the average cost for all Soviet forces and the relationship of average costs to eastern area costs opposite the PRC. -- Adjustment of these eastern area cost differentials to take account of the fact that, in some force elements, forces against the PRC have lower factor costs, relative to the average, due to peculiarities of basing. -- Adjustment to account for the fact that forces opposite the PRC are not necessarily average forces in terms of makeup and quality, and hence of cost. 2. (U) The calculation of costs in the eastern regions relative to the central USSR was based on cost differentials for various components of military costs for these regions reported in Soviet sources, adjusted for qualitative differences, and weighted by the share of those components in total Soviet military costs. These calculations are presented in Table B-1, following. 3. (C) As these differentials relate to costs for the central USSR (Moscow area) they then have to be adjusted to arrive at their relationship to average Soviet costs. Regional construction costs, weighted by regional distribution of military manpower, indicate average national military construction costs are 15 percent above central region costs. As construction costs opposite the PRC are 24 percent above central region costs, they are thus eight percent above the national average. (1.24 =1.15 = 1.08). It has been assumed in this study that total military costs, for comparable goods and services, would be no more than eight percent above the national average, as construction costs cause the greatest upward bias (Table B-1). SECRET Approved For Release 2004/06/29 : CIA-RDP83M00l71 R001100010003-2 Approved For Release 2004/06/29 : CIA-RDP83M00171 R001100010003-2 SECRET TABLE B-1 MILITARY EXPENDITURES IN THE SOVIET EASTERN AREAS IN RELATION TO CENTRAL USSR Factor Cost Differential Over Resulting Central USSRbi Contribution Equipment, spares _ .50 1.10 .550 Food .05 1.20 .060 Construction .10 1.24 _~i .124 Fuel .05 1.23A/ .062 Clothing and Other Supplies .15 1.08 bi .162 Military Pay .05 1.15?/ .058 Other (administration overhead) .10 1.23 fi .123 TOTAL 1.00 1.1399-/ b/ Rand WN-9239-NA Cost-Planning Factors for Soviet East Asia, November 1975, (FOUO) unless otherwise indicated. s1 See Table B-2. J Average of gasoline (1.14), fuel oil (1.56) and coal (0.98). Heating fuel factors include factors for the temperature differentials. Calculations are based on data in JJ/ above. 25X1 25X1 f/ General cost of living factor in West Siberia, East Siberia, Far East, weighted by military manpower, for single worker, as in above. _bj By comparison, the US Alaskan Air Command found that for planning purposes a differential of 1.24 using AAC cost weights and 1.35 using DoD cost weights is applicable to Alaskan operations. As PCS adds 13 percent to the DoD-weighted cost, and PCS is a negligible added cost in the USSR, 1.22 is a more appropriate DoD-weighted factor for comparison purposes. The average Soviet base is much further north, in much harsher conditions, so the differential should be much less in the USSR. See Air University Review Mar-Apr 1976, pp 61-73. SECRET Approved For Release 2004/06/29 : CIA-RDP83MOOl71 R001100010003-2 Share of Total ~o Approved For Release 2004/06/29 : CIA-RDP83M00171 R001100010003-2 SECRET TABLE B-2 CONSTRUCTION COST