FACTBOOK CLASSIFIED SUPPLEMENT1981
Document Type:
Collection:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
CIA-RDP08-00534R000100040001-8
Release Decision:
RIPPUB
Original Classification:
S
Document Page Count:
136
Document Creation Date:
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date:
September 5, 2012
Sequence Number:
1
Case Number:
Publication Date:
April 1, 1981
Content Type:
REPORT
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EV OD
National
Classified
Foreign
Assessment
&aro
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0716 co
WF 81-001A
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National
? Foreign
Assessment
Center
The World Factbook 1981
Classified Supplement
The World Factbook, formerly called the National Basic Intelligence Factbook
(NBIF), and this Classified Supplement are produced annually by the National
Foreign Assessment Center. The supplement contains the classified entries?mainly
concerning defense forces 1 that formerly appeared in the
classified version of the NBIF. Thus, the 1981 edition of The World Factbook (GS WF
81-001) and its Classified Supplement together supersede the classified version of the
January 1980 NBIF.
In general, information available as of October 1980 was used in the preparation of this
edition of the Factbook. The data were provided by various elements of the Central
Intelligence Agency, the Defense Intelligence Agency, the Bureau of the Census, and
the US State Department. The Factbook production schedule precluded formal
coordination of these data, although informal exchanges at the working level have
taken place.I
Comments an queries are welcome and may be addressed to the Factbook Editor,
Office of Geographic and Societal Research
GS WF 81-001A
April 1981
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CONTENTS
Page
Definitions, Abbreviations, and Explanatory Notes
United Nations (U.N.): Structure and Associated Agencies xi
Abbreviations for Other Important International Organizations xii
Metric Conversions xiv
Country Listing
?A?
Abu Dhabi (see UNITED ARAB EMIRATES)
AFGHANISTAN 1
`Ajman (see UNITED ARAB EMIRATES)
ALBANIA 1
ALGERIA 2
ANDORRA no supplemental data
ANGOLA 3
Anguilla (see ST. CHRISTOPHER-NEVIS)
ANTIGUA 4
ARGENTINA 4
AUSTRALIA 5
AUSTRIA 6
Azores (see PORTUGAL)
?B?
BAHAMAS, THE 7
BAHRAIN 7
Balearic Islands (see SPAIN)
BANGLADESH 8
BARBADOS 8
BELGIUM 9
BELIZE 10
BENIN 10
BERMUDA 11
BHUTAN 11
BOLIVIA 12
Bophuthatswana (see SOUTH AFRICA)
BOTSWANA 12
BRAZIL 13
British Honduras (see BELIZE)
British Solomon Islands (see SOLOMON ISLANDS)
BRUNEI 14
BULGARIA 14
BURMA 15
BURUNDI 16
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Cabinda (see ANGOLA)
Cambodia (see KAMPUCHEA)
CAMEROON 16
CANADA 17
Canary Islands (see SPAIN)
CAPE VERDE 17
CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC 18
Ceylon (see SRI LANKA)
CHAD
18
CHILE 19
CHINA (Taiwan listed at end of table) 20
COLOMBIA 21
COMOROS 22
CONGO (Brazzaville) 23
Congo (Kinshasa) (see ZAIRE)
COOK ISLANDS 23
COSTA RICA 24
CUBA 24
CYPRUS 25
CZECHOSLOVAKIA 26
?D?
Dahomey (see BENIN)
DENMARK 27
DJIBOUTI (formerly French Territory of the Afars and Issas) 28
DOMINICA 28
DOMINICAN REPUBLIC 29
Dubai (see UNITED ARAB EMIRATES)
?E?
ECUADOR 29
EGYPT 30
Ellice Islands (see TUVALU)
EL SALVADOR 31
EQUATORIAL GUINEA 31
ETHIOPIA 32
?F?
FALKLAND ISLANDS (MALVINAS) 33
FAROE ISLANDS 33
Fernando Po (see EQUATORIAL GUINEA)
FIJI 34
FINLAND .34
FRANCE 35
FRENCH GUIANA 36
FRENCH POLYNESIA 36
French Territory of the Afars and Issas (see DJIBOUTI)
Fujairah (see UNITED ARAB EMIRATES)
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?G?
GABON 37
GAMBIA, THE 37
GERMAN DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC 38
GERMANY, FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF 39
GHANA 40
GIBRALTAR 40
Gilbert Islands (see KIRIBATI)
GREECE 41
GREENLAND 42
GRENADA 42
GUADELOUPE 43
GUATEMALA 43
GUINEA 44
GUINEA-BISSAU 44
Guinea, Portuguese (see GUINEA-BISSAU)
GUYANA 45
?H?
HAITI 45
HONDURAS 46
HONG KONG 46
HUNGARY 47
ICELAND 48
INDIA 48
INDONESIA 49
IRAN 50
IRAQ 51
IRELAND 52
ISRAEL 53
ITALY 54
IVORY COAST 55
JAMAICA 55
JAPAN 56
JORDAN 56
?K?
KAMPUCHEA (formerly Cambodia) 57
KENYA 57
KIRIBATI (formerly Gilbert Islands) 58
KOREA, NORTH 58
KOREA, SOUTH 59
KUWAIT 60
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?L?
LAOS 61
LEBANON 61
LESOTHO 62
LIBERIA 62
LIBYA 63
LIECHTENSTEIN 64
LUXEMBOURG 64
MACAU 65
MADAGASCAR 65
Madeira Islands (see PORTUGAL)
Malagasy Republic (see MADAGASCAR)
MALAWI 66
MALAYSIA 66
MALDIVES 67
MALI 67
MALTA 68
MARTINIQUE 68
MAURITANIA 69
MAURITIUS 69
MEXICO 70
MONACO 71
MONGOLIA 71
MOROCCO 72
,MOZAMBIQUE 73
?N?
NAMIBIA (South-West Africa) 73
NAURU 74
NEPAL 74
NETHERLANDS 75
NETHERLANDS ANTILLES 76
NEW CALEDONIA 76
New Hebrides (see VANUATU)
NEW ZEALAND 77
NICARAGUA 77
NIGER 78
NIGERIA 78
Northern Rhodesia (see ZAMBIA)
NORWAY 79
?0?
OMAN 80
PAKISTAN 80
PANAMA 81
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PAPUA NEW GUINEA 82
PARAGUAY 82
Pemba (see TANZANIA)
PERU 83
PHILIPPINES 84
POLAND 84
PORTUGAL 85
Portuguese Guinea (see GUINEA-BISSAU)
Portuguese Timor (see INDONESIA)
QATAR 86
?R?
Ras al Khaimah (see UNITED ARAB EMIRATES)
REUNION 87
Rhodesia (see ZIMBABWE)
Rio Muni (see EQUATORIAL GUINEA)
ROMANIA 87
RWANDA 88
?5--
ST. CHRISTOPHER-NEVIS-ANGUILLA 89
ST. LUCIA 89
ST. VINCENT AND THE GENADINES 90
SAN MARINO 90
SAO TOME AND PRINCIPE 91
SAUDI ARABIA 91
SENEGAL 92
SEYCHELLES 93
Sharjah (see UNITED ARAB EMIRATES)
SIERRA LEONE 93
SINGAPORE 94
SOLOMON ISLANDS (formerly British Solomon Islands) 95
SOMALIA 95
SOUTH AFRICA 96
Southern Rhodesia (see ZIMBABWE)
South-West Africa (see NAMIBIA)
SOVIET UNION 97
SPAIN 98
Spanish Sahara (see WESTERN SAHARA)
SRI LANKA (formerly Ceylon) 99
SUDAN 100
SURINAME 101
SWAZILAND 102
SWEDEN 102
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SWITZERLAND 103
SYRIA 103
Tanganyika (see TANZANIA)
TANZANIA 104
Tasmania (see AUSTRALIA)
THAILAND 104
TOGO 105
TONGA 106
Transkei (see SOUTH AFRICA)
TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO 106
TUNISIA 107
TURKEY 108
TUVALU (formerly Ellice Islands) 109
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Umm al Qaiwain (see UNITED ARAB EMIRATES)
UNITED ARAB EMIRATES: Abu Dhabi, 'Ajman, Dubai, Fujairah,
Ras al Khaimah, Sharjah, Umm al Qaiwain 110
United Arab Republic (see EGYPT)
UNITED KINGDOM 111
UNITED STATES no supplemental data
UPPER VOLTA 112
URUGUAY 112
109
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VATICAN CITY no supplemental data
VENEZUELA 113
VIETNAM 114
WALLIS AND FUTUNA no supplemental data
Walvis Bay (see SOUTH AFRICA)
WESTERN SAHARA (formerly Spanish Sahara) no supplemental data
WESTERN SAMOA 115
YEMEN (Aden) 115
YEMEN (Sanaa) 116
YUGOSLAVIA 116
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ZAMBIA
Zanzibar (see TANZANIA)
ZIMBABWE
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118
119
TAIWAN 119
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Definitions, Abbreviations, and Explanatory Notes:
Dates of Information:
? Population estimates have been projected to 1 January 1981.
? Military manpower estimates are as of 1 January 1980, except the numbers of males
reaching military age, which are projected averages for the five-year period 1980-84.
? In addition, although research for this edition was generally completed in October
1980, major political developments through the end of 1980 have been included.
Fiscal Year: The abbreviation FY stands for fiscal year; all years are calendar years un-
less otherwise indicated.
GDP and GNP: GDP is the total market value of all goods and services produced within
the domestic borders of a country over a particular time period, normally a year. GNP
equals GDP plus the income accruing to domestic residents arising from investment
abroad less income earned in the domestic market accruing to foreigners abroad.
Imports, Exports, and Aid: Standard abbreviations used in individual entries
throughout this factbook are c.i.f. (cost, insurance, and freight), f.o.b. (free on board),
ODA (official development assistance), and OOF (other official flows).
Land Utilization: Most of the land utilization percentages are rough estimates. Figures
for "arable" land in some cases reflect the area under cultivation rather than the total
cultivable area.
Maritime Zones: Fishing and economic zones claimed by coastal states are included
only when they differ from territorial sea limits. Maritime claims do not necessarily rep-
resent the position of the United States Government.
Money: All money figures are in contemporaneous U.S. dollars unless otherwise
indicated.
Oil Terms: Barrel (bbl) and barrels per day (b/d) are used to express volume of crude oil
and refined products; a barrel equals 42.00 gallons, 158.99 liters, 5.61 cubic feet, or
0.16 cubic meters.
Some of the countries and governments included in this publication are not fully indepen-
dent and others are not officially recognized by the United States Government.
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UNITED NATIONS (U.N.): STRUCTURE AND ASSOCIATED AGENCIES
Principal Organs:
Sc
GA
ECOSOC
TC
ICJ
Operating Bodies:
UNCTAD
TDB
UNDP
UNICEF
UNIDO
Regional Economic
ECA
ECE
ECLA
ECWA
ESCAP
Intergovernmental
FAO
GATT
IBRD
ICAO
IDA
IFAD
IFC
ILO
IMCO
IMF (FUND)
ITU
UNESCO
UPU
WFC
WHO
WIPO
WMO
Autonomous Orga
IAEA
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Security Council
General Assembly
Economic and Social Council
Trusteeship Council
International Court of Justice
Secretariat
U.N. Conference on Trade and Development
Trade and Development Board
U.N. Development Program
U.N. Children's Fund
U.N. Industrial Development Organization
Commissions:
Economic
Economic
Economic
Economic
Economic
Commission
Commission
Commission
Commission
and Social
for Africa
for Europe
for Latin America
for Western Asia
Commission for Asia and the Pacific
Agencies Associated with the U.N.:
Food and Agriculture Organization
General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade
International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (World Bank)
International
International
International
International
International
Civil Aviation Organization
Development Association (IBRD Affiliate)
Fund for Agricultural Development
Finance Corporation (IBRD Affiliate)
Labor Organization
Inter-Governmental Maritime Consultative Organization
International Monetary Fund
International Telecommunication Union
United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization
Universal Postal Union
World Food Council
World Health Organization
World Intellectual Property Organization
World Meteorological Organization
nization Under the U.N.:
International Atomic Energy Agency
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ABBREVIATIONS FOR OTHER IMPORTANT INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS
AA PSO Afro-Asian People's Solidarity Organization
ADB Asian Development Bank
AFDB African Development Bank
AIOEC Association of Iron Ore Exporting Countries
ANRPC Association of Natural Rubber Producing Countries
ANZUS ANZUS Council; treaty signed by Australia, New Zealand, and the
United States
APC African Peanut (Groundnut) Council
ASEAN Association of Southeast Asian Nations
ASPAC Asian and Pacific Council
ASSIMER International Mercury Producers Association
BE Belgium, Netherlands, Luxembourg Economic Union
BLEU Belgium-Luxembourg Economic Union
CACM Central American Common Market
CARICOM Caribbean Common Market
CARIFTA Caribbean Free Trade Association
CEA() West African Economic Community
CEMA Council for Economic Mutual Assistance
CENTO Central Treaty Organization
CIPEC Intergovernmental Council of Copper Exporting Countries
Colombo Plan
Council of Europe
DAC Development Assistance Committee (OECD)
EAMA African States associated with the EEC
EC European Communities (EEC, ECSC, EURATOM)
ECOWAS Economic Community of West African States
ECSC European Coal and Steel Community
EEC European Economic Community (Common Market)
EFTA European Free Trade Association
EIB European Investment Bank
ELDO European Space Vehicle Launcher Development Organization
EMA European Monetary Agreement
ENTENTE Political-Economic Association of Ivory Coast, Dahomey, Niger, Upper
Volta, and Togo
ESRO European Space Research Organization
EURATOM European Atomic Energy Community
G-77 Group of 77
IADB Inter-American Defense Board
IATP International Association of Tungsten Producers
IBA International Bauxite Association
ICAC International Cotton Advisory Committee
ICCO International Cocoa Council
ICES International Cooperation in Ocean Exploration
ICO International Coffee Organization
IDB Inter-American Development tank
lEA International Energy Agency (Associated with OECD)
IHO International Hydrographic Organization
International Lead and Zinc Study Group
100C International Olive Oil Council
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ABBREVIATIONS FOR OTHER IMPORTANT INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS (Cont.)
IPU Inter-Parliamentary Union
IRC International Red Cross
ISO International Sugar Organization
ITC International Tin Council
IWC International Whaling Commission
IWC International Wheat Council
LAFTA Latin American Free Trade Association
LICROSS League of Red Cross Societies
NAM Non-Aligned Movement
NATO North Atlantic Treaty Organization
OAPEC Organization of Arab Petroleum Exporting Countries
OAS Organization of American States
OAU Organization of African Unity
OCAM Afro-Malagasy and Mauritian Common Organization
ODECA Organization of Central American States
OECD Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development
OPEC Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries
SELA Latin American Economic System
UDEAC Economic and Customs Union of Central Africa
UEAC Union of Central African States
UPEB Union of Banana Exporting Countries
WEU Western European Union
WPC World Peace Council
WSG International Wool Study Group
WTO World Tourism Organization
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Approximate Metric Conversions*
Symbol When You Know Multiply by To Find
LENGTH
millimeters
centimeters
meters
meters
kilometers
0.039 inches
0.394 inches
3.281 feet
1.094 yards
0.621 miles
A REA
Symbol Symbol When You Know Multiply by To Find Symbol
LENGTH
in
in
ft
yd
mi
CrTI2
m2
m2
ha
km2
square centimeters 0.155 square inches
square meters
square meters
hectares (10,000 m2)
square kilometers
10.764 square feet
1.196 square yards
2.471 acres
0.386 square miles
in2
ft2
yd2
mi2
MASS (weight)
grams 0.035 ounces oz
kg kilograms 2.204 pounds lb
metric tons (1000 kg) 1.102 short tons
* Metric units of length, area, and weight are used in this publication.
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in inches
in inches
ft feet
yd yards
mi miles
25.400
2.540
30.480
0.914
1.609
AREA
millimeters
centimeters
centimeters
meters
kilometers
in2
f t2
yd2
mi2
square inches 6.452 sq. centimeters
square feet 0.093 square meters
square yards 0.836 square meters
acres 0.405 hectares
square miles 2.590 square kilometers
MASS (weight)
CI112
m2
m2
ha
km2
oz ounces 28.350 grams
lb pounds 0.454 kilograms
short tons (2000 lb) 0.907 metric tons
kg
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AFGHANISTAN
(See reference map VIII)
ECONOMY
Aid: economic ?commitments?U.S., including Ex-Im
(FY70-79), $221 million; Communist countries (1970-79),
$766 million; OPEC (ODA; 1974-79), $940 million; military
commitments?U.S. ? (FY70-79), $2 million; Communist
countries (1970-79), $885 million
COMMUNICATIONS
Pipelines: natural gas, 161 krq
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: army est. 40,000; air defense force 8,000 (est.
25 pilots); gendarmerie 30,00C
Major ground units: 3 corps headquarters, 10 infantry
divisions, 1 mountain division, 3 armored brigades, 3 moun-
tain brigades, 1 artillery brigade, 3 artillery regiments, 5
commando regiments, 2 parachute regiments
Major air defense units (manned by army troops): 1
antiaircraft artillery' division, 2 SAM brigades, 1 radar bri-
gade, and 1 searchlight brigade
Aircraft: 228 (181 jet, 4 turboprop, 4 prop, 39 helicopters)
operationally assigned to air force
Missiles: 120 SA-2s, 5 sites (3 operational, 1 assembly and
storage, 1 training); 150 SA-3s, (3 sites), unknown number of
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ALBANIA
(See reference map V)
ECONOMY
Major trade partners: $323.9 million; China, which re-
placed Soviet Union as Albania's major trade partner after
the 1961 Albanian-Soviet break, has withdrawn all of its aid
from Albania; 1978 est. trade-22% China, 36% East Eu-
ropean Communist countries, 42% non-Communist countries
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 10 cargo ships (1,000 GRT or over)
totaling 51,677 GRT, 73,791 DWT
Airfields: 12 total; 5 with permanent-surface runways; 6
with runways 2,500-3,499 m, 6 with runways 1,000-2,499 m,
1 heliport
Telecommunications: least developed of any European
Communist country; serves only basic needs of government
with very limited service to public; limited coverage by ra25x1
dio and wired broadcasts; 8 AM stations, 173,000 receivers; i
TV station, 4,000 receivers; 13,000 telephones
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DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 685,000; 568,000 fit for
military service; 31,000 reach military age (19) annually
Personnel: (estimated) ground forces 30,000; naval forces
3,200; air and air defense forces 7,460; paramilitary forces
12,500
Personnel in reserve (not on active duty): estimated
ground forces 180,000,- naval forces 6,000, air force unknown
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ALBANIA (Continued)
Major ground units: 5 brigades (4 infantry, 1 tank). 2
coastal defense bases (approx. brigade size), 4 artillery regi-
ments, 1 engineer regiment, 1 signal regiment, 1 reconnais-
sance, 1 chemical defense, 1 motor transport battalion
Ships: 4 submarines, 2 :mine warfare ships, 54 coastal pa-
trol-river/roadstead craft, 6 mine warfare craft, 2 underway
replenishment ships, 1 other auxiliary
Aircraft (in operational units): 149 including 113 fighters,
4 transports, 32 helicopters
Missiles: 4 SA-2 SAM sites (24 launchers)
Supply: some small arms and ammunition manufactured
domestically; China has supplied small torpedo boats, patrol
craft and submarine sections to navy; and tanks, AFC's,
trucks, SAM's, infantry weapons, defensive CBW equip-
ment, and ammunition to the army; and jet aircraft and
helicopters to the air force; Chinese aid has been cut off
2
ALGERIA
(See reference map VII)
ECONOMY
Aid: economic commitments?Western (non-U.S.) coun-
tries, ODA and OOF (1970-79),$4.0 billion; U.S., including
Ex-Im (FY70-79), $1.3 billion; Communist countries (1970-
79), $1.0 billion; military?Communist countries (1970-79),
$3,950 million
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 74 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
1,204,116 GRT, 1,801,512 DWT; includes 5 passenger, 22
cargo, 10 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 12 tanker, 6 liquefied gas, 8
bulk, 11 specialized carrier
Telecommunications: excellent domestic and interna-
tional service in the north, sparse in the south; Atlantic and
Indian Ocean INTELSAT and Soviet STATSIONAR service,
plus 15 domestic satellite stations: 300,000 telephones (1.7
per 100 popl.); 18 AM and 32 TV stations; 5 submarine co-
axial cables
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: army 90,000, navy 4,000, air force 10,000 (est.
275 pilots), Gendarmerie Nationale 10,000, Coast Guard 500
Major ground units: 8 motorized infantry brigades, 4
mechanized infantry brigades, 1 armored brigade, 1 possible
air mobile/special forces brigade, 25 additional infantry
battalions, and training and support installations
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ALGERIA (Continued)
Ships: 6 submarine chasers, 17 missile attack boats, 4 small
torpedo boats., 2 fleet minesweepers, 1 medium landing ship,
1 miscellaneous auxiliary, 1 diving tender, 1 torpedo re-
triever, 15 armored patrol craft, 1 guided missile patrol com-
batant
Aircraft: 449 (320 jet, 22 turboprop, 19 prop, 88 heli-
copters)
Missiles: 1 SA-2 and 2 SA-6 regiments
Supply: in the past depended on France and to a small
extent on a number of non-Communist countries and China;
since 1975 materiel (including surface-to-air, air-to-air, and
naval missiles, aircraft, and naval ships) supplied mostly by
U.S.S.R.
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ANGOLA
(See reference map VII)
ECONOMY
Aid: economic commitments?Western (non-U.S.) coun-
tries, ODA and OOF (1970-79), $246 million; Communist
countries (1970-79), $115 million; U.S., including Ex-Im
(FY70-79), $10 million; military?Communist countries
(1970-79), $543 million
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 11 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
56,786 GRT, 87,228 DWT; includes 10 cargo, 1 tanker
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: 30,000 army, 1,000 navy, 1,000-1,500
force, 8,000 police corps, 10,000-15,000 militia
Major ground units: brigade-size infantry and air defense
units; as many as 17 infantry brigades of up to 1,500 per-
sonnel each; about 55 combat battalions, mostly infantry
with about 500 men each
Foreign advisers: 200 Soviet, 20 Czechoslovakian, 10
Bulgarian, 200 East German
Foreign forces: 19,000 to 20,000 Cuban troops and advis-
ers and 7,000-8,000 civilians
Ships: 3 medium amphibious assault landing ships, 3 tor-
pedo boats, 14 patrol boats, 5 utility landing craft, 5 mecha-
nized landing craft, 4 personnel landing craft, and 5 cargo
ships
Aircraft: 186 (60 jet, 22 turboprop, 47 prop, 57 heli-
copters)
Supply: dependent on foreign sources, especially U.S.S.R.
and Cuba; some equipment left by the Portuguese
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/09/05: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100040001-8
SECRET
ANTIGUA
(See reference map HI)
DEFENSE FORCES
Local security forces: Antigua and Barbuda Defence
Force (a mixed regular and volunteer ,force of 80 regulars
and 60 volunteers; at present, it has only two officers as-
signed to it but plans call for six officers and 100 men); Royal
Antigua Police Force, 402 (authorized strength 417)
U.K. is responsible for external defense; contingencies will
be met by deploying ships from the Eastern Atlantic; in
addition, the British Armed Forces maintain a company of
Caribbean-trained Royal Marine Commandos in the U.K.
prepared for immediate airlift to the Caribbean
4
ARGENTINA
? (See reference map IV)
ECONOMY
? Aid: economic?authorized. by U.S., including Ex-Im
(FY70-79), $324 million; bommitted by other Western coun-
tries, ODA and OOF (1970-78), $870 million;? from Com-
munist countries (1970-79), $470 million; military?from
U.S. (FY70-79), $137 million
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant .marine: 189 (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
2,014,431 GRT, 3,100,580 DWT; includes 3 passenger, 91
cargo, 61 tanker, 3 liquefied gas, 27 bulk, 1 combination
ore/oil, 3 specialized carrier; additionally 1 naval tanker and
1 military transport are sometimes used commercially
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: 85,000 army; 35,900 navy (including 2,900 in
naval air, and 10,000 naval infantry); 17,000 air force (535
pilots); 12,000 National Gendarmerie; 9,000 Argentine Naval
Prefecture; 2,000 National Aeronautical Police Force
Major ground units: 1 army headquarters, 4 army corps
headquarters; 12 brigades (7 infantry, 1 air-transported in-
fantry, 2 mountain. infantry, 2 armored cavalry), .2 separate
regiments (1 infantry, 1 cavalry), '1 amphibious .engineer
group, 1 communications group, 2 mountain cavalry recon-
naissance detachment; additionally,. within each corps are
combat support and service support Units to include field
artillery, air'defense artillery, engineer, communication, and
military, police
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/09/05: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100040001-8
ARGENTINA (Continued)
Ships: 1 light aircraft carrier, 1 light cruiser, 1 guided
missile destroyer, 7 destroyers, 2 frigates, 4 submarines, 10
patrol ships and craft, 6 mine warfare ships, 5 'amphibious
warfare ships, 19 amphibious:warfare Craft, 33 auxiliaries/
service craft
Aircraft: 572 total; 366 air force (164 jet, 68 turboprop, 98
prop, 36 helicopters); 101 navy (22 jet, 56 prop, 14
turboprop, 9 helicopters); 105 army
Supply: produces some weapons, ammunition, APC and
light tanks, motor transports, the JARARA air-to-air missile,
and light aircraft; assembled 2 submarines in 1972-73; cur-
rently building a guided missile destroyer with materials and
technical aid provided by U.K.; to produce 4 West German-
designed submarines and 6 German-designed patrol escorts;
past dependence upon U.S., Canada, and Western Europe
being shifted almost exclusively to Europe
SECRET
SECRET
AUSTRALIA
N ONESIA..
le7Or;!Ir'
PAPUA
EW GUINEA
AUSTRALIA
Canberra
Tasman
(See reference map X)
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 79 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
1,467,538 GRT, 2,313,361 DWT; includes 1 passenger, 6
cargo, 6 container, 21 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 14 tanker, 28
bulk, 2 liquefied gas, 1 specialized carrier
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: army 32,249, navy 16,998 (including 1,600 na-
val air), air force 22,144 (800 pilots)
Major ground units: 1 infantry, division headquarters, 6
infantry battalions, 1 Special Air Service Regiment (bn.), 3
artillery regiments (bn.), 1 armored regiment (bn.), 1 light
AD regiment (bn.), 2 cavalry regiments (bn.), 1 aviation regi-
ment (bn.)
Ships: 1 carrier, 10 destroyer-type vessels, 6 submarines,
12 coastal patrol craft, 6 amphibious craft, 3 mine warfare,
and 9 auxiliary, and 50 service craft
Aircraft: approximately 560 (235 jet), including 73 (19 jet)
in naval air, 409 (226 jet) in air force, and 78 (non jet) in army
aviation
Missiles: Rapier SAM system was delivered in 1979
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SECRET
AUSTRALIA (Continued)
Supply: produces antisubmarine missiles, light aircraft,
some types of army equipment and ships including destroy-
ers; licensed production of jet fighters and trainers; subma-
rines and limited quantities of jet fighters and heavy equip-
ment purchased abroad (U.S., U.K., Canada, FRG, Belgium,
and France)
6
AUSTRIA
(See reference map V)
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 10 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
68,865 GRT, 105,200 DWT; includes 8 cargo, 1 container, 1
bulk
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: army 36,500,
darmerie 11,000
air force 2,425 (200 pilots), gen-
Major ground units: 1 mechanized division, 30 militia
regiments, 3 artillery battalions, 1 armored reconnaissance
battalion, 6 infantry battalions, 3 engineer battalions (1 di-
vision-controlled), 3 air defense battalions (1 division-con-
trolled), 1 antitank battalion
Aircraft: 163 (34 jet, 38 prop, 14 turboprop, 77 helicopters) (S)
Supply: produces some small arms and ammunition,
trucks, and tank destroyers; current sources of other items
are the U.S., Western Europe, Sweden, and some Com-
munist countries
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/09/05: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100040001-8
THE BAHAMAS
UNITED
STATES
Atlantic Ocean
Nassau THE
BAHAMAS
CUBA
Caribbean Sea
)
0...1URKS AND
CAICOS IS.
DOMINICAN
REPUBLIC
(See reference map III)
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 10 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
44,867 GRT, 59,219 DWT; includes 8 cargo and 2 roll-
on/roll-of f; a flag of convenience registry
DEFENSE FORCES
Local security forces: Royal Naval Bahamas Defence
Force, 150 (only a naval element), 1 fast patrol boat (PCF), 7
patrol boats (PB); Royal Bahamas Police Force, 1,400; re-
serve police force, 200; prison guards, 140
SECRET
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BAHRAIN
BAHRAIN
SAUDI
ARABIA
(See reference map VI)
ECONOMY
Aid: economic commitments?OPEC, ODA (1974-79),
$857 million; U.S. (FY70-77), $2
countries (1970-78), $8 million
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant
DWT
million; other Western
marine: 1 cargo ship of 1,600 GRT, 2,600
DEFENSE FORCES
The armed forces include a 1,250-man defense force and
a 2,700-man police force; equipment includes 93 Panhard
APCs and 46 armored cars, nine 81-mm mortars, 840-mm
and 435-mm antiaircraft guns, 6 MOBAT towed antitank
guns, thirty 106-mm recoilless rifles, eight 105-mm guns, 300
LAW antitank rockets; 3 patrol boats, 2 port security boats, 2
river/roadstead patrol boats, 10 armed motorized dhows, 10
helicopters
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/09/05: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100040001-8
SECRET
BANGLADESH
(See reference map VIII)
ECONOMY
Aid: economic?FY79 disbursements, $1,015 million, of
which food aid, $187 million; commitments: U.S.S.R. (1970-
79), $261 million; Eastern Europe (1970-79), $348 million;
OPEC (ODA; 1974-79) $867 million; U.S., including Ex-Im
(FY70-79), $1.6 billion; military commitments?Communist
countries (1970-79), $94 million
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 29 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
275,235 GRT, 389,449 DWT, includes 25 cargo, 2 tanker, 1
passenger and 1 ore/oil carrier
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: army 65,000, navy 3,500, air force 2,500 est.
Major ground units: 5 division headquarters, 13 brigades,
about 24 infantry battalions, 4 artillery regiments, 1 heavy
mortar regiment, and 2 armored regiments, supported by
engineer, signal, and other service elements
Ships: 2 frigates, 4 coastal patrol boats,
boats, 1 auxiliary
4 river patrol
Aircraft: 102 (48 jet, 7 turboprop, 16 prop, 31 helicopters)
operationally assigned
Supply: military supplies consist of those captured from
West Pakistani forces and materiel provided by Egypt, In-
dia, Yugoslavia, U.K., PRC, and U.S.S.R.
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 30 June 1979,
$145.0 million; about 8.8% of the central government budget
8
BARBADOS
::.001V1INKAN.\:
c.
