THE WORLD FACTBOOK 1985

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6
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RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
S
Document Page Count: 
112
Document Creation Date: 
December 27, 2016
Document Release Date: 
December 17, 2012
Sequence Number: 
1
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
May 1, 1985
Content Type: 
REPORT
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PDF icon CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6.pdf9.26 MB
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 World Factbook ip Imo, CD in Nineteen Hundred and Eighty-Five CR WF 85-002 n I Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 3 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Central Intelligence Agency The World Factbook Nineteen Hundred and Eighty-Five Classified Supplement The World Factbook and this Classified Supplement are produced annually by the Directorate of Intelligence of the Central Intelligence Agency. The supplement contains the classified entries, In general, information available as of 1 January 1985 was used in the preparation of this edition of the Factbook. F_ Comments and queries are welcome and may be addressed to the Factbook Editor, Office of Central Reference CR WF 85-002 (Supersedes CR 84-002) May 1985 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Andorra no supplemental data Angola 3 Anguilla (formerly St. Christopher-Nevis-Anguilla) no supplemental data Antigua and Barbuda 3 Argentina 4 British Honduras (see Belize) British Solomon Islands (see Solomon Islands) Brunei Burkina Faso (formerly Upper Volta) 12 Burma 13 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret Cape Verde 15 Central African Republic 16 Ceylon (see Sri Lanka) Chad 16 Djibouti (formerly French Territory of the Afars and Issas) 23 Dominican Republic Dubai (see United Arab Emirates) Ecuador El Salvador 26 Equatorial Guinea 27 Ethiopia 27 French Polynesia French Territory of the Afars and Issas (see Djibouti) Fujayrah, al (see United Arab Emirates) Gabon Gambia, The 32 German Democratic Republic 32 Germany, Federal Republic of 33 Ghana 33 Gibraltar 34 Secret iv Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret Kiribati (formerly Gilbert Islands) 48 Korea, North 48 Korea, South 49 Kuwait 50 Madagascar 55 Madeira Islands (see Portugal) Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret Netherlands 62 Netherlands Antilles 63 New Caledonia 63 Pemba (see Tanzania) R Ra's al-Khaymah (see United Arab Emirates) Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 St. Christopher and Nevis (formerly St. Christopher-Nevis-Anguilla) 73 St. Lucia 74 St. Vincent and The Grenadines 74 San Marino no supplemental data Sao Tome and Principe 74 Saudi Arabia 75 Senegal 75 Solomon Islands (formerly British Solomon Islands) 78 Somalia 78 South Africa Southern Rhodesia (see Zimbabwe) South-West Africa (see Namibia) Soviet Union Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Umm al-Qaywayn (see United Arab Emirates) _ United Arab Emirates (Abu Dhabi, Ajman, Dubai, al Fujayrah, 91 Ra's al-Khaymah, Sharjah, Umm al-Qaywayn) United Arab Republic (see Egypt) United Kingdom 91 United States no supplemental data V Vanuatu (formerly New Hebrides) Yemen, Arab Republic (North Yemen) 95 Yemen, People's Democratic Republic of (South Yemen) 96 Yugoslavia 97 Wallis and Futuna no supplemental data Walvis Bay (see South Africa) Western Sahara (formerly Spanish Sahara) 95 Western Samoa 95 Zambia (formerly Northern Rhodesia) 98 Zimbabwe (formerly Southern Rhodesia) West Bank and Gaza Strip no supplemental data Appendix Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 secret Definitions, Abbreviations, and Explanatory Notes Fiscal Year: The abbreviation FY stands for fiscal year; all years are calendar years unless 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 invest- ment 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, insur- ance, and freight), f.o.b. (free on board), ODA (official develop- ment 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. Maps: References under the locator maps pertain to the area maps at the back of the unclassified version of The World Fact book. 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 represent the position of the United States Government. Money: All money figures are in contemporaneous US 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. Note: Some of the countries and governments included in this publication are not fully independent, and others are not official- ly recognized by the United States Government. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret Afghanistan nist countries (1970-83), $3.0 billion Economy Aid: economic commitments-Western (non-US) countries ODA and OOF (1970-78), $335 million; US, including Ex-lm (FY70-83), $221 million; Communist coun- tries (1970-83), $2.4 billion; OPEC ODA (1974-82), $940 million; military commit- ments-US (FY70-82), $2 million; Commu- 20,000 Defense Forces Personnel: air and air defense forces un- known but probably about 5,000 (half strength), air force 2,000 (pilot strength 175-200), air defense force (army) 3,000, army and paramilitary personnel-army 55,000, Border Guard Command 7,000- 9,000, Defense of Revolution Command 8,000-10,000, Provisional Police 15,000- commando regiments Major ground units: 3 corps headquarters, 10 infantry divisions, 3 armored divisions, 2 mountain regiments,1 artillery brigade, 16 artillery regiments, 3 commando brigades, 3 Major air defense units (manned by army troops): artillery division, 2 SAM brigades, 1 radar brigade, 1 searchlight brigade Aircraft: 297 (171 jet, 54 turboprop, 3 prop, 69 helicopters) operationally assigned to air force Missiles: 120 SA-2s (6 sites); 125 SA-3s (2 sites); SA-8s (4 sites); SA-13s (3 sites Ionian Sea See regional map V Economy Major trade partners: $323.9 million; China, which replaced the 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 European Communist countries, 42% non-Communist countrie~25X1 Communications Merchant marine: 11 cargo ships (1,000 25X1 DWT Airfields: 11 total; 5 with permanent-surface runways; 1 with runways 3,500 m or mol25X1 with runways 2,500-3,499 m, 5 with run- ways 1,000-2,499 m;1 heliport Telecommunications: least developed of 25X1 any European Communist country; serves only basic needs of government with very limited service to public; limited coverage by radio and wired broadcasts; 8 AM sta- tions, 175,000 receivers; 2 TV stations, 4,200 receivers; 15,000 telephones 0 25X1 Defense Forces 25X1 Personnel: (est.) ground forces 30,000, naval forces 3,300, air and air defense forces 7, Aircraft: 102 operational, including 86 air defense, 12 ground attack, 4 transport F_ Missiles: 4 SA-2 SAM sites (24 launchers) Supply: some small arms and ammunition manufactured domestically; China has sup- plied small torpedo boats, patrol craft, and submarine sections to the navy; tanks, ar- mored personnel carriers, trucks, SAMs, in- fantry weapons, defensive chemical/ biological warfare equipment, and ammuni- tion to the army; and jet aircraft and helicop- ters to the air force; Chinese aid has been cut off; also has old Soviet equipmen~ ,5a tantine Economy Aid: economic commitments-Western (non-US) countries ODA and OOF (1970-82), $6.8 billion; US, including Ex-Im (FY70-83), $1.4 billion; Communist coun- tries (1970-83), $1.9 billion; military commit- ments-Communist countries 1970-83), $4,750 millio gas, 3 chemical tanker, 4 bulk Communications Merchant marine: 71 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 1,325,770 GRT, 1,910,907 DWT; includes 5 passenger, 24 cargo, 3 vehi- cle carrier, 9 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 15 petro- leum, oils, and lubricants tanker, 8 liquefied Spain, and Tunisia Telecommunications: excellent domestic and international service in the north, sparse in the south; Atlantic and Indian Ocean INTELSAT and Soviet STATSIONAR serv- ice, plus 15 domestic satellite stations; 607,000 telephones (2.8 per 100 pop).), 26 AM, 3 FM, and 102 TV stations; 6 submarine coaxial cables; coaxial cable, radio-relay, and troposphere scatter to Italy, Morocco, darmerie 24,000 Defense Forces Personnel: army 100,000, navy 6,500, air force 12,000 (est. 400 pilots), National Gen- Major ground units: 9 motorized infantry brigades, 5 mechanized infantry brigades, 3 armored brigades, 1 airborne brigade, 40 support installations Ships: 2 submarines, 12 missile attack boats, 3 frigates, 2 fleet minesweepers,1 medium landing ship, 1 miscellaneous auxiliary, 1 diving tender, 1 torpedo retriever, 19 patrol craft, 3 guided combatants 25X1 25X1 25X1 Aircraft: 282 all-weather/day fighters, 111 bombers, 41 transports, 140 helicopters Supply: in the past depended on France and to a small extent on several non-Communist countries and China; since 1975 materiel (including surface-to-air, air-to-air, and na- val missiles, aircraft, naval ships, and ground materiel) supplied mostly by USSR; domes- tic production of small amounts of ammuni- tion and explosives is to begin in the near future; assembling UK-designed patrol boats; recently began construction of a 25X1. 25X1 zoX1 25X1 25X1 corvette-type ship, the largest domestically 25X1 Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December 1983, $1.285 billion; 6.2% of cen- tral government budget 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret Angola Vabi.dda Bourn Atlantic ?J'~Yi Economy Aid: economic commitments-Western (non-US) countries ODA and OOF (1970-82), $375 million; Communist coun- tries (1970-83), $536 million; US, including Ex-Im (FY70-83), $150 million; OPEC ODA (1974-82), $35 million; military commit- ments-Communist countries (1970-83), $1.0 billion Communications Merchant marine: 14 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 76,395 GRT, 118,705 DWT; includes 13 cargo, 1 tanker Defense Forces Personnel: army est. 35,000, navy 1,500, air force 2,000, police corps 8,000, People's De- fense Organization (militia) 30,000-65,000, Frontier Guard, roughly estimated at 2,000; foreign advisers-700 Soviet, 5 Polish, 500 East German, possibly 150 Romanian; for- eign forces-30,000 or more Cuban troops and advisers and 6,500 civilians Major ground units: brigade-size infantry and air defense units; about 20-25 infantry and mechanized infantry brigades of about 1,100 men each; about 55 combat battalions, mostly infantry with about 300 men each Ships: 3 medium amphibious assault landing ships, 6 missile attack boats, 3 torpedo boats, 15 patrol boats, 5 utility landing craft, 5 me- dium landing craft, 4 personnel landing craft, and 5 cargo ship 95 helicopters) Missiles: at least 33 SA-3/GOA launchers, 16 SA-6/GAINFUL launchers, several hundred SA-7/GRAIL launchers, 8 SA-8/GECKO launchers, 12 SA-9 GASKIN launchers, and an undetermined number of SA-2 launchers cially USSR and Cuba Antigua and Barbuda Defense Forces Personnel: Antigua and Barbuda Defense Force 72 (4 officers) 0 Force Ships: 2 harbor patrol boats (PB), operated by the Royal Antigua and Barbuda Police 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret Argentina . Boundary representation is poi ~e~esaar~iy amnorea^~e Economy Aid: economic commitments-US, includ- ing Ex-Im (FY70-83), $1,037 million; other Western countries ODA and OOF (1970-82), $1.9 billion; Communist countries (1970-83), $538 million; military commitments-US (FY70-82), $137 million Communist coun- tries (1970-83), $11 million Communications Merchant marine: 174 (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 2,031,298 GRT, 3,150,520 DWT; includes 2 short-sea passenger, 70 cargo, 11 refrigerated cargo, 4 container,1 railcar car- rier, 63 petroleum, oils, and lubricants tanker, 5 liquefied gas, 1 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 17 bulk; additionally,1 naval tanker and 1 naval transport are sometimes used commercially Defense Forces Personnel: 104,000 army, 35,900 navy (in- cluding 2,900 in naval air, and 10,000 naval infantry), 18,500 air force (1,000 pilots), 12,000 National Gendarmerie, 9,000 Argen- tine Naval Prefecture, 2,000 National Aero- nautical Police Force Major ground units: 1 army headquarters, 4 army corps headquarters, 12 brigades (2 ar- mored, 3 infantry, 2 mechanized infantry, 2 jungle infantry, 2 mountain infantry, 1 air- borne infantry), 2 armored cavalry regiments, 2 separate regiments (1 infantry, 1 cavalry), 1 amphibious engineer group, 1 communica- tions group, 2 mountain cavalry reconnais- sance detachments; additionally, within each tion, and military police corps there is an armored cavalry reconnais- sance squadron, as well as combat support and service support units including field artillery, air defense artillery, engineer, communica- Ships: 1 light aircraft carrier, 2 guided mis- sile destroyers, 5 destroyers, 1 light cruiser, 4 guided missile frigates, 6 corvettes, 3 subma- rines, 40 patrol ships and craft, 6 mine war- fare ships,1 amphibious warfare ship, 19 amphibious warfare craft, 37 auxiliaries/ Aircraft: 628 total; 386 air force (167 jet, 95 turboprop, 87 prop, 37 helicopters), 148 navy (45 jet, 54 prop, 34 turboprop, 15 heli- copters), 94 army (2 jet, 12 turboprop, 32 prop, 48 helicopters) Supply: produces some weapons, ammuni- tion, armored personnel carriers and light tanks, motor transports, an air-to-surface missile, an antitank guided missile, and tur- boprop aircraft; assembles helicopters under foreign license; assembled 2 submarines in 1972-73; has built a guided missile destroyer with materials and technical aid provided by UK; currently producing 2 FRG- designed submarines and 6 FRG-designed guided missile corvettes; past dependence upon US, Canada, and Western Europe be- ing shifted almost exclusively to Europe E Military budget: reported defense budget for fiscal year ending 31 December 1983, $1.3 billion; 12.7% of the central govern- ment budget Indian ocean ,,usrranan Bight bourne 1117 X/ 4 Communications Merchant marine: 87 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 1,970,674 GRT, 3,070,861 DWT; includes 1 passenger, 6 cargo, 4 con- tainer, 22 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 17 petro- leum, oils, and lubricants tanker, 1 chemical tanker, 2 liquefied gas,1 combination ore/oil, 2 livestock carrier, 31 bulk Defense Forces Personnel: army 31,963, navy 16,306, air force 22,587 (800 pilots Major ground units: 1 infantry division headquarters, 6 infantry battalions, 1 Special Air Service Regiment (battalion), 3 artillery regiments (battalions),1 armored regiment (battalion),1 light AD regiment (battalion), 2 cavalry regiments (battalions), 1 aviation regiment (battalion Ships: 12 principal combatants, 6 subma- rines, 19 coastal patrol craft, 7 amphibious craft, 2 mine warfare craft, 6 auxiliary craft, 4 service craft Aircraft: 459 (199 jet) total; 389 (199 jet in air force, 70 (nonjet) in army aviation 1979, and Redeye Missiles: Rapier SAM system, delivered in Supply: produces antisubmarine missiles, light aircraft, some types of army equip- ment, light armored vehicles, small arms and ammunition, and ships, including de- stroyers; submarines and limited quantities 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 LOA I 25X1 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret of jet fighters and heavy equipment pur- chased abroad (US, UK, Canada, FRG, Bel- gium, and France) includes 21 cargo, 1 container, 3 bull Communications Merchant marine: 25 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 119,377 GRT, 201,852 DWT; pilots), gendarmerie 11,000 Defense Forces Personnel: army 36,500, air force 4,500 (200 capable of being mobilized Major ground units: 1 army signal regiment, 1 army reconnaissance battalion, 1 armored infantry division, 2 corps headquar- ters, 3 infantry battalions (corps), 3 engineer battalions (2 corps, 1 division), 3 air defense battalions (2 corps, 1 division), 3 signal battal- ions (2 corps, 1 division), 24 (militia) infantry regiments and 8 (militia) infantry brigades Aircraft: 164 (32 jet, 32 prop, 13 turboprop, 87 helicopters Supply: produces some small arms and am- munition, trucks, artillery, light armored vehicles, and tank destroyers; current sources of other items are the US, Western Europe, and some Communist countries North Fri tt. Great Abaco 25X1 25X1 do Communications Merchant marine: 86 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 3,393,762 GRT, 6,339,090 DWT; includes 6 passenger, 6 short-sea pa:25X1 senger, 10 cargo, 4 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 6 refrigerated cargo, 3 container, 32 petro- leum, oils, and lubricants tanker, 4 liquefied gas, 4 combination ore/oil, 2 chemical 25X1 tanker, 7 bulk, 2 multifunction heavy lift carrier; a flag of convenience registry Defense Forces Personnel: 442-mainly coast guard ele- men Ships: 1 fast patrol craft, 10 patrol boats[ Supply: all from the UI~ 25X1 25X1 25X1 1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Economy Aid: economic commitments-OPEC ODA (1974-82), $930 million; US (FY70-83), $24 million; other Western countries; ODA and OOF (1970-82), $7.8 million Communications Merchant marine: 5 cargo ships of 20,503 GRT, 31,068 DWT; includes 3 cargo, 1 roll- on/roll-off cargo, 1 bulk Defense Forces Personnel: 2,500-man defense force, 200-man naval wing, 100-man air wing, 4,000-man police force; equipment includes 110 Panhard armored personnel carriers, 50 armored cars, 8 155-mm howitzers, 9 81-mm mortars, 8 40- mm and 4 35-mm antiaircaft guns, 6 MOBAT towed antitank guns, 30106-mm recoilless rifles, 8 105-mm guns, 300 LAW antitank rockets, 7155-mm (towed) guns Ships: 2 guided missile patrol boats, 19 pa- trol boats/craft, 2 medium landing craft, 10 Missiles: 150 TOW antitank guided missiles, Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December 1984, $279 million; 19% of cen- tral government budget Bangladesh Boundary representation is got ne~essar~iy aothornal~ue. Economy Aid: economic commitments-Communist countries (1970-83), $1.2 billion; OPEC ODA (1974-82), $1,285 million; US, includ- ing Ex-Im (FY70-83), $2.3 billion; other Western countries, ODA and OOF (1980-82), $6.1 billion; military commit- ments-Communist countries (1970-83), Communications Merchant marine: 37 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 281,023 GRT, 386,083 DWT, includes 34 cargo, 2 tanker, 1 passenger Defense Forces Personnel: army 90,000, navy 5,500, air force 3,000 est0 Major ground units: 5 division headquar- ters; 13 infantry brigades; about 35 infantry battalions; 6 field artillery regiments; 1 heavy mortar battery; 1 armored brigade, supported by 1 independent engineer bri- gade, 1 signal brigade, and other service ele- ments; 3 light artillery regiments; 2 