DIFFERENTIALS IN SOVIET EASTERN REGIONS (Central European USSR Equals 1.00) Central Asia Siberia Transbaikal Far East Weighted Total Construction Materials a/ - 1.01 1.23 1.43 Construction Costa/ - - 1.3-1.5 bi One M2 Living Space / - - 1.03-1.30 1.50b/ Apartment Construction ~~ - - - 1.30 bi Construction Costs in General d/ a. Remote Area 1.08 1.04 1.20 1.27-b/ b. Severe Climate 0.95 1.07 1.07 1.07b/ Total (a x b) 1.03 1.11 1.28 1.36 Weights e/ .23 .12 .27 .38 1.00 Contribution .24 .13 .35 .52 1.24 a/ Oleg Hoeffding, The Economy of the Soviet Far East as a Base for Military Deployment, Rand WN-9199-NA, September 1975 (U). Factors are for total region. b/ Amur and Khabarovsk oblasts and Primorskiy Kray. Anatoli Kuprianov, Cost-Planning Factors for Soviet East Asia, Rand WN-9239-NA, November 1975 (FOUO). 25X1 e/ Based on share of construction in each region. SECRET Approved For Release 2004/06/29 : CIA-RDP83MOOl71 R001100010003-2 Approved For Release 2004/06/29 : CIA-RDP83M00171 R001100010003-2 SECRET 4. (S) The differential factor inputs, tending to make forces opposite the PRC higher in cost, also make forces arrayed against the United States and its allies higher in cost as well, as suggested below. Thus the differential may, in fact, be in favor of forces deployed against the United States and its allies. Against the US and Allies ICBMs against the US are in higher cost eastern regions. Higher cost LRA Arctic basing is for use against the US. Against the PRC ICBMs against the PRC are in lower cost western regions. Lower cost LRA basing against the PRC, well south of Arctic. The higher cost fleet areas are the Northern Fleet and the Kamchatka flotilla of the Pacific Fleet, which are against the US and NATO. Ground and tactical air forces opposite NATO get foreign area bonuses equating to 100 percent of position pay. Air Defenses in the Far North are against the US. Naval forces against the PRC in the southern-based Pacific Fleet are closer to average in cost. Ground and tactical air forces opposite the PRC get border area bonuses equating to 15 percent of base pay. Air defenses against the PRC are in Southern Siberian regions. 5. (S) It is not generally remembered that the composition and quality of Soviet forces against the United States and NATO are such that unit costs are higher than against the PRC, as suggested below: Against the US and NATO Newer ICBMs with MIRVs. High cost MRBMs and IRBMs. BACKFIRE. LRA staged and refueled. Against the PRC No BACKFIRE; older BADGER No staging and refueling required. Long-range bombers are oriented against the US. Tank divisions make up 50 percent of forward force and have newer tanks. Priority deployment of new equipment to West. Bombers against PRC are less expensive intermediate-range. Tank divisions make up 5 percent of forward forces and have older tanks. SECRET Approved For Release 2004/06/29 : CIA-RDP83M00l71 R001100010003-2 Approved For Release 2004/06/29 : CIA-RDP83M00171 R001100010003-2 SECRET Forward force all combat Forward force only one-third ready. combat ready. All heavy transports are Lighter transports in the east. positioned in the west. SSNs, carriers, and Older ships. missile cruisers. 6. (U) The following table attempts to take these differentials into account, using lower factor input and composition and quality differentials for forces against the PRC, as appropriate (see Table B-3). 