PuEfE10Ico
7:i:
(See reference map III)
DEFENSE FORCES
Local security forces: Barbados Regiment, a mixed force
of 250 part-time and 60 regular soldiers (regiment slated to
increase in strength to 788); Coast Guard, 62; Royal Barbados
Police Force, 882
Ships: three 40-foot patrol boats (PB), one 65-foot (PB)
Supply: obtained primarily from the U.K.; some ammuni-
tion from Belgium
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/09/05: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100040001-8
BELGIUM
(See reference map V)
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 77 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
1,685,337 GRT, 2,681,697 DWT; includes 4 passenger, 27
cargo, 3 container, 12 tanker, 27 bulk, 1 liquefied gas carrier,
3 roll-on-roll-off
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: army 59,300, navy 4,450, air force 19,600 (512
pilots), gendarmerie 15,500
Major ground units: Intervention Force has 2 mecha-
nized division headquarters, 4 brigades, 3 reconnaissance
battalions, 1 Lance battalion, 1 eight-inch self-propelled
howitzer battalion, 4 air defense artillery battalions (includ-
ing 2 Hawk and two 35-mm Gepard), two 155-mm
self-propelled howitzer battalion, and 2 combat engineer
battalions; Combined Forces Interior have 1 paracommando
regiment, 2 light infantry battalions, 2 combat engineer
battalions, plus logistic elements; army aviation has 3 light
aviation squadrons
Ships: 4 frigates, 28 mine warfare, 6 patrol craft, 5 auxil-
iaries, 14 service craft
Aircraft: 405 (253 jet), including 315 (253 jet) in air force,
3 in naval aviation, and 87 in army aviation
Missiles: 8 SAM squadrons with Nike Hercules in air
force and 8 SAM battalions with Hawk in ground force (see
Major Ground Units)
SECRET
Supply: significant production of small arms and own am-
munition, and some production of aircraft, infantry and
antitank rocket launchers, mortars, artillery and mortar am-
munition, rockets, electronic fire control equipment and
BW/CW defensive materiel; some assembly of APC's; re-
cently completed four guided missile frigates and is
producing/assembling the U.S.-designed F-16 jet fighter; all
other materiel imported from NATO countries
SECRET 9
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/09/05: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100040001-8
SECRET
BELIZE
(formerly British Honduras)
(See reference map III)
DEFENSE FORCES
U.K. is responsible for defense; maintains an army ele-
ment in country; the Senior Naval Officer West Indies
(SNOWI), formerly headquartered at Hamilton, Bermuda,
departed on 31 March 1976; contingencies are now met by
deploying ships from the Eastern AtlantiE British Army and
Royal Air Force units still maintain their garrison on Belize.
British Army units currently include 1 infantry battalion, 1
armored reconnaissance troop, 1 field artillery battery, 1
guided weapons detachment, and engineer and helicopter
support.
Personnel: army 580, Belize Defense Force (230 regulars,
250 reservists); police 500
Major ground units: Belize Defense Force, 3 regular com-
panies, 3 reserve companies
10
BENIN
(formerly Dahomey)
ECONOMY
Aid: economic
(See reference map VII)
commitments?Communist
countries
(1970-79), $49.3 million; U.S., including Ex-Im (1970-79),
$10 million; OPEC (ODA; 1974-79), $18 million; military?
Communist countries (1970-79), $26 million
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 1 cargo ship (1,000 GRT or over) total-
ing 3,000 GRT, 4,400 DWT
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: army 3,000, air force 50, navy 70-80, militia
civique 1,500, gendarmerie 2,000, Presidential guard 100;
U.S.S.R. advisers 75-100, Cuban advisers 12-15
Major ground units: 3 interarms battalions, 1 paracom-
mando battalion, 1 antiaircraft artillery battalion, 1 service
battalion, 1 engineer battalion, and I armored squadron;
most battalions are company strength
Ships: 6 patrol boats (3 from U.S.S.R., 2 from North Ko-
rea, and 1 from France)
Aircraft: DC-3 transport, 3 AN-26, 3 AN-2, and 1 Ka-26
helicopter
Supply: depends mainly on France and the U.S.S.R.; some
aid from the Netherlands and other countries as well
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/09/05: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100040001-8
Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/09/05: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100040001-8
BERMUDA
(See reference map II)
DEFENSE FORCES
Local security focces: Bermuda Regiment, 463 (force is
basically a reserve unit?includes headquarters staff of 20
and Volunteer Reserve Force of 38); Bermuda, Police Force,
365; Bermuda Reserve Constabulary, 78
U.K. is responsible .for external defense. The Senior Naval
Officer, West Indies (SNOWI), departed Hamilton on 31
March 1976. Contingencies will now be met by deploying
ships from the Eastern 'Atlantic./
SECRET
SECRET
BHUTAN
(See reference map VIII)
DEFENSE FORCES
Defense is the de facto responsibility of India since 1949;
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Bhutan; frequently rotated to maximize Indian troop famil-
iarization
, Personnel: 6,000 (approx.) army and 550 palace guard
troops; poorly equipped and trained
Major ground units: possibly organized separate squads
and platoons
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/09/05: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100040001-8
Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/09/05: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100040001-8
SECRET
BOLIVIA
Pacific
Ocean
(See reference map IV)
ECONOMY
Aid: economic?extensions from U.S. (FY46-76), $335
million in loans, $342 million in grants; from international
organizations (FY46-75), $372 million; from other Western
countries (1960-75), $53.8 million; Communist countries
(1970-74), $59.7 million; military?assistance from U.S.
(FY52-76), $70 million
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 2 cargo ships (1,000 GRT or over) total-
ing 15,130 GRT, 18,934 DWT; owned by Bolivian Navy
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: army 20,200, navy 2,665, air force 4,000 (164
pilots)
Major ground units: 2 corps headquarters, 8 divisions (7
infantry, 1 school troop; strengths 270 to 2,000 men), 1 in-
fantry regiment, 1 cavalry group, 6 engineer regiments
Ships: 1 ocean-going cargo ship; 3 small patrol craft; 1
harbor patrol boat; 41 service craft, including 40 small river
transports and 1 hospital barge
Aircraft: 114 (19 jet, 26 turboprop, 64 prop, 5 helicopters)
in air force
Supply: totally dependent on foreign sources, primarily
U.S., also Argentina, Brazil, Israel, Netherlands, and Canada
BOTSWANA
(See reference map VII)
ECONOMY
Aid: economic commitments?Western (non-U.S.) coun-
tries, ODA and OOF (1970-78), $446.0 million; U.S. (FY70-
79), $68.0 million; Communist countries (1970-79), $16.6
million; military?Communist countries (1970-79), $1.0 mil-
lion
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: 3,000 army, 1,000 police, no paramilitary ca-
pability
Major ground units: 5 independent company groups
Aircraft: 20 utility
Supply: U.K., Belgium, and PRC
Military budget: proposed for fiscal year ending 31
December 1979,$118.5 million; 12.5% of total central gov-
ernment budget
12
SECRET
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/09/05: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100040001-8
BRAZIL
(See reference map IV)
ECONOMY
Aid: economic?bilateral commitments, including Ex-1m
(FY70-79), from U.S., $2.1 billion; from other Western coun-
tries, ODA and OOF (1970-78), $3,366.8 million; from Com-
munist countries (1970-79), $503.5 million; military?from
U.S. (FY70-79), $214.1 million
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 270 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
4,226,422 GRT, 7,110,413 DWT; includes 1 passenger, 156
cargo, 48 tanker, 5 liquefied gas, 37 bulk, 14 combination
ore/oil, 5 specialized carrier, 4 roll-on/roll-off cargo; addi-
tionally 1 naval tanker and 4 military transports are some-
times used commercially
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: army 182,780, navy 47,300 (including 84 in
naval air and 14,250 in marines), air force 42,800 (1,582 pi-
lots), militarized police constituting state guard 184,000
Major ground units: 4 army headquarters, 2 separate area
command headquarters, 8 divisions (7 army, 1 cavalry), 5
brigades, 2 engineering construction groups, 3 cavalry guards
regiments, and 33 separate battalions (11 infantry-type, 3
infantry guards, 2 frontier, 4 coast artillery, 1 field artillery,
1 air defense artillery, 5 military police, 2 railway engineer,
3 signal, 1 logistics)
Ships: 1 ASW-support aircraft carrier, 17 destroyers, 8
submarines, 14 patrol, 6 mine warfare ships, 2 amphibious
warfare ships, 18 amphibious warfare craft, 46 auxiliaries,
18 service craft (includes 3 auxiliary dry docks)
Aircraft: 733; air force 691 (235 jet, 135 turboprop, 255
prop, 66 helicopters); naval air arm, 42 helicopters
Supply: produces infantry weapons, light artillery, am-
munition, explosives, light aircraft, wheeled armored and
cargo vehicles, tanks, patrol boats, and auxiliary ships; also
built 2 destroyers with U.K. support; heavier equipment im-
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ported from U.S. and Western Europe; majority of naval
ships acquired from U.S. and U.K.; with technical assistance,
intends to produce domestically 12 patrol escorts and 3 sub-
marines
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/09/05: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100040001-8
Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/09/05: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100040001-8
SECRET
BRUNEI
(See reference map IX).
DEFENSEFORCES
'Defense is responsibility of U.K. Brunei. has an' indigenons
military force of about 2,800; about 1,700 police are main-
tained
Major units: 1 indigenous regiment consisting Of a
regimental headquarters, training depot, 2 infantry battal-
ions, 1 armored reconnaissance squadron, 1 engineer squad-
ron, 1 special boat squadron an air wing and river flotilla; 1
British 'Gurkha infantry hattaliOn
Ships: 4' missile attack boats, 6 coastal patrol boats, 3 river
patrol craft, 2 amphibious craft and about 25 small assault
craft
Aircraft: 16 (1 medium-range turboprop transport, 2 light-
wing aircraft, 13 helicopters)
Supply: dependent primarily on
trol boats from Singapore
U.K.; purchased fast pa-
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BULGARIA
(See reference map V)
1
ECONOMY
Aid: U.S.S.R.?abOtii $2.03 billion economic aid extended
(1954-76); Bulga'fia has extended foreign aid totaling More
than $64 million to Communist countries (1945-70), and
$565 million in 'bilateral economic aid to the non-Com-
munist less deN;e1Oped countries (1956-79)
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:Merchant marine: 105 ships (1,000 GRT .and over) total- 25X1
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41 cargo, 1 cargo, training, .17 tanker, 40 bulk, 1 combination
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Civil air: 45 major transport aircraft (1978)
Airfields: 382 total; 119 with permanent-surface runways;
12 with runways . 2,500-3,000 m, 33 with, runways
1,000-2,499 m, 337 with runways less than .1,000 m; 3 heli-
ports
Pipelines: crude oil, 193 km; natural-gas, 900 km;,refined,
418 km
Telecommunications: inferior to most other East Euro-
pean countries; meets only minimum requirements of gov-
ernment and public; wired 'broadcasts used extensively; 10
AM, 5 FM stations, 2,301,462 receivers; 1' major and 25 relay
TV stations, 1,441,122 receivers; 640,842 telephones, 90.7%
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Military manpower: males 15-49, 2,182,000; 1,825,000 fit
for military service; 'about 64,000 reach military age (19)
annually
Personnel: (est.) ground forces 105,000, naval forces 9,500,
air, and air defense forces 34,000; paramilitary 15,000
Personnel' in reserve (not on active duty): (est.) ground
hike? 700,000, naval forces 21,000, air force unknown
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/09/05: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100040001-8
Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/09/05: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100040001-8
BULGARIA (Continued)
Major ground units: 6 motorized rifle divisions, 10 bri-
gades (2 motorized rifle training, which will expand to di-
visions in wartime, 5, tank, 3 SCUD (A &B) tactical missile),
10 regiments (1 airborne, 3 artillery, 2 antitank, 1 SA-6, 3
antiaircraft)
Ships: 4 submarines, 2 principal surface combatants, 3 pa-
trol combatants, 2 mine warfare ships, 27 coastal patrol-
river/roadstead craft, 24 amphibious warfare craft, 28 mine
warfare craft, 1 fleet support ship, 2 other auxiliaries
Aircraft (in operational units): 320 total, including 116
fighters, 104 attack, 36 reconnaissance, 11 transports, 53
helicopters
Missiles: 16 operational SA-2 SAM sites (96 launchers), 6
operational SA-3 sites (twenty-four 4-rail launchers); 1 SA-6
regiment is deployed, and the SA-7 system is believed to be
deployed with the Bulgarian ground forces on a limited scale
Supply: dependent primarily on U.S.S.R.; domestic
production of infantry weapons, ammunition, trucks, and
small Quantities of defensive chemical warfare materiel; has
of SA-7 SAM's with Soviet-supplied
begun production
components
SECRET
SECRET
BURMA
(See reference maps VIII and IX)
ECONOMY
? Aid: economic commitments?Communist countries
(1970-79), $285 million; U.S., including Ex-Im (FY70-79)
$20 million; other Western (non-U.S.) countries, ODA and
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COMMUNICATIONS
Pipelines: 144 km crude oil
Merchant' marine: 15 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 25X1
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1 specialized carrier
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DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: army 159,000, navy 7,000, air force 8,000
Major ground units: 6 infantry division headquarters, 142
battalions (135 infantry, 3 artillery, 2 armored, 1 antitank/
mortar, 1 antiaircraft artillery battery)
Ships: no principal combatants, 15 coastal patrol, 44
river/roadstead patrol craft, 1 imine warfare, 2 amphibious
ships, 3 auxiliary, 4. service craft
Aircraft: approximately 122 (14 jets)
Supply: very limited local production; various countries
suppliers; naval vessels from Yugoslavia, and
Japan
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1-31JRUNDi
(See reference map VII)
ECONOMY
Aid: economic commitments?from Western (non-U.S.)
countries, ODA and OOF -(1970-78), $207.0 Million; Com-
munist countries (1970-79), $58.0 million; U.S. (FY70-79),
$11.5 million; OPEC (ODA; 1974-79), ,$42.5 million; mili-
tary?from Communist countries (1970-79), $9.0 million
DEFENSE FORCES . .
Personnel: army 6,000; rritliiiry; advisers?.14 .French, .5.
Soviet, 3 North Korean, and Some Chinese, probably civil-
ians
Major ground
units: 5 battalions- (3 infantry,' 2
paracommando), 1 support company, and 1 transport com-
pany (there are also 5 gendarmerie companies with territo-
rial-responsibilities)
Ships: 3 high speed boats
Aircraft: 10 to 11 prop (7-8 utility/transports, 3 heli-
copters)
Supply: formerly by Belgium, but in recent years has re-
ceived materiel from the U.S.S.R., China, France, the U.K.,
Greece, Bulgaria, and FRG
16
CAMEROON
(See reference map VII)
ECONOMY
Aid: economic commitments?from Western (non-U.S.)
countries, ODA and OOF (1970-78), $1 billion; from Com-
munist countries (1970-79), $104 million; from U.S., includ: 25X1
ing Ex-Im (FY70-79), $123 million; from OPEC (ODA;
1974-79), $71 million; military?from Communist countries
(1970-79), $7 million
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 6 cargo ships (1,000 GRT or over) total-
ing 52,170 GRT, 75,190 DWT
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: army 6,500, navy 350, air force 350, gendar-
merie 4,000, French advisers 82, PRC 45, French Army 52,
Navy 4, Air Force 14
Major ground units: 4 infantry battalions, 1 armored
squadron (company), 1 engineer battalion, 1 headquarters
and service battalion, 1 parachute infantry company, 1
transportation battalion, 1 artillery battalion, 1 antiaircraft
battery (an artillery battalion to be formed)
Ships: 11 small patrol craft, includes 2 PRC Shanghai us,
4 landing craft (LCPs), and 5 patrol boats (PCs)
Aircraft: 30 (10 transports, 5 fighter/trainer, 10 utility, 5
helicopters)
Supply: mostly from France; smaller amounts from other
West European countries, U.S., PRC, and Canada
SECRET
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;CANADA
(See reference map II)
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 103 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
693,398 GRT, 936,893 DWT; includes 8 passenger, '31 cargo,
5 container, 2 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 27 tanker, 19 bulk, 9
specialized carrier, and 2 combination ore-oil
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: Canadian Armed Forces 80,300
Major ground units: 1 mechanized brigade group, 2 gen-
eral purpose brigade groups, 1 airportable Special Service
Force
Ships: 4 destroyers, 19 frigates, 3 submarines, 6 patrol
craft, 10 auxiliaries, 135 service craft
Aircraft: 872 (526 jet)
Supply i provides some of its own materiel but relies heav-
ily on U.S. and to a lesser degree on U.K.; some antitank
missiles from France and medium tanks from FRG; most
naval ships (except submarines) and transport aircraft pro-
duced domestically; producing Swiss ApC's under. license
SECRET
SECRET
CAPE VERDE
(See reference map VII)
ECONOMY ?
Aid: economic commitments?Western (non-U.S.) coun-
tries, ODA and OOF (1970-78), $105.0 million; Communist
countries (1970-79), $20.0 million; U.S. (FY75-79), $31.5 mil-
lion; OPEC, ODA (1974-79), $11.6 million; military?Com-
munist countries (1970-79), $57.0 million
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 3 cargo ships (1,000 GRT or over) total-
ing 6,458 GRT, 11,312 DWT
DEFENSE FORCES
? Personnel: army 1,800, navy 200, and air force none; the
armed forces are divided into 3 brigades or battalions
consisting of approximately 600 men
Major equipment: 17 BRDM-2, 6 BTR-40, unknown
number of ZU-23 AAA
Ships: 3 craft (2 patrol torpedo boats and 1 transport, ves-
sel-class unknown)
Supply: ammunition; trucks, armored vehicles have been
received from the U.S.S.R.
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CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC
(See reference map VII)
ECONOMY
Aid: economic commitments?Western (non-U.S.) coun-
tries (ODA and 00F; 1970-78), $205 million; Communist
countries (1970-79), $13.5 million; OPEC (ODA; 1974-79),
$64 million; U.S. authorized, including Ex-Im (1970-79),
$13.1 million; military?Communist countries (1970-79),
$13.0 million
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: 330 army, 85 navy, 2,800 air force, 1,670 gen-
darmerie, 680 Central African Guard; 900 Imperial Guard
Major ground units: 1 intervention regiment, 1 territorial
defense regiment, 1 support regiment
Ships: 9 river patrol craft (all inoperable
Aircraft: 17 total; 5 transports (1 jet, 4 prop), 9 utility, 3
helicopters
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CHAD
(See reference map VII)
ECONOMY
Aid: economic commitments?Western (non-U.S.) coun-
tries, ODA and OOF (1970-78), $311 million; Communist
countries (1970-79), $70 million; OPEC (ODA; 1974-79), $20.
million; U.S. (FY70-79), $60 million; military?Communist
countries (1970-79), $7 million
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: strength and organization unknown; former
rebel forces in control
Aircraft: 31 total-10 transports, 8 utility/light observa-
tion; 5 fighters (AD-4 Skyraiders); 7 helicopters (5 SA-330
PUMA and 2 SA-342 Gazelle); and 1 Caravelle jet airliner
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competing for control of the government. The status of military
equipment is unknown.
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CHILE
ECONOMY (See reference map IV)
Aid: economic?commitments of bilateral ODA and
00F,. U.S. (FY70-79), $481 million; Western (non-U.S.)
countries (1970-78), $423.5 million; Communist countries
(1970-79), $386.2 million; military?U.S. (1970-79), $61 mil-
lion
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 49 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
580,731 GRT, 952,577 DWT; includes 1 passenger, 31 cargo,
2 tanker, 3 liquefied gas, 6 bulk, 3 combination ore/oil, 1
roll-on/roll-off, 1 specialized carrier; additionally 2 naval
tankers and 2 military transports are sometimes used
commercially
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: army 53,000, navy 20,800 (including 145 in
naval air and 5,000 in marines), air force 15,300 (400 pilots),
carabineros 27,000
Major ground units: 6 divisions (5 infantry, 1 cavalry) and
the Military Institute Command (non-combat, equivalent to
a division in strength)
Ships: 3 light cruisers (CL), 6 destroyers (DD), 2 guided
missile frigates (FF), 3 submarines (SS), 1 guided missile pa-
trol boat (PGG), 1 submarine chaser (PCS), 4 torpedo boats
(PT), 5 patrol craft (PC), 7 amphibious warfare ships, 2
amphibious warfare craft, 14 auxiliaries, and 17 service craft
Aircraft: 332 total; 253 (120 jet, 28 turboprop, 74 prop, 31
helicopters) in air force; 40 (19 turboprop, 9 prop, 12 heli-
copters) in navy; 39 (2 turboprop, 21 prop, 16 helicopters) in
army
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Supply: small amounts of small arms, rockets, ammuni-
tion, and military propellant and explosives are produced;
has depended mainly on U.K. for naval craft; aircraft from
Western Europe; and ground force
ern Europe and Brazil
Military budget: for
1980, $1,094 million
equipment from West-
fiscal year
ending 31 December
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CHINA
(See reference map VIII)
COMMUNICATIONS
Inland waterways: 168,981 km; 40,234 km navigable by
modern motorized craft
Pipelines: crude oil, 6,000 km; refined products, 1,200
km; natural gas, 1,500 km est.
Merchant marine: 852 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
7,724,256 GRT, 11,486,103 DWT; includes 41 passenger,
538 cargo, 5 cargo training, 14 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 3 con-
tainer, 3 specialized carrier, 131 tanker, 117 bulk; in terms of
DWT, about 31% of the fleet is employed in domestic oper-
ations and the rest in international operations to all conti-
nents; China beneficially owns an additional 113 ships (1,000
GRT or over) totaling 1,387,000 GRT, 2,245,700 DWT
which operate under the Panamanian and British (Hong
Kong) flags
Civil air: 152 major transport aircraft
Telecommunications: fair domestic and reasonably ade-
quate international systems maintained primarily for official
use; estimated 4 million telephones; 2,100 telegraph offices;
99 main radio broadcast stations, about 300 AM and 10 FM
transmitters; 2,300 wired-broadcast distribution stations; 50
million radio and 140 million wired-broadcast receivers; 276
TV broadcast and rebroadcast stations; 5 million TV receiv-
ers; international facilities include 1 coaxial submarine tele-
phone cable to Japan, coaxial underground cable to Hong
Kong, 3 standard INTELSAT ground stations, high-fre-
quency radio and open-wire line circuits
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: 3,934,400 army, 367,800 navy (including
325,000 general service, 39,500 naval air), 491,500 air force
(including 221,000 assigned to ACW, SAM, and AAA units),
and 100,000-150,000 strategic rocket force
Personnel in reserve (not on active duty): army about 6
million (armed militia); navy and air force have no known
organized reserve
20
Major ground units: army has 11 territorial commands
and 36 army headquarters, with total of 271 divisions-219
combat divisions (121 infantry, 12 armored, 3 airborne, 35
border defense/internal defense, 48 garrison), 38 combat
support (17 field artillery, 4 antitank, 17 antiaircraft), 14
service support (railway engineer); in addition, army has 311
independent regiments-147 combat (9 armored, 30 gar-
rison, 105 border defense/internal defense, 3 cavalry), 91
combat support (10 field artillery, 15 antiaircraft, 5
antichemical warfare, 48 engineer, 13 signal), 73 service sup-
port (72 motor transport, 1 railway engineer
Ships: 1,264 combatant units (not including 800
yard/service craft and about 500 mechanized landing craft),
supported by 2 underway replenishment ships (1 more
nearing completion), 5 material support ships, 87 fleet sup-
port ships, and 170 other auxiliaries, organized in 3 fleets?
North, East, and South Seas; combatant units include 1
ballistic missile submarine (not missile-equipped), 1 nuclear-
power attack submarine (2nd unit fitting out), 100 attack
submarines, 9 destroyers, 28 frigates, 9 patrol combatants, 49
amphibious warfare ships, 24 mine warfare ships, 1,022
coastal patrol-river/roadstead craft (included in this total are
233 missile attack boats and 255 small torpedo boats), and 20
mine warfare craft
Aircraft: 6,762 in operational units as follows?Air Force
(PRCAF) total 5,799 including 3,560 jet air defense fighters,
93 jet and 12 prop intermediate range bombers, 336 jet and
96 prop medium-range bombers, 506 jet attack aircraft, 159
jet and 10 turboprop reconnaissance aircraft, 170 medium-
range and 93 short-range transports, 250 prop and 167 heli-
copter liaison aircraft, 208 support helicopters, and 139 com-
bat trainers; Naval Air Force (PRCNAF) total 936 including
608 jet fighters, 9 jet intermediate-range bombers, 133 jet
and 18 prop medium-range bombers, 32 jet and 6 prop
reconnaissance aircraft, 29 jet attack aircraft, and 20 me-
dium-range and 32 short-range transports, 52 helicopters,
and 17 combat trainers
AAA: some 30 divisions of PRCAF antiaircraft artillery; in
addition, there are 17 PRCA AAA divisions (listed above)
Missiles: 105 CSA-1 sites for air defense (including 21
unoccupied sites, and 3 training areas) plus 3 R &D sites; 20
land-based antiship cruise missile sites
Strategic weapons: China has deployed a small number
of ICBMs capable of striking targets throughout the U.S.S.R.
and is deploying a few long-range ICBMs capable of reach-
ing continental U.S. targets; China also has a regional strike
capability with approximately 100-150 medium- and inter-
mediate-range missile launchers as well as medium- and
intermediate-range bomber aircraft
SECRET
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CHINA (Continued)
Supply: military industrial base supports a comprehensive
and integrated modern weapons program; production in-
cludes substantial quantities of infantry weapons, tanks, ar-
mored personnel carriers, artillery pieces, ammunition, ra-
dar and signal equipment, trucks and jeeps, jet aircraft,
lesser quantities of surface-to-surface missiles, surface-to-air
and naval cruise missiles, as well as some air-to-air missiles;
naval ships including submarines and guided missile destroy-
ers, and unknown quantities of chemical and biological war-
fare defensive materiel; transport aircraft obtained from
U.S.S.R., U.K., and. U.S.; helicopters from France and West
Germany
Military budget: the PRC does not publish a defense bud-
get; a meaningful dollar value for total military expenditures
has not been estimated; however, dollar costs of Chinese
military equipment procured in 1979 estimated to be about
$6.6 billion
SECRET
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COLOMBIA
(See reference map IV)
ECONOMY
Aid: economic?authorizations from U.S. (FY70-79),
including Ex-Im, $729.7 million; ODA and OOF commit-
ments from other Western countries (1970-78), $445 million;
from Communist countries (1970-79), $284 million; mili-
tary?assistance from U.S. (FY70-79), $121 million
COMMUNICATIONS 25X1
Merchant marine: 37 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
265,513 GRT, 348,062 DWT; includes 30 cargo, 5 bulk, 2
tankers
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DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: 53,000 army, 6,135 navy, 3,848 air force (285
pilots)
Major ground units: 10 brigades, including 56 battalions
(25 infantry, 6 artillery, 4 mechanized cavalry, 4 construc-
tion engineer, 10 service, 2 military police, 1 air defense
artillery; 3 airbOrne infantry, 1 horse cavalry); Military In-
stitutes Brigade including 6 battalions (1 infantry, 1 mecha-
nized cavalry, 2 military police, 1 construction engineer, 1
service), and 2 separate battalions (1 intelligence and
counterintelligence, 1 maintenance)
Ships: 3 destroyers, 2 coastal patrol craft; 15 river/
roadstead patrol craft; 4 submarines, 10 auxiliaries, 19 ser-
vice craft
Aircraft: 198 (57 jets, 5 turboprop, 85 prop, 51 helicopters)
21
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SECRET
COLOMBIA (Continued)
Supply: small arms, small arms ammunition, mortar and
artillery rounds and antitank mines produced; .U.S. and
Western Europe are principal supplier of ground force
equipment; France is now important supplier of aircraft;
Italy delivered 2 unassembled midget submarines (assembly
completed during 1973), and West Germany delivered two
1,000-ton submarines in 1975
22
COMOROS
(See reference map VII)
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: 620 army; nominal air force created in 1978;
paramilitary-80 gendarmes, 250-300 Presidential Guard
Aircraft: 3 prop (5 on order), 1 utility, 1 transport
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CONGO
ECONOMY
(Sea reference map VII)
Aid: economic commitments?Western (non-U.S) coun-
tries, ODA and OOF (1970-78), $515 .million; Communist
countries (1970-79), $124 million; OPEC, ODA (1974-79),
$83 million; U.S., including Ex-Im (FY70-79), $9. million;
military?Communist countries (1970-79), $74 million
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: 9,000 army (including 1,000 police), 440 navy,
325 air force; military advisers-100 Soviet, 10 French, and
6 East Germans; 150 Cuban and 70-100 .Romanian advisers
SECRET
COOK ISLANDS
(See reference map X)
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: no military forces maintained, but there Is a
Police Force of about 54 men; the Rarotonga police station is
in Avarua next to the post office
reported to be present
Major ground units: 1 paracommando battalion, 1 in-
fantry battalion, 1 artillery group (battalion), 1 signal group
(company), 1 engineer battalion, and 1 armored regiment
(battalion)
Aircraft: 33 (13 transports, 1 MiG-17, 9 MiG-15, 4 utility,
and 6 helicopters)
Ships: 5 patrol boats operational; 9 river assault craft
Supply: former .dependence on France
U.S.S.R. and China
ieplaced by
SECRET
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COSTA RICA
(See reference map III)
COMMUNICATIONS
. Merchant marine: 2 roll-on/roll-off cargo ships (1,000
GRT or over) totaling 3,198 GRT,' 5,600 DWT
DEFENSE FORCES
?
Personnel: Civil Guard 3,000, basically a police force
(constitution prohibits armed forces); Rural Assistance Guard
3,000 (under operational control of Civil Guard)
Major ground units: over half of the Civil Guard is sta-
tioned in San Jose; remainder organized into 6 provincial
capital commands; forces in San Jose consist of radio patrol
unit, military police company, Presidential Guard unit, and .