armored cavalry regiments Ships: 3 frigates, 4 guided missile patrol boats, 20 coastal patrol boats/river patrol boats, 1 submarine chaser, 3 auxiliary helicopters) operationally assigned Aircraft: 98 (46 jet, 5 turboprop, 28 prop, 19 Supply: military supplies consist of those captured from West Pakistani forces and materiel provided by Egypt, France, India, Turkey, Yugoslavia, UK, China, and USSR 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1' 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Defense Forces Personnel: 455 (S) ,The Crane Major ground units: Barbados Regiment Ships: 1 fast patrol craft, 6 patrol boats Aircraft: 1 utility; Aero Services Barbados, Ltd. (a government-owned limited liability company acquired in 1983) has 2 transports and 7 utility aircraft that can be used by the Barbados Defense Force Us Supply: mostly from the UK but some from 3.1 % of central government budget Military budget: fiscal 1984, $8 million, Belgium Communications Merchant marine: 92 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 2,185,551 GRT, 3,618,652 DWT; includes 1 passenger cargo, 3 short- sea passenger, 25 cargo, 3 refrigerated cargo, 4 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 7 container, 10 pe- troleum, oils, and lubricants tanker, 4 lique- fied gas carrier, 3 combination ore/oil, 1 chemical tanker, 31 bulk Defense Forces Personnel: army 61,400, navy 4,600, air force 20,000 (500 pilots), national gendar- merie 16,300 Ships: 4 frigates, 27 mine warfare, 6 coastal patrol craft, 6 auxiliaries0 25X1 Aircraft: 437 (236 jet), including 347 (289 jet) in air force, 3 in naval aviation, and 87 in army aviation Missiles: 4 SAM squadrons with NIKE Her- cules in air force, 8 SAM battalions with HAWK in ground force (see major ground units) Supply: significant production of small arms and ammunition and some production of aircraft, infantry and antitank rocket launchers, mortars, artillery and mortar am- munition, rockets, electronic fire control equipment, and biological/chemical war- fare defensive materiel; some assembly of armored personnel carriers; producing/ assembling US-designed F-16 jet fighter; most materiel imported from NATO coun- tries 75X1 25X1 25X1 Ministry of National Defense: General In- 25X1 formation Service (SGR), domestic/foreign; 25X1 Office for Atomic Coordination Belgium "? Major ground units: Belgian Army's I Corps-2 mechanized division headquar- ters, 4 brigades, I armored infantry brigade (reserve), 1 motorized infantry brigade (re- serve), 3 reconnaissance battalions, 1 Lance battalion, 18-inch self-propelled howitzer battalion, 4 air defense artillery battalions (including 2 HAWK and 2 35-mm Gepard), 2 155-mm self-propelled howitzer battal- ions, 1 155-mm towed artillery battalion (reserve), 2 combat engineer battalions, 2 combat engineer batallions (reserve); Inte- rior Forces Command-I paracommando regiment, 2 light infantry regiments (reserve), 9 provincial light infantry regi- ments (reserve), 2 light infantry battalions, 2 combat engineer battalions, 2 combat engi- neer battalions (reserve), plus logistic ele- ments; army aviation-3 light aviation squadrons North Atlantic Ocean Bethshebe Ministry of the Interior: State Police (Gen- ,)r-y darmerie), domesti 25X11 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Belize (formerly British Honduras) Supply: has received patrol boats and trans- port aircraft from UK, its only supplier Military budget: for 1984, $4.5 million; 4.5% of government budget QUA Caribbean See Benin (formerly Dahomey) 25X1 25X1 Defense Forces Since independence from the UK in 1981, Belize has been almost totally dependent on the continuing presence of the 1,600-man British Forces Belize (BFB) for its national defense; the 1,350-man ground element of the BFB and the 250-man air element in Belize are headquartered on a rotational basis at Airport Camp, adjacent to Belize International Airport; major units: 1 infantry battalion, 1 engineer squadron,1 signal troop, 1 armored reconnaissance troop, 1 field squadron, 1 Army Air Corps detach- ment; the British Government is providing training, equipment, financial aid, and mili- tary advisers for the upgrading of the Belize Defense Force so that the UK forces may eventually leave; in addition, the British Armed Forces maintain a company of Caribbean-area-trained Royal Marine Com- mandos in the UK for immediate airlift to Personnel: Belize Defense Force consists of 525 regulars and 290 Volunteer Guard per- Major ground units: Belize Defense Force, 3 regular companies, at a low level of com- bat effectiveness; the reserve-type Volunteer Guard is constabulary in nature and lacks any combat capability Ships: Coast Guard, 2 40-foot patrol boats Aircraft: a nascent air element reportedly has 2 Norman Britten aircraft Economy Aid: economic commitments-Communist countries (1970-83), $58 million; US, includ- ing Ex-Im (FY70-83), $26 million; other Western countries, ODA and OOF (1970-82), $602 million; OPEC ODA (1974-82), $30 million; military commit- ments-Communist countries (1970-83), Communications Merchant marine: 1 cargo ship (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 2,999 GRT, 4,407 DWT P Defense Forces Personnel: army 3,200, air force 160, navy 100, civilian militia 1,500, gendarmerie 2,000, presidential guard 100; foreign advis- ers-20 Soviet, 8 Cuban, 2 GDR, unknown number Libyan Major ground units: 3 interarms battalions, 1 paracommando battalion, 1 air defense battalion, 1 service battalion, 1 engineer bat- talion, 2 armored groups; most battalions and groups company strength Ships: 6 patrol boats (4 ZHUK from USSR, 2 P-4 without torpedo tubes from North Aircraft: 1 AN-26, 3 C-47, 1 F-27, 1 F-28, 1 Boeing 707, 1 Aerospatiale 335B Supply: depends mainly on France and the USSR; some aid from the Netherlands, FRG Libya, and other countries 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1- 25X1 LVZx 1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December 1984, $27.8 million; about 22% of central government budget fled gas, 12 bulk Communications Merchant marine: 49 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 779,092 GRT, 1,201,670 DWT; includes 9 cargo, 1 refrigerated cargo, 3 container, 18 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 5 pe- troleum, oils, and lubricants tanker, 1 lique- the Caribbean Defense Forces UK is responsible for external defense; con- tingencies now met by deploying ships from the Eastern Atlantic; in addition, the British Armed Forces maintain a company of Caribbean-area-trained Royal Marine Com- mandos in the UK for immediate airlift to Bermuda Reserve Constabulary, 78 Local security forces: Bermuda Regiment, 463 (basically a reserve unit-includes head- quarters staff of 20 and Volunteer Reserve Force of 38); Bermuda Police Force, 365; Defense Forces Defense has been the de facto responsibility of India since 1949; possibly up to 10,000 Indian Army troops stationed in Bhutan; frequently rotated to maximize Indian troop 25X1 25X1 Personnel: 6,000 (approx.) army and 550 palace guard troops; poorly equipped and traine~ 25X1 Major ground units: possibly organized sep- arate squads and platoonsF____1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 secret Government Communists: three parties; PCB/Soviet led by Simon Reyes Rivera, about 10,000 mem- bers; PCML led by Oscar Zamora Medinace- lli, about 1,000 members; POR (Trotskyite), about 50 members divided between three Economy Aid: economic commitments-US, includ- ing Ex-Im (FY70-83), $536 million; other Western (non-US) countries ODA and OOF (1970-83), $679 million; OPEC ODA (1974-82), $5 million; Communist countries (1970-83), $262 million; military commit- ments-assistance from US (FY70-82), $55 Communications Merchant marine: 2 cargo ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 15,130 GRT, 18,934 DWT; 1 owned by Bolivian Navy Defense Forces Personnel: army 20,200, navy 2,665, air force 4,000 (400 pilots) Major ground units: 9 divisions comprising 36 regiments (16 infantry, 1 jungle infantry, 1 motorized infantry, 4 infantry assault, 1 airborne, 1 armored, 6 cavalry,1 cavalry assault, 5 artillery), 6 engineer battalions (including 1 combat engineer),1 engineer company; in addition, there are 6 separate units-1 infantry regiment, 1 cavalry regi- ment, 2 armored regiments,1 military po- lice battalion, 1 signal company Ships:1 oceangoing cargo ship (described above); 5 river patrol craft; 2 harbor patrol boats; 43 service craft, including 34 small river transports and 1 hospital barge; l me- dium amphibious assault landing shi Aircraft: 132 total; 131 air force (15 jet, 46 turboprop, 64 prop, 6 helicopters);1 naval aviation (turboprop) Supply: totally dependent on foreign sources; main suppliers include Argentina, Brazil, Israel, Netherlands, and Canada Boundary epesen,zt on is not ,essa?,y aolho, taGVe Economy Aid: economic commitments-Western (non-US) countries ODA and OOF (1970-82), $969 million; US (FY70-83), $134 million; Communist countries (1970-83), $31 million; military commitments-Commu- nist countries (1970-83), $1 million; US (FY70-83), $6 million Defense Forces Personnel: army 3,200, police 1,000, limited paramilitary capability pany groups Aircraft: 15 utility Missiles: 12 SA-7 launcher' Supply: UK, Belgium, US, USSR, and Israel 25X1 25X1, 25X1 25X1 25X1 225X1 _1 1. 25X1 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 secret cavalry guards regiments, 18 separate battal- ions (2 infantry-type, 3 infantry guards, 3 frontier, 5 military police, 1 railroad con- struction engineer, 3 signal, 1 combat engi- neer) Ships: 1 antisubmarine warfare-support air- craft carrier, 10 destroyers, 6 frigates, 7 sub- marines, 9 patrol combatants, 6 coastal pa- trol craft, 7 river and roadstead patrol craft, 6 mine warfare ships, 2 amphibious warfare ships, 3 amphibious warfare craft, 44 auxilia- ries, 16 service craft (includes 3 auxiliary dry docks Economy Aid: economic commitments-US, includ- ing Ex-Im (FY70-83), $2.4 billion; other Western countries ODA and OOF (1970-82), $5.8 billion; Communist countries (1970-83), $734 million; OPEC countries ODA (1974-82), $85 million; military commit- ments-US (FY70-82), $214.1 million Communications Merchant marine: 321 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 5,691,859 GRT, 9,466,782 DWT; includes 2 passenger, 135 cargo, 5 refrigerated cargo, 6 container, 11 roll-on/roll- off cargo, 56 petroleum, oils, and lubricants tanker, 11 chemical tanker, 9 liquefied gas, 14 combination ore/oil, 72 bulk; addition- ally, 1 naval tanker and 4 military transports are sometimes used commercially Defense Forces Personnel: army 182,742, navy 49,793 (in- cluding 117 in naval air and 15,146 in ma- rines), air force 50,697 (1,584 pilots), milita- rized state police constituting state guard 243,000 Major ground units: 4 army headquarters; 2 separate area command headquarters; 8 divisions comprising 20 brigades (3 infantry, 9 motorized infantry, 3 armored infantry, 4 mechanized cavalry, 1 armored cavalry), 2 mechanized cavalry regiments, and 23 com- bat and combat support battalions; 6 sepa- rate brigades (1 infantry,1 air defense artil- lery, 1 airborne, 1 mixed, 2 jungle infantry), 2 engineer construction groups, 3 separate Aircraft: 688; air force 636 (191 jet, 162 tur- boprop, 226 prop, 57 helicopters); naval air arm, 52 helicopter Supply: produces infantry weapons, light artillery, ammunition, explosives, wheeled armored and cargo vehicles, tanks, trans- port, trainer, and light aircraft, and ships up to frigates; has begun production of a fighter bomber-a joint project with Italy; heavier equipment imported from US and Western Europe; majority of naval ships acquired from US and UK; construction has begun on first two units of a class of corvettes that rep- resent the first indigenously designed war- ship; also intends to build 4 type 209 subma- rines Defense Forces Personnel: Brunei has a military force of about 3,700; police, about 1,700 Major ground units: 1 indigenous regiment consisting of a regimental headquarters, training depot, 2 infantry battalions, 1 ar- mored reconnaissance squadron,1 combat engineer squadron, 1 special combat divi- sion, 1 air defense battery, 1 air wing, 1 flo- tilla,1 British Gurkha infantry battalion Ships: 3 missile attack boats, 9 coastal patrol boats, 3 river patrol craft, 2 amphibious craft, 24 small amphibious assault craft= )FY-1 25X1 LOA I 25X1 25X1 dependent primarily on UK; pur- chased fast patrol boats from Singapore =25X1 25X1 Aircraft: 23 (2 light-wing aircraft, 21 heli- copters== Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret Bulgaria Economy Aid: USSR-about $2.03 billion economic aid extended (1954-76); Bulgaria has extended foreign aid totaling more than $64 million to Communist countries (1945-70) and $854.5 million in bilateral economic aid to the non-Communist less developed coun- tries (1956-83) Communications Merchant marine: 102 ships (1,000 GRT and over) totaling 1,186,904 GRT, 1,783,610 DWT; includes 2 passenger, 33 cargo, 1 con- tainer,1 passenger cargo, 2 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 14 petroleum, oils, and lubricants tanker, 2 railcar carrier, 47 bulk Airfields: 385 total; 127 with permanent- surface runways; 15 with runways 2,500- 3,499 m, 32 with runways 1,000-2,499 m, 338 with runways less than 1,000 m; 3 heli- Telecommunications: inferior to most other East European countries; meets only mini- mum requirements of government and pub- lic; 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% auto- Defense Forces Personnel: (est.) ground forces 120,000, na- val forces 8,700, air and air defense forces 34,500; paramilitary 15,000; personnel in reserve (not on active duty)-(est.) ground forces 700,000, naval forces 14,000, air force Major ground units: 8 motorized rifle divi- sions (5 tanks, 3 SCUD [A & B] tactical missile, 1 SA-4 SAM), 11 regiments (1 airborne, 4 artillery, 2 antitank,1 SA-6, 3 antiaircraft), 1 attack helicopter regiment, 4 engineer regi- ments, 1 pontoon bridge regiment, 6 S-16 Ships: 2 submarines, 2 principal surface combatants, 3 patrol combatants, 2 mine warfare ships, 18 coastal patrol-river/ roadstead craft, 23 amphibious warfare craft, 28 mine warfare craft,1 underway replenishment ship,1 fleet support ship, 2 Aircraft (in operational units): 362 total, including 77 air defense fighters, 65 counter air fighters, 100 ground attack, 42 reconnais- sance, 11 transports, 67 helicopters (includes naval helicopters Missiles: 17 operational SA-2 SAM sites (102 launchers), 11 operational SA-3 sites (44 4- rail launchers); 1 SA-6 regiment and 1 SA-4 brigade SSC-16 coastal defense site; the SA-7 is deployed with the Bulgarian ground forces on a limited scale; 1 SA-5 site is opera- tional; the SA-8 and SA-13 SAMs have re- cently been identified in-countr~ Supply: very limited local production of small arms, SP artillery and tracked armored vehicles; USSR major supplier, with FRG currently active in supplying ground forces production technology; most navy ships and craft from the USSR; in 1981 Bulgaria built a medium-size naval auxiliary ship; a second Burkina Faso (formerly Upper Volta) 25X1 Defense Forces Personnel: 7,600 army, 160 air force, 1,700 25X1 gendarmerie, 2,000 other paramilitary=25X1 Major ground units: 5 infantry regiments, 1 parachute regiment,1 airborne intervention Aircraft: 1 jet, 5 turboprop, 2 prop, 6 heli- 25X1 25X1 25X1 LOA-1 25X1 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 noecret UK, US, and Netherlands Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 March 1984, $196.3 million; about 22% of the announced central government budget 25X1 25X1 Economy Aid: economic commitments-Communist countries (1970-83), $379 million; US, in- cluding Ex-Im (FY70-83), $70 million; other Western (non-US) countries ODA and OOF (1970-82), $2.2 billion tanker Communications Merchant marine: 17 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 83,094 GRT, 112,972 DWT; includes 11 cargo, 3 passenger cargo, 1 con- tainer, 2 petroleum, oils, and lubricants force 8,000 Defense Forces Personnel: army 190,000, navy 7,000, air ions) to be activated in 1985 Major ground units: 6 infantry division headquarters, 152 battalions (145 infantry, 4 artillery, 2 armored, 1 antitank /mortar, 1 antiaircraft artillery battery); forming a new infantry division (with 10 infantry battal- ous ships, 3 auxiliary) Ships: 5 patrol combatants, 35 coastal patrol, 48 river/roadstead patrol craft, 2 amphibi- Aircraft: approximately 115 (16 ground at- tack, 9 transport, 10 fighter trainer, 28 trainer, 17 utility, 35 helicopter Supply: produces small arms, mortars, artil- lery and small arms ammunition, explosives, propellants, and quartermaster equipment; Economy Aid: economic commitments-Western (non- US) countries ODA and OOF (1970-82), $610 million; Communist countries (1970-83), $108 million; US (FY70-83), $39 million; OPEC ODA (1974-82), $70 million; 25X1 military commitments-Communist coun- tries (1970-83), $44 miIIion0 25X1 Defense Forces Personnel: army 7,000; military advisers- 20 French, 25 Soviet, 17 North Korean=25X1 Major ground units: 6 battalions (4 infantry, 25X1 2 paracommando), 1 air defense battalion, 1 engineer battalion, 1 artillery company, 2 armored squadrons, logistics support base, 1,000-man gendarmerie organized into 37 territorial-based units, 6 independent infan- try companies 25X1 25X1 25X1 Supply: primarily France but in recent years has received materiel from the USSR, Bel- gium, China, Greece, FRG, and Libya55X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 secret Cambodia (formerly Kampuchea) 25X1 1e~ SI mrl~ab Srts]bng Tning B ronr~ Sap Boundary repro entation is nol n ardy author!tat ve Communications Merchant marine: 1 cargo ship totaling 1,400 GRT, 2,600 DWT; present status of vessel unknown Defense Forces Personnel: Democratic Cambodia, about 30,000-40,000; Khmer People's National Liberation Front, 15,000; Sihanoukist Na- tional Army, 7,000; PRK, 30,000 Major ground units: Democratic Cambo- dia-13 designated divisional units, which are severely under strength and are actually equivalent to regiment-sized guerrilla force units; PRK-4 understrength divisions and 36 infantry battalions assigned to provincial military command craft, 1 amphibious warfare craft Economy Aid: economic commitments-Western (non- US) countries ODA and OOF (1970-82), $2.3 billion; Communist countries (1970-83), $104 million; US, including Ex-Im (FY70- 83), $257 million; OPEC ODA (1974-82), $110 million; military commitments-Com- munist countries (1970-83), $7 million; US (FY70-83), $17 million Communications Merchant marine: 6 cargo ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 60,942 GRT, 90,700 DWT Defense Forces Personnel: army 6,500, navy 350, air force 350, gendarmerie 4,000; 82 French advisers (French army 52, navy 4, air force 14, gen- darmerie 12) Major ground units: 5 infantry battalions, 1 armored battalion, 1 engineer battalion, I parachute infantry battalion, 1 artillery bat- talion, 1 air defense battalion Ships: 11, including 7 coastal patrol-river/roadstead craft, 2 amphibious warfare craft, 2 yard and service craft Aircraft: 29 (18 transports, 5 fighter/trainers, 6 helicopters) Supply: mostly from France; smaller amounts from other West European coun- tries, US, China, and Canada 25X1 or.yi 25X1 2.5X1 25X1. 