7. (U) As can be seen, when the' average costs are adjusted in the ways indicated above, Soviet forces directed against the PRC threat are on the average, not appreciably more expensive per unit. This conclusion rests in large part on the higher quality of forces against the United States and NATO and the fact that operation in high cost areas applies to many forces against the United States and NATO, as well. While the individual figures used to arrive at these conclusions are open to debate and refinement, the general conclusion appears to be an appropriate reflection of reality.* *These conclusions are at some variance with a differential of 50 percent used in Rand WN-9178-NA, Extraordinary Costs of the Soviet Buildup Against China, 19 March 1976 (U). The differences largely lie in the facts that: Rand did not allow for differences of basing and quality as indicated above. Rand's 50 percent differential was derived from construction costs in the Siberian North, not along the Transsiberian RR, where most of the buildup took place. Rand attributed to Soviet forces opposite the PRC greater inventories and subsidies, and lower cost effectiveness than can be supported by available analysis. 25 SECRET Approved For Release 2004/06/29 : CIA-RDP83M00l71 R001100010003-2 Approved For Release 2004/06/29 : CIA-RDP83M00171 R001100010003-2 SECRET COST DIFFERENTIALS BETWEEN SOVIET FORCES OPPOSITE THE PRC AND THE NATIONAL AVERAGE Cost Differential as a result of Contribution to Total Cost 1964-1976 Force Element Quality Composition a/ Factor b! Composite Share Contribution Inputs of Total Ground Forces 0.90 1.08 0.97 .46 .45 Helicopter Aviation 1.00 1.08 1.08 .07 .08 Frontal Aviation 1.00 1.08 1.08 .20 .22 Security Troops 1.00 1.08 1.08 .06 .07 Transport Aviation 0.90 1.08 0.97 .05 .05 Air Defense 1.00 1.08 1.08 .03 .03 Navy 0.90 1.00 .90 .06 .05 ICBMs 0.80 1.00 0.80 .03 .02 Ballistic Missile Defense 1.00 1.00 1.00 Negl Negl 1 Quality adjustments have been made for forces opposite the PRC in those cases in which those forces are clearly of lower quality than average. Ground forces have fewer tanks and new equipment. Transport aviation has no heavy transports. More expensive nuclear-powered ballistic missile submarines and aircraft carriers are deployed against the US. More expensive SS-17, 18, 19 ICBMs are deployed against the US; less expensive SS-11 are deployed against the PRC. J Factor inputs opposite the PRC are estimated to be 8 percent above the national average, in general. The differential has been adjusted downward for: ICBMs, because units targeted against the PRC are in low cost western USSR, while many of those targeted against the US are in high cost eastern areas. Naval forces, because many of those against US are based in more expensive Northern Fleet and Petropavlovsk areas. LRA, in which more expensive Arctic basing and refueling are against the US. SECRET Approved For Release 2004/06/29 : CIA-RDP83MOOl71 R001100010003-2 Approved For Release 2004/06/29 : CIA-RDP83M00171 R001100010003-2 B615 DIA/DN-2C B633 DIA/DB-4G3 A010 AFS COL B634 DIA/DB-4G4 A015 DARPA B680 DIA/DB-4 A024 DEF NUCLEAR AGCY B681 DIA/DB-4B A034 DEP SEC DEF B737 DIA/RDS-3B3 LIB A045 DCA B793 DIA/DB-2B2 A085 NAT DEF UNIVERSITY B794 DIA/DB-2B3 A097 DIA