3 civil guard companies
Ships: 5 patrol craft
Aircraft: 6 prop (light), 3 helicopters
24
CUBA
(See reference map III)
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 77 ships (1,000 GRT and over) totaling
616,182 GRT, 878,410 DWT; includes 56.cargo, 10 tanker, 6
-bulk, 3 cargo training, 1 specialized caftier, .1 passenger;
Cuba beneficially owns 6 additional ships. (1,000 GRT or
over) totaling 54,600 GRT, 81,500 DWT, under Panarnanian
flag
Telecommunications: modern facilities adequately serve
military, governmental, and some civilian needs; excellent
international facilities via HF and satellite; 321,000 tele-
phones (3.3 per 100 popl.); 100 AM, 25 FM, and 28 TV
stations; 1 submarine cable, 1 Molniya and 1 Atlantic Ocean
INTELSAT station
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: eligible 15-49, 2,470,000; 1,553,000
fit. for military service; about 120,000 males and 116,000
females reach military age (17) annually
Personnel: ground - forces 200,000-230,000 (includes
100,000 full-time active duty troops-65,000 in Cuba,
35,000 overseas?and reservists capable of mobilization on
short notice); navy (MGR) 11,500; Air and Air Defense Force
(DAAFAR) 16,000 (includes air force, surface-to-air missile,
air control and warning forces, and air defense artillery);
Special Troops 1,000; Youth Labor Army (paramilitary)
100,000; Civil Defense 100,000; Department of State Secu-
rity 15,000; National Revolutionary Police 10,000; Border
Guard Troops 3,000
Major ground units: ground forces in Cuba organized
into Western Army, High Command Reserve, Central
Army, Eastern Army, and the Isle of Youth Military Region;
total 4 corps headquarters, 9 active divisions, 18 reserve di-
visions, 5 separate active brigades (4 artillery); basic combat
unit is the infantry battalion; overseas-2 Combat Com-
mands (Angola and Ethiopia) each with 4 brigades
Ships: 2 attack submarines, 26 missile attack boats, 4 hy-
drofoil torpedo boats, 18 small torpedo boats, 11 patrol boats,
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CUBA (Continued)
1 harbor patrol boat, 6 medium landing craft, 1 coastal
minesweeper, 5 inshore minesweepers, and 32 auxiliary ser-
vice craft
Aircraft: 452 (217 jet, including 12 MiG-23/FLOGGER),
25 turboprop, 118 prop, and 92 helicopters
Missiles: 20 operational SA-2 SAM sites and 8 operational
SA-3 SAM sites; MiG-21 and MiG-23 aircraft armed with
Atoll or Alkali air-to-air missiles; Navy has Samlet (in re-
serve) for coastal defense and STYX cruise missiles (aboard
OSA- and KOMAR-class PTGs); Army has FROG and
SALISH tactical missiles (both in reserve)
Supply: almost wholly dependent upon U.S.S.R.; produces
some ammunition and possibly small arms; assembles some
transport vehicles
SECRET
CYPRUS
Ficma
CYPRUBAN
Mid itottil.tvggf,
(See reference map VI)
ECONOMY
Aid: economic?U.S., $141 million authorized (FY70-78);
other Western bilateral ODA and OOF commitments, $45
million (1970-78); Greece, $79 million (1976); OPEC ODA
commitments $19 million (1977-79)
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 376 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
1,613,521 GRT, 2,282,046 DWT; includes 11 passenger, 291
cargo, 3 container, 16 tanker, 4 liquefied gas, 1 combination
ore/oil, 29 bulk, 8 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 13 specialized car-
rier; all but a few are owned and operated by Greek
nationals
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: 9,500 Greek Cypriot National Guard (CNG),
including 1,000 Hellenic Army mainland regulars and 300
naval personnel, 3,300 Greek Cypriot Police; foreign forces
include 2,400 U.N. Forces in Cyprus (UNFICYP), 2,640 U.K.
Army (not in UNFICYP), 700 British Royal Air Force (not in
UNFICYP), 1,300 Hellenic Army Contingent and Raiding
Force battalion; other forces include 46,000 Greek Cypriot
Reserve, 4,500 Turkish Cypriot (Security Zone), including
650 Turkish Army mainland regulars; 7,500 Turkish Cypriot
reserves; 27,000 Turkish invasion force
Major ground units: Greek Cypriot National Guard has
33 battalions (20 infantry, 3 raiding forces, 1 reconnaissance,
1 armored, 6 field artillery, 1 antitank artillery, 1 antiair-
craft artillery); UNFICYP has military contingents from
Austria, Canada, Denmark, Finland, Ireland, Sweden, U.K.,
a medical detachment from Austria, and 175-man civilian
police detachment comprised of personnel from Australia,
Austria, Denmark, and Sweden; Hellenic Army contingent
has 1 infantry regiment; Turkish forces include 1 corps
headquarters, 2 infantry divisions, and supporting forces
SECRET 25
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SECRET
CYPRUS (Continued)
Ships: Greek Cypriot National Guard formerly had 6 P-4
PT (Soviet), 1 gunboat (ex-West German fast minesweeper)
and 1 ex-Yugoslav PT
Aircraft: Greek Cypriot Police has 1 helicopter; British
Royal Air Force has 1 SAR helicopter squadron (8 heli-
copters), and there is one U.K. Army Air Corps flight with 8
helicopters
Supply: Greek-Cypriots (government forces) entirely
dependent on foreign supplies for their material; since 1964
have received infantry weapons, machineguns, mortars,
artillery, ammunition, trucks, armored personnel carriers,
tanks, antitank missiles and launchers from Czechoslovakia
and the U.S.S.R.; torpedo boats from Yugoslavia, Malta, and
the U.S.S.R; also, U.K. and U.S.-manufactured infantry
weapons, artillery, patrol boats, armored cars, and radar
equipment were received from Greece
z Cypriot naval forces are no longer active organized units; it is
believed that 2 P-4 PT's were sunk by air action during the Turkish
invasion; the remaining 6 boats have disappeared and are believed
to be in Rhodes or Crete.
26
CZECHOSLOVAKIA
(See reference map V)
ECONOMY
Aid: Czechoslovakia has extended bilateral economic aid
totaling $2.3 billion to non-Communist less developed coun-
tries (1954-79) and has received some medium- and
long-term credits from Western countries and the U.S.S.R.;
Czechoslovakia has used 1% of its national income to extend
long-term credits to socialist and developing countries
(1961-70)
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 17 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
155,172 GRT, 230,288 DWT; includes 11 cargo, 6 bulk
Civil air: 28 major transport aircraft (1979)
Airfields: 135 total; 38 with permanent-surface runways;
1 with runway 3,500 m or over; 15 with runways 2,500-3,499
m; 75 with runways 1,000-2,499 m; 44 with runways less
than 1,000 m; 5 heliports
Telecommunications: systems are used primarily to sup-
port operations of government and industry; requirements of
public receive secondary consideration; good coverage is
provided by 23 AM and 16 FM broadcast stations; 3,883,882
receivers; 10 major TV stations, supplemented by 300 relay
stations; 3,370,000 TV receivers; 2,246,208 est. telephones
(96% automatic)
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 3,727,000; 2,881,000 fit
for military service; about 113,000 reach military age (18)
annually I
Personnel: (estimated) ground forces 3 145,350, air and air
defense forces 57,970, paramilitary forces 11,200
Personnel in reserve (not on active duty): (estimated)
ground forces 1.5 million; air force unknown
Soviet forces (CCP) in Czechoslovakia as of 1 January 1978,
78,000 (72,000 ground; 6,000 air).
SECRET
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CZECHOSLOVAKIA (Continued)
Major ground units: 11 divisions (5 motorized rifle, 5
tank, 1 artillery), 6 brigades (3 SCUD SS-1 tactical missile, 1
SA-4, 2 artillery), 2 antitank regiments, 4 SA-6 regiments, 1
antiaircraft artillery regiment, 1 airborne regiment 4
Ships: est. 50 river patrol types, all frontier guard (S)
Aircraft (operational units): 1,044, including 720 fight-
ers/trainers, 67 transports, and 257 helicopters
Missiles: 24 operational SA-2 SAM sites (144 launchers); 8
operational SA-3 SAM sites (32 4-rail launchers); SA-4, SA-6,
and SA-7 SAM systeins are deployed with the Czechoslova-
kian ground forces (SA-9 sighted at one Czech installation)
Supply: produces substantial quantities of infantry weap-
ons, rocket launchers, ammunition, trucks, tactical signal
equipment, APC's, self-propelled AA guns, and tanks; pro-
duces copies of Soviet antitank missiles, and jet trainer and
small transport aircraft as well as small amounts of chemical
warfare agents; chemical and biological warfare defensive
materiel; dependent on the U.S.S.R. for more complex
equipment and combat aircraft; amphibious armored recon-
naissance cars obtained from Hungary
2 SA-6 regiments are division subordinate.
SECRET
SECRET
DENMARK
(See reference map V)
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 284 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
5,107,921 GRT, 8,025,107 DWT; includes 19 passenger, 123
cargo, 17 container, 18 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 45 tanker, 13
liquefied gas, 26 bulk, 3 combination ore/oil, 20 specialized
carrier
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: army 19,500, navy 5,800, air force 6,750 (210
pilots)
Major ground units: army is organized into a field army
of 5 mechanized brigades, a light infantry brigade equiv-
alent, and a regional defense force of 21 infantry battalions
and 7 artillery battalions plus support units
Ships: 2 frigates, 1 light frigate, 6 submarines, 2 patrol
escorts, 5 patrol ships, 10 missile attack boats, 6 torpedo
boats, 8 patrol craft, 7 minelayers, 8 minesweepers, 18 ser-
vice craft 25X1
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25X1
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Aircraft: 199 (127 jet), including 24 army and 9 navy
Missiles: 4 Nike, 4 I-Hawk squadrons
Supply: dependent on U.S., Canada, U.K., and Western
Europe; most naval ships produced domestically; produces
small quantities of CW/BW defensive equipment; som2 5X 1
small arms mortar and artillery ammunition, some airframe,
avionics and engine parts, and electronic equipment
Military budget: proposed for fiscal year ending 31
December 1980, $1.4 billion; about 7.5% of proposed centr25x
government budget
25X1
25X1
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SECRET
DJIBOUTI
(formerly French Territory of the Afars
and Issas)
(See reference map vio
ECONOMY
Aid: economic commitments?Western (non-U.S.) coun-
tries (ODA and 00F; 1970-78), $49 million; OPEC.(0DA;
1970-79), $89 million
DEFENSE FORCES?
Personnel: French?army 3,500, navy 200, air force 800,
gendarmes 200; Djibouti?army 2,400
Major ground units: French-1 foreign legion brigade
(regiment), 1 combined arms regiment (battalion), 1 service
battalion, 1 artillery regiment; Djibouti-1 infantry regi-
ment, 1 Gendarmerie battalion, 1 Frontier Commando
battalion
Ships: 7 landing craft
Aircraft: 29; includes squadron of Mirage III jet fighters
28
DOMINICA
(See reference map III)
DEFENSE FORCES
Local security force: Royal Dominica Defence Force, 79
(force is a regular unit); Royal Dominica Police Force, 260;
Rural Constabulary, 10
SECRET
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gy
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DOMINICAN REPUBti
(See reference map III)
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 8 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
19,773 GRT, 33,873 DWT; includes 1 cargo, 1 bulk, 6 roll-
on/roll-off cargo
DEFENSE FORCES ?
Personnel: army 13,695, navy 4,704, air force 5,749 (85
pilots)
Major ground units: 3 infantry brigades (6 tactically or-
ganized and 5 constabulary battalions); a combat support
command (1 armored battalion, 1 artillery battalion, and 1
constabulary battalion); a service support command (1 en-
gineer, 1 communications, 1 transportation, and 1 military
police battalion); Directorate General of Military Training (1
recruit training battalion), a presidential guard battalion and
a medical battalion
Ships: 5 patrol ships, 5 patrol boats (PB), 4 patrol craft, 1
medium landing ship, 1 utility landing craft, 1 medium
landing craft, 11 auxiliaries, 15 service craft
Aircraft: 43 (33 prop, 10 helicopters)
Supply: dependent upon U.S. and Western Europe; has
assembled some armored cars
Military budget: for fiscal
year ending 31 December
1980, $93.8 million; about 10.8% of central government bud-
get
SECRET
SECRET
ECUADOR
(See reference map IV)
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 32 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
222,661 GRT, 298,465 DWT; includes 20 cargo, 10 tanker, 1
container, and 1 specialized carrier
25X1
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: army 30,000, navy 4,100 (including 1,200 ma- 25X1
25X1
fines), air force 4,800 (175 pilots)
Major ground units: 9 brigades (7 infantry, 1 armored, 1 25X1
special forces (parachute)), 4 separate battalions (2 engineer,
1 signal, 1 civic action)
Ships: 1 destroyer, 2 submarines, 2 patrol craft (PC), 3
missile attack boats (PTG), 3 torpedo boats (PT), 11 patrol
boats (PB), 4 amphibious warfare ships, 6 medium landing
craft (LCM), 4 personnel landing craft (LCP), 5 port security
boats (PSB), 7 auxiliaries, 11 service craft
Aircraft: 184 total; 142 (52 jet, 36 turboprop, 43 prop,.11
helicopters) in air force; 10 (1 jet, 4 turboprop, 2 prop, 3
helicopters) in navy; 32 (1 jet, 10 turboprop, 7 prop, 14 heli-
copters) in army
Supply:. dependent primarily on U.S.; some major ,pur-
chases from Western Europe (West Germany has supplied 25x1
patrol boats, 3 missile attack boats, and 2 submarines, and
France has supplied over 100 armored vehicles in addition to25Xi
fighter aircraft) 25X1
25X1
25X1
25X1
25X1
25X1
25X1
25X1
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SECRET
EGYPT
(See reference maps VI and VII)
ECONOMY
Aid: OPEC (ODA; 1974-79), $8,058 million; U.S., includ-
ing Ex-Im (FY10779), $4.3 billion; Western (non-U.S.).coun-
tries, ODA and.00F (1970-78), $2,486 million; Communist
countries (1970-79), $823 million; military?Communist
countries (1970-79), $3.3 billion
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 90 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
421,393 GRT, 568,040 DWT; includes 8 passenger, 68 cargo,
13 tanker, 1 container
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: army 320,000, navy 20,000, air force 27,000
(1,085 pilots), air defense 80,000, frontier corps 10,000, secu-
rity and guard forces 44,500, national guard 3,000, coast
guard, 7,300
Major ground units: 2 separate armies and a total force *of
10 divisions (5 infantry, 2 mechanized infantry, 3 armored);
30 separate brigades (10 infantry, 2 presidential guard, 1
reconnaissance, 2 armored, 11 field artillery, 2 mortar, 2
surface-to-surface missile); a special forces headquarters with
1 parachute brigade, 2 air assault brigades, and 5 commando
groups (brigade); 26 air defense SAM brigades
Ships: 5 destroyers, 12 submarines, 2 frigates, 12 missile
attack boats (at least 3 units?the first of 6 RAMADAM-class
missile combatants and 2 of 6 SIXTH OF OCTOBER-class
missile attack boats fitted with OTOMAT missiles?have
been turned over to the Egyptian Navy by the U.K. but are
not yet operational), 12 small submarine chasers, 2 fast patrol
boats, 12 motor torpedo boats; 17 fast-fire support boats, 8
patrol boats, 3 air cushion vehicles, 14 mine warfare craft, 16
amphibious, 17 auxiliary and service, and numerous small
craft
30
Aircraft: 1,075 (742 jet, 39 turboprop, 130 prop, 164 heli-
copters)
Missiles: 60 SA-2 battalions, 55 SA-3 battalions, 15 SA-6
?battalions, 200 SA-7 platoons
Supply: assembles light armored vehicles; produces in-
fantry weapons, ammunition, small naval oilers, patrol boats;
is dependent on foreign sources for other equipment; re-
ceived from the Warsaw Pact before 1974 and from West-
ern Europe, the U.S., PRC, and North Korea since then
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December
1979, $1.5 billion; 19% of central government budget
25X1
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SECRET
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EL SALVADOR
Caribbean
Sea
San Si Au*,
EL SALVAD
Pacific Ocean
(See reference map III)
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 1 cargo ship (1,000 GRT or over) total-
ing 1,800 GRT, 3,200 DWT
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: army 8,300, navy 140 (plus 150 civilian techni-
cians), air force 150 (plus 50 civilian technicians), national
guard 3,200, national police 2,850, treasury police 1,550
Major ground units: 4 brigades (3 infantry, 1 artillery)
comprising a total of 7 battalions (4 infantry, 2 field artillery,
1 ADA); 1 mixed cavalry regiment (4 troops), 1 replacement
training center (4 companies), 1 commando instruction cen-
ter (1 company), 1 engineer instruction center (1 company), 1
signal instruction center (3 companies), 1 military police
company, 1 airborne infantry company (under operational
command of air force), 1 medical company, and 9 separate
military/border detachments (2 under construction0
Ships: 12 armed, small patrol craft (3 PC, 6 PBR, 3 PBS)
Aircraft: 62 (18 jet, 4 turboprop, 29 prop, 11 helicopters)
Supply: army and air force equipment procured from
Western Europe, Israel, and Yugoslavia; navy depends on
U.S.
SECRET
EQUATORIAL GUINEA
Malalub
EllaTORIAL
GU.INEA
SAO TOME
AND PRINCIPE?
Atlantic
Ocean
SECRET
(See reference map VII)
ECONOMY
Aid: economic commitments?Communist countries
(1970-79), $25 million; Western (non-U.S.) countries, includ-
ing ODA and OOF (1970-78), $9.0 million; military?Com-
munist countries (1970-79), $19 million
25X1
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 2 cargo ships (1,000 GRT or over) total-
ing 6,400 GRT, 6,600 DWT
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: army 1,500; navy 125-150; militia
(paramilitary) 600; military advisers: 'U.S.S.R. 5-10, Cuba un-
known, PRC 100
Major equipment: 10 Soviet amphibious personnel car-
riers (3 small and 7 large); 5 P-6 motor gunboats, 1 unidenti-
fied patrol craft; 3 ZHUK patrol craft and 2 aircraft (trans-
port)
Supply: since 1970 has received mortars, small arms, a few
armored vehicles, 4 patrol boats, and a harbor launch from
the U.S.S.R. and some materiel from the PRC and Libya
25X1
25X1
25X1
25X1
25X1
9)(1
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25X1
25X1
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SECRET
ETHIOPIA
(See reference map VII)
ECONOMY
Aid: economic commitments?Western (non-U.S.) coun-
tries, ODA and OOF (1970-78), $437.0 million; U.S., includ-
ing Ex-Im (FY70-79), $209.2 million; -Communist COtintrieS
(1970-79), $560.0 million; OPEC (ODA; 1974-79); $20.2 mil-
lion; military?U.S. (FY70-79), $122.5 million; Communist
countries (1970-79), $2,211 million
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 5 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
20,340 GRT, 27,595 DWT; includes 3 cargo, 2 tanker
Telecommunications: fair system of radio relay and wire;
Addis Ababa principal center, Asmara secondary center;
85,000 telephones (0.4 per 100 popl.); radio relay extension
in progress; Soviet facilities located in Addis Ababa; 8 AM,
no FM, and 1 TV station; 1 Atlantic Ocean INTELSAT sta-
tion at Svlulta
Ships: 8 patrol craft, 10 amphibious warfare craft, 4 ser-
vice craft, 2 auxiliary ships, 2 torpedo boats, 2 missile attack
boats 25X1
Aircraft: 144 in operational units (120 jet, 20 prop, 4 heli-
copters); army aviation 18 prop, 47 helicopters 25X1
Supply: produces some small-arms ammunition; formerly
most equipment from U.S., but now mostly from the
U.S.S.R.; ground force materiel has been purchased from a
number of non-Communist countries; aircraft from Sweden,
U.K., U.S., Canada, France, and also more recently from the
U.S.S.R.; naval material from the U.S., Yugoslavia, France
the Netherlands, and the U.S.S.R. 25X1
25X1
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: army 225,000, navy 1,500, air force 3,500,
emergency police 9,000
Major ground units: 18 motorized infantry divisions with
organic armor and artillery support
32 SECRET
25X1
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/09/05: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100040001-8
FALKLAND ISLANDS
(Islas Malvinas)5
(See reference map IV)
DEFENSE FORCES
Defense force is a British Royal Marine detachment of
approximately 40 men with headquarters at Port Stanley;
the police force comprises a sergeant, a corporal, and 3 con-
stables; a part-time Falkland Islands Defense Force of
approximately 100 men could support the Royal Marines in
an emergency
The possession of the Falkland Islands has been disputed by the
U.K. and Argentina (which refers to them as the Islas Malvinas) since
1833.
SECRET
SECRET
FAROE ISLANDS
(See reference map V)
DEFENSE FORCES
Denmark retains responsibility for defense of islands;
Royal Danish Navy operates 1 or 2 patrol escort ships in
islands' waters for fishery inspection; the ships can accom-
modate helicopters; Royal Danish Air Force has a control
and reporting post at Torshavn, manned by 108 personnel;
the islands have no organized native military forces; only a
small police force is maintained
33
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25X1
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SECRET
FIJI
(See reference map X)
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant Marine: 3 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
4,879 GRT, 5,935 DWT; includes 2 liquefied gas, 1 roll-
,. ? ? ?
on/roll-off cargo
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: Royal Fiji Military Force (RFMF), 1,400; Ter-
ritorial Force (Reserves), 600; Royal Fiji Police, 950; Royal
Fiji Maritime Squadron, 114
Major ground units: 3 regular infantry companies, 1 re-
serve infantry battalion; a 650-man infantry battalion is on
duty with the U.N. peacekeeping force in Lebanon
Major naval units: 1 naval squadron comprised of 3
ex-minesweeper craft and 1 hydrographic survey vessel; per-
sonnel trained by U.S. and New Zealand
No formal defense agreements have been reached since
gaining independence; however, the U.K. has agreed to pro-
vide training and equipment to modernize the RFMF; New
Zealand and India provide defense advice, training, and
financial assistance
34
FINLAND
(See reference map V)
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 199 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
'2,389,148 GRT, 3,771,487 DWT; includes 22 passenger, 76
cargo, 1 container, 20 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 33 tanker, 39
bulk, 6 specialized carrier, 2 liquefied gas carrier
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: army 31,300, navy 2,500, air force' 2,250 (210
pilots), border guard 3,650 (including coast guard, 650)
Major ground units: 8 brigades (7 infantry, 1 armored), 6
regiments (3 field artillery, 1 air defense artillery, 2 coast
artillery), 20 battalions (8 infantry, 1 artillery, 1 target ac-
quisition, 4 air defense artillery, 2 engineer, 3 coast artillery,
1 signal)
Ships: 1 frigate, 2 patrol escorts, 5 submarine chasers, 12
fast patrol boats, 5 missile attack boats, 1 coastal minelayer, 6
minesweepers, 14 minor amphibious, 1 minelayer/training
ship, 4 auxiliary
Aircraft: 171 (116 jet)
Missiles: 1 SA-3 battalion
Supply: produces small quantities of ammunition and
equipment up to medium artillery; has developed an ar-
mored car; has produced prototypes of the Vinka basic train-
ing aircraft; will begin to assemble the British HAWK air-
craft in 1980; remainder from U.S.S.R., U.K., West
Germany, Sweden, France, Switzerland; most naval ships
(except principal surface combatant types) produced domes-
tically; production also includes small quantities of chemical
warfare defensive materiel
SECRET
25X1
25X1
25X1
25X1
25X1
25X1I
25X1
25X1,
25X1
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FRANCE
(See reference map V)
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 354 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
11,124,280 GRT, 19,994,417 DWT; includes 16 passenger,
104 cargo, 19 container, 57 roll-on/off cargo, 84 tanker, 7
liquefied gas, 39 bulk, 5 combination ore/oil, 23 specialized
carrie
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: army 314,722, navy 68,000 (including 12,250
in naval air, 400 in naval amphibious group), air force
102,000 (3,000 pilots), national gendarmerie 76,000
Major ground units: army consists of 3 corps with 8 light
armored divisions, 3 light infantry divisions (1 overseas), 1
alpine and 1 airborne division, 1 Foreign Legion group, 8
independent combat and artillery regiments in France, and
6 independent combat overseas regiments; Army and corps
combat support units include 3 Hawk missile air defense, 4
other air defense, and 5 Pluton tactical nuclear regiments
SECRET
NOTE: French regiments are roughly equivalent in size to
U.S. battalions.
Ships: 2 aircraft carriers, 1 training cruiser, 1 guided mis-
sile cruiser, 6 guided missile destroyers, 12 destroyers, 26
frigates, 5 nuclear-powered ballistic-missile submarines
(SSBNs), 22 submarines, 1 experimental submarine, 24 patrol
ships/craft, 36 mine warfare ships, 20 amphibious, 29 minor
amphibious, 51 auxiliaries, 119 service ships and craft
Aircraft: 3,244 (1,495 jet), including 658 nonjet in army
aviation, 465 (149 jet) in naval aviation, and 2,121 (1,346 jet)
in the air force
Missiles: army has 3 Hawk battalions and 5 Honest John
battalion equivalents, 2 Pluton battalion equivalents; air
force has 3 Crotale squadrons
SECRET
25X1
Supply: develops and produces ground force equipment
of all types in quantities sufficient for domestic needs plus
considerable exports; produces all types of ships up to and
including nuclear-powered ballistic-missile submarines;
naval armaments, electronics, and missile systems can be
indigenously produced; exports frigates, submarines, patrol
boats, and auxiliaries; independently produces a wide vari-
ety of aircraft and missile systems, including intermediate-
range ballistic missiles, surface-to-surface, air-to-surface,
surface-to-air, air-to-air, and antitank missiles; some aircraft
purchases from the U.S.; collaborating with the U.K. and
West Germany in joint aircraft development and productio25x
programs, and the U.K., West Germany, and Italy in joint
missile development and production programs; produces
small quantities of offensive CW agents and CW/BW defen-
25X1
sive materiel
25X1
25X1
25X1
25X1
25X1
25X1
25X1
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SECRET
FRENCH GUIANA
(See reference map IV)
DEFENSE FORCES
Defense is responsibility of France; France maintains an
army force in French Guiana; also available army and naval
forces located in Martinique and Guadeloupe
Personnel: 1,300 (500 French, 800 natives of Martinique,
Guadeloupe and French-Guiana)
Major ground units: 1 infantry battalion, 1 foreign legion
infantry regiment, 1 signal center, 1 engineer battalion of
the Adapted Military Service (SMA)
Ships: 5 patrol boats, 1 medium landing ship, 2 minor
amphibious craft (in Martinique)
Aircraft: 2 helicopters available from Gendarmerie
FRENCH POLYNESIA
(See reference map X)
DEFENSE FORCES
Pacific Naval Command at Papeete; Tahiti currently has
4. frigates, 4 patrol combatants, 1 amphibious ship, 1
amphibious craft, and 2 auxiliaries assigned.
Personnel: army 2,000, navy 2,150 air force 70, gendar-
merie 400
Major ground units: 1 infantry regiment, 1 maritime/
infantry battalion, a security and engineer unit
Aircraft: 25 (11 jet)
36
SECRET
25X1
25X1
25X1
25X1
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25)(1
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.GABON
(See reference map VII)
ECONOMY
Aid: economic commitments?Western (non-U.S.) coun-
tries, ODA and OOF (1970-78), $468.0 million; Communist
countries (1970-79), $27.0 million; U.S., including Ex"-Im
(FY70-79), $24.4, million; rriilitary?U.S. (FY70-79.): $6.0
million
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 1 tanker (1,000 CRT' or over) totaling
74,100 GRT, 140,700 DWT
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: army 1,500, navy 150, air force 300, gendar-
merie 2,000, Gabonese presidential guard 1,130 (plus 30
French nationals and 40 Moroccans); French Army 550 (or-
ganized in 2 infantry battalions, which also perform training
function), includes 74 military advisers
Major ground units: I combined arms regiment-5 in-
fantry companies, 1 parachute battalion (company size), 1
engineer battalion (company size), 1 command and support
battalion (company size), 1 commando company
Ships: 3 patrol craft (PC), 1 missile attack boat (PTC), and
1 medium landing craft
Aircraft: 55 total; 41 air force (22 transport and VIP pas-
senger, 3 helicopters, 10 trainers, 5 utility), 14 presidential
guard (7 fighters, 2 helicopters including 1 VIP, 4 trainers, 1
utility)
Supply: primarily dependent on France; 1 patrol boat
from Italy
SECRET
SECRET
THE GAMBIA'
tiffit'A00.!
GAMBIA
GUINE
BISSALJ-
(See reference map VII)
COMMUNICATIONS 25X1
Merchant marine: l?cargo ship (1,000 GRT or over) total-
25X1
ing 1,600 GRT, 2,700 DWT
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: no army; Police 850, includes a 250-man 25X1
paramilitary field force 25X1
Supply: defense agreement with Senegal; indirect defe -
ns25X1
support from U.K.; has received small arms from th,..
U.S.S.R. and the PRC; small patrol craft from the U.K.
37
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/09/05: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100040001-8
SECRET
GERMAN DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC
(See reference map V)
ECONOMY
Aid: economic?from U.S.S.R., $990 illioii (1954-75); te
less developed non-Communist countries, $2,155 million .in
bilateral ?economic aid 0956-79)
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 154 ships (1,000 GRT and over) total-
ing 1,286,138 GRT, 1,815,218 DWT; .includes 1 passenger,
119 cargo, 5 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 6 tanker, 16 hoillk, 4 com-
bination ore/oil, 1 beach landing craft, 2 specialized carrier
Civil air: 50 major transport aircraft (1979)
Airfields: 168 total; 59 with permanent-surface runways;
3 with runways 3,500 m or over, 44 with runways
2,500-3,499 m, 71 with runways 1,000-2,499 m, 50 with run-
ways less than 1,000 m; 7 heliports
Telecommunications: domestic and international facili-
ties modern and adequate; good coverage provided by 21
AM and 18 FM broadcast stations, 6,082,400 receivers; 15
major TV stations supplemented by 300 rebroadcast stations;
4,966,500 TV receivers; 2,326,143 telephones (100% auto-
matic)
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 4,261,000; 3,427,000 fit
for military service; about 146,000 reach military age (18)
annually
Personnel: (estimated)6 ground forces 112,875, naval
forces 15,500, air and air defense forces 38,000, paramilitary
forces 62,300
Personnel in reserve (not on active duty): (estimated)
ground forces 700,000, naval forces 30,000, air force 4,400
6 Soviet forces (GSFG) in GDR as of 1 January 1979, 400,500
(360,000 ground; 40,500 air).
38
Major ground units: 6 divisions (4 motorized' rifle, 2 tank),
2 SCUD (SS-1) tactical missile brigades, 4 regiments (2 artil-
lery, 2 antiaircraft artillery), 1 airborne battalion, 2 antitank
battalions, 1 SA-4 regiment, 4 .SA-6 regiments
Ships: 3 principal surface -.combatants, 12 patrol com-
batants, 14 amphibious warfare .ships, 82 coastal patrol-
river/roadstead craft, 33 mine warfare craft, 4 underway
replenishment ships, 2 fleet ?support ships, 28 other auxil-
iaries
Aircraft (operational units): 542 including 19 helicopters
in naval air, 277 fighters, 66 attack, 18 reconnaissance, 31
transports, 131 helicopters
Missiles: 25 operational SA-2 sites (150 launchers), 4 oper-
ational SA-3 sites (12 4-rail and 4 dual-rail launchers); 2 regi-
ments of the SA-4 tactical missile system and 4 regiments of
5A-6 tactical missile system are deployed with the East Ger-
man ground forces; the SA-7 and SA-9 tactical SAM systems
are also deployed
Supply: dependent on Communist countries,, mainly the
U.S.S.R., Czechoslovakia and; Poland, except for light in-
fantry weapons, small arms ammunition, explosives, chemi-
cal warfare defensive materiel, signal equipment, transport
vehicles, and some minesweepers, torpedo boats, amphibious
and auxiliary ships and Service craft
SECRET
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/09/05: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100040001-8
GERMANY, FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF
Bonn
x.
FED. REP.
OF GER.