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 oils, and lubricants tanker, 5 chemical tanker, 1 combination ore/oil, 13 bulk Communications Merchant marine: 89 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 726,027 GRT, 1,031,751 DWT; includes 1 passenger, 7 short-sea pas- senger, 3 passenger service, 14 cargo, 4 railcar carrier, 1 refrigerated cargo, 5 roll- on/roll-off cargo, 4 container, 31 petroleum, Defense Forces Personnel: Canadian Armed Forces 83,784 Cape Verde 25X1 Santo Antao Sao Vicente aa, 00 Fogo do Sotavento Economy Aid: economic commitments-Western (non-US) countries, ODA and OOF (1970-82), $234 million; Communist coun- tries (1970-83), $26 million; US (FY75-83), $55 million; OPEC ODA (1974-82), $30 mil- lion; military commitments-Communist countries (1970-83), $67 million Communications Merchant marine: 4 cargo ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 8,058 GRT, 14,218 DWT airportable Special Service Force Major ground units: 1 mechanized brigade group, 2 general purpose brigade groups, 1 rines, 7 patrol craft, 10 auxiliaries RAD system to be purchased in 1985 Supply: limited production of armored com- bat vehicles, small arms, artillery ammuni- tion, propellants, and high explosives as well as military electronic items and engineering equipment; most naval ships (except subma- rines) and transport aircraft also produced; relies heavily on US; some antitank missiles from US, medium tanks from FRG, and Blowpipe missiles from UK for air defense Defense Forces Personnel: army 2,200, navy 100, air force 10, militia 2,000; the armed forces are di- vided into 3 brigades or battalions 75X1 25X1 Major equipment: 17 BRDM-2, 6 BTR-40, 25X1 unknown number of ZU-23 AAA, 10 light tanks, 4 85-mm D44s, Soviet artillery pieces25X1 25X1 Ships: 3 craft (2 patrol torpedo boats and 1 25X1 transport, vessel class unknown) 25X1 Supply: ammunition, trucks, armored vehi- cles have been received from the USSRE 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Central African Republic Economy Aid: economic commitments-Western (non- US) countries, ODA and OOF (1970-82), $709 million; Communist countries (1970-83), $28 million; OPEC ODA (1974-81), $70 million; US, including Ex-Im (1970-83), $21 million; military commit- ments-Communist countries (1970-83), $15 Defense Forces Personnel: army 3,200, air force 230, na- tional police 1,350, gendarmerie 1,600, Cen- tral African Republican Guard 700; 83 French military advisers and 1,000 troops Major ground units: 1 parachute interven- tion regiment, 1 territorial defense regiment, 1 support regiment, I gendarmerie regi- ment, I Republican Guard regimen Aircraft: 12 (7 transports, 3 utility, 2 train- ers); 4 French Air Force (FAF) transports, 0-8 FAF Jaguar fighter-bombers, 4 French Army helicopters Supply: dependent mainly on France, Libya, and Italc~ Economy Aid: economic commitments-Western (non- US) countries, ODA and OOF (1970-82), $603 million; Communist countries (1970-83), $70 million; OPEC ODA (1974-82), $25 million; US (FY70-83), $76 million; military commitments-Commu- nist countries (1970-83), $7 million Defense Forces Personnel: est. 7,500 army, 200-300 air force, 800 presidential guard, 2,000 gendar- Major ground units: 2 commando battal- ions, 15 motorized infantry companies, 1 howitzer battery, 2 armored reconnaissance squadrons Aircraft: 14 total (9 transports, 1 utility/light observation, 4 helicopters [2 SA-330 PUMA, 2 SA-342 Gazelle]) Boundary representation is not necessarily authoritative Economy Aid: economic commitments-US, includ- ing Ex-Im (FY70-83), $512 million; Western (non-US) countries ODA and OOF (1970-82), $845 million; Communist coun- tries (1970-83), $386 million; military com- mitments-US (1970-82), $50 million F_ 9 Y1 25X1 Merchant marine: 21 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 368,462 GRT, 618,560 DWT; includes 1 short-sea passenger, 11 cargo, 2 roll-on/roll-off cargo,1 petroleum, oils, and lubricants tanker, 3 liquefied gas, 3 combina- tion ore/oil, 6 bulk; additionally, 2 naval tankers and 2 military transports are some- 25X1 times used commercially[______] OFy 4 Defense Forces Personnel: army 59,525, navy 23,000 (in- cluding 145 in naval air and 5,000 marines), air force 13,350 (400 pilots), carabineros (na- tional police) 28,000 Major ground units: 6 army divisions, 1 in- dependent motorized mountain infantry brigade, l Army Troops command, and the 25X1 25X1? 25X1 25X1' 2 A11 25X1 Military Institute Command (noncombat, equivalent to a division in strength) 25X1 Ships: 4 submarines, 2 light cruisers, 2 guided missile destroyers, 4 destroyers, 2 frigates, 2 guided missile patrol combatants, 1 submarine chaser, 4 torpedo boats, 6 am- phibious warfare ships,1 amphibious war- fare craft, 14 patrol craft, 14 auxiliaries, 15 yard and service craf 25X1' Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret copters) Aircraft: 346 total; 249 in air force (135 jet, 40 turboprop, 54 prop, 20 helicopters); 36 in navy (23 turboprop, 13 helicopters); 61 in army (1 jet, 14 turboprop, 21 prop, 25 heli- January 1983) Supply: small amounts of armored cars, small arms, rockets, ammunition, and mili- tary propellant and explosives are produced; has depended mainly on UK for naval craft, but has constructed patrol boats, amphibious vehicle landing ships, and a submarine chaser; aircraft from Western Europe, some through license assembly agreements; ground force equipment from Western Eu- rope and Brazil; the Chilean Air Force is involved in 3 coproduction and assembly projects-Piper Dakota (parts have been indigenously produced since 1980), T-35 Pillan (assembled and partially produced since late 1981), and CASA 1O1B (Chilean production of some components started in 18.5% of central budge Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December 1982, $1,548 million; about China (Taiwan listed at end of table) Boundary rep,, entation a oInecessanly authontatrve manian and British (Hong Kong) flags Communications Merchant marine: 1,083 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 9,905,179 GWT, 14,728,144 DWT; includes 25 passenger, 41 short-sea passenger, 21 passenger cargo, 619 cargo, 10 refrigerated cargo, 19 container, 16 roll- on/roll-off cargo, 2 barge carrier, l multi- function heavy lift, 157 petroleum, oils, and lubricants tanker, 2 chemical tanker, 170 bulk; China beneficially owns an additional 154 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 4,009,192 DWT, which operate under Pana- have no known organized reserve Defense Forces Personnel: China's armed forces are unified and include three main service branches- army, navy, air force-and technical and combat service support arms, including the Second Artillery Corps (China's strategic ballistic missile force); there are 4,238,210 members of the armed forces (manually tab- ulated results of China's 1982 census), 3,172,500 ground forces, 350,000 navy (in- cluding 300,000 general service, 10,000 ma- rines, 40,000 naval air), 485,000 air force (including 220,000 assigned to ACW, SAM, and AAA units); there are approximately 100,000-150,000 troops assigned to the Sec- ond Artillery Corps; other personnel are at- tached to the various corps-type service sup- port and combat support arms; personnel in reserve (not on active duty)-Army about 10 million (armed militia); navy and air force Major ground units: Army has 11 territorial commands (military regions) and 36 army headquarters, with a total of 218 divisions- 187 combat divisions (116 infantry, 13 tank, 3 airborne, 6 border/internal defense, 49 25X1 garrison), 31 combat support divisions (16 field artillery, 15 antiaircraft); in addition, the Army has 292 independent regiments- 138 combat (21 tank, 33 garrison, 82 border/internal defense, l cavalry, 1 recon- naissance), 88 combat support (12 field artil- lery, 2 antiaircraft artillery, 7 antichemical warfare, 37 engineer, 13 pontoon bridge, 17 signal); 66 combat service support (motor transport) Ships: 1,319 combatant units (not including 800 yard/service craft and about 500 land- ing craft), supported by 5 stores and under- way replenishment ships, 5 materiel support ships, 85 fleet support ships, and 189 other auxiliaries, organized in 3 fleets-North, East, and South Seas; combatant units in- clude 1 ballistic missile submarine (used for SLBM R & D), 1 nuclear-power ballistic mis- sile submarine (undergoing at-sea trials), 3 nuclear-power attack submarines (1st unit 25X1 not operational), 112 attack submarines, 15 destroyers, 27 frigates, 8 patrol combatants, 25X1 61 amphibious warfare ships, 1,033 coastal patrol-river/roadstead craft (included in this 25X1 total are 228 missile attack boats and 257 small torpedo boats), 58 mine warfare craft 25X1 Aircraft: Chinese People's Liberation Army Air Force (CPLAAF) total 6,029, including 3,665 jet air defense fighters, 116 jet and 7 prop intermediate-range bombers, 330 jet and 35 prop medium-range bombers, 580 jet attack aircraft, 147 jet and 10 turboprop reconnaissance aircraft, 46 medium-range and 213 short-range transports, 295 prop and 170 helicopter liaison aircraft, 145 sup- port helicopters, 270 combat trainers; Chi- nese People's Liberation Army Naval Avia- tion (CPLANA) total 1,034, including 635 jet fighters, 9 jet intermediate-range bombers, 140 jet and 18 prop medium-range bombers, 20 jet and reconnaissance aircraft, 31 jet at- tack aircraft, 2 medium-range and 43 short- range transport, 26 prop liaison aircraft, 70 helicopters, 40 combat trainers 25X1 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret China (continued) Antiaircraft artillery: some 30 divisions of CPLAAF AAA; in addition, there are 15 PRCA AAA divisions (listed above Missiles: strategic (land-based offensive)- China has deployed a small number of ICBMs capable of striking targets through- out the USSR and is deploying a few long- range ICBMs capable of reaching continen- tal US targets; China also has a regional nu- clear strike capability with approximately 65-125 medium- and intermediate-range missile launchers; defensive-125 CSA-1 sites for air defense (including 13 unoccu- pied sites, 2 sites under construction, 4 train- ing areas) plus 3 R&D sites; 22 land-based antiship cruise missile sites Supply: military industrial base supports a comprehensive weapons program; produc- tion includes substantial quantities of infan- try weapons, tanks, armored personnel carri- ers, artillery pieces, ammunition, radar and signal equipment, trucks and jeeps, jet air- craft, lesser quantities of surface-to-surface missiles, surface-to-air and naval cruise mis- siles, antitank missiles, as well as some air-to- air missiles; naval ships, including subma- rines and guided missile destroyers, and un- known quantities of chemical and biological warfare defensive materiel; transport air- craft obtained from USSR, UK, and US; heli- copters from FR6 Military budget: although China provides an annual budget figure in Yuan, it is clear that this figure substantially understates ac- tual defense spending; tentative estimates indicate that defense spending for 1985 will be equivalent to about $22 billion Economy Aid: economic commitments-US, includ- ing Ex-Im (FY70-83), $1,415 million; other Western countries ODA and OOF (1970-82), $1.4 billion; Communist countries (1970-83), $289 million; military commitments-US (FY70-83), $133 million; Communist coun- tries (1970-83), $8 million Communications Merchant marine: 41 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 362,269 GRT, 471,847 DWT; includes 1 passenger cargo, 2 petroleum, oils, and lubricants tanker, 8 bulk Defense Forces Personnel: army 58,600, navy 8,228, air force 3,850 (285 pilots) 25X1 25X1 )FY-1 25X1 25X1 25X1' and Observers in Sinai) 25X1 Major ground units: 5 divisions, including 12 brigades with 64 battalions (27 infantry, 2 airborne infantry, 5 mechanized cavalry, 6 artillery, 1 air defense artillery, 1 combat engineer, 8 construction engineer, 4 military police, 10 service); the Military Institutes Brigade (XIII Brigade) with 11 battalions (1 infantry,1 mechanized cavalry, 2 military police, 1 construction engineer, 1 services, 5 school battalions); 5 separate battalions (1 intelligence and counterintelligence,1 trans- portation, 1 quartermaster, 1 supply, 1 in- fantry on duty with the Multinational Force Ships: 3 destroyers, 1 frigate, 4 submarines, 2 coastal patrol craft, 24 coastal patrol/river Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 56 helicopters) plying 4 guided missile corvettes Supply: small arms, small arms ammunition, mortar and artillery rounds and antitank mines produced; US and Western Europe are principal suppliers of ground force equipment; Italy delivered 2 unassembled midget submarines (assembly completed during 1973), and FRG delivered 2 1,000- ton submarines in 1975 and is currently sup- budget Military budget: for fiscal year ending 1984, $436.3 million, 8.5% of central government NI MA, rande Comore Moheti Indian Ocean Mayotte (administered by France. claimed by Comoros) (1974-82) $185 million $232 million; Communist countries (1970-83), $15 million; OPEC, ODA Economy Aid: economic commitments-Western (non- US) countries ODA and OOF (1970-82), Defense Forces Personnel: 325-man army; nominal air force; 325-man gendarmerie; 450-man Pres- idential Guard under the direct control of the President, commanded by mercenaries rovers, 64 assorted trucks Major ground units: army-1 headquar- ters, 3 companies; gendarmerie-3 units; Presidential Guard-unknown number of detachments; equipment includes 500-600 semiautomatic rifles, 9 30-cal. light machine guns, 2 50-cal. heavy machine guns, RPG- 2/7 launchers, 2 81-mm mortars, 6 106-mm recoilless rifles, rocket launchers, 30 land Congo Boundary representat!on is not necessarily authontahve Economy 25X1 Aid: economic commitments-Western (non- US) countries ODA and OOF (1970-82), 25X1 $988 million; Communist countries (1970-83), $272 million; OPEC ODA (1974-82),$140 million; US, including Ex-Im25X1 (FY70-83), $17 million; military commit- ments-Communist countries (1970-83), $184 million Defense Forces Personnel: army 7,000, navy 385, air force 325; 926 military advisers-75 Soviet, 800 Cuban, 25X1 12 Chinese, 30 Romanian, 9 French0 LJn Major ground units: 3 mechanized infantry battalions, 1 field artillery battalion, I air defense artillery battalion, 1 armor battal- ion, l support battalion, l engineer battal- ion, 2 paracommando battalions, 1 security battalion, l signals company0 Aircraft: 38 (11 transports, 5 MiG-17, 2 MiG- 15, 12 MiG-21, 1 utility, 7 helicopters 25X1 Ships: 26, including 17 coastal patrol boats/river roadstead craft, 2 amphibious warfare craft, 7 yard and service craft Supply: former dependence on France re- placed by USSR and China; received 3 fast patrol craft from Spain 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret 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 Communications Merchant marine: 2 roll-on/roll-off cargo ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 8,598 GRT, 12,454 DWT Defense Forces Personnel: Civil Guard 4,500, primarily an urban police/border control force (constitu- tion prohibits armed forces); Rural Assist- ance Guard 3,500, a rural police force (un- der operational control of Civil Guard dur- ing emergency deployment) Major ground units: approximately half of the Civil Guard is stationed in San Jose; re- mainder organized into 6 provincial capital commands and 4 border area commands (Northern, Southern, Los Chiles, and Atlan- tic); forces in San Jose consist of 1 radio pa- trol unit, 1 military police company, 1 Presi- dential Guard unit, 5 Civil Guard compa- nies; small Rural Assistance Guard detach- ments are scattered throughout the country; increasing numbers of Rural Assistance Guard personnel are being used to augment Civil Guard forces stationed along the Costa Rican-Nicaraguan border{ Aircraft: 6 prop (light), 3 helicopter Communications Merchant marine: 93 ships (1,000 GRT and over) totaling 688,516 GRT, 990,632 DWT; includes 3 passenger cargo, 64 cargo, 5 re- frigerated cargo, 10 petroleum, oils, and lu- bricants tanker,1 chemical tanker, 2 lique- fied gas, 8 bulk; Cuba beneficially owns 20 additional ships (1,000 GRT or over), 146,670 GRT, 231,284 DWT, which it oper- ates under Cypriot, Panamanian, and Malt- ese flags 25X1 25X1 Telecommunications: modern facilities ade- quately serve military, governmental, and most civilian needs; excellent international facilities via HF and satellite; 406,400 tele- phones (4.0 per 100 popl.); 148 AM, 25 FM, 53 TV stations; 2 submarine cable, 1 Molniya and 1 Atlantic Ocean INTELSAT statioi Defense Forces Personnel: ground forces about 265,000 (in- cludes 130,000 full-time active duty troops-about 75,000 in Cuba, 37,000-42,000 overseas-and 135,000 re- servists capable of mobilization on short no- tice); navy (MGR) 13,500; Air and Air De- fense Force (DAAFAR) 18,500 (includes air force, surface-to-air missile, air control and warning forces, and some air defense artil- lery); Special Troops 2,500; Youth Labor Army (paramilitary) 80,000; Civil Defense 50,000 (in wartime would also include po- lice, firefighters, and others totalling over 1,100,000); territorial militia Department of State Security 15,000; Border Guard Troops 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1: Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Cyprus 25X1 25X1 Major ground units: ground forces in Cuba organized into Western Army, High Com- mand Reserve, Central Army, Eastern Army, and the Isle of Youth Military Region; total 3 corps headquarters, 10 active divi- sions, 13 reserve divisions, 8 separate active brigades (4 artillery,1 frontier infantry, 1 air assault, 1 naval infantry, 1 special forces); basic combat unit is the infantry battalion; overseas-2 Combat Commands (Angola- about 8 brigades; Ethiopia-1 brigade Ships: 3 attack submarines, 2 frigates, 2 me- dium landing ships, 22 missile attack boats, 3 submarine chasers, 9 hydrofoil torpedo boats, 9 torpedo boats, 1 patrol boat, 6 me- dium landing craft, 11 inshore minesweep- ers, and 38 auxiliary service