GRP ANMCC B854 USDAO AUSTRALIA A100 OSD B855 USDAO AUSTRIA A104 OASDCCC&I B859 USDAO BULGARIA A115 OASD ISA B862 USDAO CANADA A116 OATSD AE B872 USDAO DENMARK A117 OSD ODP&E B876 USDAO ENGLAND A124 OSD NET ASSESSMENT B878 USDAO FINLAND A125 OSD DD R & E B879 USDAO FRANCE A127 OSD SALT SUP GRP B880 USDAO GERMANY A301 JCS/J-5 STRATNEGBR B882 USDAO GREECE A302 JCS/CHAIRMAN B888 USDAO INDONESIA A315 JCS/SAGA B893 USDAOITALY A325 JCS/J3 B896 USDAO JAPAN A340 JCS/J-5 MIL SEC B902 USDAO MALAYSIA A363 USNMR SHAPE B908 USDAO NETHERLANDS A365 US DEL UN MSC B909 USDAO NEW ZEALAND A368 USRMC/NATO B912 USDAO NORWAY B032 DIA/JS B913 USDAO PAKISTAN B033 DIA/CS-3 B917 USDAO POLAND B037 DIA/CS-4 B927 USDAO SWEDEN B040 DIA/DIO B928 USDAO SWITZERLAND B060 DIA/RDS-3A5 PENT B930 USDAO TAIWAN B080 DIA/SWS B931 USDAO THAILAND B131 DIA/DE B933 USDAO TURKEY B136 DIA/DE-3 B934 USDAO USSR B150 DIA/DT B940 DLO HONG KONG B155 DIA/RDS-3A4 PP B942 USDAO SINGAPORE B264 DIA/DP-1 B267 DIA/DP-3 B318 DIA/DN-1A B329 DIA/DN-2F1 C020 DCS-MIL OPS B351 DIA/RDS-3D2 C030 CH RD&A B352 DIA/RDS-3A2C STOCK C043 USAMIIA B485 DIA/IS C231 2ND ARM DIV B515 DIA/DC C242 FORSCOM B520 DIA/DC-3 C303 4TH PSYOP GROUP B550 DIA/DP-2 C348 453D MID B551 DIA/DM-3 C398 698TH MID B563 DIA/DB-1E2 C459 COMD-GEN STF COL B569 DIA/DN-2A C463 INTEL CTR&SCH B571 DIA/DB-4G1 C470 ARMY WAR COL B573 DIA/DB-4E1 C500 TRADOC B575 DIA/DB-1 C513 ARRADCOM B578 DIA/DB-4A C523 HARRY DIAMOND LAB B579 DIA/DN-2B2 C539 TRASANA B583 DIA/DB-ID C591 FSTC B584 DIA/DB-1B4 C605 JFK CTR MIL ASSIST B586 DIA/DB-4D1 C617 CONCEPT ANLYS AGCY B593 DIA/DB-1G2 C619 MIA REDSTONE B594 DIA/DB-1F C620 SRD/ITAD B596 DIA/DB-1E1 C635 AIR DEF AGCY B597 DIA/DB-1G1 C750 OACSI-MAIL ROOM B598 DIA/DB-2 C763 OACSI-S & T DIV B604 DIA/DB-4E2 C766 OACSI-INT SUP DET B606 DIA/DB-2B C768 OACSI-USAITAD B607 DIA/DB-2B1 C787 OACSI-EASTERN BR B608 DIA/DB-2B4 C788 OACSI-SOV/EEUR BR Approved For Release 2004/06/29 : CIA-RDP83MOOl71 R001100010003-2 Approved For Release 2004/06/29 : CIA-RDP83MOO171 R001 100010003-2 D008 NISC D011 OP-09B24 MLRM D150 CMC INT D159 NAVAIRDEVCEN D202 NAVWARCOL D204 NAVWARCOL/IO D263 NOSC RES LIB D496 DIR SSPO D507 COMINEWARCOM D511 NAVAIRSYSCOM D700 CGMCDEC D902 NFOIO DET NPT D947 NAVINTCOM-03E DO10 OP-OOK E010 AFIS/INDOC E016 AFIS/INC E018 AF/RDQA-C E020 AFIS/INZA E050 7602 AINTELG/INUA E053 AF/INAKA E054 AF/INAKB E200 AAC E252 AF/RDRE E303 AF/INAP E317 AF/SAMI E403 AFSC/INA E408 AFWL E409 AMD E410 ADTC E411 ASD/FTD/ETID E420 FTD/NICD E429 SAMSOIND E436 AFEWC SUR E437 AFIS/INI E450 AIR UNIV G005 CINCAD G120 AIR DEF WPNS CEN H005 USCINCEUR H101 USAFE 497RTG IRC H300 USAICEUSAREUR H350 SFDET ABN EUR H351 10TH SFGABNISTSF H500 CINCUSNAVEUR J015 COMICEDEFOR J037 FAISCEN OCEANA J500 CINCLANTFLT J502 COMSECONDFLT J505 COMNAVAIRLANT J515 FICEURLANT J517 COMNAVSURFLANT J532 COMSUBLANT J575 FMFLANT/FMFEUR J959 RECONATKWNGONE K007 COMUSJAPAN KO10 UNC/USFK/EA K100 PACAF 548 RTG K115 5TH AF K203 314 AD/IN K300 IPAC CODE IC-L K302 USACSG MOCG-IN K313 IPAC CODE 1-22 K315 IPAC CODE 1-24 K320 USARJAPAN K500 CINCPACFLT K505 FICPAC K515 COMSEVENTHFLT L040 SAC 544TH ARTW N005 USREDCOM rVV') P055 25X1 P085 STATE P090 NSA P091 NSA REP DEFENSE P100 NAT SEC COUNCIL Pill WH SIT ROOM R010 OMB R145 ACDA DIA Dist. DIA Stock TOTAL PRINT 369 26 395 Approved For Release 2004/06/29 : CIA-RDP83MOOl71 ROO1100010003-2