(See reference map V)
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 469 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
7,175,397 GRT, 11,543,698 DWT; includes 13 passenger,
234 cargo,.76 container, 24 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 45 tanker,
9 liquefied gas, 52 bulk, 1 combination ore oil, 14 special-
ized carrier, 1 cargo training
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: army 495,000, navy 36;000 (including 7,000 in
naval air), air force 109,000 (1,590 pilots), federal border
police 22,400
Major ground units: 12 combat divisions (4 armored in-
fantry; 5 armored, 1 motorized infantry, 1 mountain, 1 air-
borne), 6 home defense brigades, 6 aviation regiments, 4
Lance missile battalions; reorganization to occur through
1985 will result in 6 armored divisions, 5 armored infantry
divisions, 1 airborne division, and will add 3 ROLAND regi-
ments, 3 helicopter regiments (antitank), and 6 home defense
regiments to existing force structure
Ships: 3 guided missile destroyers, 8 destroyers, 24 subma-
rines, 6 frigates, 5 subchasers, 10 large guided missile com-
batants, 20 missile attack boats, 10 torpedo boats, 60 mine
warfare, 22 minor amphibious, 49 auxiliaries, 89 service
craft
Aircraft: 2,057 (1,078 jet), including 566 in army aviation,
186 (125 jet) in navy aviation, 1,305 (953 jet) in air force
Missiles: 24 Nike Hercules, 36 I-Hawk, 8 Pershing squad-
rons; Honest John, Lance
SECRET
SECRET
Supply: supplies most of its own needs for ground forces
materiel but has large procurement program in NATO coun-
tries; produces tanks, armored vehicles, artillery, infantry
weapons; produces CW/BW defensive materiel; has pur-
chased antitank, air-to-surface, .and ship-to-ship missiles
from U.S. and France and helicopters and naval
surface-to-air missiles from the United Kingdom; domestic
output of aircraft is expected to be maintained with the
continuing B0-105 helicopter production and joint aircraft
development and production programs with the U.K.,
France, and Italy; produces antitank and air-to-surface mis-
siles; produces destroyers, frigates, submarines, guided mis-
sile patrol combatants, missile attack boats, minecraft, and
auxiliaries; naval weapon systems obtained from NATO
countries; frigates, submarines, patrol boats, and missile
boats are produced for export
39
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/09/05: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100040001-8
Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/09/05: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100040001-8
SECRET
GHANA
(See ? reference map VII)
ECONOMY
Aid: economic commitments?UIS., including Ex-Im
(FY70-79), $242.9 million; other Western countries, ODA
and OOF (197008), $565.0 million; OPEC, ODA (1974-79),
$63.9 million; Communist countries (1970279), $43.5 million;
military?Communist countries (1970-79), $10.0 million;
U.S. (1970-79), $0.5 million
COMMUNICATIONS ?
Merehant marine: 28 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
195,553 GRT, 262,211 DWT; includes 27 cargo, 1 tanker
Telecommunications: fair system of open-wire and cable,
radio-relay links and radiocommunication stations; 50,000
telephones (0.6 per 100 popl.);''6 AM, no FM, and 8 TV
stations; .1 Atlantic Ocean satellite station under construction
and 1 station planned
DEFENSE FORCES ,
Personnel: army 12,750, navy 1,185, air force 1,550, bor-
der guard 4,500, national police force 17,000
Major ground units: 2 brigades (6 infantry battalions, 1
airborne battalion); (although the term regiment is used for
each of the following, unit strength is equivalent to a battal-
ion) 1 mortar regiment, 1 field engineer regiment 1 rec n-
naissance regiment (minus), and 1 signal regiment
Ships: 10 (2 patrol escorts, 2 fast patrol craft, 4 patrol
craft, and 2 patrol boats)
Aircraft: 41(12 jet, 12 turboprop, 14 prop, and 3 heli-
copter)
Supply: dependent on imports; primarily from the U.K.;
other West European countries, Canada, U.S.S.R., China, Is-
rael, Bulgaria, and Czechoslovakia also supplied some
materiel
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 30 June 1979,
$159.5 million; 4% of central government budget
40
GIBRALTAR
(See reference map V)
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: U.K. Army 765,--colonials:45, Royal Navy 650,
25X1
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Royal Air Force 420
Majorground Units: 1 infantrY battalion
'Ships: 1 destroyer-type ship deployed in. the area rotates
as the Gibraltar gua(ri,dship; additional ships are often tem-
porarily deployed td the area for exercise and training or for
refit or maintenance of a varied number of ships and craft
25X1
Aircraft: small detachment of fighter/trainer aircraft (2)
25X1
SECRET
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/09/05: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100040001-8
Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/09/05: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100040001-8
GREECE
(See reference map V)
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 2,830 ships (1,000 GRT or over) total-
ing 38,788,415 GRT, 66,198,298 DWT; includes 83 Pas-
senger, 1,365 cargo, 18 container, 343 tanker, 9 liquefied gas,
24 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 900 bulk, 55 combination ore/oil,
33 specialized carrier; ethnic Greeks also own large numbers
of ships under Liberian, Panamanian, Cypriot, and
Lebanese flags
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: army 140,000, navy 18,000, air force 23,600
(755 pilots), gendarmerie 24,000
Major ground units: 1 army headquarters, 4 corps head-
quarters, 10 infantry divisions (5 at full strength), 1 mecha-
nized division, 1 armored division headquarters, 5 separate
armored brigades, 1 special forces division (3 raiding forces
regiments, 1 parachute regiment, 1 marine regiment), 1 high
military command, 6 island military commands (brigade
equivalents), 1 infantry regiment (Cyprus), 29 separate
battalions (2 Honest John, 9 artillery, 3 recon, 6 engineer, 1
EW, 8 signal), 4 corps-level aviation units, 1 army aviation
school
Ships: 13 destroyers, 4 frigates, 4 submarines, 40 patrol
(including 9 guided missile armed), 15 mine warfare, 16
amphibious warfare ships, 58 amphibious warfare craft, 15
auxiliaries, 27 service craft
Aircraft: 848 (499 jets), including 658 (499 jets) in air
force, 180 in army aviation, 10 in naval aviation
SECRET
Missiles: 4 Nike Hercules squadrons (36 launchers), 1
Nike Hercules training site, 7 Improved Hawk battalions (42
launchers)
Supply: dependent largely on foreign sources, mainly U.S.
and other NATO countries; armored vehicles, missile attack
boats and trucks from France and Italy, submarines and
artillery from West Germany, and recoilless rifles from
Spain; produces small arms and ammunition in small quan-
tities; has assembled armored vehicles and is producing six
guided missile patrol combatants of French design
Military budget: proposed for fiscal year ending 31
December 1980, $2.2 billion; about 18% of central govern-
ment budget
SECRET 41
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/09/05: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100040001-8
Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/09/05: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100040001-8
SECRET
GREENLAND
(See reference map II)
DEFENSE FORCES
Defense is responsibility of Denmark, but under terms of
a U.S.-Danish agreement of 1951, defense is actually shared
by U.S. and Danish forces. Danish forces in Greenland con-
sist of mostly naval personnel; one or two patrol escort ships
are in Greenland waters for fishery inspection; both ships
can accommodate helicopters. There is one Royal Danish air
force C-54 always on rotational duty in Greenland. Green-
land has no organized native military forces; only small local
police forces are maintained
42
GRENADA
(See reference map III)
ECONOMY
Aid: economic?bilateral ODA and OOF commitments,
from Western (non-U.S.) countries (1970-78), $4.2 million;
ODA from OPEC (1974-79), $7.2 million; no military aid.
DEFENSE FORCES
Local security forces: People's Revolutionary Army
1,500, People's Militia under 2,000, Royal Grenada Police
Force (unknown strength)
SECRET
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' Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/09/05: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100040001-8
Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/09/05: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100040001-8
GUADELOUPE
DEFENSE FORCES
Defense is responsibility
France
of
(See reference map III)
France;
data
included with
SECRET
SECRET
GUATEMALA
(See reference map //I)
COMMUNICATIONS 25X1
Merchant marine: 4 cargo ships (1,000 GRT or over) total-
ing 13,560 GRT, 20,240 DWT 25X1
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: army 14,000, navy 535, air force 470(65 pilots)
Major ground units: 5 brigades (1 infantry battalion
each), 11 separate battalions (4 infantry, 1 airborne infantry,
1 military police, 1 engineer, 2 training, 1 transportation,
and 1 Presidential Guard Battalion); in addition, a 400-man
tactical group stationed at La Aurora Airbase for airport
security
Ships: 1 fast patrol craft, 10 patrol boats, 2 river patrol
boats, 1 medium landing craft (LCM), 1 floating workshop
(AG)
Aircraft: 79 (12 jet, 22 turboprop, 28 prop, 17 helicopters)
Supply: current supplies from Western Europe; substan-
tial quantities of army materiel obtained from U.S. and re-
cently from Israel and the Republic of Korea
Military budget: proposed for fiscal year ending 31
December 1980, $74.7 million; 5.8% of central government
budget
43
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/09/05: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100040001-8
Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/09/05: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100040001-8
SECRET
GUINEA
(see reference map VII)
ECONOMY
Aid: economic commitments?Communist countries
(1970-79), $106.5 million; OPEC (ODA; 1974-79), $294.5
million; U.S. authorizations, including Ex-Im (FY70-79),
$84.3 million; other- Western countries (ODA and 00F;
1970-78), $75.0 million; military?Communist countries
(1970-79), $141.0 million
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 1 bulk 1,000 GRT or over) totaling
10,800 CRT, 15,300 DWT
Telecommunications: barely adequate system of open-
wire lines, small radiocommunication stations, and 1 small
radio-relay link; principal center Conakry, secondary center
Kankan; 10,000 telephones (0.2 per 100 popl.); 1 AM station,
no FM, and 1 TV station; radio-relay net and satellite station
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: army. est. 5,000-7,000, navy 300, air force 200,
gendarmerie 1,000, republican guard 1,200, police 1,500,
militia 8,000
Major ground units: 5 infantry battalions; 1 armored
battalion, 1 engineer battalion, 1 special battalion, 1 para-
commando battalion, 1 artillery battalion
Ships: 1 fleet minesweeper, 1 sub-chaser, 2 torpedo boats,
2 small torpedo boats, 4 patrol craft, 6 patrol boats, 3 coastal
patrol craft, 5 medium landing craft
Aircraft: 44 (24 jet, 13 prop, 1 turboprop, 6 helicopters) (S)
Supply: dependent primarily on Communist countries,
mainly U.S.S.R., also France and Egypt; naval boats from
China
44
GUINEA-BISSAU
(formerly Portuguese Guinea)
(See reference map VII)
ECONOMY .
Aid i economic commitments?Western (non-U.S.) coun-
tries, ODA and OOF (1970-78), $130.0 million; Communist
countries (1970-79), $30.2 million; OPEC, ODA (1974-79),
$21.0 million; U.S. authorizations (FY70-79),. $12.9 million;
military?Communist countries (1974-79), $22.0 million
DEFENSE FORCES:
Personnel: army est. 4,500, navy 750, air force 350,
paramilitary 5,000
Major ground units: 4 infantry battalions, 1 mechanized
brigade, 1 artillery group, 1 antiaircraft artillery unit, 1
transportation group, and 1 signal company
Aircraft: 8 (3 jet fighters, 2 prop light transports, 2 prop
light trainers, 1 helicopter)
Supply: dependent on outside sources, primarily the
U.S.S.R.
SECRET
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/09/05: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100040001-8
Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/09/05: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100040001-8
GUYANA
(See reference map IV)
ECONOMY
Aid: economic?bilateral commitments including Ex-Im
(FY70-79),. from U.S, $81.2 . million; from other Western
countries (1970-78), .$110.8 million; from OPEC (1974-79),
$20 million; from Communist .countries (1970-79), $73 mil-
lion; no military aid
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 1 bulk (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
3,000 GRT, 3,100 DWT
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: Guyana Defense Force (GDF) 7,000; Guyana
Police Force 4,500
Major ground units: 1 brigade, 2 tactical battalions, plus 6
support units
Maritime Command (GDF: 6 patrol craft, 2 fishing
boats, 1 small cargo goat
Air Command (GDF): 3 turboprop, 8 prop, 7 helicopters
Supply: mostly U.K., some U.S. equipment
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December
1980; $28.8 million; 7.3% of central government budget
SECRET
HAITI
(See refejence map III)
25X1
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: army 6,981, navy 301 (including 165 naval in-
fantry), air corps 218(19 pilots)
Major ground units: 10 infantry companies, 1 heavy
weapons company, 22 police companies, miscellaneous other
elements
Ships: 4 patrol boats-3 patrol (PB), 1 harbor. patrol (PSB);
1 ocean tug (ATA); 2 miscellaneous auxiliaries (AG)
Aircraft: 33 (24 prop, .9 helicopters)
Supply:, current supplies from U.S. commercial sources,
and from Israel; sources in the past have included Belgium,
Czechoslovakia, Italy, Jordan, Nicaragua, Yugoslavia, and
primarily the U.S.
SECRET
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/09/05: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100040001-8
Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/09/05: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100040001-8
SECRET
HONDURAS
(See reference map III)
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 43 ships (1,000 GRT .or over) totaling
153,111 GRT, 258,628 DWT; includes 31- cargo, 7 tanker, 4
bulk and 1 specialized carrier; a flag of convenience registry
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: 10,830; army 9,600, navy 230, air force 1,000
Major ground units: 11 infantry battalions, 3 -artillery
battalions, 1 engineer battalion, 1 armored reconnaissance
squadron (troop size)
Ships: 8 patrol craft-3 patrol craft (CF), 4 patrol boats
(PB), 1 river/roadstead patrol boat (PBR)
Aircraft: 94 (33 jet, 3 turboprop, ? 52 prop, 6 helicopters)
Supply: equipment procured from U.S., Israel and West-
ern Europe
46
HONG KONG
(See reference map VIII)
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 23 ships (1,000 GRT or over), totaling
409,315 GRT, 620,485 DWT; includes 1 passenger, 5 cargo,
3 tanker, 9 bulk, 5 container;' ships registered in Hong Kong
fly the U.K. flag; an estimated 500 Hong Kong-owned ships
are registered elsewhere
DEFENSE FORCES
' Personnel: ground forces?U.K. Army 1,770; colonials
5,950; police 11,580; auxiliary police 3,100; navy 260 U.K.,
265 locals; air force 220; auxiliary air force 90
Major ground units: 1 Gurkha field force
Ships: Hong Kong Marine Police, 38 police boats; U.K.
naval ships homeported in the U.K. operate occasionally in
the Indian Ocean, Gulf, and Far East; 5 patrol combatants, 1
patrol boat assigned to Commander, Hong Kong
. Aircraft: 7 helicopters (RAF),. 6 helicopters (Army Air
Corps)
SECRET
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/09/05: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100040001-8
Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/09/05: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100040001-8
'..HUNGARY
(See reference map V)
ECONOMY
Aid: U.S.S.R.?$338 million extended. (1956-66), $10 mil-
lion extended in 1967, $167 million extended in 1968; 'ex-
tended to .non-Communist less developed countries (1954-
79), $1.1 billion in bilateral aid
COMMUNICATIONS
Civil air: 17 major transport aircraft (1979)
Merchant marine: 23 cargo ships (1,000 GRT or over)
totaling 83,803 CRT, 113,945 DWT
Airfields: 83 total; 14 with permanent-surface runways; 1
with runway 3,500 m or over, 14 with runways 2,500-3,499
m, 28 with runways 1,000-2,499 m, 40 with runways less
than 1,000 m, 23 heliports
Telecommunications: services meet most government
and industrial 'requirements, but looal public telephone ser-
vice is inadequate; radio and TV broadcasts can be 'received
throughout most of the country; 11 AM, 4 FM stations, more
than 2.7 million receivers; 1 major and 10 relay TV stations,
2,200,000 TV receivers; 923,966 telephones (80.3% auto-
matic)
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: (estimated)8 ground forces 72,000 (including a
river flotilla), air and air defense force 21,750, paramilitary
forces 16,000
Personnel in reserve (not on active duty): (estimated)
ground forces 985,000, naval forces 3,400, air force unknown
Major ground units: 6 divisions (5 motorized rifle, 1 tank),
1 SCUD (SS-1) tactical missile brigade, 1 artillery brigade, 3
regiments (1 SA-6, 1 antiaircraft, 1 antitank), 1 airborne
battalion
Soviet forces (CCF) in Hungary as of 1 January :1978, 69,000
(59,000 ground, 10,000 air)
SECRET
SECRET
Ships: (estimated) 45 river patrol types, 60 minesweepers,
2 landing craft, 2 auxiliaries
Aircraft (operational units): 308, including 188 fighters/
trainers, 18 transports, 102 helicopters
Missiles: 12 operational SA-2 SAM sites (72 launchers); 6
operational SA-3 sites (24 4-rail launchers); 3 SA-6 tactical
SAM regiments are deployed with the ground forces; 9 SA-9
and SA-7 systems are deployed with the Hungarian ground
forces; sites are under construction for the SA-3 system
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oz
Supply: pro uces small arms, ammunition, explosives,
light artillery, an armored reconnaissance car, some trucks,
chemical warfare defensive materiel and small quantities of 25x1
agents, some types of electronic equipment; dependent upon
other Warsaw Pact countries, primarily the U.S.S.R., for
other military equipment including radar and missiles
Includes 1 army level regiment and 2 divisional regiments.
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/09/05: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100040001-8
Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/09/05: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100040001-8
SECRET
ICELAND
(See reference map V)
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 38 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
73,776 GRT, 119,871 DWT; includes 32 cargo, 2 bulk, 1
tanker, and 3 roll-on/roll-off ships
DEFENSE FORCES
Iceland has no armed forces; police forces est. 390, Coast
Guard Service consists of 6 patrol vessels, 3 helicopters, 1
light transport aircraft, and an est. 160 personnel
Under NATO provisions, the U.S. operates the Iceland
Defense Forces.
Personnel: 2,600 navy and air
Aircraft (operational): 28, including 21 combat aircraftairborne early warning aircraft, 1 transport, 3 helicopters
INDIA
Indian Oc?an
(See reference map VIII)
ECONOMY
Aid: economic commitments?U.S.S.R. (1970-79), $670
million; Eastern Europe (1970-79), $105 million; OPEC
(ODA; 1974-79), $1.6 billion; U.S. including Ex-Im (FY707
79), $2.4 billion; military commitments?U.S.S.R. (1970-79),
$2,968 million; U.S. (FY70-79), $1.6 million
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 365 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
5,666,194 GRT, 9,327,980 DWT; includes 2 passenger, 221
cargo, 30 tanker, 86 bulk, 17 combination ore/oil, 2 special-
ized carrier, 1 barge carrier, 6 container
48
EFENSE FORCES
Personnel: army 944,000, navy 44,000 (including 2,000 in
naval air arm); air force 113,000 (about 2,600 pilots); armed
police 242,000 (including 36,700 under army control); Cen-
tral Reserve Police 73,700; Border Security Force, at least
84,800
Major ground units: 8 corps, 30 divisions (18 infantry, 10
mountain, 2 armored), 28 independent brigades (6 armored,
2 infantry, 1 mountain, 1 parachute, 11 artillery, 4 air de-
fense, and 3 engineer); also 30 paramilitary battalions in-
tegrated on rotational basis
Ships: 1 carrier, 1 light cruiser, 20 fast frigates, 3 missile
combatants, 14 guided missile boats, 8 submarines, 25 coastal
patrol, 11 mine warfare, 6 amphibious, 9 auxiliary
Aircraft: 1,430 (811 jet) operationally assigned, including
1,314 (764 jet) in air force; 106 (47 jet) in navy; and 10 in
Border Security Force
Missiles: est. 36 active SAM sites (20 SA-2, 13 SA-3, 3
others)
Supply: increasingly self-sufficient including manu-
facture/assembly of own small arms, artillery, ammunition,
variety of aircraft, military electronics, and medium tanks;
frigates, craft and landing craft being built domestically;
U.S. and U.K. were principal foreign suppliers until 1965,
SECRET
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INDIA (Continued)
since then the U.S.S.R. has become the principal foreign
source,'? medium tanks obtained from Czechoslovakia and
Poland, 4 medium landing ships from Poland, armored per-
sonnel carriers and tank transports from Czechoslovakia and
the U.S.S.R.; small amounts of other army materiel from
Bulgaria and Yugoslavia; small arms, towed artillery, armor,
armor components, military electronics, and self-propelled
artillery and aircraft from U.K.; licensed radar production
with France and to a lesser extent, Switzerland; 'produces
MiG-21s under license from U.S.S.R.?majority of compo-
nents domestically produced; licensed production French
helicopters; licensed missile assembly/production programs
include the French SS-11 ATM and the Soviet ATOLL AAM
1? Since 1965 the U.S.S.R. has supplied ground, naval, and air
equipment to India; included are 70 T-72 tanks, more than 600 T-55
tanks, 178 PT-76 tanks, tank transporters, approximately 500
130-mm guns, 180 100-mm guns, 8 submarines, 10 destroyer escorts,
5 patrol boats, 3 medium landing ships, 16 guided missile patrol
boats, 2 submarine support ships, 1 guided missile destroyer, 3 mis-
sile patrol combatants, 6 fleet minesweepers, more than 300 Mic-21
fighters (including in-country assembly), 131 SU-7 fighters, transport
aircraft, and helicopters.
SECRET
SECRET
INDONESIA
(See reference map IX)
ECONOMY
Aid: economic commitments?Communist (1970-79),
$100 .million; U.S., including Ex-Im (FY70-79), $2,214 mil-
lion; other Western countries, ODA and OOF (1970-78), $4.8
billion; military?Communist (1970-79), $1 million; U.S.
(FY70-79), $327 million
COMMUNICATIONS
Pipelines: crude oil, 2,591 km; refined products, 310 km;
natural gas, 518 km
Merchant marine: 254 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
984,869 GRT, 1,419,593 DWT; includes 1 passenger, 196
cargo, 2 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 31 tanker, 21 bulk, 3 special-
ized carrier; in addition 1 naval tanker and 5 troop trans-
ports sometimes used commercially; only a small part of the
fleet is in international trade; in the domestic fleet, as many
as half of the ships are inoperable because of chronic lack of
spare parts and trained personnel, although a newly begt25X1
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DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: army 195,000 (12,000 officers, 183,000 en-
listed), navy 40,000 (including 11,000 marines and 800 naval
air); air force 25,000 (2,000 officers, 11,000 NC0s, 12,000
airmen); police 11,800 (mobile brigade)
Major ground units: 16 brigades (13 infantry, 2 airborne,
1 cavalry), 7 regiments (2 field artillery, 4 antiaircraft artil-
lery, 1 combat engineer), Police Mobile Brigade (10 infantry
battalions), 2 Marine regiments
Ships: 9 frigates, 1 submarine (lacking in diving capabil-
ity), 2 patrol combatant, 35 coastal patrol, 8 river/roadstead
patrol, 5 mine warfare, 13 amphibious, 21 auxiliary
ships/craft, and 11 service craft ?
Aircraft: 301 (54 jet), including 23 naval air and 215 (54
jet) in air force; 63 army aviation
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SECRET
INDONESIA (Continued)
Missiles: ground air-defense missile site deactivated and
missiles in storage
Supply: small quantities of ammunition and small arms
produced as well as 1 light utility aircraft; from 1957-65,
Indonesia purchased most military equipment from Com-
munist countries, the majority after 1960 from the U.S.S.R.;
naval ships and equipment from a large variety of Com-
munist and non-Communist sources; naval surface-to-sur-
face, air-to-air, air-to-surface, and surface-to-air missiles
from U.S.S.R. and France; antitank missiles from Switzer-
land and France; recent purchases generally for cash; both
purchases and grant-aid from non-Communist sources; most
recent naval purchases include 4 missile boats from South
Korea, 3 corvettes from the Netherlands, and 2 submarines
from Germany; 4 additional missile boats are on order from
South Korea; F-5 fighters have been purchased from the
U.S., A-4s have been purchased from Israel, and air defense
radar from France
50
IRAN
(See reference map VI)
ECONOMY
Aid: economic?(1970-76) Western (non-U.S.) countries,
$863.05 Million; U.S., $1,019.9 million; Communist coun-
tries, $517.6 million; military?Communist countries,
$1,182.0 million; U.S., $18.7 million
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 55 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
1,048,160 GRT, 1,743,429 DWT; includes 39 cargo, 12
tanker, 1 liquefied gas carrier, 3 beach landing cargo ship
(converted U.S. LCT)
Telecommunications: advanced system but not properly
maintained; only partially operative, further degradation ex-
pected; Tehran principal center and hub of critical radio
relay, troposcatter links; 828,000 telephones (2.2 per 100
popl.); about 35 AM, 2 FM, and 65 TV stations; Atlantic and
Indian Ocean INTELSAT stations
DEFENSE FORCES
NOTE: Information in this section does not include data
on losses of men and materials resulting from the Iran/Iraq
war
Personnel: joint staff 3,750; ground force 150,000; navy
20,000; air force 85,000 (1,500 pilots); gendarmerie 75,000;
revolutionary guards 80,000
Major ground units: 9 divisions (5 infantry, 4 armored), 4
independent brigades (1 infantry, 1 airborne infantry, 1 spe-
cial forces, 1 armored); 1 aviation command; 5 artillery
groups
Ships: 3 guided-missile destroyers, 4 guided-missile frig-
ates, 9 missile attack boats, 48 patrol craft, ,13 amphibious
vessels, 5 minesweepers, 14 hovercraft, 21 other vessels
(auxiliary)
Aircraft: 1,452 including 432 jet, 87 prop, and 933 heli-
copters
Missiles: 21 active SAM sites
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IRAN (Continued)
Supply: can produce small arms, 20mm cannons, rockets,
explosives, and various calibers of ammunition; bulk of
equipment from U.S. prior to 1979, some antitank missiles
from France, some surface-to-air missiles and naval craft
from U.K. and West Germany, helicopters from Italy; since
1967 has received significant quantities of armored vehicles,
artillery (including self-propelled AA guns), and transport
vehicles from the U.S.S.R.; has procured AA guns and asso-
ciated radar from Switzerland, tanks from U.K., and signifi-
cant quantities of other materiel from FRG, France, Italy,
Canada, and Israel; 9 missile attack boats acquired from
France during late 1970s
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 20 March 1981,
$5.3 billion; 13% of central government budget
SECRET
IRAQ
(See reference map VO
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Aid: economic commitments?Communist countries 25X1
(1970-79), $770 million; U.S. (FY70-79), $3 million; Iraq
pledged $2,251 million in economic aid to LDC's (1974-79);
military?Communist countries (1970-79), $9.7 billion
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 43 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
1,246,844 GRT, 2,336,296 DWT; 19 cargo, 1 container, 22
tanker, 1 cargo training
DEFENSE FORCES
NOTE: Information in this section does not include data
on losses of men and materials resulting from the Iran/Iraq
war
Personnel: army 350,000; navy 4,500; air force 38,000
(750 pilots)
Major ground units: 4 mountain infantry divisions, 2
mechanized infantry divisions, 4 armored divisions, 2 border
guard divisions, 1 republican guards mechanized brigade, 2
armored brigades, 2 infantry brigades, 3 infantry training
brigades, 2 special forces brigades
Ships: 12 large guided missile boats, 12 motor torpedo
boats, 4 river gunboats, 5 patrol boats, 7 service craft, 5
minesweepers, 3 small submarine chasers, 4 medium landing
craft
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IRAQ (Continued)
Aircraft: 1,119 (692 jet, 14 turboprop, 46 prop, 367 heli-
copters)
Supply: produces some ammunition; dependent mainly on
U.S.S.R. and East European Communist countries for com-
bat materiel; some transport and electronic equipment from
Western Europe as well as COBRA antitank missiles from
West Germany and a patrol boat from the U.K.; armored
cars from France
52
IRELAND
(See reference map V)
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 31 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
163,505 GRT, 217,170 DWT; includes 4 passenger, 2 con-
tainer, 1 tanker, 2 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 6 bulk, 12 cargo, 4
specialized carrier
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: army 11,900, navy 700, air corps 680(60 pilots)
Major ground units: 6 infantry brigades consisting of
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Supply: formerly from the U.K. primarily, but since 1961
from other European countries; 4 naval service fishing
protection ships produced domestically, another 2 larger
units are planned; produces APCs 25X1
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ISRAEL
(See reference map VI)
NOTE: The Arab ,territories occupied by Israel since th6
1967 war are not included in the data 'below unless 'in-
dicated. The occupied Gaza Strip (360 km2), administered
from 1948 to June 1967 by Egypt but not claimed as?their
sovereign territory, is not considered Egyptian land.
ECONOMY
Aid: economic commitments?U.S., including Ex-Im
(FY70-79), $4.2 billion; Western countries, ODA and OOF
(1970-78), $735.0 million; military?U.S., (FY70-79) $11.6
billion
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 39 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
465,822 CRT, 627,144 DWT; includes 8 cargo, 15 container,
4 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 11 bulk, and 1 specialized carrier
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: army 135,000 (plus 300,000 reserve), navy
6,600, air force 30,000 (1,500 pilots), NAHAL 5,000, frontier
guard 4,500, CHEN (women) 42,000
Major ground units: 11 armored divisions (including 2
forming), 1 airmobile division HO (provisional), 4 territorial
infantry division HQs, 10 mechanized infantry, 4 airborne,
and 5 infantry brigades
SECRET
Ships: 3 submarines, 9 patrol guided missile combatants,
12 missile attack boats, 40 patrol boats, 16 river/roadstead
patrol boats, 2 patrol air cushion vehicles, 10 amphibious, 5
service, and 3 auxiliary
Aircraft: .1,289 (924 jet, 137 prop, 30 turbo'prop, 198 heli-
copters)
Missiles: 17 Hawk missile batteries (16 towed and 1
self-propelled) and 48 Chaparral launchers
Supply: produces most types of ammunition, vehicles up
to 50/60-ton tank transporters, small arms, mortars up to
160-mm, 155-mm self-propelled and towed artillery, indig-
enously designed medium tanks, and chemical and biologi-
cal warfare defensive materiel, aircraft from native and for-
eign designs, and small turbojet engines, engine parts and
components; also produces GABRIEL, an indigenously de-
signed and produced naval surface-to-surface missile, as well
as the SHAFRIR air-to-air missile; has built 6 patrol guided
missile combatants and is building 6 more; most nay.), ships
from U.K., France, and U.S.; equipment from U.S. and di-
verse sources in Western Europe
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 March 1981,
$3,530 million; about 31% of central government budget
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ITALY
(See reference map V
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 645 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
10,176,738 qi.er,. 17,125,657 DWT; includes 55 passenger,
166 cargo, 15 container, 46 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 155 tanker,
26 liquefied gas, 113 bulk, 26 combination ore/oil, 43 spe-
cialized carriers
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: army 256,000, navy 41,900 (including 220 pi-
lots and 540 marines), air force 68,150 (est. 2,500 assigned to
naval air) (1,776 pilots), carabinieri 85,000
Major ground units: 4 divisions (3 mechanized, 1 ar-
mored), and the following separate maneuver units: 12 bri-
gades (5 alpine, 1 airborne, 2 mechanized, and 4 motorized),
18 battalions (10 infantry, 2 armored cavalry, 3 alpine, 1
amphibious, and 2 mechanized); separate combat support
units include 1 missile artillery brigade, 1 air defense com-
mand (3 regiments), 4 field artillery regiments, 4 separate
artillery battalions, 3 light aviation groups, 2 engineer regi-
ments, 7 engineer battalions, and 11 signal battalions
Ships: 3 guided missile cruisers, 4 guided missile destroy-
ers, 3 destroyers, 9 submarines, 16 frigates, 4 escorts, 42 mine
warfare, 29 auxiliary ships, 2 amphibious, 55 minor
amphibious, 2 missile attack boats, 3 motor torpedo boats,
and 156 auxiliary and service craft
Aircraft: 1,556 (603 jet), including 938 (603 jet) in air
force, 98 (nonjet) in naval air, 520 in army aviation
Missiles: 2 I-Hawk regiments, 8 Nike squadrons
Supply: produces infantry weapons, armored vehicles,
electronics, and optical equipment, artillery up to 127-mm,
ammunition up to 203-mm, air-to-air, surface-to-air, and
surface-to-surface missiles; collaborating with France in
development and production of air-to-surface and ship-to-
ship missiles; a VSTOL aircraft carrier; guided missile
destroyers, frigates, submarines, and patrol craft (midget
submarines, guided missile frigates, patrol craft, and missile
attack boats produced for export); jet fighter, trainer, trans-
port and utility aircraft, as well as helicopters; small amounts
of CW/BW defensive materiel; some material, chiefly heavy
equipment, imported from U.S.