craft Aircraft: 572 (312 jet including 45 MIG- 23/FLOGGER, 29 turboprop, 118 prop, 68 helicopters) Missiles: 23 operational SA-2 SAM sites and 11 operational SA-3 SAM sites, at least 20 SA-6 transporter-erector-launchers (TELs), at least 20 SA-9 TELs, and unknown SA-7 shoulder-fired missiles; Atoll, Aphid, and KERRY air-to-air missiles and SAGGER antitank missiles; Navy has SAMLET (in reserve) for coastal defense, STYX cruise missiles (aboard OSA- and KOMAR-class PTGs), SA-N-4 (aboard the frigate) and SA- N-5 (aboard the medium landing ships and some of the OSAs); Army has FROG, SALISH tactical missiles (both in reserve), and SNAPPER and SAGGER antitank mis- siles assigned in unknown numbers Supply: almost wholly dependent upon USSR; produces some ammunition; assem- bles some transport vehicles 10.4% of the central government budget 2.5X1 25X1 Economy Aid: economic commitments-US, includ- ing Ex-Im (FY70-83), $203 million; other Western countries ODA and OOF (1970-82), 25X1 $134 million; OPEC ODA (1977-80), $35 million; Communist countries (1970-83), $24 million; military commitments-Commu- nist countries (1970-83), $34 million; Turkish 25X1 sector aid-Turkey, probably $20-30 mil- lion annually since 1975; primarily develop- ment and budgetary aid with some balance- of-payments support) 25X1 Communications Merchant marine: 573 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 6,929,491 GRT, 12,084,487 DWT; includes 1 passenger, 11 short-sea passenger, 1 passenger cargo, 313 cargo, 22 refrigerated cargo, 9 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 12 container, 64 petroleum, oils, and lubri- cants tanker, 2 liquefied gas, 6 chemical tankers, 4 combination ore/oil, 126 bulk; all but a few are owned by Greek national~-25X 1 25X1 Defense Forces Personnel: 13,400 Greek Cypriot National Guard (CNG), including 1,500-1,700 Hel- lenic Army mainland regulars and 250 naval 25X1 personnel, 3,700 Greek Cypriot Police; for- eign forces include 2,314 UN Forces in Cyprus (UNFICYP), 2,640 UK Army (not in UNFICYP), 700 British Royal Air Force (not in UNFICYP), 2,200 Hellenic Army Contin- gent and Raiding Force battalion; other forces include 44,000 Greek Cypriot Re- serve, 4,500 Turkish Cypriot (Security 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Cyprus (continued) Force), including 400 Turkish Army main- land regulars; 7,500 Turkish Cypriot reserves; 22,000-23,000 Turkish (mainland) peacekeeping force Major ground units: Greek Cypriot Na- tional Guard has 60 battalions (21 infantry, 5 raiding forces, 3 reconnaissance,1 mecha- nized, 1 armored, 7 field artillery, 1 engi- neer, 1 air defense artillery, 2 ordnance, 1 signal, 16 reserve infantry, 1 reserve artil- lery); UNFICYP has military contingents from Austria, Canada, Denmark, Sweden, UK, a medical detachment from Austria, and a 34-man civilian police detachment comprised of personnel from Australia and Sweden; Hellenic Army contingent has 1 infantry regiment and 2 raiding force com- panies; Turkish forces include 1 corps head- quarters, 2 infantry divisions, and support- ing forces; Turkish Cypriot forces have 7 infantry battalions element has 3 patrol boats (est.) Aircraft: Greek Cypriot Police has 3 or 4 helicopters, 1 RN Islander aircraft commander, and 2 or 3 single-engine air- craft; they are periodically loaned to the CNG; British Royal Air Force has 1 helicop- ter squadron (5 helicopters), and there is 1 UK Army Air Corps flight with 8 helicopters Supply: Greek Cypriots (government forces) entirely dependent on foreign supplies for their materiel; since 1964 have received in- fantry weapons, machineguns, mortars, artil- lery, ammunition, trucks, armored person- nel carriers, tanks, antitank missiles, and launchers from France, Czechoslovakia, Poland, Portugal, Egypt, Yugoslavia, and Brazil; torpedo boats from Yugoslavia, Malta, and the USSR; also, UK and US-manufactured infantry weapons, artil- lery, patrol boats, armored cars, and radar equipment were received from Greece; France and Brazil are currently providing most heavy equipment) 81,600 (76,700 ground, 4,900 air) Major ground units: 11 divisions (5 motor- ized rifle, 5 tank, 1 artillery), 6 brigades (3 SCUD SS-1 tactical missile, 1 SA-4, 2 artil- lery), 2 antitank regiments, 5 SA-6 regiments, 1 antiaircraft artillery regiment, 1 airborne regiment guard Aircraft: (operational units) 773, including 170 air defense fighters, 126 counter air fighters, 160 ground attack, 29 fixed wing reconnaissance, 64 transports, 224 helicop- 25X1 25X1 Economy Aid: Czechoslovakia has extended bilateral economic aid totaling $2.8 billion to non- Communist less developed countries (1954-83) and has received some medium- and long-term credits from Western coun- tries and the USSR Communications Merchant marine: 19 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 183,500 GRT, 275,000 DWT; includes 14 cargo, 5 bulk Airfields: 140; 41 with permanent-surface runways; 1 with runways 3,500 m or over, 17 with runways 2,500-3,499 m, 69 with run- ways 1,000-2,499 m, 53 with runways less than 1,000 m; 4 heliports Telecommunications: systems are used pri- marily to support 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; 4,000,000 TV receivers; 2,900,000 est. tele- phones (96% automatic) Defense Forces Personnel: (est.) ground forces 146,100, air and air defense forces 57,500, paramilitary forces 11,200; personnel in reserve (not on active duty)-(est.) ground forces 1.5 mil- lion; air force unknown; Soviet forces (CGF) 25X1 25X1 Missiles: 26 operational SA-2 SAM sites (156 launchers); 16 operational SA-3 SAM sites (64 4-rail launchers); 1 SA-5 site under con- struction; 1 SA-4 brigade, 5 SA-6 regiments, 25X1 and 563 SA-7 SAM systems are deployed with the Czechoslovakian ground forces; also, the SA-8 has been recently added to the25X1 Supply: produces substantial quantities of infantry weapons, rocket launchers, ammuni- tion, trucks, tactical signal equipment, infan- try combat vehicles, self-propelled antiair- 25X1 craft guns, and tanks; produces copies of So- viet tactical antitank and surface-to-air m's- 25X1 sites, and jet trainer and small transport air- craft as well as small amounts of chemical 25X1 warfare agents; chemical and biological war- fare defensive materiel; dependent on the USSR for more complex equipment and com- bat aircraft; has received amphibious 25X1 I - as well as trucks from Romania and GDR, antitank rocket launchers from Bulgaria, and trucks and helicopters from Poland; river craft are imported or built under license from 25X1 25X1 " 25X1 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Communications Merchant marine: 268 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 4,711,974 GRT, 7,385,306 DWT; includes 19 short-sea passenger, 77 cargo, 11 refrigerated cargo, 33 container, 27 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 43 petroleum, oils, and lubricants tanker, 11 chemical tanker, 25 liquefied gas, 1 specialized tanker, 2 live- stock carrier, 19 bulk Defense Forces Personnel: army 17,400, navy 5,600, air force 6,750 (210 pilots) Major ground units: army is organized into a field army of 1 mechanized division and 1 mechanized division equivalent (with only 2 standing mechanized brigades during peace- time), a light infantry brigade equivalent, and 6 regimental combat teams plus support under regional commands Ships: 2 frigates, 3 corvettes, 4 submarines, 5 patrol ships, 10 missile attack boats, 6 tor- pedo boats, 8 patrol craft, 12 patrol boats, 7 minelayers, 6 minesweepers Missiles: 520 Redeye launchers, 4 I-HAWK squadrons; additional 2 squadrons will be deployed in 1981 Supply: dependent on US, Canada, UK, and Western Europe; most naval ships produced domestically; produces small quantities of biological/chemical warfare defensive equipment; some small arms mortar and artillery ammunition, some airframes, avi- onics and engine parts, and electronic equip- ment Djibouti (formerly French Territory of the Afars and Issas) Babel \Mandeb 25X1 25X1 ol{ede Tadjoura ti Economy Aid: economic commitments-Western (non- US) countries, including ODA and OOF (1970-82), $533 million; US, including Ex-Im (FY78-83), $17 million; OPEC ODA (1974-82), $240 million; Communist coun- tries (1970-83), $30 million 25X1 Defense Forces 25X1 Personnel: French-army 3,800, air force 200; Djibouti-army 2,600, of which 20 are naval personnel and 80 air force 25X1 25X1 Major ground units: French-2 infant: y regiments with 2 artillery batteries and a command and support battalion; Djibouti- 1 commando intervention company, 1 gen- darmerie group, 1 Frontier Commando 25X1 group, 1 paratroop company, 1 armored squadron, 1 naval force, I general headquar- ters and staff 25X1 Ships: French-home port for 1 amphibious ship, 4 amphibious craft, 1 repair ship; sur25X1 face combatants are forward deployed to Djibouti; Djibouti-7 landing craft 25X1 Aircraft: French-10 Mirage III jet fighters, 1 C-160 transport, 6 utility helicopters, 5 25X1 antitank and armed reconnaissance helicop- ters, 5 assault helicopters, 2 utility aircraft 25X1 (occasionally the French Navy deploys an 25X1 Supply: France is the leading supplier of military equipmentF___~ 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret Djibouti (continued) Dominican Republic Puerto Plata ' ~ ?'" j ,/-~' Bahia de Semana ;axe ?,,~ej, ::~..,,~: SANTO Barahona DOMINGO Defense Forces Communications Local security force: Royal Dominica Police Merchant marine: 11 ships (1,000 GRT or Force, 374; Coast Guard (division of the Po- over) totaling 35,890 GRT, 60,448 DWT; lice), 2 patrol boats, 3 launchesF____-] includes 5 cargo, 4 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 2 Supply: UK and US; Canada supplied 1 pa- force 4,300 (90 pilots) Defense Forces Personnel: army 12,900, navy 4,900, air 2 marine infantry battalions Major ground units: 4 infantry brigades (9 tactically organized and 6 constabulary bat- talions);1 combat support command (1 ar- mored battalion, 1 artillery battalion, and 1 constabulary battalion);1 service support command (1 engineer battalion, 1 communi- cations battalion, 1 transportation battalion); 1 Directorate General of Military Training (1 recruit training battalion), 1 presidential guard battalion, 1 military hospital; navy has iliaries, 11 service craft Ships: 5 patrol ships, 7 patrol craft, 4 patrol boats, 1 medium landing ship,1 medium landing craft, 1 utility landing craft, 13 aux- forces group Aircraft: 49 (4 jets, 30 prop, 15 helicopters), plus 6 air police companies and a special ammunition Supply: dependent upon US and Western Europe; has assembled some armored cars and produced small arms and associated 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret Military budget: proposed 1985-$175.8 million, 11.7% of central government budget Pacific Ocean tanker, 2 bu4 Bountla y np a ental on is necessanly autno,~tat~'ua Islands not shown in true geographical position 300 km Communications Merchant marine: 51 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 379,595 GRT, 553,957 DWT; includes 9 cargo, 16 refrigerated cargo, 2 container, 2 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 19 petro- leum, oils, and lubricants tanker,1 chemical, lots) Defense Forces Personnel: army 36,950, navy 4,400 (includ- ing 1,200 marines), air force 2,900 (175 pi- signal, 1 logistic, 1 military intelligence) Major ground units: 7 infantry brigades, 1 armored brigade, 1 special forces (paratroop) brigade, 6 separate battalions (3 engineer, 1 auxiliaries, 14 service craft Ships: 1 destroyer, 1 frigate, 6 patrol combat- ants, 2 submarines, 6 missile attack boats, 2 river patrol boats, 5 landing ship/craft, 4 army Aircraft: 185 total; 123 (70 jet, 33 turboprop, 9 prop, 11 helicopters) in air force; 8 (1 jet, 5 turboprop, 2 helicopters) in navy; 54 (1 jet, 10 turboprop, 3 prop, 40 helicopters) in Supply: dependent primarily on US; recent major purchases from Western Europe (pa- trol boats, 6 missile attack boats, and 2 sub- marines from FRG; 6 guided missile patrol combatants from Italy; fighter aircraft from Israel; fighter aircraft and armor from France 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 " Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret Egypt Mediterranean Sea Alexandria - 100 Ships: 2 destroyers, 14 submarines, 5 frig- ates, 30 missile attack boats, 50 patrol boats, 3 air cushion vehicles, 14 mine warfare craft, 17 amphibious, 17 auxiliary and serv- ice, and numerous small craft tYt Red Sa& prop, 155 helicopters) Missiles: 4 air defense divisions and 1 Air Defense Operations Group with 365 SA-2 launchers, 220 SA-3 launchers, 60 SA-6 launchers, 24 Crotale launchers, 72 I- HAWK launchers, 1,300 SA-7 launchers Boundary representation is not necessarily authorilatrve Economy Aid: economic commitments-OPEC ODA (1974-82), $8 billion; US, including Ex-Im (FY70-83), $8.9 billion; Western (non-US) countries ODA and OOF (1970-82), $4.2 billion; Communist countries (1970-83), $1.3 billion; military commitments-Communist countries (1970-83), $4.4 billion; US (1970-83), $4.3 billion Budget: (1982 est.) revenues, $10.5 billion; expenditures, $14.9 billior~ Communications Merchant marine: 120 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 661,539 GRT, 941,328 DWT; includes 8 short-sea passenger, 6 passenger cargo, 81 cargo, 1 refrigerated cargo, 5 roll- on/roll-off cargo, 14 petroleum, oils, and lubricants tanker, 5 bulk Defense Forces Personnel: army 320,000, navy 20,000, air force 30,000 (1,085 pilots), air defense 80,000, frontier corps and coast guard 17,300 Major ground units: 2 separate field armies and a total force of 11 divisions (3 infantry, 5 mechanized infantry, 3 armored; also a new armored divison is being formed); 7 inde- pendent infantry brigades;1 independent mechanized brigade; 1 independent armored brigade; 1 paratroop brigade; 2 air assault brigades; 5 commando group Supply: assembles light armored vehicles, trainer aircraft, helicopters, some air de- fense missiles, and antitank missiles; produces infantry weapons, ammunition and a small number of artillery pieces, small naval oilers, patrol boats; is dependent on foreign sources for other equipment; received from the Warsaw Pact before 1974 and from Western Europe, the US, China, and North Korea since then; China recently supplied 6 missile attack boats, frigates, sub- marines, patrol boats, and subchasers Military budget: for fiscal year ending 30 June 1984, $5.6 billion; 24% of central gov- ernment budget Boundary representation is not necessarily authoritative 25X1 Communications Merchant marine: 1 cargo ship (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 1,800 GRT, 3,200 DWTF-- Defense Forces Personnel: army 32,000, navy 650 (plus 100 255X1 civilian technicians), air force 590 (320 civil- ian technicians), national guard 4,230, na- tional police 5,500, treasury police 1,97 Major ground units: 7 brigades (6 infantry, 1 artillery), 8 military detachments, 1 signal instruction center, a total of 51 infantry and artillery battalions (20 BIAT [antiterrorist in- fantry], 12 BIC [countersubversion infantry], 3 countersubversion, 5 security, 5 immediate reaction, 1 airborne, 4 field artillery,1 antiair- craft artillery), 1 cavalry regiment, 1 medical battalion, 1 military police company Ships: 17 armed, small patrol craft (3 patrol craft, 6 harbor patrol boats, and 8 river/ roadstead patrol boats) 48 helicopters Supply: army and air force equipment pro- cured from US, Western Europe, Israel, Ar- gentina, and Yugoslavia; navy depends on 25X1 25X1. 25X1 25X1 25X1' 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret Equatorial Guinea Island not shown in true geographical position Annobdn See regional map VII Economy Aid: economic commitments-Communist countries (1970-83), $29 million; Western (non-US) countries ODA and OOF (1970-82), $23 million; US, including Ex-Im (FY81-83), $3 million; military commit- ments-Communist countries (1970-83), $28 Communications Merchant marine: 2 cargo ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 6,413 GRT, 6,699 DWT; includes 1 cargo, 1 passenger cargo Defense Forces Personnel: army 2,000, navy 150; militia (paramilitary) 700; military advisers-Cuba unknown number, Spain 40, Morocco 300-400 Major equipment: 14 Soviet armored per- sonnel carriers (amphibious); 3 ZHUK patrol craft, 6 aircraft (transport helicopters) Supply: imports a variety of military equip- ment primarily from Spain and Morocco; Soviet equipment was imported in the early Ethiopia not n, ,i Ssar Iy authoritative Economy Aid: economic commitments-Western (non- US) countries ODA and OOF (1970-82), $893 million; US, including Ex-Im (FY70- 83), $234 million; Communist countries (1970-83), $1.4 billion; OPEC ODA (1974-82), $20 million; military commit- ments-US (FY70-82), $122.5 million; Com- munist countries (1970-83), $4 billion Communications Merchant marine: 10 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 32,331 GRT, 50,003 DWT; includes 6 cargo, 1 refrigerated cargo,1 roll- on/roll-off cargo, 2 petroleum, oils, and lu- Telecommunications: fair system of radio relay and wire; Addis Ababa principal cen- ter, Asmara secondary center; 100,800 tele- phones (0.3 per 100 popl.); Soviet facilities located in Addis Ababa and elsewhere; 13 AM, no FM, 17 TV stations; 1 Atlantic Ocean INTELSAT station Defense Forces Personnel: army 240,000, navy 2,500, air force 4,000, air defense (missile) 3,000, emer- gency police 9,000 Major ground units: 23 infantry divisions with organic armor and artillery support, 1 administrative/support division Ships: 2 corvettes, 15 patrol craft, 8 landing craft, 1 auxiliary ship, 2 torpedo boats, 4 mis- sile attack boats Aircraft: 263 in operational units (181 jet, 40 prop, 42 helicopters)F____1 25X1 Supply: produces some small arms ammuni- tion; the USSR is the principal supplier of military equipment; ground force materiel has also been purchased from several non- Communist countries; aircraft from USSR predominantly; older aircraft from UK, US, Sweden, Canada, and France; naval mate- riel from US, Yugoslavia, France, Nether- lands, and USSRF__~ 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 LOA I Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret Falkland Islands (Islas Malvinas) Wesalk/and Falkland Sound r East Falkland (administered by U.K., claimed by Argentina) NOTE: The possession of the Falkland Is- lands has been disputed by the UK and Argentina (which refers to them as the Islas Malvinas) since 1833. Defense Forces Royal Air Force assets deployed in the Falklands include 9 Phantom all-weather interceptors, 4 Harrier GR-3 ground attack aircraft, 2 Hercules transport/tankers, 6 CH-47 Chinook heavy lift helicopters, 3 Sea King transport helicopters, 8 Rapier surface- to-air missile launchers; Royal Navy forces forward deployed at Port Stanley include 3 ex-merchantmen converted to patrol craft,1 trawler converted for minesweeping/patrol duties, 1 ARAPAHO-equipped helicopter carrier, 1 helicopter support ship; a task force of 1 destroyer, 2 frigates, and 1 or 2 replenishment ships is deployed to the South Atlantic on a rotational basis A British Army garrison of approximately 3,500 men and a detachment of approxi- mately 40 Royal Marines are deployed in the Falklands TORSHAVN Defense Forces Royal Danish Navy operates 1 or 2 patrol escort ships in islands' waters for fishery in- spection; the ships can accommodate heli- copters; Royal Danish Air Force has a con- trol and reporting post at Torshavn, manned by 108 personnel; the islands have no organ- ized native military forces; only a small po- lice force is maintained Fiji South Pacific Ocean Vanua Levu Kadvu Ceva-i-Ra See regional map X Communications Merchant marine: 4 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 11,819 GRT, 11,012 DWT; includes 1 cargo, 2 liquefied gas, 1 25X1 roll-on/roll-off cargo Defense Forces Personnel: Royal Fiji Military Force (RFMF) of approximately 2,320 personnel comprising 3 infantry battalions (1 UNIFIL, 1 MFO, and 1 territorial, raised in country); Royal Fiji Maritime Squadron, 150 Major ground units: 2 regular infantry bat- talions, 1 territorial infantry battalion Major naval units: 1 naval squadron com- prised of 3 ex-minesweeper craft and 1 hydrographic survey vessel; personnel trained by US and New Zealand; no formal defense agreements have been reached since gaining independence; however, the UK has agreed to provide training and equipment to modernize the RFMF; Australia and New Zealand provide defense advice, training, 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret Switzerland; new ships produced domesti- cally; production also includes small quanti- ties of chemical warfare defensive materiel 25X1 25X1 Communications Merchant marine: 141 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 2,017,003 GRT, 3,102,441 DWT; includes 14 short-sea passenger, 41 cargo, 10 refrigerated cargo, 13 roll-on/roll- off cargo, 30 petroleum, oils, and lubricants tanker, 6 chemical tanker, 3 liquefied gas, 24 bulk Defense Forces Personnel: army 31,400, navy 2,500, air force 2,250 (210 pilots), border guard 3,650 (including coast guard, 650F Major ground units: 8 brigades (7 infantry, 1 armored), 7 regiments (3 field artillery,1 air defense artillery, 2 coast artillery, 1 sig- nal), 19 separate battalions (6 infantry, 1 ar- tillery,1 target acquisition, 4 air defense, 1 coast guard, 2 engineer, 3 coast artillery, 1 signal) Ships: 2 patrol combatants, 5 submarine chasers, 13 fast patrol boats, 6 missile attack boats, 3 minelayers, 12 minesweepers, 14 minor amphibious, 8 auxiliary Supply: produces an armored car and small quantities of ammunition and equipment up to medium artillery; produced the Vinka basic training aircraft; began assembly of the British HAWK aircraft in 1981; remainder from USSR, UK, FRG, Sweden, France, Communications Merchant marine: 293 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 8,053,506 GRT, 14,060,399 DWT; includes 1 passenger, 13 short-sea passenger, 52 cargo, 9 refrigerated cargo, 26 container, 64 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 59 petro- leum, oils, and lubricants tanker, 13 chemi- cal tanker, 9 liquefied gas, 4 combination ore/oil, 5 specialized tanker, 38 bulkF- 25X1 25X1 Defense Forces Personnel: army 305,000, navy 67,040 (in- cluding 11,500 in naval air); marines 2,000, 25X1 air force 100,225 (3,000 pilots), national gen- darmerie 82,000 25X1 Major ground units: army-1 army head- quarters with 3 corps with 6 armored divi- sions, 2 infantry divisions, 2 light armored (school) divisions;1 Rapid Action Force (FAR)-1 overseas (rparine) division, 1 Para-255x1 chute division,1 alpine division,1 light ar- mored division, 1 airmobile division; 1 For- eign Legion demibrigade-40 nondivisional combat and artillery regiments in France, 14 independent overseas regiments; army and 25X1 corps combat support units-3 I-HAWK missile air defense, 6 Roland air defense, 5 25X1 Pluton tactical nuclear regiments (French regiments are roughly equivalent in size to 7 rX 1 US battalions) 25X1 Ships: 2 aircraft carriers, 1 helicopter train- ing cruiser,1 guided missile cruiser, 4 guided missile destroyers, 14 destroyers, 24 frigates/corvette, 6 nuclear powered ballis- tic missile submarines, 19 attack submarines, Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 France (continued) 1 experimental submarine, 11 patrol ships/craft, 28 mine warfare ships, 21 am- phibious, 66 auxiliaries Aircraft: 3,091 (1,468 jet), including 605 nonjet in army aviation, 404 (135 jet) in na- val aviation, 2,082 (1,333 jet) in air force Missiles: army has 3 I-HAWK battalions, 5 Pluton battalion equivalents, 6 Roland regi- ments (153 launchers); air force has 4 Crotale squadron Nuclear weapons: 40 Pluton launchers with 10-25 KT tactical fission weapons; 37 Mirage IVA light bombers armed with 70 KT fission weapons, and 18 silo-launched IRBMs with 1 MT fission warheads; 6 SSBNs (5 armed with 16 missiles, each with 1 megaton war- head,1 armed with 16 missiles, each with 6 150 KT warheads); 73 Mirage III E and Jag- uar A and 24 Super Etendard fighter bomb- ers armed with AN-52 tactical fission weap- Supply: develops and produces ground force equipment of all types in quantities suffi- cient for domestic needs plus considerable exports; produces all types of ships up to and including nuclear powered ballistic missile submarines; naval armaments, electronics; exports frigates, corvettes, submarines, pa- trol boats, and auxiliaries; independently produces and exports a wide variety of air- craft and missile systems, including intermediate-range ballistic missiles, surface-to-surface, air-to-surface, surface-to- air, air-to-air, and antiship, antitank missiles; some aircraft purchases from the US; collab- orating with the UK and FRG in joint air- craft development and production programs, and the UK, FRG, and Italy in joint missile development and production programs; produces small quantities of of- fensive chemical warfare agents and biological /chemical warfare defensive ma- Bou neary represenlalion is al n ce santy aut hoclabve 25X1 25X1 25X1 Defense Forces France maintains an army force in French Guiana; also available army and naval forces located in Martinique and Guadeloupe Personnel: 2,100 (readily augmented by 1,800 personnel, aircraft, and ships/craft stationed in Martinique and Guadeloupe); 260 gendarmerie Major ground units: 1 marine infantry regi- ment, 1 Foreign Legion infantry regiment, 1 signal center, 1 engineer battalion of the Mil- itary Service (SMA; a vocational training corps for indigenous personnel led by French Army personnel) darmerie, 2 from French Air Force North Atlantic 100 km Ocean Kourou ra>?.. CAYENNE 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 French Polynesia 500 km r Iles Marquises Defense Forces Personnel: army 2,220, navy 2,150, air force 70, gendarmerie 400 Major ground units: 1 marine infantry regi- ment, 2 rotating infantry companies, 1 com- mand and support battalion Ships: Pacific Naval Command at Papeete; France currently has 4 frigates, 4 patrol combatants, 4 amphibious ships, 2 amphibi- ous craft, 2 oilers, 4 tugs assigned Aircraft: the French Air Force operates 12 fixed-wing SAR/utility/test range support aircraft, 7 utility helicopters; the French Navy operates 5 maritime patrol aircraft for surface surveillance' Economy Aid: economic commitments-Western (non- US) countries (1970-82), $969 million; Com- munist countries (1970-83), $27 million; US, including Ex-Im (FY70-83), $41 million; military commitments-US (FY70-83), $10 million; Communist countries (1975-83), $7.0 million Communications Merchant marine: 3 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 91,562 GRT, 165,345 DWT; includes 2 cargo,1 tanker advisers Defense Forces Personnel: army 1,700, navy 200, air force 500, gendarmerie 2,300, Gabonese presiden- tial guard 1,400 (plus 30 French nationals, 40 Moroccans); French Army 630 (organized in 1 infantry battalion, which also performs training function), including 145 military strength Major ground units: 7 infantry companies, 1 engineer battalion, 1 command and sup- port battalion, 1 paracommando battalion, 81-mm mortar battery; battalions company Ships: 4 (3 patrol craft and 1 medium land- ing craft Aircraft: 70 total; 42 air force (27 transport and VIP passenger, 8 helicopters, 1 trainer, 6 utility), 28 presidential guard (13 fighters, 2 helicopters, including 1 VIP and 13 trainers); French Air Force operates 2 C-160 transports, 0-8 Jaguar fighter bombers, 4 helicopter Supply: primarily dependent on France, Brazil, and Morocco;1 landing craft from France 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 2 A11 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret The Gambia Boundary representation is not necessarrly authornahve Communications Merchant marine: 1 cargo ship (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 1,600 GRT, 2,700 DWTF_ Defense Forces Personnel: gendarmerie 284, army 100; Sen- egambia Confederation formed effective 1 February 1982; under the confederation the security and defense forces in The Gambia are to be integrated with the 450 Senegalese troops in The Gambia; the Gambian Gendar- merie (formerly the Gambian Field Force) has been integrated as a separate unit serv- ing with the Senegalese troops; the Gambian army completed its formation on 9 Novem- ber 1984 and will be integrated with the Sen- egalese Forced Ships: 3 tracker class fast patrol craft Supply: defense agreement with Senegal; indirect defense support from UK; has re- ceived small arms from USSR and PRC; German Democratic Republic The final borders of Germany have not been aatabliahad Economy Aid: economic commitments-USSR, $990 million (1954-75); to less developed non- Communist countries (1983), $3.2 billion in bilateral economic aid (1956-81) Communications Merchant marine: 150 ships (1,000 GRT and over) totaling 1,241,000 GRT, 1,704,000 DWT; includes 1 passenger, 115 cargo, 7 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 1 beach landing cargo, 1 multifunction heavy lift carrier, 4 petro- leum, oils, and lubricants tanker, 4 combina- tion ore/oil, 17 bulk Civil air: 45 major transport aircrafd Airfields: 190 total; 67 with permanent-surface runways; 3 with run- ways 3,500 m or over, 45 with runways 2,500-3,499 m, 74 with runways 1,000-2,499 m, 68 with runways less than 1,000 m; 7 heli- Telecommunications: domestic and interna- tional facilities modern and adequate; good coverage provided by 21 AM and 18 FM broadcast stations; 7,000,000 receivers; 20 major TV stations supplemented by 325 rebroadcast stations; 5,550,000 TV receivers; 2,900,000 telephones (100% automatic) Defense Forces Personnel: (est.) ground forces 122,600, na- val forces 15,400; air and air defense forces 40,000, border troops, Ministry of State Se- curity (MFS) guard regiment, alert police, 63,300; personnel in reserve (not on active duty)-(est.) ground forces 700,000, naval forces 26,000, air force 4,400; Soviet forces (GSFG) in GDR as of 1 January 1983, 402,000 (365,000 ground; 37,000 air)) Major ground units: 6 divisions (4 motor- ized rifle, 2 tank), 2 SCUD (SS-1) tactical mis- sile brigades, 4 regiments (2 artillery, 2 anti- aircraft artillery),1 airborne battalion, 2 antitank battalions, 5 SA-6 regiments, 1 SA-8 Ships: 17 principal surface combatants, 7 patrol combatants, 12 amphibious warfare ships, 81 coastal patrol-river/roadstead craft, 27 mine warfare craft, 6 underway replenishment ships, 2 fleet support ships, 38 Aircraft: 635 operational, including 300 air defense fighters, 56 ground attack, 17 recon- naissance, 68 transports, 194 helicopters (in- cluding naval helicopters) Missiles: 25 operational SA-2 sites (150 launchers), 4 operational SA-3 sites (12 4-rail and 4 dual-rail launchers); 2 brigades of the SA-4 tactical missile system, 4 SA-6 regi- ments, and 1 SA-8 regiment are deployed with the GDR ground forces; the SA-7, SA-9, and SA-13 tactical SAM systems are also de- ployed; 2 SA-5 complexes are under con- Supply: dependent on Communist countries, mainly USSR, Czechoslovakia and Poland, except for light infantry weapons, small arms ammunition, explosives, chemical war- fare defensive materiel, signal equipment, transport vehicles, and most navy ships and 25X1, 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 2.5X1 225X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret Germany, Federal Republic of The final borders of Germany hav not been established Communications Merchant marine: 455 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 5,250,360 GRT, 7,830,397 DWT; includes 2 passenger, 10 short-sea passenger, 190 cargo, 5 refrigerated cargo, 91 container, 30 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 1 railcar carrier, 6 barge carrier, 6 multifunc- tion heavy lift, 35 petroleum, oils, and lubri- ants tanker 33 chemical tanker 19 lique- c Roland II regiments (127 launchers), 8 Per- shing squadrons); 1 Honest John, 26 Lance Supply: supplies most of its own needs for ground forces materiel but has large procure- ment program in NATO countries; produces tanks, armored vehicles, artillery, infantry weapons, biological/chemical warfare protec- tive materiel, military electronic optical equipment; has purchased antitank, air-to- surface, surface-to-air and antiship, and ship- to-ship missiles from US and France and heli- copters and naval surface-to-air missiles from UK; domestic output of aircraft is expected to be maintained with the continuing BO-105 helicopter production and joint aircraft and helicopter development and production pro- grams with the UK, France, Italy, and Japan; previously produced antitank and air- to-surface antiship missiles; collaborating with US, UK, France, Canada, and other West Eu- ropean nations on a wide variety of missile and drone systems; produces destroyers, frig- ates, submarines, guided missile patrol com- batants, missile attack boats, minecraft, and auxiliaries; naval weapon systems obtained from NATO countries; frigates, corvettes, > fled gas, 2 combination ore/oil, 25 bulk~~ubmarines, patrol boats, and missile boats are Defense Forces Personnel: army 322,484, navy 37,000 (in- cluding 7,000 in naval air), air force 109,000 (1,600 pilots), federal border police 22,400 Major ground units: 12 combat divisions (4 armored infantry, 6 armored,1 mountain, 1 airborne), 6 heavy home defense brigades, 6 light home defense brigades, 3 helicopter regiments (antitank), 4 Lance missile battal- ions Ships: 3 guided missile destroyers, 4 destroy- ers, 24 submarines, 9 frigates, 5 subchasers, 20 guided missile patrol combatants, 20 mis- sile attack boats, 1 torpedo boats, 59 mine warfare, 28 minor amphibious, 47 auxilia- ries Aircraft: 2,207 (1,123 jet), including 703 in army aviation, 202 (130 jet) in navy aviation, 1,302 (993 jet) in air force Economy Aid: economic commitments-US, includ- ing Ex-Im (FY70-83), $306 million; other Western countries ODA and OOF (1970-82), $1.1 billion; OPEC ODA (1974-82), $80 mil- lion; Communist countries (1970-83), $56 million; military commitments-Commu- nist countries (1970-83), $12.0 million; US (1970-83), $2 million0 25X1 Communications Merchant marine: 15 ships (1,000 GRT or 25X1 over) totaling 107,819 GRT, 146,133 DWT, includes 14 cargo,1 refrigerated cargoL25X1 Defense Forces 25X1 Personnel: army 5,450, navy 508, air force 400, border guard 2,500, national police force 17,000, Palace Guard 50, people's mili- tia unknowr~ 25X1 Major ground units: 3 brigades-1 service brigade, 2 infantry brigades (6 infantry bat, talions,1 airborne battalion); although the term regiment is used for each of the follow- ing, unit strength is equivalent to a battal- ion-1 mortar regiment, 1 field engineer regiment, 1 reconnaissance regiment (under strength), 1 signal regiment 25X1 Ships: 12 (2 patrol escorts, 2 fast patrol cra25X1 and 8 patrol craft) 0 25X1 Aircraft: 45 (12 short-range transport, 9 je25X1 trainers, 11 prop trainers, 8 utility aircraft, support helicopters 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret Ghana (continued) Gibraltar Supply: dependent on imports; primarily from FRG, UK, Switzerland, and Italy; USSR, Libya, Bulgaria, and Czechoslovakia have also supplied some materiel Military budget: for fiscal year ending 30 June 1981, $15.5 million; 5% of central gov- ernment budget Bay of Gibraltar Strait of Gibraltar See regional map V Communications Merchant marine: 16 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 87,786 GRT, 141,798 DWT; includes 5 cargo, 2 refrigerated cargo, 1 pe- troleum, oils, and lubricants tanker, 1 chemi- Royal Navy 664, Royal Air Force 420 Defense Forces Personnel: UK Army 842, colonials 35, Major ground units: 1 UK infantry battal- ships and craft Ships: 1 destroyer-type ship deployed in the area rotates as the Gibraltar guardship; addi- tional ships are often temporarily deployed to the area for exercise and training or for refit or maintenance of a varied number of trainer aircraft (2 Aircraft: small detachment of fighter/ AWNS V D a? d Q j ?jO i Crete Rhodes Communications Merchant marine: 2,020 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 33,741,605 GRT, 59,518,530 DWT; includes 24 passenger, 57 short-sea passenger, 4 passenger cargo, 713 cargo, 14 container, 21 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 64 refrigerated cargo, 2 livestock carrier, 2 vehicle carrier, 256 petroleum, oils, and lu- bricants tanker, 6 chemical tanker, 8 lique- 25X1' 25X1' 25X1` fled gas, 39 combination ore/oil, 6 special- 25X1 ized tanker, 804 bulk; ethnic Greeks also own large numbers of ships under Liberian, Panamanian, Cypriot, and Lebanese flags Defense Forces Personnel: army 141,000, navy 18,000, air force 23,600 (755 pilots), police 24,000 F_ Major ground units: 1 army headquarters, 4 corps headquarters, 11 infantry divisions (5 near full strength),1 mechanized division, 1 armored division, 3 separate armored bri- gades,1 special forces division (3 raiding forces regiments, 1 parachute regiment, 1 marine regiment),1 high military command, 6 island military commands (bri- gade equivalents),1 infantry regiment (Cyprus), 3 army aviation battalions, 1 army mine warfare ships Ships: 14 destroyers, 6 frigates, 10 subma- rines, 16 guided missile patrol boats, 23 pa- trol craft, 12 amphibious warfare ships, 16 6,'. qos 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret Aircraft: 841 (427 jets), including 617 (427 jets) in air force, 207 in army