Military budget: proposed for fiscal year ending 31
December 1980, $8.9 billion; about 4.9% of proposed central
government budget
54 SECRET
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IVORY COAST
(See reference map VII)
ECONOMY
Aid: economic commitments?Western (non-U.S.) ODA
and OOF (1970-78), $1,134 million; U.S. authorizations,
including Ex-1m (FY70-79), $140 million; military?US.
(FY70-79), $0.1 million
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 12 cargo ships
totaling 125,392 GRT, 158,634 DWT
(1,000 GRT or over)
DEFENSE FORCES
.Personnel: 5,200 army (plus 53 French), 400 navy (plus 9
French), 350 air force (plus 17 French), 3,900 gendarmerie
(plus 30 French), 700 Presidential Guard, (plus 14 French in
civic service)
Major ground units: 3 infantry battalions, 1 armored car
company, 1 parachute company, 1 artillery battery, 1 light
antiaircraft artillery platoon, 1 engineer company
Ships: no combatants
Aircraft: 26 (7 jet, 4 turboprop, 4 prop, 11 turbine heli-
copters)
Supply: principally dependent on France; has purchased
transport aircraft from Netherlands
SECRET
SECRET
JAMAICA
(See reference map III)
ECONOMY
Aid: economic?bilateral commitments including Ex-1m
(FY70-79) from U.S., $200 million; (1976-78) ODA and OOF
from other Western countries:' $320.7 Million; from 'OPEC,
ODA (1974-79) $9 million; from Communist countrieS*(1974-
79), $327.4 million; no military aid '
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 1 cargo ship (1,000 GRT or over) total-
ing 5,800 GRT, 5,100 DWT
DEFENSE FORCES
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ion, Jamaica Regiment, 1,500); Coast Guard, 101; air wing,
90 including 22 pilots; Jamaica Constabulary Force, 6,000; 25X1
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serve), 9,140
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Mfjor'grOund tinits: 2 infintiy'battalioil(active)
Ship: 1 fast patrol craft (PCF), 3 patrol boats (PB)
Aircraft: 12 (3 prop, 1 turboprop, 8 helicopter
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 March 1981,
$23.5 million; about 2.01% of central government budget
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JAPAN
(See reference map VIII)
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 1,854 ships (1,000 GRT or over) total-
ing 34,542,812 GRT, 57,993,233. DWT; includes 78 pas-
senger, 531 'cargo, 67 container, 28 roll2on/roll-off cargo, 412
tanker, th gas carrier, 332 bulk, 48 combination ore/oil, 307
specialized carrier
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: Ground Self Defense Force 155,000; Maritime
Self Defense Force 40,500 (including 11,900 air arm); Air
Self Defense Force, 44,003
Major ground units: 12 infantry divisions,.1 mechanized
division, 1 combined brigade, 1 tank brigade, 1 airborne bri-
gade, 12 nondivisional artillery battalions, 8 antiaircraft mis-
sile groups (HAWK), 1 helicopter brigade
Ships: 51 destroyer/frigates, 14 submarines, 26 coastal pa-
trol, 40 mine warfare, 6 amphibious, 7 auxiliary, and over
300 service craft (an additional force of 521 patrol and ser-
vice craft operates under the jurisdiction of the Maritime
Safety Agency)
Aircraft: 1,532 (736 jet), including 364 in army aviation,
304 in naval air, and 864 (736 jet) in air force
Missiles: 6 operational Nike-Hercules groups, 8 -oper-
ational HAWK groups (Nike in air force, HAWK in ground
force)
56
JORDAN
(See reference map VI)
, .
NOTE: The war between Israel and the Arab states in
(lune 1967 ended with Israel in control of West Jordan. Al-
though approximately 930,000 persons resided in this area
Prior to the start of the war, fewer than 750,000 of them
remain there under the Israeli occupation, the remainder
having fled to East Jordan. Over 14,000 of those who fled
were repatriated in August 1967, but their return has been
more than offset by other Arabs who have crossed and are
continuing to cross from West to East Jordan. These, and
certain other effects of the 1967 Arab-Israeli war are not
included in the data below.
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 1 cargo ship (1,000 GRT or over) total-
ing 1,600 GRT, 2,900 DWT
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: army 57,700, coast guard 190, air force 7,400
.(11.0 pilots), Public Security Force (National Police) 5,700
Major ground units organized around 'divisional struc-
ture; 2 mechanized divisions (each composed of 2 rifecha-
nized brigades, 1 infantry brigade,. divisional artillery.b.attal-
ions, combat support and combat servic support units), 2
armor divisions (each composed of 3 armor brigades, di-
visional artillery battalions, combat support and combat ser-
vice support units), 1 Royal Guards brigade with supporting
units, and a special forces brigade
Ships: 6 operational small patrol craft
Aircraft: 152 (115 jet, 11 prop, 7 turboprop, 19 heli-
copters)
Supply: dependent on outside sources; U.S. and U.K. prin-
cipal suppliers of military equipment; has a large order for
aircraft and missiles with France
SECRET
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KAMPUCHEA
VATNAM
Goff of
Thailand
South
China Sea
(See reference map IX)
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 1 cargo ship totaling 1,400 GRT, 2,600
DWT; the present status of this vessel is unknown
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: Democratic Kampuchea, last known strength
about 30,000 troops; PRK, last known strength about 15,000
troops
Major ground units: Democratic Kampuchea-19 des-
ignated divisional units, which are severely understrength
and are actually equivalent to battalion-sized guerrilla force
units; People's Republic of Kampuchea-37 battalion-sized
units and an unspecified number of troops operating in joint
task forces with Vietnamese cadres
SECRET
KENYA
Indian
Ocean
(See reference map VII
SECRET
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ECONOMY
Aid: economic commitments?Western (non-U.S.) coun-
tries (ODA and 00F; 1970-78), $1,121.0 million; U.S. au-
thorizations (FY70-79), $1,343.0 million; OPEC (ODA; 1974-
79), $61.5 million; military?U.S. (FY70-79), $89.0 million
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 2 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
2,615 GRT, 3,643 DWT; includes 1 cargo, 1 tanker
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Personnel: army about 10,000, navy 650, air force 2,100,
paramilitary police 1,800
Major ground units: 2 brigade FIOs, 5 infantry battalions,
1 mechanized infantry battalion, 1 armor battalion, 1 ground
cavalry battalion, 1 artillery battalion
Ships: 7 patrol boats
Aircraft: 71, including 20 jets and 51 prop (18 transport,
16 trainer, 11 utility aircraft, and 6 helicopters)
Supply: mostly from U.K., but also from France, West
Germany, Israel, and Canada
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KIRIBATI
(formerly Gilbert Islands)
(See reference map X)
COMMUNICATIONS
Airfields: 13 total, 12 usable; 2 with ermanent-surface
runways; 4 with runways 1.',220-2,439 in
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: no military force maintained; there are small
police posts on all islands in the Gilbert Group
58
KOREA, NORTH
(See reference map VIII)
-COMMUNICATIONS
Freight carried: rail-133 million metric tons (1978);
highway-116 million metric tons (1969); waterway-540
million metric ton/km, , 7.7 million metric tons (1969);
coastal-170 million metric ton/km, 0.4 million metric tons
(1969)
Merchant marine: 28 ships (1,000 GRT and over) totaling
226,266 GRT, 360,424 DWT; includes 19 cargo, 5 tanker, 1
combination passenger-cargo, 1 passenger, 2 bulk; North Ko-
rea beneficially owns 2 cargo ships of 4,900 GRT and 8,500
DWT, operated under the Japanese flag
Civil air: 49 major transport aircraft and helicopters
Airfields: 64 (24 with permanent-surface runWays).; 20
with runways over 2,500 m, 22 with runways 1,700-2,499 m;
22 with runways less than 1,700 m
Telecommunications: domestic and international services
are adequate for needs, and oriented to political, military,
and industrial use; extensive upgrading in progress; good
coverage by radio, TV, and wire broadcasts; about 130,000
telephones; 300,000 radios; 21,000 est. TV receivers; 21 AM
radiobroadcast stations; 3 TV stations and unknown number
of TV repeaters; color TV available
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: army at least 600,000 peacetime, over 700,000
at wartime table of organization and equipment; navy
31,300; air force 51,400; military security forces 38,000
(including internal security force 8,000, railroad police 5,000,
coastal/border security units 25,000)
SECRET
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KOREA, NORTH (Continued)
Major ground units: 8 corps headquarters, 1 special corps,
30 infantry divisions, 2 mechanized infantry divisions, 2 ar-
mored divisions, SAM command (4 brigades), 4 infantry bri-
gades, 5 independent infantry regiments, 16-20 ranger/
commando brigades, 4 reconnaissance brigades, 1 (women's)
AA brigade, 6 armored brigades, 2 tank regiments, 5 shock
assault brigades, 1 engineer river crossing regiment, 3
engineer pontoon bridge regiments, 3 engineer river crossing
battalions, 3 engineer amphibian battalions, 5 FROG battal-
ions, 100 artillery battalions (nondivisional), 82 rocket
launcher battalions
Ships: 2 light frigates, 6 patrol frigates, 20 submarines, 340
coastal patrol types, 116 amphibious warfare, 4 auxiliary,
and 97 service craft
Aircraft: 1,202 (730 jet)
Missiles: 45 operational
(SAMLET) sites
SA-2 SAM sites, 2 SSC-2b
Supply: produces infantry weapons, towed and self-
propelled artillery, rocket launchers, ammunition (including
artillery), tanks, armored vehicles, explosives, trucks, naval
ships (including patrol escorts, submarines, and missile
boats), and some CW defensive materiel; dependent on
heavy artillery and sophisticated
U.S.S.R. and China for
electronic equipment
Military budget:
December 1980, $3.1
budget
estimate for fiscal year ending 31
billion; about 29% of total government
SECRET
SECRET
KOREA, SOUTH
(See reference map VIII)
25X1
25X1
COMMUNICATIONS 25X1
Railroads: 4,175 km total (1978); 4,110 km standard gage
(1.435 m), 65 km narrow gage (0.610 m); 901 km double
track; 320 km electrified; government-owned
Inland waterways: 1,609 km; use restricted to small na-
tive craft
Merchant marine: 387 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
3,749,162 GRT, 6,305,256 DWT; includes 197 cargo, 33 con-
tainer, 44 tanker, 88 bulk, 18 specialized carrier, 2 combina-
tion ore/oil, 3 liquefied gas carrier, 1 passenger
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: army 520,000, navy 48,000 (including 23,000
marines), air force 32,600
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Major ground units: 3 army and 5 corps headquarters, 20
(19 Army, 1 Marine) infantry divisions, 1 mechanized in25X 1
fantry division, 2 independent infantry brigades, 2 indepen-
dent infantry regiments, 8 reserve infantry divisions at cadre
strength, 2 air defense artillery brigades (including 4 Hawk
battalions, 2 NIKE battalions), 2 armored brigades, 9 sepa-
rate (corps level) armored battalions, 7 special forces bri-
gades (abn), 38 corps and army field artillery battalions (7
light, 17 medium, 14 heavy), 2 Honest John battalions, 1
army aviation brigade
Ships: 17 destroyer/frigates, 55 coastal patrol, 9 mine
warfare, 25 amphibious ships and craft, 12 auxiliary and 140
various service craft
Aircraft: 1,232 including 554 (277 fixed wing prop and
277 helicopters) in army, 55 (30 prop and 25 helicopters) in
naval air, and 623 (474 jet) in air force
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Missiles: Hawk and Nike-Hercules (see above) 25X1
59
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/09/05: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100040001-8
SECRET
KOREA, SOUTH (Continued)
Supply: assembles APC's; retrofits tanks, produces rifles,
mortars, howitzers, other crew-served weapons, small arms
and artillery ammunition, explosives, some engineer equip-
ment and quartermaster-type equipment, helicopters, some
small naval craft, including motor gunboats, missile boats,
landing craft, and small auxiliary craft; 1 frigate currently
under construction; most other materiel obtained from U.S.
60
KUWAIT
(See reference map VI)
ECONOMY
Aid: Kuwait pledged $5,996 million in in economic aid to
LDCs 1974-79
COMMUNICATIONS ?
Merchant marine: 97 ships (1,000 GRT or over), totaling
2,506,693 GRT, 4,158,438 DWT; includes 1 passenger, 62
cargo, 15 tanker, 9 specialized carrier, 5 liquefied gas car-
rier, 5 container
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: army 10,000, navy 470, air force 2,000 (90 pi-
lots), national police force 8,000
Major ground units: 3 brigades (1 mechanized infantry
brigade and 2 armored brigades); 1 Amiri Guard battalion,
and 1 military police battalion
Aircraft: 99 (61 jet, 3 transports, 35 helicopters)
Coast Guard: 39 patrol boats, 8 port security boats, 3 util-
ity landing craft
Supply: dependent mainly on U.K., but also on Belgium,
France, and FRG and on Singapore for patrol boats; field
artillery, rocket launchers and rockets obtained from
U.S.S.R.
SECRET
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/09/05: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100040001-8
:LAOS.
(See reference map IX)
COMMUNICATIONS
Civil air: 9 major transport aircra
DEFENSE FORCES ,
Personnel: ground 46,000, air force 800 (possibly 200 pi-
lots), river flotilla unknown
Major ground units: 7 probable infantry -regiments and
72 infantry, 5 artillery, 2 armor, and 6 AAA battalions are
under the control of the military region or province in which
they operate; in addition, there are believed to be elements
of 4 People's Army of Vietnam (PAVN) infantry divisions, 2
and
combat regiments, 2 economic construction divisions,
assorted PAVN engineer and logistics forces in Laos
Ships: 20 river patrol craft, 11 amphibious warfare craft,
15 service craft
Aircraft: 96 (68 fixed wing-32 combat, 27 transport, 9
utility; 28 helicopters-8 turbine, 20 piston)
Supply: dependent on USSR; and China
Military budget announced for fiscal year ending 30
June 1979, $50 million; about 29% of total government bud-
get
SECRET
SECRET
LEBANON
(See reference map VI)
ECONOMY .
GNP: $3.3 billion (1979), $1,120 per capita
Aid: economic?OPEC (ODA; 1974-79), $336.0 million;
U.S., including Ex-Im (FY70-79), $174.8 million; other. West-
ern; ODA and OOF (1970-79), $56.0 million; Communist
countries (1970-79), $9.2 million; military?U.S. (FY70-79),
$95.1 million; Communist 'countries (1970-79), $100 million
25X1
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 79 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
226,604 GRT, 325,565 DWT; includes 63 cargo, 2 bulk, 7
specialized carrier, 6 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 1 container; a
flag of convenience registry
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: estimated to reach 25,000 by 1980
Major ground units: 1 mechanized infantry brigade and 6
infantry brigades are being formed; eventually, all are to be
mechanized; each brigade will consist of 3 mechanized
battalions, an artillery battalion, and an armored reconnais-
sance battalion
Ships: 1 motor gunboat, 3 patrol boats, 1 utility landing
craft
Aircraft: 57 (27 jet, 9 prop, 21 helicopters); only about half
of inventory operational
Supply: nearly all supplies purchased abroad, principally
from U.S., France, and U.K.; minor amounts from U.S.S.R.
and Yugoslavia
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/09/05: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100040001-8
SECRET
LESOTHO
Int/inn Ocean
(See reference map VII)
ECONOMY
Aid: economic?Western (non-U.S.) countries, ODA and
00F, (1970-78), $148 million; U.S. authorized (FY70-78),
$56 million; OPEC (ODA; 1974-79), $32 million
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: about 1,500 army; the Police Mobile. Unit
forms the basis for the new army; police, about 1,000; no
paramilitary capability
Major ground units: 1 infantry battalion
Aircraft: 3 prop, 1 helicopter
Supply: ground force equipment from U.K. and Iran
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 30 March 1981,
$9.8 million; 4% of central government budget
62
LIBERIA
(See reference map VII)
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 2,202 ships (1,000 GRT or over) total-
ing 78,247,629 GRT, 152,961,813 DWT; includes 5 pas-
senger, 411 cargo, 46 container, 23 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 719
tanker, 47 liquefied gas, 704 bulk, 130 combination ore/oil,
5 barge carriers, 112 specialized carrier; although this regis-
try ranks first in tonnage in the world, all but 2 ships are
entirely foreign owned and operated
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: national guard 5,137, national coast guard 210,
national police force 1,556, air reconnaissance unit 29
Major ground units: 1 brigade headquarters, 5 infantry
battalions, 1 executive mansion guard battalion, 1 engineer
battalion, 1 artillery battalion, 1 scout platoon, 1 aviation
unit and 1 service support battalion
Ships: 1 gunboat and 6 patrol boats
Aircraft: 6 light prop
Supply: dependent mainly on U.S., has received small
arms and ammunition from Israel, armored cars from Swit-
zerland and trucks from Japan and materiel from the FRG
and the ROK
Military budget: for year ending 30 June 1981, $27.6 mil-
lion; 7.4% of central government budget
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/09/05: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100040001-8
LIBYA
(See reference map VII)
ECONOMY
Aid:. economic?(1970-77), Western (non-U.S.), $60 mil-
lion; U.S., $0.4 million; military?(1970-77), Communist
countries, $3,429 million; U.S., $0.5 million
COMMUNICATIONS
Merehant marine: 29 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
873,800 GRT, 1,571,686 DWT; includes 9 cargo, 3
roll-on/roll-off cargo, 13 tanker, 1 specialized carrier, 3 pas-
senger
Telecommunications: system is in top one-third of Af-
rican systems; coaxial cable and radio relay used widely; ra-
dio communication stations primarily in use in south; Soviet
facilities at Tobruk; principal centers are Tripoli and Ben-
ghazi; 55,000 telephones (1.9 per 100 popl.); 12 AM, 1 FM,
and 12 TV stations; 2 submarine cables to France and Sicily;
satellite service from Tripoli, 3 antennas
DEFENSE FORCES
, Personnel: army 60,000, navy 6,000, air force 7,600 (350
pilots), air ,defense 1?2,000
Major ground units:.the brigade structure has been abol-
ished; the battalion is now the basic unit; there are an es-
timated 21 infantry/mechanized infantry battalions (bns), 17
armor bns and 17 artillery bns, as well as SCUD and FROG
units; the Al Jamahiriyyah Guard (former Republican Guard
Brigade) and Commando/Suicide, forces
Ships: 1 frigate, 3 F-class submarines, 17 missile attack
boats, 1 patrol combatant, 4 fast fire support boats, 11 patrol
boats, 7 tank landing craft, and 2 auxiliaries
SECRET
Supply: dependent Mainly on U.K. and U.S. up to 1969;
U.K. provided a Vosper.Mk. 7 frigate in 1973; current con-
tracts for 10 French missile attack boats and 8 Italian patrol
guided missile combatants; France primary supplier of air-
craft and supplied the CROTALE surfaceLto-air missile in
1973; Soviet military aid began in 1970 and accelerated
throughout the 1970s, with substantial deliveries of tanks,
armored personnel carriers (APCs), artillery, transport ve-
hicles, 6 missile attack bots, 3 submarines, bomber and25X1
fighter aircraft, SCUD surface-to-surface missiles and sur-
face-to-air missile systems; additional missile boats and sub-
marines are to be received; Czechoslovakia and Poland also25X1
have provided APCs and tanks and 1 medium landing ship;
Italy has provided artillery, APCs, and 1 vehicle cargo ship25X1
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Aircraft: 790 (698 jet, 7 turboprop, 85 helicopters)
Missiles: 8 SA-2 battalions, 14 SA-3 battalions, 14 SA-6
battalions, 3 CROTALE batteries, unknown number of SA-9
launchers
SECRET
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63
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/09/05: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100040001-8
Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/09/05: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100040001-8
SECRET
LIECHTENSTEIN
(See reference map V) ?
64
LUXEMBOURG
(See reference map V)
DEFENSE FORCES
; .Personnel: army 625, national gendarmerie 390
Major ground unit: 1 light infantry battalion
Supply: completely dependent on other NATO countries,
primarily the U.S.
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December
1980, $52 million, 3% of central government budget
SECRET
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MACAU
(See reference map VIII)
DEFENSE FORCES
Ships: 8 patrol craft, under control of Water and Customs
Police
SECRET
SECRET
MADAGASCAR
(See reference map VII)
ECONOMY
Aid: economic commitments?Western (non-U.S.) coun-
tries (ODA and 00F; 1970-78), $450.0 million; Communist
countries (1970-79), $110.3 million; U.S. (FY70-79), $7.9 mil-
lion; OPEC (ODA; 1974-79), $138.9 million. military?Com-
munist countries (1970-79), $90.0 million
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 15 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
56,712 GRT, 80,474 DWT; includes 10 cargo, 1 tanker, 1
specialized carrier, 1 liquefied gas carrier, 2 roll-on/roll-off
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: 18,000 army, 500 navy, 900 air force, 7,000
gendarmerie
Major ground units: 2 interarms regiments of battalion
size, 1 artillery regiment, 1 air defense regiment, 1 engineer
regiment, ,7 development regiments, 1 communications regi-
ment, and 1 support regiment
Ships: 4 fast attack boats, 1 patrol craft, 1 motor gunboat,
and 1 cargo transport
Aircraft: 25 (10 jets, 12 prop transport, 3 helicopters) (S)
Supply: nearly all from France in the past, now mostly
from West and East European countries; also PRC, North
Korea, U.S.S.R., and Romania; relying on U.S.S.R. for new
aircraft
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December
1980, $148.8 million; about 14.2% of central government
budget
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/09/05: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100040001-8
SECRET
MALAWI
(See reference map VII)
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: 4,500 army, 3,000 police (including 460 police
mobile force), 600 Malawi Young Pioneers
Major ground units: 3 motorized infantry battalions; a
fourth motorized infantry battalion is due to be formed in
1982
Ships: 4 patrol craft (1 limited operation, 3 out of oper-
ation)
Aircraft: 12 prop utility aircraft, 4 helicopters
Supply: mainly from U.K., but also from several other
Western and Third World countries
66
MALAYSIA
(See reference map IX)
NOTE: Malaysia, which came into being on 16 September
1963, consists of Peninsular Malaysia, which includes 11
states of the former Federation of Malaya, plus East Malay-
sia, which includes the 2 former colonies of North Borneo
(renamed Sabah) and Sarawak
ECONOMY
Aid commitments: economic U.S., including Ex-Im
(FY70-79), $93 million; military U.S. (FY70-79) $126 million;
Western (non-U.S.) countries (1970-78), $655 million; OPEC,
ODA (1974-79), $241 million
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 73 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
725,326 GRT, 1,013,355 DWT; includes 46 cargo, 4 tanker,
9 bulk, 1 combination ore/oil, 10 container, 2 specialized
carrier, 1 liquefied gas tanker
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: army 61,980 (including 2,700 territorial army
reserves and 3,500 local defense corps personnel), navy
10,000, air force 10,000, police field force 21,450, marine
police 2,800, Sarawak Border Scouts 1,200
Major ground units: 36 infantry, 3 cavalry, 5 artillery, 2
special service battalions, 18 police field force battalions
Ships: 2 frigates, 8 missile attack boats, 28 coastal patrol, 6
mine warfare, 3 auxiliary, 21 amphibious ships/craft, and 1
service craft; in addition Marine Police have approximately
100 coastal patrol craft and numerous small patrol vessels
Aircraft: approximately 149 (32 jets)
Supply: fast patrol boats domestically produced; naval
ships and equipment from New Zealand, Singapore, France,
Sweden, and the U.S.; some air force equipment from
Canada, France, U.K., U.S., and Australia; armored vehicles
from U.S. and U.K.; limited ground forces equipment
domestically produced
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bik
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SECRET
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/09/05: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100040001-8
Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/09/05: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100040001-8
MALDIVES
Laccadive
See
Male
SR]
LANKA
Vouf0.0110
(See reference map VIII)
ECONOMY
Aid: U.K. (1960-65),$1.4 million drawn; Sri Lanka (1967),
$1 million committed; OPEC ODA committed (1974-79),
$22 million; Japan and India (amounts not known)
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 30 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
146,904 GRT, 207,983 DWT; includes 28 cargo, 1 container,
and 1 bulk carrier
DEFENSE FORCES
No formal defense structure and no regular armed forces;
there is a 400-man armed police force; several trawlers have
been armed and supplement several 7-meter patrol boats; 2
light aircraft and 1 helicopter provide air patrol
SECRET
SECRET
MALI
(See reference map VII)
ECONOMY
Aid: economic commitments?Western (non-U.S.) coun-
tries, ODA and OOF (1970-78), $492.0 million; OPEC
(ODA; 1974-79), $117.0 million; U.S., including Ex-Im
(FY70-79), $154.5 million; Communist countries (1970-79),
$63.2 million; military?Communist (1970-77), $125.0 mil-
lion; U.S. (FY70-79), $0.6 million
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: 4,670 army, 200-300 airforce, 2,000 gendar-
merie, 700 police, 720 nomad security guards, 1,500 repub-
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lican guard, 180 Soviet military advisers 25X1
Major ground units: 5 infantry battalions, 1 paratroo125x
battalion, 1 tank group, 1 engineer battalion, 1 special battal-
ion, 1 mixed artillery group, and 1 SA-3 battery
Aircraft (army): 48 (including 21 fighter, 3 trainer, 8 heli-
copter, 1 utility, and 15 transport)
Supply: dependent primarily on foreign countries, mainly
the U.S.S.R.; also has received equipment from France,
PRC, and FRG
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/09/05: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100040001-8
Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/09/05: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100040001-8
SECRET
MALTA
('See reference map V)
ECONOMY
Aid: economic authorizations?U.S., $79,5 million (FY70-
79); other Western bilateral (ODA and 00F) 'commitments,
$123 million (1970-78); China, $45 million (1972); OPEC
(ow.), $111 million (1974-79)
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 26 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
119,660 GRT, 174,566 DWT; includes 13 cargo, 2 roll-on/
roll-off cargo, 5 bulk, 2 specialized carriers, 1 tanker, 2 pas-
senger, 1 liquefied gas carrier
DEFENSE FORCES
?
Defense no longer responsibility of U.K.; Regular Armed
Forces of Malta consist of a small headquarters staff; a regf-
ment (U.S. bn) consisting of the regimental headquarters bat-
tery, a maritime battery with 11 patrol boats, and a heli-
copter detachment with 10 helicopters; 1 infantry company;
and a service support unit including engineers; personnel
strength is approx. 700; the paramilitary Pioneer Corps con-
sists of 1 corps of 1,600 personnel; the Arms of Malta consists
of 1 battalion of 4,000 personnel; 350 Royal naval personnel
Malta police force is composed of about 1,300 Maltese
68
MARTINIQUE
(See reference map III)
DEFENSE FORCES
Defense is responsibility of France; data are for French
Military forces
Personnel: 1,000 army infantry; 900 civic action; 200
navy; small air force detachment; 400 gendarmes
? Major ground units: 1 overseas infantry regiment, 1 civic
action battalion
Ships: 2 motor gunboats, 1 utility, landing craft
Aircraft: 6 (3 medium transports, 3 utility aircraft)
SECRET
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/09/05: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100040001-8
MAURITANIA
(See reference map VII)
ECONOMY
Aid: economic commitments?OPEC, ODA (1974-79),
$845.0 million; Western (non-U.S.) countries, ODA and OOF
(1970778), $231.8 million; Communist countries (1970-79),
$98.1 million; U.S., including Ex-Im- (FY70-79), $31.4 mil-
lion; military?Communist countries (1976), $4.0 million
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 1 cargo ship totaling 1,500 GRT, 1,700
DWT
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: 7,500 army, 320 navy, 150 air force, 1,380
gendarmerie, 1,335 national guard
Major ground units: 1 headquarters company, 1 engineer
company, 1 artillery battalion, 2 armored car squadrons, 11
tactical units (bn), 1 commando company, 1 air defense bat-
tery
Ships: 8 patrol craft, 1 landing craft
Aircraft: 11 prop (3 transport, 8 utility)
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December
1980, $45.7 million; 20.7% of central government budget
SECRET
MAURITIUS
(See reference map VII) 25X1
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 5 cargo ships (1,000 GRT or ove
ing 30,883 GRT, 45,910 DWT
) total-
25X1
DEFENSE FORCES
Mutual defense and assistance agreement with the U.K.;
paramilitary units, special mobile force (340-400), police riot
units (240), regular police (3,000); ? British influence has
continued; Mauritius also looks to India and France for mili-
tary aid.
Ships: 1 patrol craft assigned to police
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SECRET
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/09/05: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100040001-8
SECRET
MEXICO
(See reference map II)
GOVERNMENT
Communists: Mexican Communist
100,000) and other minor far-left parties
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 70 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
889,424 GRT, 1,320,504 DWT; includes 6 passenger, 15
cargo, 2 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 35 tanker, 1 specialized car-
rier, 6 bulk, 5 liquefied gas carrier
Party (estimated
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: 88,000 army, 20,800 navy (including 2,500
marines, 300 naval air), 4,600 air force (including 450 pilots)
Major ground units: 3 infantry brigades, 65 separate in-
fantry battalions, 5 cavalry regiments (horse), 18 motorized
cavalry regiments, 2 artillery regiments, 1 military police
brigade, 1 engineer service regiment, 1 combat engineer
battalion, 1 signal battalion, 1 transport regiment; regiments
are comparable in size to battalions; air force has 1 airborne
brigade, 1 combat engineer battalion, 2 armored infantry
battalions
Ships: 2 destroyers, 1 frigate, 34 patrol ships, 31 patrol
craft, 7 river/roadstead craft, 4 amphibious personnel trans-
port, 6 harbor patrol boats, 2 amphibious vehicle landing
ships, 11 auxiliaries, and 16 service craft
Aircraft: air force 270 (21 jet, 196 prop, 30 turboprop, 23
helicopters); naval air 40 (1 jet, 1 turboprop, 30 prop, 8 heli-
copters)
Supply: produces small arms, mortars, ammunition and
quartermaster equipment; imports other materiel including
most naval ships from U.S., Western Europe, Israel, and Ja-
pan; large aircraft order with Switzerland
70
SECRET
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/09/05: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100040001-8
MONACO
(See reference map V)
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 2 tankers totaling 28,154 GRT, 45,405
DWT
SECRET
SECRET
MONGOLIA
(See reference map VIII)
COMMUNICATIONS
? Civil air: 3 major transport aircraft (1976)
Airfields: 31 total; .6 with permanent-surface'runways; 17
with runways 2,500-3,499 m, 11 with runways 1,000-2,499
m, 3 with runways less than 1,000 m
Telecommunications: domestic and international facilities
are being modernized and provide fairly good service; 25,805
telephones (96% automatic); about 93 telephone exchanges
and 25 telegraph offices; 2 main AM radiobroadcast stations
supplemented by about 294 wired broadcast distribution sta-
tions; 111,000 radio and 67,000 wired broadcast receivers; 3
TV stations; 20,000 TV receivers (est.)