aviation, 17 in naval aviation Missiles: 5 NIKE Hercules squadrons (72 launchers), 2 I-HAWK battalions (42 launch- ers), Redeye (1,200 launchers Supply: dependent largely on foreign sources, mainly US and other NATO coun- tries for heavy equipment, but does have domestic capability to produce and rebuild wide range of military materiel under li- cense; processes materiel in limited quantity from Communist neighbors and USSR; produces small arms and ammunition in small quantities; has assembled armored vehicles and produced six guided missile patrol combatants of French design Military budget: proposed for fiscal year ending 31 December 1984, $1.997 billion; about 16.4% of central government budget local police forces are maintained Defense Forces Defense is responsibility of Denmark, but under terms of a US-Danish agreement of 1951, defense is actually shared by US and Danish forces; Danish forces in Greenland consist of mostly naval personnel; one or two patrol escort ships are in Greenland waters for fishery inspection; both ships can accom- modate helicopters; there is one Royal Dan- ish Air Force Gulf stream III always on rota- tional duty in Greenland; Greenland has no organized native military forces; only small AAi GEORGE'S Grenada See regional map III Carriacou 25X1 North Atlantic Ocean 25X1 Economy 25X1 Aid: economic commitments-Western (non- US) countries ODA and OOF (1970-82), $18 million; OPEC ODA (1974-82), $57 million; Communist countries (1970-83), $29 million; military commitments-Communist coun- 9y 1 tries (1970-83), $27 million0 25X1 25X1 Defense Forces Local security forces: Royal Grenada Police Force 384; Coast Guard 106-foot fast patrol 25X1 craft, 1 40-foot patrol boat, and 3 30-foot patrol boats-the police commissioner is the immediate supervisor of the Coast Guari 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret Guadeloupe sarstsr ornas Castilla Caribbean Sea See regional map III North Atlantic Ocean Defense Forces Defense is responsibility of France; data are for French military forces Personnel: 1,500 military personnel, includ- Major ground units: 1 company of overseas infantry regiment, 1 command and support Aircraft: 2 C-160 transports, 2 helicopters Qufzaltenan9 Communications Merchant marine: 4 cargo ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 15,585 GRT, 23,642 DWT Defense Forces Personnel: army 30,000, navy 950, air force 650 (140 pilots Major ground units: 33 army infantry battal- ions, 1 military police battalion, 1 Chief of State guard battalion, l engineer construction battalion, 1 mobile military police battalion, 1 cadet battalion, 7 strategic reserve battalions (2 airborne infantry, 4 army infantry, l air police battalion), 2 marine infantry battalions Ships: 12 coastal patrol-river/roadstead craft, 1 amphibious warfare craft, 2 other Aircraft: 98 (13 jet, 23 turboprop, 30 prop, 32 helicopters tion from Argentina and Israel Supply: produces small arms, ammunition, substantial quantities of materiel obtained from US through 1977; recent (1983-84) pur- chases limited to small arms and ammuni- 25X1 25X1 -25X1 25X1 Economy Aid: economic commitments-Communist countries (1970-83), $210 million; OPEC 25X1 ODA (1974-82), $565 million; US authoriza- tions, including Ex-Im (FY70-83), $124 mil- lion; other Western countries ODA and OOF (1970-82), $295 million; military com- mitments-Communist countries (1970-83), Communications Merchant marine: 1 bulk (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 10,800 GRT, 15,300 DW'11 Telecommunications: fair system of open- wire lines, small radiocommunication sta- tions, and new radio-relay system; 10,000 telephones (0.2 per 100 popl.); 2 AM stations, 1 FM, 1 TV station; 1 Atlantic Ocean satel- lite ground station Defense Forces Personnel: army est. 11,000, navy 900, air force 750, gendarmerie 1,500, Surete Nati- onale 1,500, Republican Guard 1,200, mili- Major ground units: 25 battalions (1 engi- neer, 1 special, 1 armored, 1 para- commando, 1 artillery, 20 unidentified)F- Ships: 1 patrol gunboat, 1 patrol boat, 4 me- dium landing craft Aircraft: 52 (12 jet, 2 turboprop, 5 helicop- ters, 18 fighters, 12 transports, 3 trainers)F_ 25X1 25X1 25X1' 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1. 25X1 25X1' 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret Supply: dependent primarily on Communist countries, mainly USSR; some items also received from France; naval boats from China Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December 1984, $58.2 million; 7.9% of cen- tral government budget Guinea-Bissau (formerly Portuguese Guinea) million Economy Aid: economic commitments-Western (non- US) countries ODA and OOF (1970-82), $266 million; Communist countries (1970-83), $51 million; OPEC ODA (1974-82), $20 million; US authorizations (FY70-83), $29 million; military commit- ments-Communist countries (1974-83), $45 force 150, paramilitary 2,000 Defense Forces Personnel: army est. 7,000, navy 450, air signal company Major ground units: 4 infantry battalions, 1 mechanized brigade, 1 artillery group,1 antiaircraft group, 1 transportation group, 1 Ships: 15 (6 patrol boats, 6 medium landing craft, 2 torpedo retrievers, 1 hydrographic survey ship ers, 4 helicopters) France Supply: dependent on outside sources, pri- marily the USSR; some items received from Guyana 25X1 25X1 Economy Aid: economic commitments-US, includ- ing Ex-Im (FY70-83), $92 million; other Western countries (1970-82), $151 million; OPEC (1974-82), $50 million; Communist countries (1970-83), $75 million 25X1 Communications Merchant marine: 1 bulk (1,000 GRT or 25X1 over) totaling 3,000 GRT, 3,100 D WT 25X1 Defense Forces Personnel: Guyana Defense Force (GDF)25X1 6,400; Guyana Police Force, 4,500; Guyana People's Militia (GPM), 1,500; Guyana Na- tional Service (GNS), 1,200 25X1 Major ground units: 1 brigade (3 infantr) 25X1 battalions,1 support battalion), 1 special forces battalion,1 training unit F__25X1 Ships: 8 patrol craft, 5 miscellaneous auxi7 rX 1 iary vessels 25X1 Aircraft: 2 turboprop, 6 prop, 9 helicopte25X 1 Supply: mostly UK, Yugoslavia, North Korea; some US equipment 25X1 Military budget: for fiscal year ending 3]25X1 December 1984, $20.8 million; 9.2% of cL_ tral government budget0 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Guyana (continued) 41 officers), air corps 230 (28 pilots Defense Forces Personnel: army 6,400, navy 260 (including Major ground units: Leopard Corps, Presi- dential Guard, Casernes Dessalines, and Port- au-Prince Police; Armed Forces of Haiti organized into 51 companies, including 10 infantry, 1 heavy weapons, 24 district police, and miscellaneous other elements; only 2 units (Leopard Corps and Casernes Dessa- lines) have marginal combat capabilities trol; 1 ocean tug Ships: 12 patrol boats-2 65-foot patrol, 1 47-foot patrol, 8 40-foot patrol, 1 harbor pa- prop; Aircraft: 42 (9 helicopters, 26 prop, 7 turbo- Supply: current supplies from US commer- cial sources and from Italy and Brazil; sources in the past have included Jordan, Nicaragua, Argentina, and primarily the US Military budget: proposed for fiscal year ending 30 September 1985, $18 million; about 8.3% of central government budget Boundary representation is not ___,Y aothootatrve Communications Merchant marine: 97 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 288,353 GRT, 409,809 DWT; includes 4 passenger cargo, 45 cargo, 10 re- frigerated cargo, 6 container, 3 roll-on/roll- off cargo, 24 petroleum, oils, and lubricants tanker, 1 specialized tanker, 4 bulk Defense Forces Personnel: army 14,600, navy 600, air force Major ground units: 12 infantry battalions, 4 artillery battalions, 1 engineer battalion, 1 armored cavalry regiment, 1 special forces Ships: 4 patrol craft, 6 patrol boats, 7 river/roadstead patrol boats, 1 buoy tender Aircraft: 106 (29 jet, 9 turboprop, 36 prop, 32 helicopters Supply: equipment procured from US, Is- rael, Brazil, Argentina, and Western Europe Military budget: for the fiscal year ending 31 December 1984, $77.0 million; about 7% of the central government budged 25X1, 25X1 2 A11 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X11 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 secret Hong Kong a A Hong Kong m Shan South China Sea Communications Merchant marine: 199 ships (1,000 GRT or over), totaling 5,514,043 GRT, 9,323,299 DWT; includes 1 passenger, 1 short-sea pas- senger, 19 cargo, 16 refrigerated cargo, 16 container, 12 petroleum, oils, and lubricants tanker, 11 combination ore/oil, 5 liquefied gas, 1 specialized tanker, 117 bulk; ships reg- istered in Hong Kong fly the UK flag; an esti- mated 500 Hong Kong-owned ships are reg- istered elsewhere Defense Forces Personnel: ground forces-UK army 1,943, colonials 4,986, locals 1,230 (ground), police 11,580, auxiliary police 3,100, UK navy 330, locals (navy) 350; air force 220, auxiliary air force 90 Major ground units: 1 Gurkha field force Ships: Hong Kong Marine Police, 38 police boats; UK naval ships homeported in the UK operate occasionally in the Indian Ocean, Gulf, and Far East; 5 patrol combatants as- signed to Commander, Hong Kong Aircraft: 13 helicopters (7 RAF, 6 Army Air Corps) Hungary Economy Aid: extended to non-Communist less devel- oped countries (1962-83), $1.3 billion in bi- lateral aid Major ground units: 6 divisions (5 motor- ized rifle, 1 tank), 3 brigades (1 SCUD SS-1 tactical missile, 1 artillery, 1 SA-4), 5 regi- ments (3 SA-6, 1 antiaircraft, 1 antitank), 1 airborne reconnaissance battalion, 1 attack helicopter regiment Ships: (est.) 45 river patrol craft, 60 mine- sweepers, 2 landing craft, 2 auxiliaries Aircraft: (operational units) 267, including 143 air defense fighters, 17 transports, 107 helicopter ical warfare defensive materiel and small quantities of agents, some electronic equip- ment; dependent on other Warsaw Pact Missiles: 13 operational SA-2 SAM sites (78 launchers), 6 operational SA-3 sites (24 4-rail launchers), 1 SA-5 site under construction; 3 SA-6 SAM regiments and 1 SA-4 brigade are deployed with the ground forces; SA-9 and SA-7 systems are deployed with the Hungar- ian ground forces0 25X1 Supply: produces small arms, ammunition, explosives, light artillery, some trucks, chem- Communications Civil air: 25 major transport aircraft Merchant marine: 22 cargo ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 83,803 GRT, 113,945 DWT Airfields: 98 total; 21 with permanent- surface runways; 2 with runways 3,500 m or over, 14 with runways 2,500-3,499 m, 25 with runways 1,000-2,499 m, 57 with run- ways less than 1,000 m; 19 heliports Telecommunications: services meet most government and industrial requirements, but local public telephone service is inade- quate; radio and TV broadcasts can be re- ceived throughout most of the country; 11 AM, 4 FM stations; more than 3,000,000 receivers; 1 major and 11 relay TV stations; 2,600,000 TV receivers; 950,000 telephones (80.3% automatic) Defense Forces Personnel: est. ground forces 77,600 (includ- ing a river flotilla), air and air defense force 23,000, paramilitary forces 16,000; Soviet forces (SGF) in Hungary as of 1 January 1983,74,000(64,000 ground, 10,000 air); personnel in reserve (not on active duty)- (est.) ground forces 985,000, naval forces 3,400, air force unknown 25X1 countries, primarily the USSR, for other mil- itary equipment including radar and mis- siles; imports minesweepers from Yugoslavia 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret Ships: 1 light carrier,1 light cruiser (nonoperational), 6 frigates, 3 guided missile patrol combatants, 3 guided missile destroy- ers, 3 guided missile frigates, 13 guided mis- sile boats, 8 submarines, 15 mine warfare, 11 amphibious, 10 corvette Aircraft: 1,376 (833 jet) operationally as- signed, including 1,172 (794 jet) in air force; 117 in army aviation; 77 (39 jet) in navy; and North Atlantic Ocean See regional map V Communications Merchant marine: 32 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 60,066 GRT, 103,030 DWT; includes 18 cargo, 5 refrigerated cargo, 5 roll-on/roll-off cargo,1 petroleum, oils, and lubricants tanker, 3 bulk Defense Forces Iceland has no armed forces; police forces est. 390; Coast Guard Service consists of 4 patrol vessels, 2 helicopters,1 light transport aircraft, and an est. 160 personnel; under NATO provisions, the US operates the Ice- land Defense Force Aircraft: 28 operational, including 21 com- bat aircraft, 3 airborne early warning air- craft, 1 transport, 3 helicopters Andaman Islands Bay of Bengal Nicobar Islands , Boundary representatio-s not necessarily authontabve Economy Aid: economic commitments-USSR (1970-83), $1.6 billion; Eastern Europe (1970-83), $105 million; OPEC ODA (1974-82), $11.2 billion; Western (non-US) ODA and OOF (1980-81), $2.2 billion; US, including Ex-Im (FY70-83), $3.3 billion; military commitments-Communist coun- tries (1970-83), $10.0 billion; US (FY70-83), $2 million Communications Merchant marine: 374 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 6,320,205 GRT, 10,468,556 DWT; includes 1 passenger, 2 short-sea pas- senger, 9 passenger cargo, 179 cargo, 1 re- frigerated cargo, 11 container, 1 barge car- rier, 44 petroleum, oils, and lubricants tanker, 2 chemical tanker, 16 combination ore/oil, 108 bulk Defense Forces Personnel: army 1,092,000, navy 46,000 (including 2,000 in naval air arm), air force 114,600 (about 3,270 pilots), armed police 400,000, Central Reserve Police 92,800, Bor- der Security Force approx. 91,50(0 Major ground units: 8 corps, 32 divisions (20 infantry, 9 mountain, 2 armored,1 mecha- nized), 25 independent brigades (6 armored, 3 infantry, 1 mountain, 1 parachute, 4 artil- lery, 6 air defense, 4 engineer); also 25 para- military battalions integrated on rotational 10 in Border Security Force Missiles: (est.) 43 active SAM squadrons (20 SA-2, 15 SA-3, 3 training squadrons, 5 other) Supply: increasingly self-sufficient, includ- ing manufacture/assembly of own small arms, artillery, ammunition, variety of air- craft military electronics, and medium tanks; guided missile frigates, patrol craft and landing craft being built domestically; US and UK were principal foreign suppliers until 1965; since then the USSR has supplied ground, naval, and air equipment, including 350 T-72 tanks, more than 600 T-55 tanks, 178 PT-76 tanks, tank transporters, approxi- mately 580 130-mm guns, 180100-mm 25X1 guns, 8 submarines, 10 corvettes, 2 medium landing ships, 16 guided missile patrol boats, 1 submarine support ship, 3 guided missile destroyers, 3 guided missile patrol combat- 25X1 ants, 2 fleet minesweepers, more than 300 MiG-21 fighters (including in-country assem- 25X1 bly), 131 SU-7 fighters, various transport aircraft, and helicopters; medium tanks ob- tained from Czechoslovakia and Poland; 4 medium landing ships from Poland; armored personnel carriers and tank trans- ports from Czechoslovakia and USSR; small amounts of other army materiel from Bul- garia and Yugoslavia; small arms, towed ar- tillery, armor, armor components, military electronics, and self-propelled artillery and 25X1 25X1 aircraft from UK; licensed radar production 25X1 with France and to a lesser extent, Switzer- land; produces MiG-21s under license from USSR-majority of components domesti- cally produced; licensed production of French helicopters; licensed production of British Jaguar aircraft; licensed missile assembly/production programs include French Milan ATM and Soviet Atoll AAM; 25X1 more recent acquisitions from USSR include-MiG-23/27 Flogger aircraft with Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret licensed production rights, anticipates acqui- sition of MiG-29/Fulcrum with option to subassemble additional aircraft and AN-32 and IL-76 transports to replace its aging fleet; other acquisitions include-from France, the Mirage 2000 fighter; from UK, the British Sea Harrier; and from FRG, the DO-228 transport aircraft; recently began assembly of the first of 2 Type-500 subma- rines with FRG assistance million; US (FY70-83), $462 million Economy Aid: economic commitments-Communist (1970-83), $175 billion; US, including Ex-Im (FY70-83), $3.3 billion; other Western coun- tries ODA and OOF (1970-82), $11.0 billion; OPEC ODA (1981), $25 million; military commitments-Communist (1970-83), $1.0 specialized tanker, 22 bulk Communications Merchant marine: 323 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 1,336,094 GRT, 1,970,813 DWT; includes 1 passenger, 3 short-sea pas- senger, 30 passenger cargo, 182 cargo, 4 con- tainer, 5 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 1 vehicle car- rier, 69 petroleum, oils, and lubricants tanker, 2 chemical tanker, 1 liquefied gas, 3 bile brigade Defense Forces Personnel: army 214,000, navy 37,600 (in- cluding 12,800 marines and 800 naval air), air force 25,000 (2,000 officers, 11,000 NCOs, 12,000 airmen), police 11,800 (mo- mands Major ground units: 16 army brigades (13 infantry, 2 airborne, 1 cavalry), 4 regiments (2 field artillery, 1 antiaircraft artillery, 1 combat engineer),1 Police Mobile Brigade (10 infantry battalions), 2 marine infantry regiments; during the 1984-85 period, ap- proximately 10 army brigade headquarters will be eliminated with the subordinate bat- talions resubordinated to geographic com- Ships: 11 frigates, 3 submarines, 34 coastal patrol-river/roadstead patrol, 2 mine war- fare, 5 amphibious, 15 support auxiliary ships/craft, 3 service craft Aircraft: approximately 385 (91 jet), includ- ing 40 naval air, 283 (91 jet) air force, 62 army aviation Missiles: Soviet-made ground air-defense missile site deactivated and missiles in stor- age; a limited number of manportable air 25X1 defense missiles being procured from Swe- den and 2 batteries of Rapier air defense missiles on order Supply: small quantities of ammunition and small arms produced; licensed to produce Spanish CASA C-212 utility aircraft and FRG BO-105 helicopters and to assemble French Puma helicopters; also coproducing the CN-235 medium transport with Spain; naval ship production includes 57-meter FRG-designed patrol boats and 28-meter wood-hulled patrol boats; a contract is pend- ing on jet foils; during 1957-65 Indonesia 25X1 purchased most military equipment from Communist countries, the majority during 1960-65 from the USSR; naval ships and equipment from a large variety of Commu- nist and non-Communist sources; naval surface-to-surface, air-to-air, air-to-surface, and surface-to-air missiles from USSR and France; antitank missiles from Switzerland and France; recent purchases generally for cash; both purchases and grant-aid from 25X1 non-Communist sources; naval purchases include 4 missile boats and 6 landing ships from South Korea, 3 corvettes from the Netherlands, 2 submarines from FRG, 3 refurbished British frigates (on order); F-5 fighters have been purchased from the US, A-4s have been purchased from Israel, anc25X1 air defense radar from France; recent major armored vehicle purchases (mostly used equipment) from the Netherlands, Singapore, and France; equipment purchases curtailed in 1983 because of eco- nomic downturn Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 March 1985, $2.03 billion; about 10% of cen- tral government budget0 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret Indonesia (continued) brigades (1 infantry, 1 airborne infantry, 1 armored),1 aviation command, 5 artillery groups; at least 20 Revolutionary Guard divi- sions, 40 brigades Ships: 3 guided-missile destroyers, 4 guided- missile frigates, 11 missile attack boats, 2 patrol combatants, 44 patrol boats/craft, 13 amphibious vessels, 4 minesweepers, 14 hovercraft, 9 other vessels (auxiliary) Aircraft: approximately 924, including an estimated 250 jet fighters (only 70 opera- tional), 61 transport (prop), 13 transport (jet), 600 helicopter 25X1. 