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 373,000; 244,000 fit for
military service; average number reaching military age (18)
annually, about 18,000 ?
? Personnel: (estimated) 25,000 ground forces," 100 pilots
in air force (operate civil airline), 10,000 paramilitary forces
Major ground units: 2 identified motorized brigades, plus
combat and service support units
"Soviet ground forces troops in Mongolia as of 1 January 1978,
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MOROCCO
(See reference map VII)
ECONOMY
Aid: economic commitments?Western (non-U.S.) coun-
tries, ODA and 00F, (1970-.78), $1,305 million; U.S., includ-
ing Ex-In (FY70-79), $486 Million; OPEC, ODA (1974779),
$935 million; Communist countries (1970-79), $2,258 mil-
lion; military?Communist countries (1970-79), $63 million
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 44 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
325,979 GRT, 538,119 DWT; includes 1 passenger, 21 cargo,
3 container, 5 tanker, 3 bulk, 10 specialized carrier, 1 lique-
fied gas carrier
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: 105,000 army, 4,500 navy, 10,000 air force
(270 pilots), 7,500 mobile maghzen of Auxiliary Forces, 9,600
royal gendarmerie 5 800 mobile intervention companies of
national police
Major ground units: 1 light security brigade, 1 parachute
brigade, 10 infantry regiments, 16 infantry battalions, 1
Royal Guard battalion, 5 armor squadron qroups, 1 mecha-
nized group, 8 artillery groups, 3 Mehariste (camel infantry)
battalions, 2 horse cavalry groups, 4 combat en? 'neer battal-
ions, 3 signal battalions, 3 transport groups
Ships: 1 submarine chaser, 2 patrol escorts, 2 patrol craft,
11 patrol boats, 1 coastal minesweeper, 3 medium landing
ships, 2 service craft, and 1 utility landing craft
Aircraft: 231 (89 jet, 23 turboprop, 38 prop, 81 heli-
copters)
Supply: dependent entirely on foreign supplies, princi-
pally France and U.S., but also obtains some equipment
from Warsaw Pact countries
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MOZAMBIQUE
(See reference map VII)
ECONOMY ?
Exports: $241 million (1979 est.); cashew nuts, cotton, su-
gar, mineral products, timber products, tea, copra
Imports: $600 million (1979 est.); machinery and eleC:
trical equipment, cotton textiles, vehicles, 'petroleum pro-
ducts, wine, iron and steel
Aid: economic commitments?Western (non-U.S.) coun-
tries, ODA and OOP' (1970-78), $580.0 million; Communist
countries (1970-79), $187.0 million; U.S., including Ex-Im
(FY70-79), $55.5 million; OPEC, ODA (1974-79), $57.8 mil-
lion; military?Communist countries (1970-79), $327.0 mil-
lion
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 7 ships totaling 18,764 GRT, 28,061
DWT; includes 6 cargo, 1 tanker
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: approximately 25,000-30,000 organized into
12 brigades (8 motorized infantry, brigades and 4 border
guard brigades with an unknown number of support battal-
ion
Equipment: various ADA (85-mm, 37-mm, 14.5-mm, and
quad 12.7-mm), SA-3 and SA-7 SAMs, 122-mm rockets and
probably some 122-mm artillery, light .armored vehicles,
T-34 tanks, MiG-15.and MiG-17 aircraft
SECRET
SECRET
NAMIBIA
(South-West Africa)
(See reference map VII)
ECONOMY
GDP: approximately $1 .billion (est.
capita; growth rate about 5% since 1970
Exports: $335 million (f.o.b., 1970); diamonds, uranium,
base metals (blister copper, lead-copper-zinc concentrates,
refined lead), cattle and karakul pelts fish products (pilchard
products, rock lobster, white fish)
Imports: $250 million (f.o.b., 1969); .grain and other food
products, steel, fertilizer, cement, textiles, and capital goods25X1
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Major trade partners: Republic of South Africa supplies
about 90% of country's imports; most of the rest of
Namibia's trade is with the U.K. and West Germany
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel/forces present in Namibia: about 17,000-
20,000 total active duty composed of about 2,000-3,000 eth-
nic Namibians; about 600 in an irregular battalion of ex-
Angolans; about -12,000-15,000 South African Defense Force
(SADF) personnel in Namibia, 1,500 SADF permanently sta-
tioned in Walvis Bay; in addition there are some 5,000-7,000
Namibian reservists not on active duty
Rebel forces: about 8,000 SWAPO guerrillas mainly at
camps in Angola and Zambia
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NAURU
(See reference map X)
NEPAL
(See reference map VIII)
COMMUNICATIONS ECONOMY
Merchant marine: 4 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totalin ? Aid: economic commitments?Communist (1970-79),
50,743 GRT, 72,177 DWT; includes 1 cargo, 3 bulk $125 million; OPEC, ODA (1974-79), $56 million; U.S.
(FY70-79), $110 million
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: 20,000-23,000 army
Major ground units: 12 infantry battalions (subordinate to
1 palace and 4 infantry brigade headquarters elements), 1
parachute battalion, 1 reduced-strength artillery regiment,
the King's Household Cavalry, and other service elements;
the army also includes 24 separate infantry companies
Supply: produces some small arms ammunition; performs
small arms repair; bulk of military supplies obtained from
India; lesser amounts from the U.K., France, the U.S., PRC
and West Germany
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NETHERLANDS
(See reference map V)
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 397 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
3,313,664 GRT, 5,122,848 DWT; includes 3 passenger, 288
cargo, 18 container, 8 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 23 tanker, 34
bulk, 1 barge/lighter carrier, 22 specialized carrier
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: 74,000 army, 16,400 navy (including 2,200 na-
val air and 2,800 marines), 18,290 air force approx. (513
pilots), 3,200 royal constabulary
Major ground units: 1 NATO-committed corps consisting
of 2 active mechanized divisions, 1 reserve mechanized di-
vision, 1 reserve motorized infantry brigade, a corps artillery
group with a Lance battalion, an SP 155-mm howitzer
battalion, a 175-mm gun battalion, and an SP 203-mm how-
itzer battalion
Ships: 2 guided missile destroyers, 3 destroyers, 6 subma-
rines, 6 ASW frigates, 3 guided missile frigates, 11 patrol, 35
mine warfare, 10 minor amphibious warfare, 14 auxiliary,
27 service craft
Aircraft: 355 (202 jet, 19 turboprop, 15 prop, 119 heli-
copters); 313 air force (202 jet, 12 turboprop, 99 helicopters);
42 naval air arm (7 turboprop, 15 prop, 20 helicopters)
Missiles: 4 Nike-Hercules squadrons; 14 I-Hawk Squad-
rons; Honest John and 8-inch howitzer (see Major ground
units)
Supply: naval ships produced domestically include guided
missile frigates, submarines, and mine warfare types; has
built light frigates for export, two transport-type aircraft,
moderate quantities of ammunition, some CW/BW defense
materiel, and military telecom and electronics equipment;
most supplies from other NATO countries; naval
surface-to-air missiles from the U.K., air-to-surface missiles
from France
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Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December
1980, $5,328 million; about 10% of central government bud-
get
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NETHERLANDS ANTILLES
(See reference map III)
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 64 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
1,878,728 GRT, 3,443,529 DWT; includes 4 passenger, 20
cargo, 3 container, 2 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 20 tanker, 5 liq-
uefied gas, 8 bulk, 2 specialized carrier; all but a few are
Dutch owned
DEFENSE FORCES
Local security forces: civil police, 675 (including 40
Dutch under contract in adviser and warrant officer duties);
200 Antilles marines; National Guard, 200 (force is a reserve
unit)
Personnel: Dutch forces: 1,600 navy, 400 marines; local
civil police force cooperates with Dutch forces
Ships: 1 destroyer, and 1 medium landing craft from the
Netherlands inventory
Aircraft: 3 prop
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NEW CALEDONIA
(See reference map X)
DEFENSE FORCES
France provides for defense; there are about 2,500 mili-
tary personnel in New Caledonia including paramilitary
forces (Gendarmes and police agents). A Gendarmerie di-
vision is stationed there; officers of this force are recruited in
France. There is also an auxiliary Gendarmerie of Melane- 25X1
sians. The police force, as distinct from the Gendarmerie, is
locally recruited and operates in Noumea under a French
officer. There is a naval base at Noumea (2 patrol com-
batants, 3 amphibious ships/craft, 3 auxiliaries homeported),
1 fleet air squadron (4 fixed-wing aircraft), and an air section
at Tontouta Airport (3 helicopters).
Major ground units: 1 infantry regiment (3 motorized in-
fantry companies and 1 airborne company)
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? .NEWSZEALAND
(See reference map X)
COMMUNICATIONS .
Merchaht marine: 28 .ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
233,999 GRT, 260,824 DWT; includes 2 passenger, 7- cargo;
4 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 8 bulk, '3 tanker, 1 specialized car-
rier, 3 container
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: 5,457 army, 2,870 navy, '4,220 air force
Major ground units: 3 infantry regiments (bn), 1 in Sin-
gapore, and 1 special air service squadron (remainder of
army essentially a cadre force)
Ships: 4 frigates, 10 coastal patrol (plus 3 in reserve), 2
auxiliary and 1 service craft
Aircraft: 103 (29 jet)
Supply: capable of producing some small arms ammuni-
tion; produces some utility aircraft; dependent on foreign
sources for all other materiel; `principally U.K., U.S:, Austra-
lia (also Canada for naval items)
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NICARAGUA
(See reference map III)
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Merchant marine: a ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
14,506 GRT; 20,703.DWT;4ricludes.2 cargo, 1 taiiker.
DEFENSE FORCES,
Personnel: est. 17,000 (includes ground, air, and naval)
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Major ground units: the Government of National Re-
construction has stated that the maximum number of' units
would not exceed 10 battalions; exact status of the formation
process is currently unkriown; air force has one composite
unit at Sandino Airport in Managua
Ships: est. 3 patrol craft
Aircraft: 80 (5 jet, an unknown variety of turboprop and
prop, 8 helicopter)
Supply: dependent primarily upon U.S.; and West Europe
has purchased aircraft and patrol boats from Israel
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SECRET
NIGER
(See reference map VII)
ECONOMY
Aid: economic commitments?Western (non-U.S.) cbun-
tries; ODA and OOF (1970-78), $600 'million; U.S., including
EX4in (Fy70-79), $95.2 Communist countrie(1970-
79), $54.6 million; OPEC, ODA (1974-79), $32.6 million
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel:. 3,200 army (plus 28 French and 6 West Ger-
Man advisers), 100 air force (plus 6 French), 800 Gendar-
merie (plus 13 French advisers), 1,500 Republican Guard,
1,000 national police, and 200 Presidential Guard
Major ground units: 1 headquarters and support com-
pany, 1 airborne company, 2 armored reconnaissance squad-
rons, 1 engineer company, 4 mixed infantry companies
Aircraft: 11(9 transport, 2 utility)
Supply: dependent on France exclusively until 1964; since
then has obtained ground_ force materiel from other
non-Communist countries including Belgium, Israel, West
Germany, and Canada
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NIGERIA
(See reference map VII)
ECONOMY
Aid: economic commitments?Western (non-U.S.) coun-
tries, ODA and OOF (1970-78), $458.0 million; U.S., includ-
ing Ex-Im (FY70-79), $168.1 million; Communist countries,
(1970-79), $159.0 million; military?Communist countries
(1970-79), $190.0 million
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 32 cargo ships (1,000 GRT or over)
totaling 278,452 GRT, 359,845 DWT
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: army 140,000; navy 8,000; air force 9,100; po-
lice force 75,000; military advisors: 4 British air force, 3
West German air force, 3 Polish army, 2 French air force, 3
Czechoslovakian air force, 3 Pakistani army; 40 Soviet air
force
Major ground units: 4 infantry divisions (21 brigade
headquarters-13 combatant, 4 armored, and 4 artillery); 12
division combat support units (battalion size-4 field en-
gineer, 4 signal, and 4 engineer construction); 16 division
service units (battalion size-4 medical, 4 provost marshall, 4
supply and transport, and 4 ordnance/ammunition depots)
Ships: 19 total (1' frigate, 2 patrol escorts, 2 amphibious
warships, 11 coastal patrol river craft, 2 auxiliaries, 1 fire-
boat)
SECRET
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NIGERIA (Continued) ?
Aircraft: 149 (53 jet, 57 prop, 39 helicopters)
Supply: produced some small arms and ammunition in the
past; army materiel obtained from several countries; other
materiel 'imported primarily from ? Algeria, U.K:, U.S.S.R.,
and West Germany; dependent for ships primarily on U.K.
but also West Germany and France; received aircraft from
Czechoslovakia, Sudan, Egypt, and the U.S.S.R. in the past;
U.K. and France more recently
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NORWAY
(See reference map V)
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COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 613 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
20,585,919 GRI, .37,440,523 DWT; includes 37 passenger,
128 cargo, 3 container, 39 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 131 .tanker,
47 liquefied gas, 124 bulk, 39 combination ore/oil, 74: spe-
cialized carrier 25X1
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Personnel: 17,900 army, 8,600 navy including coast artil-
lery, 9,900 air force (275 pilots)
Major ground units: 1 brigade,
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3 minelayers, 9 coastal minesweepers, 1 coastal minehunter,
7 auxiliaries, 8 amphibious craft, 1 service craft
2 regimental combat
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Missiles: 1 Nike battalion, RBS-70 (6 launchers)
Supply: ammunition, some light armaments, electroni25xi
equipment; CW defensive materials, aircraft, avionics, en-
gine parts, and naval ships (except submarines) produced
domestically; currently? exporting missile attack boats;
producing small naval missile, Penguin;. most 'equipment
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OMAN
(See reference map VI)
ECONOMY
Aid:' economic commitments?OPEC, ODA (1974,?79),
$1;446 million; Western(nOniU.S.) countries', ODA'and OOF
(197(Y79),.$17 U:S. (FY70L79),;-$2 millidn
COMMUNICATIONS
eNerchant marine: 1 Cargo ship (1,000 GRT or over) total-
ing 1,400 GRT, 2,900 DWT
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: 11,800 army, 1,000 navy, 1,700 force (500 of-
ficers)
Major ground units: 2 infantry brigades, 1 special forces
unit, 1 artillery regiment, 1 armored car squadron, 1 guard
regiment, and 1 airborne ccimpany
Ships: 2 guided missile.boats, 4 motor gunboats, 5 patrol
boats (police), 5 mechanized landing craft, 1 large Personnel
landing craft, 3 auxiliaries, 4 miscellaneous service craft,. 1
amphibious' command ship, and 1 oceanographic research
ship
Aircraft: 105 (51 jet, 8 prop, 17 turboprop, 29 helicopters)
Supply: mostly from U.K.; some ground equipment and
aircraft also from Belgium, Italy, Iran, Jordan, and Saudi
Arabia
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December
1980, $880 million; 31% of central government budget
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PAKISTAN
(See reference map VIII)
ECONOMY
Aid commitments (including Bangladesh prior to 1972):
economic?U.S. (FY70-79), $1.7 billion authorized (exclud-
ing what is now Bangladesh); U.S.S.R. (1970-79), .$721.0 ..mil-
lion; China (1970-79); $463.0 , million; Eastern Europe
(1970-79), $163.0 million; military?U.S.. (FY70-79), $3.0
million; U.S.S.R. (1970-79), $26.0 million; China (1970-79),
$427.0 million; Eastern Europe (1970-79), $19.0 million;
OPEC :economic assistance (ODA;1970179), $2.0 billion
committed
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 51 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
473,195 GRT, 645,513 DWT; includes 50 cargo, 1 bulk
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: 408,000 army, 9,900 navy, about 17,900 air
force (600 pilots), 71,800 civil armed forces
Major ground units: 7 corps headquarters, 16 infantry
divisions, 2 armored divisions, 4 independent infantry bri-
gades, 6 artillery brigades, 5 independent armored brigades,
6 armored reconnaissance regiments (battalion size), 2 AAA
brigades, 6 SAM squadrons, and 1 special services p
plus an army air arm
Ships: 1 light cruiser, 6 destroyer-types, 1 frigate, 6 sub-
marines, 5 midget submarines, 19 coastal patrol, 7 mine war-
fare, 3 auxiliary
Aircraft: 388 (331 jet, 18 turboprop, 26 prop, 13 heli-
copters) operationally assigned to air force
SECRET
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PAKISTAN (Continued)
Supply: produces infantry weapons and ammunition up to
and including 106-mm; U.S. and Western Europe were prin-
cipal suppliers until arms embargo in September 1965; since
then, China and recently France have become major
sources; U.S. reinitiated arms deliveries between March
1975-April 1979 and provided APC's and TOW missile sys-
tems, but all U.S. military sales were then suspended in re-
sponse to Pakistan's continued nuclear weapon's develop-
ment program; in recent years infantry weapons and
ammunition have been provided by China and Turkey; me-
dium tanks and artillery by China; artillery and ammunition
by North Korea; armored vehicles and tank maintenance
service from Iran; aircraft by China, France, Sweden, and
the U.K.; helicopters provided by the U.S.S.R., the U.S., and
France; transport vehicles supplied by China, the U.S.S.R.,
Iran, and Czechoslovakia; France has provided 5 subma-
rines, 58 Mirage fighters; PRC has supplied over 300 jet
fighters and trainers, 12 Shanghai-II-class patrol boats, 4
Hainan-class subchasers, and 4 Hu Chwan-class torpedo
boats; more recently Portugal supplied 1 submarine; other
naval ships have come from the U.K. and the U.S.
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PANAMA
(See reference map III)
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 2,296 ships (1,000 GRT or over) total-
ing 22,236,085 GRT, 36,449,184 DWT; includes 23 pas-
senger, 1,455 cargo, 54 container, 34 roll-on/roll-off cargo,
221 tanker, 28 liquefied gas, 365 bulk, 10 combination
ore/oil, 102 specialized carrier, 1 cargo training, 3 beach
landing cargo; all foreign owned and operated; 114 ships are
owned by China and 15 are owned by Vietnam, 8 by
Yugoslavia, and 6 by Cuba
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: 9,087 national guard, including 8,660 ground
force, 197 coast guard, 230 air force; a majority of personnel
serve as police
Major ground units: infantry trained and equipped units
are 7 rifle companies, 5 platoon-size combat units, 1 recon-
naissance platoon; remainder primarily police; national
guard troops deployed in 10 geographic administrative
zones; only significant concentration of troops is in and near
the city of Panama; remainder of force is in small detach-
ments scattered throughout country
Ships: 6 patrol boats, 1 medium landing craft, 3 medium
landing ship, 1 service craft
Aircraft: 33 (1 jet, 4 turboprop, 11 prop, 17 helicopters)
Supply: principally dependent on U.S. but has acquired
infantry weapons and ammunition from Western Europe
and 2 motor gunboats from the U.K.
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December
1980, $40.0 million
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PAPUA NEW GUINEA
(See reference map X)
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: Papua New Guinea Defense Forces (PNGDF),
consists of d land element (3,500 personnel with 2 infantry
battalions, 1 engineer battalion), a maritime element (410
personnel), and an air element (82 personnel); the PNGDF
has 5 patrol craft, 2 amphibious craft, 4 C-47 transport and 3
Nomad N-22 utility aircraft; additionally, there are 250 Aus-
tralian personnel integrated into the PNGDF
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PARAGUAY
(See reference map IV)
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 13 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
'14,400 GRT, 15,900 DWT; includes 10 cargo, 2 tanker, 1
specialized carrier; domestic ships are operated mostly in
river traffic; most international seaborne trade is carried by
foreign-flag ships
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: 12,000 army, 2,540 navy (including 55 in naval
air and 346 in marines), 1,040 air force (103 pilots)
Major ground units: 6 infantry divisions, 1 cavalry di-
vision, 1 separate infantry regiment, 1 engineer command (7
battalions-5 engineer, 1 railroad, 1 supply and service)
Ships: 16 patrol, 3 mine warfare, 2 amphibious, 1 heli-
copter carrier (AG), 5 light cargo ships, 1 small floating dry
dock, 4 small harbor tugs, 1 relic, plus 31 other yard and
service craft in various states of repair
Aircraft: 91 total; 78 air force (6 jet, 1 turboprop, 62 prop,
9 helicopters, plus 23 nonflyable), 13 navy (9 prop, 4 heli-
copters; 2 fixed-wing and 2 helicopters are nonflyable)
Supply: dependent on foreign sources (primarily U.S.,
Brazil, Ar entina South Africa, Japan, and Belgium) for all
materials
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PERU
(See reference map IV)
ECONOMY
Aid: economic?bilateral economic commitments, U.S.
including Ex-Im (1970-79), $795.3 million; other Western
countries (1970-78), $1.0 billion; Communist countries (1970-
79), $278.0 million; military?U.S. (FY70-79), $86.0 million
Communist (1970-79), $970.0 million
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 44 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
512,915 GRT, 818,106 DWT; includes 29 cargo, 3 tanker, 9
bulk, 2 combination ore-oil, 1 liquefied gas; additionally 5
naval tankers are sometimes used commercially
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: 75,000 army, 15,000 navy (including 100 naval
air officers, 3,000 marines), 40,000 air force (including 580
pilots), 40,000 Civil Guard (plus 400 civilians), 4,500 Repub-
lican Guard (plus 65 civilians), 400 coastguard
Major ground units: 11 combat divisions (5 infantry, 1
airborne, 3 armored, 1 jungle, 1 cavalry), 2 division-sized
detachments, 7 groups (1 armored, 1 air defense artillery, 1
surface-to-air missile, 2 artillery, 2 engineer), 4 separate regi-
ments (2 horse cavalry, 2 armored cavalry), 6 separate com-
bat and combat support battalions (4 motorized infantry, 2
combat engineer)
Ships: 3 cruisers, 7 destroyers, 2 frigates, 8 submarines, 10
patrol boats, 8 amphibious warfare ships and craft, 11 auxil-
iaries, 14 service craft (not including 13 coast guard patrol
vessels)
Aircraft: 425 (146 jet), including 41(17 prop, 8 turboprop,
16 helicopters) in naval air, 342 (146 jet) in air force, and 42
(6 prop, 36 helicopters) in army
SECRET
Supply: produces some small arms ammunition, hand gre-
nades, and is producing two guided missile frigates with Ital-
ian assistance; army materiel is supplied by Western Europe,
?and the U.S.; U.S.S.R. has supplied tanks and helicopters
since 1973 and engineer .eqUipment,- military trucks, artil-
lery, and guided missiles since 1975; aircraft and ships from
France and U.K. represent three-fourths of the total value of
non-U.S. imports since 1953; ships also furnished by U.S., 25X1
Netherlands, Italy, and West Germany; fighter aircraft from
U.S.S.R. plus license to produce spare parts for SU-22
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December
1980, $281.6 million; about 9.5% of central government bud25X1
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SECRET
PHILIPPINES
(See reference map IX)
ECONOMY
Aid commitments: economic?U.S., including Ex-Im (FY70-
79), $1.4 billion; Western (except U.S.), ODA and OOF (1970-
79), $370 million; Communist (1975-79), $66 million; OPEC,
ODA (1974-79), $33 million; military--U.S. (FY70-79) $334
million
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 236 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
1,800,711 GRT, 2,927,230 DWT; includes 11 passenger, 144
cargo, 38 tanker, 29 bulk, 5 combination ore/oil, 1 gas carrier, 2
roll-on/roll-off, 6 specialized carrier
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: 70,000 army; 26,000 navy (including 6,400 ma-
rines and 3 600 Coast Guard); 16,800 air force; 43,500
constabulary
Major groun units: 4 infantry divisions, 1 separate infantry
brigade, 2 engineer brigades, 4 artillery regiments, 1 light ar-
mor regiment, 1 special warfare brigade, 1 constabulary? bri-
gade, 12 constabulary battalions, and 2 marine brigades
Ships: 3 frigates, 18 patrol combatants, 44 coastal patrol,
river/roadstead patrol, 31 amphibious, 16 auxiliaries, 71
amphibious craft, 33 service craft
Aircraft: 383 (55 jet) in air force, and 10 (nonjet) in navy air
group
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December 1980,
$778.5 million; about 10.6% of central government budget
84
POLAND?
(See reference map V)
ECONOMY
Aid: Western countries est. $20 billion (short, medium, and
long term debt, end of 1979); Polish bilateral 'economic aid
commitments to non-Communist LDCs, $1,360 million
(1954-79)
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 313 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
3,142,818 GRT, 4,694,208 DWT; includes 9 passenger, 181
cargo, 2 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 9 tanker, 100 bulk, 4 specialized
carrier, 3 cargo training, 5 container
Civil air: 47 major transport aircraft (1979)
Airfields: 147 total; 83 with permanent-surface runways; 1
with runway 3,500 m or over; 33 with runwaYs 2,500-3,499 m,
95 with runways 1,000-2,499 m; 18 with runways less than
1,000 m; 3 heliports
Telecommunications: adequate for government .needs but
only limited service is available to the public; international
facilities are adequate; modern radio and TV network is used
effectively to educate and entertain the public; 28 AM and 25
FM broadcast stations, 5,794,673 receivers; 32 TV stations and
61 TV transmitters; 6,142 999 TV receivers; 2,337,603 tele-
phones (86.1% automatic).
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 9,276,000; 7,355,000 tit
for military service; 287,000 reach military age (19) annually
Personnel: 224,000 (estimated) ground forces,12 includes
9,000 Internal Defense Forces (WOW), 55,000 Territorial De-
fense Forces (OT); 8,000 specialized construction troops, 22,000
naval forces; 42,720 air forces; 48,480 national air defense
forces; 21,500 paramilitary forces
Personnel in reserve (not on active duty): 2,000,000 (es-
timated) ground forces, 52,000 naval forces, 12,500 air force
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1! Soviet forces (NGF) in Poland as of 1 January 1978, 50,000
(37,000 ground; 13,000 air).
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POLAND (Continued)
Major ground units: 15 divisions (8 mechanized, 5 ar-
mored, 1 airborne, 1 sea landing), 8 brigades (4 SCUD tacti-
cal missile, 3 artillery, 1 SA-4), 11 regiments (2 antiaircraft, 3
antitank, 1 artillery, and 5 SA-6 regiments)
Ships: 4 submarines, 1 guided missile destroyer, 1 patrol
combatant, 23 amphibious warfare ships, 23 mine warfare
ships, 50 coastal patrol/river roadstead craft, 19 amphibious
warfare craft, 25 mine warfare craft, 5 fleet support ships, 9
other auxiliaries
Aircraft (in operational units): 1,028, including 72 in na-
val air (42 attack, 10 reconnaissance, 20 helicopters) and 956
in air force (423 fighters, 220 attack, 81 reconnaissance, 43
transports, 189 helicopters)
Missiles: 36 operational SA-2 SAM sites (216 launchers);
12 operational SA-3 sites (48 four-rail launchers); 5 regiments
of the SA-6 tactical missile system are deployed with the
Polish ground forces; SA-9, SA-7 tactical systems are also
deployed on a limited scale; an SA-4 brigade is also oper-
ational with the ground forces
Supply: produces infantry weapons, APCs, tanks, am-
munition, electronic equipment including radar, trucks,
chemical and biological defensive materiel and small quan-
tities of CW agents; Poland builds small combatants and na-
val auxiliary ships for the Polish Navy and coast guard, as
well as amphibious warfare ships and naval auxiliaries for
U.S.S.R.; Poland also produces helicopters, jet trainers, small
transport utility aircraft and air-to-air missiles; other equip-
ment primarily from U.S.S.R.