25X1 25X1' 25X1' $2.6 billion; US (1970-80), $18.7 milliod Economy Aid: economic commitments-Western (non-US) countries ODA and OOF (1970-82), $1.3 billion; US, including Ex-Im (1970-83), $1,038 million; Communist coun- tries, (1970-83), $876 million; military agree- ments-Communist countries (1970-83), tanker, 4 chemical tanker, 40 bulk Communications Merchant marine: 105 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 2,085,289 GRT, 3,608,862 DWT; includes 44 cargo, 3 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 14 petroleum, oils, and lubricants Turkey and Pakistan Telecommunications: advanced system but not properly maintained and only partially operative; Tehran principal center of critical radio relay, troposcatter links; 1,230,000 telephones (3.2 per 100 popl.); about 38 AM, 28 FM, 250 TV stations; Atlantic and Indian Ocean INTELSAT stations; radio relay to Defense Forces Personnel: army 250,000; navy 15,000; air force 50,000 (400 pilots); gendarmerie 40,000; revolutionary guards 100,000- 150,000, with another 200,000-400,000 in Major ground units: 12 divisions (7 infantry, 4 armored,1 special forces), 3 independent Supply: can produce small arms, 210-mm cannons, rockets, rocket launchers, explo- sives, and various calibers of ammunition; bulk of equipment from US before 1979, some antitank missiles from France, some surface-to-air missiles and naval craft from UK, Italy, and India, helicopters from Italy; since 1967 has received significant quantities 7r-,X1 of armored vehicles, artillery-including self-propelled antiaircraft (AA) guns and field artillery, rocket launchers, and trans- port vehicles from the USSR; has procured AA guns and associated radar from Switzer- land, tanks from UK, and significant quanti- ties of other military materiel from FRG, France, Italy, Canada, and Israel; 12 missile attack boats acquired from France during late 1970s and early 1980s; since the end of 1980, Iran has received tanks from Libya, and North Korea and significant quantities of ground forces materiel have been exported from Syria, Libya, North Korea, China, Eastern Europe, South Korea, and the West; trainer aircraft from Switzerland; broker and black-market sales account for most of free world sales; black-market sales are estimated to exceed $1 billion Military budget: for fiscal year ending 20 March 1985, $12.89 billion; 33% of the cen- tral government budget 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Iraq Economy Aid: economic commitments-Communist countries (1970-83), $770 million; US (FY70- 80), $3 million; Iraq pledged $3,310 million in ODA to less developed countries (1974-80); military commitments-Commu- nist countries (1970-83), $19 billio Communications Merchant marine: 44 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 914,993 CRT, 1,617,168 DWT; includes 1 passenger, 1 passenger cargo, 19 cargo, 1 refrigerated cargo, 1 con- tainer, 3 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 18 petroleum, oils, and lubricants tanke Defense Forces Personnel: army 750,000, navy 4,500, air force 35,000(1,000-1,100 pilots Major ground units: 20 infantry divisions, 2 mechanized infantry divisions, 5 armored divisions, 2 border guard (infantry) divisions, 1 republican guards (armored) division, 11 independent armored brigades, 2 independ- ent mechanized infantry brigades, 82 infan- try brigades mobilized for Iraq-Iran war, 6 special forces brigades Ships: 1 training frigate, 8 missile attack boats, 8 small torpedo boats, 3 submarine chasers, 3 river gunboats, 5 patrol boats, 6 fast patrol craft (air cushion), 8 service craft, 8 minesweepers, 3 medium landing ships Aircraft: 1,770 (765 jet, 69 turboprop, 44 prop, 892 helicopters); includes Army Avia- tion Command and Naval Aviation Com- man 25X1 25X1 Supply: produces some ammunition and small arms; dependent primarily on USSR and East European Communist countries for combat materiel; increased import of weap- ons systems from Western Europe to include transport and electronic equipment, anti- tank guided missiles, surface-to-air missiles,25X1 armored vehicles, Super Etendard and Mi- rage F-1 aircraft; 4 guided missile frigates, 6 missile patrol combatants, and a replenish- ment oiler have been ordered from ItalV___1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret Defense Forces Personnel: army 135,000 (plus 300,000 re- serve), navy 6,600, air force 30,000 (1,500 pilots), NAHAL 5,000, frontier guard 4,500, iary Irish Sea Boundary representation is not necessarily authoritative. CHEN (women) 42,000 Major ground units: 13 armored divisions, 1 airmobile division headquarters (pro- visional), 4 territorial infantry division head- quarters (provisional), 10 mechanized infan- try, 5 airborne, 5 infantry brigades F_ Ships: 3 submarines, 12 guided missile patrol combatants 12 missile attack boats, 2 hydro- foils, 40 patrol boats, 13 river/roadstead pa- trol boats, 5 amphibious, 5 service, 3 auxil- Communications Merchant marine: 32 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 153,227 GRT, 206,238 DWT; includes 4 short-sea passenger, 17 cargo, 2 container, 1 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 1 petro- leum, oils, and lubricants tanker, 1 special- ized tanker, 6 bulk Defense Forces Personnel: army 12,041 (navy and air force are subordinate to the army), navy 938, air corps 680 (60 pilots) Ships: 7 patrol ships, 2 auxiliary, 1 service Aircraft: 37 (7 jetJ Missiles: RBS-70 (7 launchers) NOTE: The Arab territories occupied by Israel since the 1967 war are not included in the data below. As stated in the 1978 Camp David Accords and reaffirmed by the President's 1 September 1982 peace initiative, the final status of the West Bank and Gaza Strip and a peace treaty be- tween Israel and Jordan are to be negoti- ated among the concerned parties; Camp David further specifies that these negotia- tions will resolve the location of the respec- tive boundaries; pending the completion of this process, it is US policy that the final status of the West Bank and Gaza Strip has yet to be determined (see West Bank and Gaza Strip "factsheet" in The World Factbook); on 25 April 1982 Israel relin- quished control of the Sinai to Egypt; sta- tistics for the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights are included in the Syria "fact- (FY70-83) $17.2 billion Economy Aid: economic commitments-US, includ- ing Ex-Im (FY70-83), $7.9 billion; other Western countries ODA and OOF (1970-82), $1.37 billion; military commitments-US roll-on/roll-off cargo, 4 bulk Communications Merchant marine: 40 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 529,968 GRT, 630,206 DWT; includes 13 cargo, 19 container, 4 Aircraft: 1,464 (937 jet, 263 prop, 28 turbo- prop, 236 helicopters)0 25X1 Missiles: 17 HAWK missile batteries (16 towed, 1 self-propelled), 48 Chaparral launchers 25X1 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, MERKAVA main battle tank, chemical and biological warfare defensive materiel, air- craft from native designs, small turbojet en- gines, engine parts and components; produces a variety of defense electronics equipment; also produces GABRIEL, an indigenously designed and produced naval surface-to-surface missile, as well as the Py- thon III and Python air-to-air missile; almost all naval combatants are being domestically produced, excluding submarines 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret Italy Communications Merchant marine: 597 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 8,586,333 GRT, 14,391,107 DWT; includes 7 passenger, 44 short-sea passenger, 138 cargo, 9 refrigerated cargo, 14 container, 54 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 5 ve- hicle carrier, 2 livestock carrier, 141 petro- leum, oils, and lubricants tanker, 34 chemi- cal tanker, 30 liquefied gas, 7 specialized tanker, 21 combination ore/oil, 91 bulkF- 82,000 Defense Forces Personnel: army 290,500, navy 43,400 (in- cluding 220 pilots, 960 naval infantry), air force 68,000 (1,400 pilots), carabinieri Major ground units: 4 divisions (3 mecha- nized, l armored), and the following sepa- rate maneuver units-12 brigades (5 alpine, 1 airborne, 2 mechanized, 4 motorized), 1 brigade equivalent (Trieste Troop command); separate combat support units include 1 missile artillery brigade, l air de- fense command (3 regiments), 5 field artil- lery regiments, 4 light aviation groups, 2 engineer regiments, 1 amphibious regiment Ships: 1 helicopter/VSTOL carrier, 1 guided missile aviation cruiser, 2 guided missile cruisers, 4 guided missile destroyers, 16 frigates, 4 corvettes, 10 submarines, 7 missile attack hydrofoils, 4 patrol combat- ants, 4 patrol craft, 2 amphibious warfare, 34 mine warfare Aircraft: 1,632 (657 jet), including 1,017 (657 jet) in air force, 110 (nonjet) in naval air, 505 in army aviation ers), 8 NIKE squadrons (72 launchers) Supply: produces infantry weapons, armored vehicles, electronics and optical equipment, artillery, ammunition up to 203- mm, a VSTOL aircraft carrier, guided mis- sile destroyers, frigates, corvettes, subma- rines, patrol craft (midget submarines, guided missile frigates, patrol craft, missile attack boats, minehunters, and auxiliaries produced for export), jet fighter, trainer transport and utility aircraft, helicopters, small amounts of biological/chemical war- fare defensive materiel; collaborating with France and FRG to develop a family of anti- tank missiles and antiship missiles; indige- nously developing antitank surface-to-air and antiship missiles; some materiel, chiefly heavy equipment, imported from US; net exporter of military equipment Ivory Coast Communications Merchant marine: 12 cargo ships (1,000 25X1 GRT or over) totaling 126,342 GRT, 160,777 DWT; includes 9 cargo, 1 refrigerated cargo, 2 petroleum, oils, and lubricants tanker F~ Defense Forces 25X1 Personnel: 4,350 army, 620 navy, 790 air force (plus 17 French), 4,312 gendarmerie, 25X1 1,610 Presidential Guard (plus 90 French advisers, 450 French troops) '')FV1 25X1 Major ground units: 3 infantry battalions, 1 armored car company, l artillery battery, l light antiaircraft artillery battery, 1 engineer battalion 25X1 Ships: 10 (1 medium amphibious assault landing ship, 2 river/roadstead patrol boats, 2 patrol boats, 2 patrol craft, 2 fast patrol craft, l harbor patrol boat 0 25X1 Aircraft: 31(4 jet, 17 transports, 10 turbine helicopters) 0 25X1 Supply: principally dependent on France' has purchased transport aircraft from Netherland 25X1 Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 25X1 December 1984, $78.7 million; about 4.9% of the central government budget Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret Jamaica Economy Aid: economic commitments-US, includ- ing Ex-Im (FY70-83), $539 million; other Western countries ODA and OOF (1970-82), $681 million, OPEC ODA (1974-82), $100 million; Communist countries (1974-83), $338 million; military commitments-US (FY81-83), $7.3 million Communications Merchant marine: 2 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 7,474 GRT, 12,450 DWT; in- cludes 1 cargo, 1 roll-on/roll-off cargo Defense Forces Personnel: 2,979 Major ground units: 1 regiment consisting of 2 active duty battalions, 1 reserve battal- ion,1 support and services battalion Aircraft: 13 (1 turboprop, 5 prop, 7 helicop- ters) Japan pOkina wa See regional map Vlll Communications Merchant marine: 1,695 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 35,287,664 GRT, 58,200,918 DWT; includes 5 passenger, 76 short-sea passenger, 4 passenger cargo, 262 cargo, 71 container, 21 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 147 refrigerated cargo, 151 vehicle carrier, 358 petroleum, oils, and lubricants tanker, 38 chemical tanker, 63 liquefied gas, 24 combination ore/oil, 10 specialized tanker, Defense Forces Major ground units: 12 infantry divisions, 1 armor division, 2 combined brigades,1 air- borne,brigade, 12 nondivisional artillery battalions, 1 helicopter brigade, 1 Fuji bri- gade (composed of an infantry regiment, a nonstandard artillery unit, a nonstandard tank unit, and an engineering battalion Agency Ships: 53 destroyer/frigates, 14 submarines, 42 mine warfare, 8 amphibious, 22 auxil- iary, over 300 service craft; an additional force of 404 patrol and service craft operates under the jurisdiction of the Maritime Safety force, 53 in Maritime Safety Agency Aircraft: 1,603, including 397 in army avia- tion, 297 in naval air, 856 (720 jet) in air 25X1 25X1 25X1 2.5X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 LJ/~ I 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Jordan Boundary representation is not necessarily authoritative NOTE: The war between Israel and the Arab states in June 1967 ended with Israel in control of the West Bank. As stated in the 1978 Camp David Accords and re- affirmed by the President's 1 September 1982 peace initiative, the final status of the West Bank and Gaza Strip and a peace treaty between Israel and Jordan are to be negotiated among the concerned parties; Camp David further specifies that these negotiations will resolve the location of the respective boundaries; pending the comple- tion of this process, it is US policy that the final status of the West Bank and Gaza Strip has yet to be determined (see West Bank and Gaza Strip "factsheet" in The World Factbook)0 Communications Merchant marine: 6 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 48,401 GRT, 74,414 DWT; includes 4 cargo, 2 bulk Defense Forces Personnel: army 70,000-80,000, coast guard 250, air force 9,000-10,000 (155 pilots), Pub- lic Security Force (National Police) 5,700 Major ground units: organized around divi- sional structure; 2 mechanized divisions (each composed of 2 mechanized brigades, 1 infantry brigade, divisional artillery battal- ions, combat support and combat service support units), 2 armor divisions (each com- posed of 3 armor brigades, divisional artil- lery battalions, combat support and combat service support units), 1 Royal Guards Forces brigade operational 31 helicopters Supply: dependent on outside sources; US and UK principal suppliers of military equipment; has purchased fighter aircraft from France and is expected to purchase sophisticated equipment from the French in the near term; has purchased air defense systems from the USSR and will probably receive additional Soviet air defense systems in 1985 Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December 1984, $463 million; 23% of cen- tral government budget Kenya Economy Aid: economic commitments-Western (non-US) countries ODA and OOF 25X1 25X1 (1970-82), $3.6 billion; US, including Ex-Im 25X1 (FY70-83), $433 million; OPEC ODA (1974-82), $145 million; Communist coun- 25X1 tries (1970-83), $51 million; military com- mitments-US (FY70-83), $169 millionLl25X1 25X1 Communications Merchant marine: 1 cargo ship (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 1,168 GRT, 1,590 DWIE= Defense Forces Personnel: army about 13,000, navy 650, air force 2,500, paramilitary police 1,800 25X1 Major ground units: 2 infantry brigade 25X1 headquarters, 5 infantry battalions, 1 armor brigade, 1 air cavalry battalion, 1 artillery brigade, 2 artillery battalions, 1 combat engi25X1 neer brigade, 2 combat engineer battalions, 1 airborne battalion0 25X1 helicopters Aircraft: 72, including 28 jets, 33 prop (18 transport, 13 trainer, 2 utility aircraft), 11 France, FRG, Israel, Canada, and US 25X1 25X1 Military budget: for fiscal year ending 30 25X1 June 1984, $208 million; 12% of central gov- ernment budge(_~ 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret Kenya (continued) Kiribati (formerly Gilbert Islands) *TARAWA .