SECRET
SECRET
PORTUGAL
MADVIIA
ISLANDS
(See Telerence map V and VII)
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 75 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
1,149,646 GRT, 1,974,495 DWT; includes 2 passenger, 46
cargo, 3 container, 16 tanker, 2 liquefied gas, 5 bulk, 1 spe-
cialized carrier
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DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: est. 39,000 army, 12,500 navy (including 3,000
marines), 9,100 air force (420 pilots, 1,325 paratroops); 9,500
National Republican Guard, 6,100 Fiscal Guard, 14,000
Public Security Police 25X1
Major ground units: Metropolitan army has 26 regiments
(13 infantry, 2 armored cavalry, 4 artillery, 1 coast artillery,
1 military police, 1 signal recon, 1 armored, 2 engineer, 1
commando) and 8 independent battalions (4 infantry, 1 25X1
quartermaster, 1 transport, 1 signal, 1 military administra-
tion); Azores and Madeira Islands have total of 3 infantry
regiments;, major changes in organization are continuing;
current plans call for two types of forces?an intervention
and a territorial force 25X1
Ships: 3 submarines, 17 frigates, 15 minor amphibious, 5
auxiliaries, 22 patrol craft, and 1 service craft
Aircraft: 250 (94 jet)
Supply: produces transport vehicles, wheeled APC's, small
arms, ammunition, aerial bombs, military telecom and elec-
tronics equipment, and incendiary, smoke, and tear agent
munitions; also produces naval ships up to frigate size; other
military equipment imported from other NATO countries;
navy ships, weapons, and equipment from U.S., West Ger-
many, U.K., Canada, Italy, France, Brazil, Austria, South
Africa, Spain 25X1
Military budget: proposed for fiscal year ending 31
December 1980, $831,1,million; about 11% of proposed cen-
tral government budget
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PORTUGAL (Continued)
86
QATAR'
(See reference map VI)
ECONOMY
Aid: Qatar pledged $1,438 million
LDCs, 1974-79
in economic aid to
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 4 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
83,405 GRT, 151,563 DWT; includes 1 tanker, 1 specialized
carrier, 2 cargo
DEFENSE FORCES
Qatar Public Security Forces comprise a 5,000-man army,
a 2,500-man Police Force, a 200-man Air ?Force, and a 300-
man Sea Arm; ? equipment includes 28 armored cars, 25
tanks, 12 Ferret scout cars, 57 armored personnel carriers, 6
155-mm howitzers, 6 motor gunboats, 1 utility landing craft,
7 auxiliary craft, 3 Hunter jet fighters, 3 Tigercat SAM units,
and 14 helicopters
Supply: mostly from U.K., recently from France
SECRET
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REUNION
(See reference map VII)
DEFENSE FORCES
Defense is responsibility of France; about 2,000 military
personnel are stationed on the island including a
1,500-man infantry unit, a 350-man airborne unit, and a
200-man naval unit; ships homeported at French n1
base at Ports-des-Gatets include 2 destroyers, 5 frigates, 2
patrol boats, 3 amphibious boats, and 4 auxiliary craft;, air
unit operates 3 medium-range and 9 short-range trans-
helicopters, 1 utility aircraft, and 1 ocean patrol
ports, 2
aircraft
SECRET
SECRET
ROMANIA
(See reference map V)
ECONOMY
Aid: economic credits extended by U.S.S.R. (1956)?$123
million; Czechoslovakia, East Germany, Poland, and Hun-
gary (1951-61)?more than $128 million; Western coun-
tries?estimated net indebtedness at end of 1979, $6.7'bil-25X1
lion; Romania has extended bilateral economic. aid totaling
$2.35 billion to non-Communist LDCs (1954-79)
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 190 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
1,736,779 GRT, 2,689,536 DWT; includes 1 passenger, 133
cargo, 8 tanker, 46 bulk, 1 cargo training, 1 specialized car-
rier
Civil air: 31 major transport aircraft (1979)
Airfields: 174 total; 26 with permanent-surface runways;
2 with runways 3,500 m or over; 13 with runways
2,500-3,499 m; 31 with runways 1,000-2,499 m, 128 with
runways less than 1,000 m; 1 heliport
Telecommunications: systems are used primarily for gov-
ernment and military purposes; only a few facilities are
available to public; wired-broadcast network offers broad
coverage; 15 AM, 5 FM stations, 3,105,000 receivers; 13 ma-
jor and 20 relay TV stationg, 1.9 million receivers; 886,166
(est.) telephones (84.3% automatic)
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 5,442,000; 4,557,000 fit
for military service; 155,000 reach military age (20) annually
Personnel: 140,000 ground forces, 9,500 naval forces,
34,000 air and air defense forces, 35,000 paramilitary forces
87
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SECRET
ROMANIA (Continued)
Personnel in reserve (not on active duty): 1,300,000 (es-
timated) ground forces, 30,000 naval forces, unknown
airforce
Major ground units: 10 divisions (8 motorized infantry, 2
tank), 8 brigades (2 artillery, 2 SCUD tactical missile, 3
mountain infantry, 1 AAA), 1 airborne regiment, 2 artillery
regiments, 2 antiaircraft artillery regiments, 1 SA-6 regi-
ment, and 5 antitank regiments
Ships: 3 patrol combatants, 4 mine warfare ships, 66
coastal patrol-river/roadstead craft, 28 mine warfare craft, 2
fleet support ships, 1 other auxiliary
Aircraft (in operational units): 457 (246 fighters, 82 at-
tack, 21 reconnaissance, 29 transports, 79 helicopters)
Missiles: 18 operational SA-2 SAM sites (108 launchers);
one regiment of the SA-6 tactical missile system is deployed
with the Romanian ground forces; the SA-7 is also probably
deployed
Supply: produces small arms, rocket launchers, artillery,
APCs, ammunition, medium trucks and jeeps, chemical war-
fare offensive and defensive materiel, and several types of
coastal patrol-river/roadstead craft?some of Chinese de-
sign?aircraft and helicopters under license from the U.K.
and France; attempting to produce tanks and naval ships of
frigate size; dependent on imports from other Communist
countries, primarily the U.S.S.R., for other military equip-
ment
88
RWANDA
(See reference map VII)
ECONOMY
Aid: economic commitments?Western (non-U.S.) coun-
tries, ODA and OOF (1970-78), $363.0 million; OPEC, ODA
(1974-79), $24.0 million; Communist countries (1970-79),
$57.5 million; U.S., including Ex-Im (1970-79), $20.0 million;
military?Communist countries (1970-79), $2.0 million
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: about 5,000 army, gendarmerie activated in
late 1975 and still organizing, strength 840; military advisers:
20 Belgian, 7 French, 4 West German
Major ground units: 3 paracommando battalions, 9-10
prefectural companies, 1 reconnaissance squadron, 1 heavy
weapons company, 1 engineer company, 1 aviation com-
pany, and a logistic support base
Aircraft: 11 (7 utility, 4 helicopters)
Supply: dependent primarily on Belgium; has received
equipment from France, U.K., West Germany, Belgium,
Italy, Libya, and PRC
SECRET
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ST. CHRISTOPHER-NEVIS-ANGUILLA
SECRET
ST. LUCIA
(See reference map III) (See reference map III)
DEFENSE FORCES DEFENSE FORCES 25X1
Local security forces: 216 Royal St. Christopher-Nevis Local security forces: 350 Royal St. Lucia Police Force;
Police Force, 203 Royal St. Christopher-Nevis Defense Force 30 St. Lucia Auxiliary Constabulary; 1 port security
boat
(about 53 full-time members, .60 volunteers) (Police)
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U.K. is responsible for external defense; contingencies will
be met by deploying ships from the Eastern Atlantic; in
addition, the 'British Armed Forces maintain a company of
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Caribbean-area-trained Royal Marine Commandos in the
U.K. for immediate airlift to the Caribbean
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ST. VINCENT AND THE GRENADINES
(See reference map III)
DEFENSE FORCES
Local security forces: 400 Royal St. Vincent Police Force;
100 St. Vincent Auxiliary Police Force; 1 port security boat
(police)
SAN MARINO
(See reference map V)
DEFENSE FORCES
San Marino has no defense forces; treaty of 1862 extended
protective friendship of Italy and is believed to be still in
effect
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SAO TOME AND PRINCIPE
(See reference Map VII)
DEFENSE FORCES
A company of 200-250 local troops has been formed into a
fledgling army; Sao Tome also has several small boats for
patrolling territorial waters between Sao Tome and Principe
that normally have crews of armed military personnel; for-
eign personnel include: 40-50 Cuban army troops, 400 est.
Angolan troops, 100 est. Guinea-Bissau troops, 200 advisers
(mostly civilian), 11 Soviet advisers
'SECRET
SECRET
SAUDI ARABIA
(See reference map VI)
ECONOMY
Aid: large aid donor; economic commitments (1974-79),
$16.1 billion; military commitments (1974-79), $10.7 billion
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 93 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
1,509,418 GRT, 2,624,123 DWT; includes 9 passenger, 32
cargo, 31 tanker, 9 specialized carrier, 5 bulk, 2 liquefied
gas, 5 roll-on/roll-off
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: 35,000 army, 2,500 navy, 17,000 air force (290
pilots), 25,000 national guard
Major ground units: 3 infantry brigades, 1 mechanized
infantry brigade, 2 armored brigades, 7 battalions (1 royal
guard, 2 airborne, 1 light armored, 1 Special Forces, 2 field
artillery); 18 air defense artillery batteries; 10 I-Hawk air
defense missile batteries; in addition, national guard has 46
battalion-size units
Ships: 3 fast patrol boats, 1 patrol boat, 4 coastal mine-
sweepers, 2 utility landing craft, 4 mechanized landing craft,
4 service craft in naval force; about 400 miscellaneous patrol
craft (including 8 hovercraft) in coast guard
Aircraft: 265 (177 jet, 39 turboprop, 14 prop, 35 heli-
copters
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SAUDI ARABIA (Continued)
Supply: produces some ammunition and rifles; otherwise
relies on Western sources, particularly U.S., West Germany,
U.K., Italy, and France
92
SENEGAL
(See reference map VII)
ECONOMY
Aid: economic commitments?Western (non-U.S.) coun-
tries, ODA and OOF (1970-78), $778.0 million; Communist
countries (1970-79), $88.0 million; OPEC, ODA (1974-79),
$310.0 million; U.S., including Ex-Im (FY70-79), $104.0 mil-
lion; military?U.S. (FY77-79), $8.2 million
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 5 ships (1,000 GRT and over) totaling
12,300 GRT, 17,100 DWT; includes 4 cargo, 1 specialized
carrier
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: 8,476 army, 762 navy, 160 air force, 2,355
gendarmerie, 1,500-2,000 French forces; 27 French advisers
Major ground units: 5 infantry battalions, 1 training
battalion, 1 parachute group (2 companies), 1 commando
group (2 companies), 1 engineer battalion (3 combat
construction companies, 1 HQ/Training Company), 1
supporting arms company
Ships: 1 subchaser, 2 patro ?oats, 3 patrol craft, 2 mecha-
nized landing craft, 1 utility landing craft, 2 medium tug
and 1 training tug
Aircraft: 17 (4 fighter trainers, 8 prop transports, 2 prop
utility, 3 helicopters)
Supply: primarily dependent on France, Netherlands, and
Austria; beginning to diversify sources of supply
SECRET
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SEYCHELLES
(See reference map VII)
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 1 cargo ship (1,000 GRT or over) total-
ing 2,388 GRT, 3,698 DWT
DEFENSE FORCES?
Personnel: a 706-man army is trained by Tanzania 'Peo-
ple's Defense Force (TPDF) advisers; militia may have as
many as 1,500; police force consisting of 5507man unit, helps
army maintain internal stability
SECRET
SECRET
SIERRA LEONE
(See reference map VII) 25X1
ECONOMY
Aid: economic commitments?Western (non-U.S.) coun-
tries, ODA and OOF (1970-78), $104.0 million; U.S., includ-
ing Ex-Im (FY70-79), $59.0 million; Communist countries
(1970-79), $61-.2 million;, military-Communist countries
(1970-79), $3.0 million
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 1 bulk cargo (1,000 GRT or over) total-
ing 2,000 GRT, 3,000 DWT
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: 1,650 army, 2,500 police
Major ground units: 2 infantry battalions
Supply: most army materiel from U.K.; some small arms,
ammunition, and patrol boats from China and armored cars
from Switzerland; other materiel from the FRG and Switzer-
land
Military budget: for year ending 30 June 1981, $24.9 mil-
lion; 7.4% of central government budget
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SINGAPORE
(See reference map IX)
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 586 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
7,112,962 GRT, 11,745,742 DWT; includes 4 passenger, 321
cargo, 58 container, 7 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 90 tanker, .83
bulk, 7 combination ore/oil,: 2 liquefied 'gas, 14 specialized
carrier; most foreign owned
DEFENSE FORCES
External defense provided by loose Five Power Defense
Arrangement (FPDA) which replaced Anglo-Malayan De-
fense Agreement of 1957; FPDA, effective as of 1 November
1971
Personnel: 22,000 army, 3,000 navy, 4,000 air force, 7,500
police force, 26,000 army reserve, 250 naval reserve (Peoples
Defense Force?SEA); in addition, the navy can be aug-
mented by the 700-man marine police with some 80 small
craft
Major ground units: 1 infantry division comprising 3 in-
fantry brigades, 9 infantry battalions, 1 artillery brigade of 6
battalion-size units, 1 armored brigade with 1 tank, 1 recon-
naissance, and 2 mechanized battalions, 1 commando battal-
ion, 5 engineer battalions, 3 signal battalions, 18 reserve
battalions
Aircraft: approximately 237 (126 let)
Missiles: 3 Bloodhound SAM sites; I-Hawk has been pur-
chased as replacement .
Ships: 14 coastal patrol, 6 amphibious ships (1 hi' eserve),
2 coastal minesweepers, 6 amphibious craft, 2 service craft
Supply: produces some small arms and mortar ammuni-
tion, rifles, and quartermaster-type individual equipment;
some small patrol craft and missile gunboats built; all other
materiel imported, mainly from U.K. and U.S., 2 missile gun
boats from West Germany, ship-to-ship missiles from Israel
94 SECRET
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SOLOMON ISLANDS
(See reference map X)
NOTE: This newly independent ?(as of 7 July 1978)
archipelagec nation includes southern Solomon Islands, pri-
marily Guadalcanal, Malaita, San Cristobal, Santa Isabel,
Choiseul. Northern Solomon Islands' constitue part of Papua
New Guinea.
DEFENSE FORCES
PersOnnel: no military forces maintained, however, the
British maintain a well trained Police Force of about 300 for
peacekeeping and security purposes
SECRET
SECRET
SOMALIA
(See reference map VII
ECONOMY
Aid: economic commitments?OPEC, ODA (1974-79),
$944.0 million; Communist countries (1970-79), $240.0 mil-
lion; Western (non-U.S.) countries, ODA and OOF (1970-78),
$169.0 million; .U.S. -(FY70-79), .$59.6 million; military? 25X1
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COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 3 cargo ships 1,000 GRT or over) tota125X1
ing 11,300 GRT, 9,800 DWT
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: 50,000 army, about 550 navy, 1,000 air force
(about 50 pilots), 8,000 police (including 2,000 Police Mobile)
Major ground units: 3 corps headquarters, 7 division
headquarters, 21 infantry brigade headquarters, 6 air de-
fense brigade headquarters, 63 infantry battalions, 4 tank
battalion, 20 artillery battalions, 7 antitank battalions, 34 air
defense batteries
Ships: 11 patrol 'craft, 3 landing craft, 2 OSA II 'guided
missile patrol boats, 4 MOL torpedo boats, and 1
POLNOCNY class medium amphibious assault landing ship
Aircraft: (in operational units) 50; 29 fighter, 15 prop, 6
turboprop
Supply: dependent on outside sources; ground materiel
predominantly from the U.S.S.R. and since mid-1977 from a
number of European and Middle Eastern countries; naval
ships from the U.S.S.R.; aircraft from the U.S.S.R., Italy,
Egypt; SS-N-2 and SA-2's from the U.S.S.R.
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SOUTH AFRICA
(See reference map VII)
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 30 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
593,515 GRT, 772,729 DWT; includes 14 cargo, 7 container,
2 tanker, 5 bulk, 2 specialized carrier
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: 60,000 army, 5,000 navy, 10,300 air force (700
pilots); 4,000 Cape Corps; 400 Indian Corps; 1,200 Blacks;
2,000-3,000 Namibian ethnic units; Citizen Force (active re-
serve)-100,000 army, 11,000 navy, 20,000 air force; 90,000
Army Commandos (home defense force)
Major ground units: 15 combat-type battalions, plus 75
citizen force reserve battalions and 300 Commando units (S)
Independent homeland forces: Bophuthatswana, 350-
man national guard; Transkei, 1,000-man army; Venda, 550-
man defense force
Rebel forces: about 8,000 Namibian SWAPO rebel ele-
ments largely in Angola and Zambia
Ships: 3 submarines, 3 frigates, 5 missile patrol boats, 21
type, 8 mine warfare craft, 11 auxiliaries, 7 service craft
Aircraft: 845 (350 jet, 23 turboprop, 315 prop, 157 heli-
copters)
Supply: produces most of the small arms, mortar, and
ammunition it requires; manufactures armored cars and
guided missile patrol combatants; France, Italy, U.K., Israel,
Portugal, India, Canada, and Belgium supply materiel not
locally made; most naval ships supplied by U.K.; submarines
from France; guided missile patrol combatants initially sup-
plied by Israel; now being produced domestically under Is-
raeli license; also producing MB 326 (Impala) jet trainer at-
tack aircraft under license; has assembled and produced
Mirage F-1 jet fighter under license; has development pro-
gram to produce air-to-air and naval cruise missiles
96 SECRET
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SOVIET UNION "
kr& Ocean
?
(See reference map VIII)
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 1,726 ships (1,000 GRT or over) total-
ing 13,729,763 GRT, 18,942,032 DWT; includes 66 pas-
senger, 1,174 cargo, 26 container, 47 roll-on/roll-off cargo,
282 tanker, 10 liquefied gas, 102 bulk, 9 combination
ore/oil, 10 specialized carriers; 655 merchant ships based in
Black Sea, 396 in Baltic Sea, 437 in Soviet Far East, and 238
in Barents/ White Sea
Civil air: 1,251 major transport aircraft (1977)
Airfields: 3,711 total; 789 with permanent-surface run-
ways; 50 with runways over 3,500 m, 404 with runways
2,500-3,499 m, 1,063 with runways 1,000-2,499 m, 2,158
with runways less than 1,000 m; 46 heliports
Telecommunications: extensive and relatively modern
domestic and international systems maintained primarily for
official use; 19.3 million telephones; an estimated 37,000
telephone exchanges; 83,100 main and branch telegraph of-
fices; about 135 main AM broadcast network stations; 280
FM broadcast and 40,000 wired-broadcast distribution sta-
tions; 59.8 million radio and 56 million wired broadcast re-
ceivers; 1,620 TV broadcast and rebroadcast stations; 55 mil-
lion TV receivers
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 68,182,000; 54,388,000
fit for military service; 2,267,000 reach military registration
age (17) annually on the average
Personnel: (estimated as of October 1980) 2,873,000
ground forces; 432,600 naval forces (excluding Maritime
Border Guard); 505,300 air forces; 327,800 strategic rocket
forces; 656,300 air defense forces; 450,350 paramilitary
forces; these strengths, redistributed to correspond with U.S.
force programs rather than with Soviet military structure,
are set forth as follows:
" The U.S. Government does not recognize the incorporation of
the Baltic States-Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania-into the Soviet
Union.
SECRET
SECRET
Total Estimated Military and Paramilitary Strength
Command and General Support
1,732,600
General Purpose Ground Forces
1,704,000
25X1
General Purpose Naval Forces
308,100
General Purpose Air Forces
297,800
Strategic Attack Forces
272,500
Strategic Defense Forces
492,400
Frontier Troops
157,800
Internal Troops
280,850
Total
5,246,050
Total Estimated Personnel released into reserve system for
last 5 years
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Command and General Support
2,702,000
General Purpose Ground Forces
3,210,000
General Purpose Naval Forces
446,000
General Purpose Air Forces
567,000
Strategic Attack Forces
549,000
Strategic Defense Forces
914,000
Frontier Troops
296,000
Internal Troops
526,600
Total
9,210,600
Major ground units: general purpose ground forces-24
armies, 10 corps, 173 divisions, plus 12 artillery divisions,
170 brigades, 200 regiments, and many smaller combat sup-
port units
Ships: submarines-69 nuclearpowered ballistic missile,
16 ballistic missile, 47 nuclear-powered cruise missile attack,
21 cruise missile attack, 58 nuclear-powered attack, 163 at-
tack, 4 coastal, 3 auxiliary, 2 radar picket, 4 training; surface
ships-2 guided missile V/STOL aircraft carriers, 2 guided
missile aviation cruisers, 1 nuclear-powered guided missile
cruiser, 25 guided missile cruisers, 9 light cruisers, 34 guided
missile destroyers, 31 destroyers, 28 guided missile frigates,
39 frigates, 110 light frigates, 138 patrol combatants, 85
amphibious warfare ships, 166 mine warfare ships, 422
coastal patrol-river/roadstead craft, 87 amphibious warfare
craft, 236 mine warfare craft, 79 underway replenishment
ships, 70 material support ships, 133 fleet support ships, 478
other auxiliaries 25X1
Aircraft: 16,441 operational units; by force, strength data
follows: Long-Range Aviation-874 (215 long-range bomb-
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ers, 462 intermediate-range bombers, 51 tankers, 33 recon-
naissance, 113 ECM/SIGINT); Aviation of Air Defense-
2,539 fighters and 9 airborne warning and control; Soviet
Tactical Aviation-4,828 combat aircraft (2,100 ground at-
tack, 1,985 counterair, 48 intermediate-range bombers, 695
reconnaissance/ECM/SIGINT) and 2,200 combat heli-
copters; Naval Aviation-1,192 bombers, reconnaissance,
fighter, and ASW aircraft (100 long-range and 522 inter-
mediate-range bomber/tanker/reconnaissance; 70 fighters/
fighter-bombers; 391 ASW, including 211 helicopters; 109
miscellaneous training-type aircraft); Support aircraft
97
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SECRET
SOVIET UNION (Continued)
strength: 4,799 transports and helicopters (1,799 transports-
178 long-range, 933 medium-range, 688 short-range?and
3,000 admin/liaison helicopers
Defensive missiles: Tactical?about 2 SA-2 battalions, 37
SA-3 battalions, 138 SA-4 battalions, 38 SA-6 regiments, 3
SA-6/11 regiments, and 18 SA-8 regiments are deployed
with Soviet Theatre General Purpose Forces and Soviet
forces in East Germany, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Poland,
and Mongolia. Approximately 275 SA-9/SA-13 fire units and
about 21,000 SA-7 missiles are available in maneuver regi-
ments. Some of these tactical SAM systems could augment
the national air defense forces in times of crisis. Strategic?
defensive missile force includes 1,010 operationally de-
ployed surface-to-air missile sites and complexes (12,522
launch rails); 56 SA-1 sites (3,242 launch rails) deployed only
in defense of Moscow; 491 SA-2 sites (2,946 launch rails)
provide point defense of important strategic targets and bar-
rier defense of the country. Deployed primarily in periph-
eral areas and in already SAM defendedareas to Provide
low-altitude coverage are 338 SA-3 sites (491 'dual-rail and
861 four-rail platforms) with 4,426 launch rails; 125 .SA-5
complexes (1,908 launch rails) provide a barrier and vital
area defense of targets throughout the Soviet Union. De-
ployed around the city of Moscow are 8 ABM-1 complexes
(32 launchers).
Nuclear weapons: satisfies major requirements of Soviet
forces
Supply: fully supplies own needs and produces large
quantities of all types of materiel for export; Warsaw Pact
countries provide the bulk of amphibious and auxiliary ship
replacements as well as trainers and other light aircraft;
some light armored vehicles obtained from Eastern Europe
as an economic measure
Military budget (announced): for fiscal year ending 31
December 1980, only the figure 17.1 billion rubles was re-
leased; this figure is manipulated for political purposes and
covers only a small portion of total military expenditures; the
estimated dollar costs of military activities in 1979, exclud-
ing pensions, are $164 billion (in 1979 dollars
98
SPAIN
CANARY
?ISLANDS
(See reference map V and VII)
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 542 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
7,294,116 GRT, 12,907,983 DWT; includes 20 passenger,
274 cargo, 32 container, 16 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 96 tanker,
13 liquefied gas, 58 bulk, 4 combination ore/oil, 29 special-
ized carrier
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: 269,600 army, 42,000 navy (including 9,100
naval infantry and 125 pilots), 37,300 air force (1,167 pilots),
63,000 civil guard, 30,000 armed police
Major ground units: 5 combat divisions (1 mechanized
infantry, 1 motorizd infantry, 2 mountain, 1 armored), 16
brigades (1 parachute infantry, 1 airtransportable, 1 high
mountain, 1 cavalry, 10 infantry, 2 artillery), 16 combat
regiments (14 infantry, 2 light cavalry), 22 combat support
regiments (12 artillery, 1 artillery observation, 6 engineer, 4
air defense artillery)
Ships: 1 V/STOL aircraft carrier, 12 destroyers, 8 subma-
rines, 10 patrol ships, 5 guided missile frigates, 11 frigates, 87
patrol ships and craft, 15 mine warfare ships, 6 amphibious,
159 minor amphibious, auxiliaries, and service craft
SECRET
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SPAIN (Continued)
Aircraft: 994 (329 jet), 822 (322 jet) in air force, 58 (7 jet)
in naval air, and 114 in army
Missiles: 1 Nike Hercules battalion (9 launchers) and 1
Improved Hawk battalion (24 launchers) under army control
Supply: produces naval ships to aircraft carrier size, small
arms, mortars, some artillery, ammunition, armored and
transport vehicles; French-designed tanks; military telecom
and electronic equipment; transport aircraft; all other equip-
ment primarily from U.S. and secondarily from Western Eu-
ropean countries
Military budget: proposed for fiscal year ending 31
December 1980, $6,700 million; about 24% of the proposed
central government budget
SECRET
?
SECRET
SRI LANKA
(formerly Ceylon)
'Colombo? SRI
LANKA
Indian Ocean
(See reference map VIII)
ECONOMY
Aid: economic commitments?(1970-79) U.S.S.R., $127
million; Eastern Europe, $41 million; China, $181 million;
OPEC, ODA (1974.-79), $175 U.S., including Ex-Im
(FY70-79), $326 million; military commitments?U.S.
(FY70-79), $3 million; U.S.S.R. (1970-79), $13 million; China
(1970179), $21 million
COMMUNICATIONS
Pipelines: 53 km crude oil; 96 km refined products
Merchant marine: 10 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
81,222 GRT, 120,131 DWT; includes 8 cargo, 2 tanker
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DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: 9,000 army, 2,600 navy, 2,300 air force, 14,500
police, 4,500 Volunteer Force 14
Major ground units: 8 infantry battalions and supporting
units; 1 artillery regiment (4 batteries), 1 reconnaissance regi-
ment
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Ships: 30 coastal patrol-river/roadstead craft, 1 yard a2-15x
service craft
Aircraft: 57 (12 jet, 28 prop, 17 helicopters) 25X1
Supply: dependent on imports for all categories of mili-
tary materiel; small arms from Australia, India, PRC, and
the U.K., light artillery from the PRC and Yugoslavia,
wheeled armored vehicles from the U.K., and APC's from
the U.S.S.R.; naval ships have been acquired mainly from
the U.K. but with Italy, Israel, and Singapore each supplying
some craft; 5 Shanghai-II-class patrol boats provided by
PRC; 1 coastal patrol boat provided by U.S.S.R.; jet aircraft
and helicopters have been purchased from U.S.S.R.
"Approximately one-half of Sri Lanka's 10,000-man Volunteer
Force is on active duty at all times. 25X1
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SECRET
SRI LANKA (Continued)
100
SUDAN
(See reference map VII)
GOVERNMENT
Communists: party decimated following July 1971 coup
and counter-coup; by mid-1979 party had built up to an
estimated 15,000 members; its role in student demonstra-
tions and strikes in August 1979 again resulted in govern-
ment crackdown on party, but it probably retains capability
to instigate civil disorders
ECONOMY
Aid: economic commitments?OPEC, ODA (1974-79),
$1.6 billion; Western (non-U.S.) countries, ODA and OOF
(1970-78), $713.0 million; Communist countries (1970-79),
$253.0; U.S., including Ex-Im (FY70-79), $142.0 million;
military?Communist countries (1970-79), $72.0 million;
U.S. (FY70-79), $5.6 million
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 10 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
89,916 GRT, 121,978 DWT; includes 8 cargo and 2 roll-
on/roll-of f cargo
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: 65,000 army,
pilots), 3,000 air defense
1,200 navy, 1,500 air force (70
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Major ground units: 4 infantry divisions (8 infantry bri-
gades, 26 infantry battalions), 1 armored division (2 armored
brigades), 1 artillery corps, 1 parachute brigade, 1 engineer
brigade, 2 border guard battalions, 1 Republican guard
battalion, plus support troops 25X1
SECRET
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SUDAN (Continued)
Ships: 9 patrol boats, 3 utility landing craft, 4 harbor pa-
trol craft?3 auxiliaries
Aircraft: 63 (28 jet, 10 turboprop, and 25 helicopters)
Missiles: 3-SA-2 battalions, 1 SA-7 battalions
Supply: produces some small arms ammunition; all other
materiel fmported, formerly the USSR and Czechoslovakia
were primary sources, but in 1972 China began supplying a
variety of materiel, including tanks and fighter aircraft;
materiel also received from West Germany, U.K., Egypt,
Algeria, the Netherlands, Yugoslavia, U.S., and Saudi Arabia
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 30 June 1981,
$289.8 million; 11% of central government budget
SECRET
SECRET
SURINAME
(See reference map IV).
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COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 4 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 25X1
9,210 GRT, 12,977 DWT; includes 3 cargo and 1 container
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DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: 900 Suriname Military Force (including naval
force); 760 civil police (constabulary) 25X1
Major ground units: 1 independent infantry battalion
(headquarters company, administrative company, 4 infantry
companies, logistics elements, and a military hospital)
Ships: 3 river patrol craft, 3 coastal patrol boats, 3 high
seas patrol boats 25X1
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SECRET
SWAZILAND
(See reference map VII)
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: about 3,000 army;
100-man police mobile unit)
Major ground units: 2 battalions
Aircraft: 2 light transports (leased 'from; Isiael)
Supply: mostly from U.K.; the army is attempting to get
military assistance from other Western and African sources
900 police (including
102
s SWEDEN
(See reference map V)
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 259 Ships (I,000 GRT or bver) totaling
3;917,757 GRT, 6354,271 DWT; includes 21 passenger, 63
cargo; 13 'container, 58-roll:on/roll-off 'cargo, 42 tanker; 1
liquefied gas, 24 bulk, 3 combination Ore/oil; 321'specialiied.'
carrier
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: 45,700 army (10,000 regulars on staff and in
training cadre, remaining troops are conscripts for training),
12,000 navy (including 4,300 coast artillery and 100 in naval
helicopter service), 14,800 air force (including 750 pilots and
5,000 civilians)
Major ground units: the Swedish Army has no standing
tactical units; the mobilization field army is organized into
20 infantry, 4 Norrland (armored infantry), 4 armored and
50 independent battalions; planning, supply, and training
are performed at 33 peacetime training regiments 15 in-
fantry, 8 armored, 6 field artillery, 4 air defense)
Ships: 2 frigates, 6 destroyers, 18 submarines, 47, patrol
boats, 11 minelayers, 36 minesweepers, 80 miscellaneous
amphibious, auxiliary, and service craft
Aircraft: 804 (542 jet), 707 (542 jet) in air force, 29 heli-
copters in navy, 68 aircraft in army
Supply: can produce vehicles, infantry weapons, ammuni-
tion, artillery, tanks, aircraft, chemical and biological war-
fare defensive materiel, some missiles, and ammunition; im-
ports considerable quantities from NATO countries; most
naval ships produced domestically, including submarines
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SWITZERLAND
Sea
(See reference map V)
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 31 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
307,978 GRT, 475,045 DWT; includes 16 cargo, 9 bulk, 1
roll-on/roll-off cargo, 5 specialized carrier; fleet is registered
in Basel, operated mainly out of Genoa, Hamburg, and
Rotterdam
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: 19,700 army (includes cadre of 1,400 perma-
nent personnel; remainder are recruits undergoing training),
3,600 air force (about 100 pilots), about 600 frontier guard,
1,800 fortification guard
Aircraft: 685 (420 jet, 122 prop, 41 turboprop, 102 heli-
copters)
Missiles: 6 batteries of Bloodhounds
Supply: produces moderate amounts of all types of
materiel; some medium and heavy equipment is imported
from U.S. and Western Europe; produces jet aircraft (under
license) and light trainer aircraft
SECRET
SYRIA
(See reference map VI)
SECRET
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ECONOMY
Aid: economic?OPEC, ODA (1973-77), $3,902 million;
Communist countries (1970-76), $587.8 million; U.S. (1970-
77), $319 million; Western (non-U.S.) countries (1970-77),
$180 million; military?Communist Countries (1970-77),
$4,338 million
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 13 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
30,485 GRT, 43,027 DWT; includes 12 cargo and 1 bulk
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DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: army 200,000, navy 2,500, air force 30,000
with air defense having an additional 20,000; police and
security force 10,000
Major ground units: 4 armored divisions, 2 infantry di-
visions; separate units include 2 armored brigades, 4 infantry
brigades, 1 border guard brigade; 2 mechanized artillery
regiments; 15 commando, 1 parachute, and 2 reconnaissance
battalions; 14 air defense missile brigades
Ships: 41 total; 2 frigates, 18 missile attack boats, 15 patrol
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boats, 3 minesweepers, 2 patrol craft, 1 torpedo retriever
Aircraft: 830 (596 jet, 9 turboprop, 50 prop, 175 heli-
copters)
Missiles: 33 SA-2 battalions, 26 SA-3 battalions, 25 SA-6
battalions, 100 SA-7 platoons
Supply: capable of producing
small-arms ammunition; otherwise dependent on outside
sources, principally U.S.S.R.; some equipment from West
European countries including Austria, Spain, West Ger-
many, and U.K.
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December
1980, $2,145 million; 35% of central government budget
limited quantities of
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SECRET
TANZANIA
(See reference map VII)
ECONOMY
Mainland:
Aid: economic commitments?Western (non-U.S.) coun-
tries, including ODA and OOF (1970-78), $2,045 million;
Communist countries (1970-79), $365 million; OPEC, ODA
(1974-79), $212 million; U.S., including Ex-Im, (FY70-79),
$195 million; military?Communist countries (1970-79),
$381 million
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 8 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
45,600 GRT, 60,000 DWT; includes 7 cargo and 1 tanker
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: 53,000 army, 850 naval wing, air wing es-
timated at 1,000 (60 pilots), 1,430 police field force units, 130
police marine units
Major ground units: 2 division headquarters, 7 brigade
headquarters, 21 infantry battalions, 7 artillery battalions, 1
heavy mortar battalion, 7 air defense battalions, 7 service
battalions, 7 communications battalions, and 7 engineer
battalions
Ships: 24 patrol and utility craft, including 6 -Shanghai-
class patrol boats and 4 hydrofoil torpedo boats provided by
China; the police marine unit has its own patrol craft
Aircraft: 70 (27 jet, 32 transports, 11 helicopters)
Supply: produces some ammunition; dependent on exter-
nal sources, primarily China, but also U.K., U.S.S.R.,
Canada, Sweden, and Italy; Tanzanian Peoples Defense
Force (TPDF) ships supplied by East Germany, West Ger-
many, U.K., U.S.S.R., and China; SAMs from U.S.S.R.
104
THAILAND
(See reference map IX)
ECONOMY
Aid: economic commitments?OPEC, ODA (1975-79),
$70 million; Western (non-U.S.) countries, ODA and OOF
(1970-78), $1,080 million; U.S. economic authorizations
(FY70-79), $401 million; military?U.S. (1970-79), $698 mil-
lion
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 68 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
328,700 GRT, 502,000 DWT; includes 46 cargo, 21 tanker, 1
specialized carrier
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: 167,500 army; 36,500 navy (including 16,500
marines); 43,100 air force; 15,000 border patrol police (in-
cludes 1,300 Police Aerial Reinforcement Unit); 3,500 Spe-
cial Action Forces; 500 Police Aviation Division; 1,700 Thai
Marine Police; 37,000 Volunteer Defense Corps
Major ground units: 7 infantry divisions (one is a cavalry
division that operates as infantry) with 1 additional regimen-
tal combat team, 1 armor regiment, 3 special forces groups
(battalion size), 1 separate airborne battalion and a marine
corps of 2 infantry, 1 artillery, and 1 security regiment
Ships: 170, including 6 principal combatants, 81 patrol (7
medium, 29 coastal, 45 river), 17 mine warfare, 35 amphibi-
ous ships and craft, 13 auxiliary and service craft
Aircraft: 713 operational; 372 Air Force (146 combat, 11
reconnaissance, 53 transports, 70 trainers, 45 utility aircraft,
and 47 helicopters); 268 Army (138 reconnaissance, 5 trans-
ports, and 125 helicopters), 73 Navy (37 patrol, 6 search and
rescue, 19 transports, 11 helicopters)
SECRET
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THAILAND (Continued)
Supply: limited local production of small arms ammuni-
tion, rifles, small naval craft, and personal equipment; most
other equipment from U.S.; 1 frigate purchased from U.K.; 3
missile attack boats from Singapore, 3 patrol boats from
Italy, and 154 tracked reconnaissance vehicles from U.K.
SECRET
SECRET
TOGO
(See reference map VII
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ECONOMY
Aid: economic commitments?Western (non-U.S.) coun-
tries (1970-78), $280.0 million; U.S., including Ex-Im (FY70-
79), $35.7 million; OPEC, ODA (1974-79), $22.0 million;
military?Communist countries (1970-79), $7.0 million
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: 3,440 army, 62 air force, 48 navy, 700 gendar-
merie, 800 presidential guard, 82 French military advisers
Major ground units: 1 interarms regiment (consists of a
command battalion, 2 infantry battalions, 1 motorized
battalion, 2 paracommando battalions)
Ships: 2 patrol boats
Aircraft: 20 (5 transport, 2 utility, 2 helicopters, 11 jet
trainers)
Supply: most military materiel obtained from France,
Canada, and Brazil
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SECRET
TONGA
(See reference map X)
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 6 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
11,300 GRT, 17,000 DWT; includes 3 cargo, 1 liquefied gas,
1 roll-on/roll-off, and 1 bulk cargo
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: -approximately 310 men comprise the Tongan
Defense Services; over the next 3 years the Tongan Defense
Services will be reoriented from a primarily land-based force
to a predominantly maritime force
Major ground units: 1 infantry company; 1 territorial in-
fantry company; 1 police unit
Ships: 2 coastal patrol manned by 50 naval personnel
106
TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO
(See reference map III)
DEFENSE FORCES
Local security forces Trinidad and Tobago Defence
Force (725 Trinidad and Tobago Regiment; 120 Reserve
Company "D"; 2,50 Coast Guard); 4,000 National Police.
Force; 1,000 National Police Reserve; 1,006 supplemental?
police forces (Estate, Rural, and District)
Major ground units: 1 regiment (consisting of 1 infantry
battalion and 1 reserve company,
Ships: 6 patrol craft (PC), 1 small harbor tug (YTL)
Aircraft: 2 (1 light observation, 1 helicopter) under Min-
istry of National Security
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TUNISIA
(See reference map VW
ECONOMY
Aid: economic commitments?Western (non-U.S.) conn-
tries, ODA and OFF (1970-78), $1,417 million; U.S., includ-
ing Ex-Im (FY70-79), $328 million; OPEC, ODA (1974-79),
$486 million; Communist countries (1970-79), $329 million;
military?Communist countries (1970-79), $21 million
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 23 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
128,000 GRT, 162,900 DWT; includes 9 cargo, 2 tanker, 4
bulk, 4 specialized carrier, 3 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 1 pas-
senger
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: 24,500 army, 2,500 navy, 2,000 air force (56
pilots), 1,550 paramilitary
Major ground units: 2 infantry brigades, 4 infantry regi-
ments, 1 armored regiment, 2 artillery regiments, 2
paracommando regiments, and 2 ADA regiments (Tunisia is
in the process of organizing 1 artillery regiment, 1 antitank
SECRET
regiment, 1 support regiment, and 2 helicopter squadrons)
Ships: 1 frigate, 4 patrol craft, 1 large submarine chaser, 3
missile attack boats, 12 patrol boats, 2 coastal minesweepers,
2 auxiliary
Aircraft: 82 (21 jet, 33 prop, 28 helicopters)
Supply: dependent on foreign sources; mostly U.S., with
lesser amounts from France, Austria, Italy, and West Ger-
many; two patrol boats delivered from U.K. and two motor
gunboats from PRC in 1977; artillery and small arms also
received from the PRC
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TURKEY
(See reference map VI)
ECONOMY
Aid: economic authorizations?U.S., $622 million (FY70-
79); other Western (ODA and 00F), $1,155 million (1970-
78); Communist, $3,405 million (1970-79); OPEC, ODA,
$387 million (1974-79); military authorizations?U.S., $1,770
million (1970-79)
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 170 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
1,275,000 GRT, 1,974,300 DWT; includes 12 passenger, 102
cargo, 1 liquefied gas, 21 tanker, 22 bulk, 7 specialized car-
rier, 4 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 1 combination ore/oil
Telecommunications: good international, fair domestic
service; maintenance a continuing problem; radio relay be-
ing expanded and improved; 1.38 million telephones (3.3 per
100 popl.); 40 AM, 4 FM, and 70 TV stations; 1 coaxial sub-
marine cable; 1 Atlantic Ocean satellite station
Ships: 13 destroyers, 2 frigates, 14 submarines, 49 patrol
craft, 31 mine warfare, 5 amphibious ships, 68 amphibious
craft, 45 auxiliary; 57 service
Aircraft: 1,049 (452 jet); 631 (452 jet) in air force, 392 in
army aviation, 26 in naval air
Missiles: 8 SAM squadrons (Nike Hercules with 72
launchers)
Supply: mostly dependent on foreign sources,
primarily
U.S., Canada, and West Germany; manufactures some small
arms, trucks and adequate quantities of ammunition; builds
some of its naval ships including submarines with technical
and material assistance
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 28 February 1981,
$1.7 billion; about 15% of proposed central government bud-
get
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Personnel: 419,000 army, 45,400 navy, 52,300 air force
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Major ground units: 4 armies, 10 corps with corps troops,
14 infantry divisions, 2 mechanized divisions, 6 separate ar-
mored brigades, 4 mechanized infantry brigades, 6 infantry
brigades, 1 airborne brigade, 1 commando brigade, 3 mobile
gendarmerie brigades, 3 regiments (2 infantry, 1 armored),
34 battalions (23 artillery, 11 border); each field army has 1
aviation regiment assigned and each corps has 1 aviation
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TUVALU
(formerly Ellice :Islands)
(See reference map X)
NOTE: On October 1, 1975, by Constitutional Order, the
Ellice Islands were-, formally separated from the British
colony of Gilbert and Ellice Islands, thus forming the hew
colony of Ttivalu. The remaining islands in the forrrier Gil-
bert and Ellice Islands Colony are now named Kiribati.
The new 'colony of' Tuvalu includes the islands of
Nanumanga, Nanumea, Nui, Niutao, Vaitupu, and the four
islands of the Tuvalu group formerly claimed by the United
States: Funafuti, Nukufetau, Nukulailai (Nukulaelae), and
Nurakita (Niulakita).
DEFENSE FORCES
No military forces maintained: a small police post is lo-
cated at Funafuti.
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UGANDA
(See reference map VII)
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ECONOMY
Aid: economic commitments?OPEC, ODA (1974-79),
$254.0 million; Western (non-U.S.), ODA and OOF (1970-
78),11140 'million; inclUding Ex-Im (1970-79); $19.5
Communist ? countries (1970-79),' $58.6 million; mili-
tary?Communist countries (1970-79), $138.0 million
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 1 cargo ship (1,000 GRT or over).total-
ing 5,500 GRT, 9,100 DWT
DEFENSE FORCES
NOTE: As a result of the ,defeat of the Icli Amin regime,
the Ugandan defense forces have been disorganized; most
personnel have deserted or been captured or killed; much
equipment has been damaged, destroyed, stolen, Or cap-
tured. The forces are being totally reconstituted; the figures
below are tentative
Personnel: 2,500-5,500 army; plans are to increase to
8,000-10,000 and add an' air force
Major ground units: unknown number of infantry battal-
ions have been formed
Aircraft: an estimated 10-15 fighters, a few transport's,
and 5-6 helicopters may remain
'Supply: dependent on 'external sources?U.K., France,
U.S.S.R., Czechoslovakia, France, and Israel; a recent influx25X1
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Military budget: for fiscal year ending 30 June 1978, $118
billion; 18.3% of central government budget
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UNITED ARAB EMIRATES
(See reference map VI)
ECONOMY
Major industries: oil production, fishing, trading (Oil
production began in Abu Dhabi in 1962, and in 1979
reached 1.5 million b/d. Dubai has best port and is a
commercial center; oil was discovered in commercial quan-
tities in 1966 and production began in 1969; 1979 production
360 b/d. Sharjah began production in 1974. Revenues paid
to U.A.E. in 1979 were $14 billion.); small fishing, some boat
building, handicrafts, animal husbandry, pearling through-
out area
Aid: UAE pledged $5,591 million in economic aid to
LDCs, 1974-79
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 17 ships (1,000 CRT or over) totaling
117,376 CRT, 202,870 DWT; includes 14 cargo, 2 tanker, 1
roll-on/roll-of f
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: 40,100 army, 2,500 air force, 1,000 navy, and
9,800 paramilitary
Major ground units: 3 infantry brigades, 1 mechanized
infantry brigade, 1 field artillery brigade, 1 ADA brigade, 1
armored brigade
Ships: 6 motor gunboats, 9 patrol boats, 13 port security
boats, other miscellaneous craft
Aircraft: 79 (41 jet, 8 prop, 7 turboprop, 23 helicopters)
Supply: mostly from U.K. and France, some from Italy
and Jordan
110 SECRET
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UNITED KINGDOM
PEN,
UNITED.?
KINGDOM.
London, .
(See reference map V)
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 1,314 ships (1,000 GRT or over) total-
ing 27,445,500 GRT, 45,422,500 DWT; includes 50 pas-
senger, 389 cargo, 96 container, 79 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 280
tanker, 42 liquefied gas, 267 bulk, 38 combination ore/oil,
73 specialized carrier
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: 161,500 army (plus 8,800 colonials, including
1,100 locally entered personnel?Maltese, Goans, and Hong
Kong and Singapore Chinese); 72,000 navy (including 9,530
naval air and 7,300 marines); 90,400 air force (4,000 pilots)
Major ground units: army is organized into an army
headquarters, a corps headquarters, 5 divisions (4 armored, 1
artillery), 3 infantry brigades, 6 field forces, 22 artillery and
19 armored regiments (battalion size) and 57 infantry battal-
ions (including colonials 1 field force and 5 infantry battal-
ions); army aviation is organized into an Army Aviation
Center, 1 regiment, 14 squadrons, and 4 separate flights
Ships: 3 ASW carriers, 2 cruisers, 13 destroyers, 55 frig-
ates, 11 nuclear-powered submarines, 16 submarines, 22
patrol-type ships, 39 mine warfare ships, 8 amphibious war-
fare ships, 49 amphibious warfare craft, 43 auxiliaries, 191
service craft
Aircraft: 2,458 (1,301 jet), including 327 (nonjet heli-
copters) in army aviation, 308 (9 jet) in naval air, 1,823 (1,292
jet) in air force
Missiles: Bloodhound II SAM, Rapier SAM, Lance S-5
missile
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Supply: capable of producing all types of equipment, but
some aircraft supplies, as well as Polaris missiles, come
from U.S.; all types of naval ships constructed including
nuclear-powered ballistic missile submarines; exports
destroyers, frigates, submarines, patrol craft, missiles and
aircraft; produces surface-to-air, air-to-air, and antitank
missiles
Military budget: proposed for fiscal year ending 31
March 1981, $26.76 billion; about 12% of proposed central
government budget
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UPPER VOLTA
. (See reference map VII)
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: 5,200 army, 190 air force, 800 gendarmerie,
1,175 republican guard, 270 republican security, company,
455 police, 18 French advisers
Major ground units: 3 infantry regiments, (total of 6 in-
fantry battalions and 1 commando battalion); 1 interarms
regiment consisting of 1 armored bn, 1 engineer company, 1
artillery bn, 1 airborne regiment
Aircraft: 5 prop (3 transport, 2 utility), 2 helicopters
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December
1980, $37.7 million; 19.7% of central government budget
112
URUGUAY
(See reference map IV)
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 14 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
84,500 GRT, 115,500 DWT; includes 11 cargo, 1 tanker, 1
liquefied gas, 1 bulk; additionally 2 naval tankers are some-
ties used commercially
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: 22,300 army, 4,700 navy (including 430 in na-
val air arm and 500 marines), 3,260 air force (including 341
pilots), 1,700 maritime police, 520 republican guard, 650
metropolitan guard
Major ground units: 4 army divisions (comprising 7 bri-
gades and 10 battalion-sized units and 1 air defense battal-
ion), plus 5 separate battalion-sized units (1 horse cavalry
-regiment,- 1 armored infantry battalion, 2 infantry battal-
ions, and 1 signal battalion), 1 military intelligence company,
1 military police company
?Ships: 3 frigates, 4 patrol ships and craft, 2 minesweepers,
2 amphibious warfare craft, 5 auxiliary, 7 service craft
Aircraft: 136 (13 jet), including 113 (13 jet) in air force, 23
in naval air
Supply: dependent on U.S. for current supplies, with a
few exceptions such as fast patrol craft from France
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VENEZUELA
(See reference map IV)
ECONOMY
Aid: economic assistance?extensions from U.S.
(FY46-76), $128 million loans; $73 million grants; from inter-
national organizations (FY46-75), $658 million; from Com-
munist countries (1954-76), $10 million; military?assistance
from U.S. (FY46-76), $153 million
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 64 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
591,200 GRT, 852,800 DWT; includes 5 passenger, 35 cargo,
12 tanker, 3 bulk, 6 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 3 specialized car-
rier
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: 27,000 army, 9,100 navy (including 4,500 ma-
rines), 4,500 air force, 15,000 national guard
Major ground units: 4 infantry divisions, 1 armored bri-
gade, 1 ranger brigade
Ships: 2 destroyers, 3 frigates, 3 submarines, 3 missile at-
tack boats, 3 patrol craft, 4 river/roadstead patrol boats, 4
amphibious warfare ships, 5 auxiliary ships, 1 service craft
SECRET
Aircraft: 243 (140 jet, 23 turboprop, 51 prop, 29 heli-
copters), including 52 aircraft not in operational units that
are being offered for sale or prepared for disposal (43 F-86K,
3 Vampire, and 6 Venom) 25X1
Supply: produces portion of small arms and ammunition,
aerial bombs, and military explosives and propellants;
dependent upon U.S. and Western Europe for all other
materiel; 2 submarines purchased from West Germany, (25X1
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Italy 25X1
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VIETNAM
(See reference map IX)
COMMUNICATIONS
Railroads: 2,917 usable km total, consists of about 45 km
standard gage (1.435 m), 2,637 km meter gage (1.00 m), and
235 km of dual gage (standard and meter) all single track,
none electrified; all government owned and operated
Pipelines: refined products 2,414 km (including 547 km
in Laos)
Merchant marine: 43 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
222,800 GRT, 311,700 DWT; includes 31 cargo, 7 tanker, 3
bulk, 1 passenger-car, 1 roll-on/roll-off cargo; Vietnam
beneficially owns 11 cargo ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
85,600 GRT, 112,100 DWT under the Panamanian flag
Telecommunications: government requirements fulfilled
mainly through radiocommunications and radio-relay net-
works; radio stations provide alternate communication links;
international facilities adequate from Hanoi and Ho Chi
Minh City (Saigon); radio and wired broadcast coverage is
good and most important means of mass communications;
about 60,000 telephones; estimated 3 to 4 million radios and
over 300,000 TV sets; approximately 18 shortwave and 5
mediumwave radio transmitters; 11 AM, 1 FM and 6 TV
stations
DEFENSE FORCES
Military manpower: males 15-49, 12,327,000; 7,443,000
fit for military service; average number currently reaching
military age (17) annually about 577,000
army; 3,000-6,000 navy;
Personnel: 680,000-760,000
12,200 air force
Major ground units: 39 infantry divisions, 14 economic
construction divisions, 6 engineer divisions, 1 transportation
division, 5 artillery brigades, 5 armor brigades, 4 AAA bri-
gades, 4 engineer brigades
Ships: 4 frigates (FF), 1 patrol ship (PGF), 4 coastal patrol
ships (PC), 7 missile attack boats (PIG), 39 coastal patrol
craft (CPC), 25 amphibious warfare ships (LST, LSM, LCU,
LCP, LCM), 79 river/roadstead patrol craft (PB, PBR), and
34 auxiliary/service craft
Aircraft: 794 including 358 jet fighters/ground attack air-
craft, 2 jet reconnaissance aircraft, 119 jet trainers, 19 jet
transports, 31 turboprop transports, 80 prop transports, 36
prop light utility aircraft, and 149 helicopters
Missiles: 13 SAM regiments and 37 AAA regiments
NOTE: VN figures preliminary
114 SECRET
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WESTERN SAMOA
(See reference map X)
DEFENSE FORCES
Western Samoa 13'as informal defense ties with New Zea-
land but has no formal defense structure and no regular
armed forces; a native police force of 245 men is main-
tained; the 1972 budget for police and
US$405,230, 3.8% of total government budget
?SECRET
prisons
was
SECRET
YEMEN (ADEN)
(See reference map VI)
ECONOMY
Aid commitments: economic?OPEC, ODA (1973-79),
$606.0 million; Communist countries (1970-79), $312.5 mil-
lion; Western (non-U.S.) countries, ODA and OOF (1970-78),
$44.0 million; U.S. (FY70-79), $4.5 million; military?Com-
munist countries (1970-79), $1,149 million
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 3 cargo ships (1,000 GRT or over) total-
ing 4,300 GRT, 6,600 DWT
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: 22,000 army, 1,000 navy, 2,500 air force (100
pilots), 15,000 people's police, 20,000 people's militia
Major ground units: 10 infantry brigades (3-4 battalions
per brigade), 1 armored brigade, 1 field artillery brigade, 1
FROG-7 rocket brigade, 1 coastal defense battalion
Ships: 4 guided missile attack boats, 2 small. submarine
chasers, 2 patrol bots, 1 mine warfare ship, 3 medium land-
ing craft, 3 mechanized landing craft, 1 fireboat
Aircraft: 182 (134 jet, 5 prop, 4 turboprop, 33 helicopters)
Missiles: 4 SA-2 batteries; SA-7s are deployed with PDRY
Army units
Supply: dependent on outside sources, primarily U.S.S.R.
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YEMEN (SANAA)
(See reference map VI)
ECONOMY
Aid commitments: economic?OPEC, ODA (1974-79), $2
billion; U.S. (1970-79), $67 million; Western countries (ex-
cept ? U.S.), ODA and OOF (1970-79), $197 million; Corn:
munist countries (1970-79), $141 million; military?Com-
munist countries (1970-79), $506 million; U.S. (1970-79), $2
million; OPEC (1974-79), $955 million
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: 30,000 army (only 10,000 could be mobilized),
750, navy, 700 air force (29 pilots)
Major ground units: 6 infantry brigades, 1 mechanized
brigade, 1 airborne brigade, 4 armored brigades, 3 field artil-
lery brigades, 5 air defense artillery brigades (equate to re-
inforced_ VS. companies)
- Ships: 2 motor torpedo boats, 6 patrol boats, 2 mechanized
landing craft
Aircraft: 129 (95 jet, 7 turboprop, 2 prop, 25 helicopter) (S)
Supply: dependent on outside sources, primarily U.S.S.R.;
since 1970 various other countries also, including France,
Jordan, Poland, Saudi -Arabia, U.K., and U.S.
116
YUGOSLAVIA
(See reference map V)
ECONOMY
Debt and aid: Yugoslav outstanding net external debt
(medium/long-term) end 1979, $13.65 billion; Yugoslavia
has extended bilateral economic aid totaling about $1.2 bil-
lion to non-Communist LDCs (1966-79)
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 259 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
2,378,100 GRT, 3,692,800 DWT; includes 6 passenger, 175
cargo, 4 container, 8 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 12 tanker, 54
bulk; Yugoslavia beneficially owns 6 additional ships (1,000
GRT or over) totaling 64,270 GRT, 102,600 DWT which are
registered under the Panamanian flag
Civil air: 47 major transport aircraft (1979)
Airfields: 110 total; 40 with permanent-surface runways;
15 with runways 2,500-3,499 m, 42 with runways
1,000-2,499 m, 53 with runways less than 1,000 m; 1 heliport
Telecommunications: services available to public are
limited but system as a whole is adequate; telephone and
telegraph services are provided by open-wire lines,
multiconductor, coaxial, and submarine cables; radio and
TV broadcast facilities provide coverage to nearly all sec-
tions of country; 26 main and 48 relay AM, 47 FM stations;
3,785,877 receivers; 25 major and 144 relay TV stations;
2,665,746 receivers; 1,003,550 telephones (97% automatic)
DEFENSE FORCES
-Personnel: 191,000 ground forces, 13,000 naval forces,
36,150 air and air defense forces, 18,000 paramilitary forces
Personnel in reserve (not on active duty): (estimated)
2,100,000 ground forces, 48,000 naval forces, air force un-
known
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YUGOSLAVIA (Continued)
Major ground units: 8 infantry divisions, 27 brigades (14
infantry, 3 mechanized, 1 mountain, 8 armored, 1 para-
chute), 34 regiments (2 infantry, 11 artillery, 7 antitank, 13
antiaircraft artillery, and 2 SA-6 regiments)
Ships: 6 submarines, 1 frigate, 65 coastal patrol-
river/roadstead craft, 38 amphibious warfare craft, 27 mine
warfare craft, 2 fleet support ships, 9 other auxiliaries
Aircraft: (in operational units) 696, including 484
fighters/trainers, 55 transports, 133 helicopers
Missiles: 8 operational SA-2 sites (48 launchers); 8 oper-
ational SA-3 sites (32 four-rail launchers); 2 regiments of the
SA-6 SAM system are deployed with the ground forces; and
the SA-7 and SA-9 systems are also believed to be deployed
on a limited baks
Supply: produces weapons and ammunition up to me-
dium artillery, ATGMs and SA-7s, trucks, MICV, signal
equipment, offensive/defensive chemical warfare materiel;
builds submarines, missile attack boats, amphibious warfare
craft, and units up to frigate size; builds limited quantity of
subsonic fighter aircraft, and assembles limited quantities of
helicopters; other materiel now obtained primarily from
U.S.S.R.
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ZAIRE
(See reference map VII)
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Aid: economic commitments?Western (non-U.S.) coun-
tries, ODA and OOF (1970-78), $1,862.0 million; U.S. au-
thorizations, including Ex-Im (1970-79), $577.7 million;
Communist countries (1970-79), $103.0 million; OPEC.
ODA (1974-79), $202.0 million; military?U.S. (1970-79),25X1
$121.0 million; Communist countries (1970-79), $35.0 mil-
lion
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 8 cargo ships (1,000 GRT or over) total-
ing 77,400 GRT, 117,443 DWT
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Personnel: 18,500 army; 2,100 air force; 1,050 navy;
35,100 national gendarmerie; military advisers-120 Bel-
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ZAIRE (Continued)
Major ground units: 1 infantry division, 1 airborne bri-
gade (3 battalions-2 operational, 1 in training), 1 armored
brigade, 1 infantry brigade (3 battalions), 1 Special Brigade
(headquarters, ceremonial, and miscellaneous units, as well
as 1 Presidential Guard, 1 parachute battalion, and 1 ar-
mored infantry battalion)
Ships: 27 total (4 coastal escorts, 3 motor torpedo boats, 18
patrol boats, 2 landing craft)
Aircraft: 68 (16 jet, 8 turboprop, 35 prop, 9 helicopters)
Supply: historically dependent on Western sources, princi-
pally France and U.S., and to a lesser extent Belgium, Israel,
and Italy; in 1975 began receiving PRC, FRG, Canada, and
North Korean equipment
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December
1980, $135.7 million; 7.5% of central government budget
118
ZAMBIA
(See reference map VII)
ECONOMY
Aid: economic commitments?Western (non-U.S.) coun-
tries, ODA and OOF (1970-78), $882.0 million; Communist
countries (1970-79), $378.0 million; U.S. authorized, includ-
ing Ex-Im (1970-79), $170.2 million; OPEC, ODA (1974-79),
$45.0 million; military?Communist countries (1970-79),
$180.0 million
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 1 cargo ship totaling 5,500 GRT, 9,100
DWT
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: 12,800 army (including foreign contract per-
sonnel), 1,500 air force (including some foreign contract per-
sonnel), 840 paramilitary police mobile battalion, 5,000
Zambian national service
Major ground units: 8 infantry battalions, 1 armored-car
regiment, 2 artillery batteries, 2 air defense batteries
Aircraft: 139 (43 jet, 62 prop, 34 helicopters)
Supply: until '70s heavily dependent on U.K.; since then,
equipment received from a number of West European coun-
tries including Italy and Sweden; the USSR has also provided
military equipment since 1971; PRC aid extended to regular
military in 1973; Yugoslavia major source of training assis-
tance; Zambia has shown willingness to seek military assis-
tance from virtually any country
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December
1979, $391 million; 38% of central government budget
SECRET
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ZIMBABWE
.0111 116. ???
(See reference map VII)
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: 29,000 army, 1,700 air force, 9,000 police and
1,800 paramilitary, and 50,000 army reserve
Major ground units: 3 brigade headquarters, 8 battalions,
3 independent companies, 8 battalions reserve, 1 artillery
regiment, 1 armored-car regiment
Aircraft: 165 (28 jet, 90 prop, 47 helicopters
Supply: dependent upon U.K. prior to declaration of in-
dependence on 15 November 1965; since then South Africa
has been principal supplier, also received some materiel
from Canada, France, and Italy; aircraft have been pur-
chased mainly from the U.K., but also from France, Italy
and Canada
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 30 June 1980; $600
million; 37% of central government budget
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TAIWAN
(See reference map VIII)
COMMUNICATIONS
Merchant marine: 144 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling
1,656,350 GRT, 2,560,495 DWT; includes 1 passenger, 9225x1
cargo, 11 container, 13 tanker, 23 bulk, 1 combination
ore/oil, 3 specialized carrier
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Civil air: 45 major transport aircraft
DEFENSE FORCES
Personnel: 310,000 army, 61,200 navy (31,000 marines),
68,000 air force, 39,600 Ministry of National Defense (not
included in service totals), 7,600 Combined Service forces
Major ground units: 13 heavy infantry divisions, 6 light
infantry divisions, 2 marine divisions, 3 armored brigades, 1
armored infantry brigade, 2 armored cavalry regiments, 2
airborne brigades, 1 Anti-Communist National Salvation
Corps (2 regiment-sized units), 25 GS field artillery battal-
ions, 2 Nike Hercules missile battalions, 2 I-Hawk missile
battalions; army aviation has 1 general support aviation
battalion; 9 reserve infantry divisions (cadre only for reserve,
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Ships: 130 combatant units (not including 28 yard/service
craft and 302 minor amphibious craft), supported by 2
underway replenishment ships, 1 materiel support ship, 8
fleet support ships, and 9 other auxiliaries; combatant units
include 2 unarmed training submarines, 21 destroyers, 9
frigates, 1 guided missile patrol combatant, 3 patrol com-
batants, 29 amphibious warfare ships, 23 coastal patrol-
river/roadstead craft, 21 amphibious warfare craft, and 21
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Aircraft: 907 inc u ng jet) in air force, 170 in
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TAIWAN (Continued)
Missiles: Nike Hercules, Hawk (see above)
Supply: some production of infantry weapons, artillery.
ammunition, CBW protective masks, assembly of general
purpose vehicles, quartermaster items; heavy reliance upon
U.S. for other military supplies; currently producing trainer
aircraft and under license U.S. F-5E fighters; will produce
naval patrol boats with U.S. assistance
Military budget: for fiscal year ending 30 June 1980, $3.2
billion including personnel costs; about 59% of central gov-
ernment budget
120
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