~M Gn,err y is/ends "Phoenix ,'Line Islands Islands Korea, North Boundary representation is not necessarily authoritative Communications Communications Airfields: 13 total, 12 usable; 2 with Freight carried: rail-133 million metric permanent-surface runways; 4 with run- tons (1978); highway-116 million metric ways 1,220-2,439 tons (1969); waterway-540 million metric Defense Forces Personnel: no military force maintained; there are small police posts on all islands of ton/km, 7.7 million metric tons (1969); coastal-170 million metric ton/km, 0.4 million metric tons (1969); current data not and lubricants tanker, 3 bulk Merchant marine: 54 ships (1,000 GRT and over) totaling 500,065 GRT, 816,068 DWT; includes 1 passenger, 2 short-sea passenger, 1 passenger cargo, 43 cargo, 4 petroleum, oils, struction Airfields: 22 permanent-surface, jet-capable airfields; 27 transport/utility airfields; and 17 highway airstrips; 2 airfields under con- 25X1 25X1 Telecommunications: domestic and interna- tional services are adequate for needs; ori- ented to political, military, and industrial use; upgrading in progress; good coverage by radio, TV, and wire broadcasts; about 130,000 telephones; 300,000 radios; 10,000 est. TV receivers; 34 AM radiobroadcast stations; 3 TV stations and unknown number of TV repeaters; color TV available 25X1 Defense Forces Personnel: army at least 763,000 peacetime, over 811,000 at wartime table of organiza- tion and equipment; navy 37,500; air force 56,000; civil security forces 56,000 (includ- ing internal security force 8,000, railroad police 5,000, coastal/border security units Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Korea, South 4,000,000 (50% women) Major ground units: 8 standard corps, 4 mechanized corps,1 artillery corps, I capital defense corps, 21 standard infantry divi- sions,1 truck-mobile infantry division, 1 mechanized infantry division, 2 armored divisions, 22 mechanized/truck-mobile in- fantry brigades, 1 SAM command (11 regi- ments),1 infantry brigade, 10 light infantry brigades, 4 airborne brigades, 2 amphibious assault brigades, 4 reconnaissance brigades, 1(women's) AA brigade, 10 AAA regiments, 10 armored brigades, 2 tank regiments, 4 engineer river crossing regiments, 3 engineer pontoon bridge regiments, 3 engineer am- phibian battalions, 6 FROG battalions, 94 artillery battalions (nondivisional), 82 rocket Ships: 1 frigate, 2 corvettes, 6 patrol combat- ants, 28 attack submarines, 33 missile attack boats, 353 coastal patrol types, 19 mine war- fare, 127 amphibious warfare,1 auxiliary, copters, 142 trainers, 1 utility) Aircraft: 1,356 in air force (667 jet fighters, 83 light bombers, 294 transports, 169 heli- Missiles: 45 operational SA-2 SAM sites, 2 Supply: produces infantry weapons, towed and self-propelled artillery, rocket launch- ers, ammunition (including artillery), tanks, armored vehicles, explosives, trucks, some radar and telecommunications equipment, naval ships (including patrol escorts, subma- rines and missile boats), and some chemical warfare materiel; produces/assembles cop- ies of Soviet surface-to-air and antitank mis- siles; is constructing an aircraft production complex for production of helicopters, fixed wing aircraft, and engines; dependent on external sources for high performance air- craft and sophisticated electronic equip- Military budget: no accurate information about military spending is available; esti- mated military budget is equivalent to $4 billion for the fiscal year ending 31 Decem- ber 1984, constituting 14.8% of the central government budget; actual military spend- ing was probably at least twice the stated amoun Cheju do Bo.,da,y ,p,,S-1a1- 5 25X1 not nece-Jy Communications Merchant marine: 546 ships (1,000 GRT or 25X1 over) totaling 6,306,262 GRT, 10,849,523 DWT; includes 2 short-sea passenger, 207 cargo, 35 container, 9 refrigerated cargo, 1 vehicle carrier, 60 petroleum, oils, and lubri- cants tanker, 34 chemical tanker, 8 liquefied Defense Forces Personnel: army 520,000 (army is aug- mented by over 145,000 limited service con- 25X1 scripts), navy 47,700 (including marines), air force 31,900 2.SX 1 25X1 Major ground units: 3 army and 7 corps headquarters, 21 (19 army, 2 marine) infan- try divisions, 2 mechanized infantry divi- sions,1 independent infantry brigade,1 in- dependent marine brigade, 25 reserve infan-. try divisions at cadre strength, 2 air defense artillery (ADA) brigades (including 6 HAWK battalions, 2 NIKE battalions), 1 ADA group (9 batteries), 5 independent ADA battalions, 2 armored brigades, 9 separate armored bat- talions, 7 special forces brigades (airborne), 6 ranger/commando regiments, 44 corps and army field artillery battalions (4 light, 25 medium, 15 heavy), 1 multiple rocket launcher battalion, 2 Honest John battalions, 1 army aviation brigade) 25X1 Ships: 18 destroyer/frigates, 6 corvettes, 11 missile attack boats, 72 coastal patrol, 8 mine warfare, 34 amphibious ships and craft, 7 auxiliary, 140 various service crafC25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret Korea, South (continued) Aircraft: 1,177, including 466 (144 fixed wing and 322 helicopters) in army, 65 (28 prop and 37 helicopters) in naval air, and 646 (496 jet) in air force and 10 NIKE;1 SSM NIKE site Supply: assembles armored personnel carri- ers; retrofits tanks; produces rifles, mortars, howitzers, multiple rocket launchers, other crew-served weapons, small arms and artil- lery ammunition, explosives, some engineer equipment and quartermaster-type equip- ment; builds frigates, corvettes, small subma- rines, and other naval craft, including motor gunboats, missile boats, landing craft, and small auxiliary craft; assembles F-5E/F fighter/trainer aircraft, and will produce F-16 fuselage components under US license; most other materiel obtained from US F_ Economy Aid: Kuwait pledged $8.6 billion in ODA to less developed countries (1974-82) Communications Merchant marine: 75 ships (1,000 GRT or over), totaling 2,304,487 GRT, 3,517,892 DWT; includes 29 cargo, 9 container, 6 live- stock carrier, 23 petroleum, oils, and lubri- cants tanker, 2 chemical tanker, 6 liquefied gas~_~ Defense Forces Personnel: army 11,000, navy 600, air force 4,000 (70 pilots), national police force 8,000 guard battalion Major ground units: 3 brigades (1 mecha- nized infantry brigades and 2 armored bri- gade);1 Amiri Guard battalion, I frontier ters) trot boats, 6 utility landing craft equipment obtained from the USSR Supply: dependent mainly on UK, but also on Belgium, France, Italy, and FRG; on Singapore for patrol boats; on FRG for mis- sile attack boats and guided missile patrol combatants; field artillery, and air defense 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret operational; air force now is basically a rotary-wing element of the armed force 25X1 Supply: nearly all supplies purchased abroad, principally from US, France, and UK; minor amounts from USSR and Yugosla- Communications Civil air: 9 major transport aircraft Defense Forces Personnel: ground 53,000, air force 800 (pos- sibly 200 pilots , river flotilla unknown, navy 500(o st. Major ground units: 5 infantry divisions, 7 infantry regiments, 1 engineer regiment, 48 infantry, 3 artillery, 3 armor, 9 AAA battal- ions; in addition, there are believed to be elements of 4 People's Army of Vietnam (PAVN) infantry divisions, 2 combat regi- ments, 1 engineer division, and assorted PAVN logistics forces in Laos Ships: 6 coastal-river patrol craft, 4 amphibi- ous warfare craft, 6 service craft transport, 5 utility; 7 helicopters 20% of total government budget Boundary representation is not necessarily authoritative. Economy Aid: economic commitments-OPEC ODA (1974-82), $1,430 million; US, including Ex- Im (FY70-83), $246 million; other Western ODA and OOF (1970-82), $224 million; Communist countries (1970-83), $9 million; military commitments-US (FY70-83), $250 million; Communist countries (1970-83), $23 Communications Merchant marine: 113 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 417,567 GRT, 616,370 DWT; includes 80 cargo, 3 refrigerated cargo, 2 vehicle carrier, 5 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 1 container, 8 livestock, 1 petroleum, oils, and lubricants tanker, 1 chemical tanker, 1 spe- cialized tanker, 11 bulk; Lebanon is a flag of convenience registry Defense Forces Personnel: 40,000 (December 1984 Major ground units: 4 mechanized infantry brigades and 7 infantry brigades have been formed; eventually, all infantry battalions will be mechanized; each brigade consists of 3 infantry battalions, 1 artillery battalion,1 Ships: 1 medium amphibious assault landing ship (on loan from France), 14 patrol boats 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 Aircraft: 63 (22 jet, 5 prop, 36 helicopters); only about two-thirds of inventory Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December 1984, estimated at $455 million; 23% of central government budget (could be as high as $1 billion)F__~ 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret Economy Aid: economic commitments-Western (non- US) countries ODA and OOF (1970-82), $428 million; US authorized (FY70-83), $138 million; OPEC ODA (1974-82), $30 million Defense Forces Personnel: about 1,500-2,000 army, about 1,200 police; no paramilitary capability Communications Merchant marine: 1,832 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 63,331,718 GRT, 120,880,080 DWT; includes 8 passenger, 258 cargo, 33 refrigerated cargo, 29 roll- on/roll-off cargo, 51 vehicle carrier, 34 con- tainer, 3 barge carrier, 2 livestock carrier, 512 petroleum, oils, and lubricants tanker, 96 chemical, 104 combination ore/oil, 48 liquefied gas, 1 specialized tanker, 653 bulk; a flag of convenience registr~ Major ground units: 3 battalions, 1 engineer company, 1 signal company, 1 support com- Defense Forces pany 0 Personnel: army 5,851, coast guard (navy) 443, national police force 1,300 Major ground units: 1 brigade headquar- Supply: ground force equipment from UK, ters, 3 infantry battalions, I executive man- Iran, and FRGF---] sion guard battalion, 1 engineer battalion, 1 Military budget: for fiscal year ending 30 March 1985, $55.9 million; 21.6% of central government budget artillery battalion, 1 brigade armored scout unit, 1 service support battalion, 1 agricul- tural battalion, 2 border guard battalions, 1 air reconnaissance unit guard patrol boats) boats from Sweden Supply: dependent mainly on US; has re- ceived rifles from Ethiopia, small arms and ammunition from Israel, armored cars from Switzerland, trucks from Japan, materiel from the FRG and the ROK, and 3 patrol 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret Libya Economy Aid: economic commitments-Western (non- US) ODA and OOF (1970-82), $161 million; US (FY70-82), $0.5 million; military commit- ments-Communist countries (1970-83), $18.7 billion; US (FY70), $0.1 million Communications Merchant marine: 28 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 838,290 GRT, 1,504,347 DWT; includes 3 short-sea passenger, 9 cargo, 4 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 11 petroleum, oils, and lubricants tanker, 1 chemical Telecommunications: system is in top third of African systems; coaxial cable and radio relay used widely; domestic satellite net- work operational; Soviet facilities at Tobruk; principal centers are Tripoli and Benghazi; 200,000 telephones (6 per 100 popl.); 18 AM, 3 FM, 16 TV stations; 2 submarine cables to France and Sicily; satellite service from Tripoli, 3 antennas, 1 ARABSAT station un- der construction; tropospheric scatter to Greece, radio relay to Egypt and Tunisia-_ Defense Forces Personnel: army 60,000, navy 8,000, air force 10,000 (378 pilots), air defense 13,000 Ships: 6 attack submarines, 7 guided-missile patrol combatants, 25 missile attack boats, 7 amphibious landing ships Aircraft: 8 intermediate-range bombers, 382 all-weather fighters, 140 fighter bombers, 87 transports, 393 trainers, 160 helicopters, 32 ASW helicopters Missiles: 25 SA-2 battalions (177 launchers), 29 SA-3 battalions (120 launchers), 20 SA-6 battalions (160 launchers), 18 SA-8 launch- ers; 60 SA-9 launchers Supply: dependent mainly on UK and US up to 1969; UK provided a Vosper Mk. 7 frigate in 1973 (now in fifth year of overhaul); 10 French missile attack boats delivered in 1984; 4 patrol guided missile combatants delivered by Italy 1979-81; France was pri- mary supplier of aircraft and supplied the Crotale surface-to-air missile in 1973; Soviet military supply began in 1970 and acceler- ated throughout the 1970s, with substantial deliveries of tanks, armored personnel carri- ers, artillery, transport vehicles, 12 missile attack boats, 6 submarines, 2 guided missile patrol combatants, 6 fleet minesweepers, bomber and fighter aircraft, SCUD surface- to-surface missiles, and surface-to-air missile systems; Czechoslovakia and Poland have provided armored personnel carriers, artil- lery, tanks, and 4 medium landing ships; Italy has provided artillery, armored person- nel carriers and 1 vehicle cargo ship Military budget: estimated for fiscal year ending 31 December 1983, $4.3 billion; 32% of central government budget 25X1 25X1 Major ground units: 3 divisions (mecha- nized); 11 identified maneuver brigades; 4 identified artillery brigades; 2 brigade- equivalent Jamahiriya Guard units (S NF) Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Liechtenstein Luxembourg Defense Forces Defense Forces 25X1 Personnel: army 618, national gendarmerie Personnel: several Portuguese military per- 463 sonnel are assigned to nondefense positions 25X1 in the government F__~ 2bAI Major ground unit: 1 light infantry battal- ion F__~ Supply: completely dependent on other NATO countries, primarily the U Military budget: proposed for fiscal year ending 31 December 1983, $38 million; 3.5% of central government budget Ships: 8 patrol craft, under control of Water 25X1 and Customs Police 25X1 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Madagascar e` c? ra ti0 ~~ Tf7MlMtlii Indian ANTAPEAtIAFtI1I(? Economy Aid: economic commitments-Western (non- US) countries ODA and OOF (1970-82), $1.3 billion; Communist countries (1970-83), $203 million; US (FY70-83), $38 million; OPEC ODA (1974-81), $150 million; mili- tary commitments-Communist countries (1970-83), $117 million Communications Merchant marine: 16 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 66,418 GRT, 91,634 DWT; includes 10 cargo, 2 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 2 petroleum, oils, and lubricants tanker, 1 chemical tanker, 1 liquefied ga~ Defense Forces Personnel: 21,315 (11,815 are combat and support unit personnel; 9,500 are develop- ment force personnel now subordinate to the People's Armed Forces), 400 navy, 500 air force (navy and air force are combined un- der one command), 5,000 gendarmerie Major ground units: combat support units-1 communications regiment, 1 ad- ministration and personnel regiment, 1 com- bat support regiment, 1 engineer regiment, 1 presidential security regiment; major tacti- cal units-2 intervention force regiments,1 air defense regiment,1 field artillery regi- ment, 1 armored regiment; major develop- ment units-5 development force regiments, 1 engineer regiment; equipment includes light tanks, armored cars, scout zers, mortars, antitank rocket launchers Ships: 1 fast patrol craft, 1 patrol craft, 1 amphibious assault landing ship,1 miscella- neous auxiliar~ helicopters; Supply: increasingly supplied with equip- ment by Communist countries, including USSR, North Korea, and GDR; some equip- ment is also supplied by France and FRGO Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December 1984, $67.8 million; about 10.3% of central government budget 25X1 25X1 Defense Forces 25X1 Personnel: 6,000 army, 3,000 police (includ- ing 4 mobile force), est. 600 Malawi Young25X1 Pioneers, 1,500 militi~~ 25X1 Major ground units: 3 motorized infan125X1 battalions, 1 paratroop wing, 1 support bat- talion F___1 25X1 Ships: 4 patrol craft (3 limited operation, 1 out of operation) 0 25X1 France and FRG Missiles: 11 Blowpipe SAM ters Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 March 1983, $22.9 million; 6.4% of recur- rent central government budgeC_ 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 LJ/~ I 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Malaysia 11ALA LUMPUR Sulu Sea NOTE: Established on 16 September 1963, Malaysia consists of Peninsular Malaysia, which includes 11 states of the former Federation of Malaya, and East Malaysia, which includes the 2 former colonies of North Borneo (renamed Sabah) and Sar- Economy Aid: economic commitments-US, includ- ing Ex-Im (FY70-83), $170 million; Western (non-US) countries, ODA and OOF (1970-82), $1.9 billion; OPEC ODA (1974-82), $415 million; military commit- ments-US (FY70-83), $159 million Communications Merchant marine: 175 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 1,598,813 GRT, 2,299,024 DWT; includes 2 short-sea passenger, 103 cargo, 14 container, 3 vehicle carrier, 3 roll- on/roll-off off, 1 livestock carrier, 26 petro- leum, oils, and lubricants tanker, 1 chemical tanker, 5 liquefied gas,1 combination ore/oil, 16 bulk Defense Forces Personnel: army 83,000, territorial army 50,000, navy 9,000, police field force 22,000, marine police 2,800, Sarawak Border Scouts 1,300, air force 12,000 (500 pilots) Major ground units: 4 infantry divisions, 42 battalions, 4 cavalry battalions, 6 artillery battalions, 1 air defense/artillery battalion, 2 special service battalions, 11 engineer force battalions' Ships: 2 frigates, 2 corvettes, 8 missile attack boats, 29 coastal patrol, 14 auxiliary, 25 am- phibious ship/craft, 2 service craft; in addi- tion, Marine Police have approximately 100 coastal patrol craft and numerous small pa- trol vessels Supply: fast patrol boats and ammunition domestically produced; naval ships and equipment from New Zealand, Singapore, France, Australia, UK, Sweden, and US; some air force equipment from Canada, France, UK, US, and Australia; ground force equipment from Yugoslavia, Australia, France, FRG, Italy, ROK, Sweden, and UK; recently delivered equipment includes 2 guided missile corvettes from FRG; 4 mine- sweepers from Italy; armored vehicles from US, UK, and Belgium Male Atoll "Gan Laccadive Sea Economy Aid: economic commitments-OPEC ODA (1974-82), $85 million tanker, 5 bulk Communications Merchant marine: 22 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 186,125 GRT, 255,627 DWT; includes 14 cargo, 1 refrigerated cargo, 1 container, 1 petroleum, oils, and lubricants Defense Forces Branches: no formal defense structure or regular armed forces exist; National Security Service of the Maldives, a paramilitary or- ganization with an est. 1,000 members, con- sists of a marine division (coast guard), an air patrol, and some smaller units; has coastal meter boat (manned by 100 men) Ships: 3 ex-Taiwanese trawlers, armed with 1 twin 25-mm gun; 1 13.7-meter launch; 1 ex-British landing craft;,1 ex-British 19.2- 25X1 25X1' 25X1 Vihyl 25X1 9 X1 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Martinique North :4+ Atlantic Ocean Economy Aid: economic commitments-Western (non- US) countries ODA and OOF (1970-82), $1.2 billion; OPEC ODA (1974-82), $305 million; US, including Ex-Im (FY70-83), $161 mil- lion; Communist countries (1970-83), $122 million; military commitments-Commu- nist (1970-83), $163 million; US (FY70-83), $1.0 million Defense Forces Personnel: 7,500 army, 400 air force, 2,000 gendarmerie, 2,000 republican guard, 1,000 national police, 50 Soviet military advisers Major ground units: 4 infantry battalions, 1 paratroop battalion, 1 tank group, 1 engineer battalion, l special battalion,1 Sahelian battal- ion,1 mixed artillery group, 1 SA-3 battery-- Aircraft (army): 47 (including 21 fighter, 3 trainer, 7 helicopters,1 utility, 15 transport Supply: dependent on foreign countries, mainly the USSR; also has received equip- ment from France, China, FRG, Japan, and Spain( Economy Aid: economic commitments-US, includ- ing Ex-Im, $171.6 million (FY70-82); other Western bilateral ODA and OOF (1970-82), $224 million; China (1972), $45 million; OPEC ODA (1974-82), $145 million Communications Merchant marine: 157 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 1,608,274 GRT, 2,606,822 DWT; includes 1 passenger, 1 short-sea passenger, 93 cargo, 3 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 8 refrigerated. cargo,1 vehicle carrier, 5 petroleum, oils, and lubricants tanker, 1 combination ore/oil, 44 bulk; a flag of convenience registry of about 400 personnel Defense Forces Defense no longer responsibility of UK; Regu- lar Armed Forces of Malta consist of a small headquarters staff; 1 regiment (US battalion) consisting of the regimental headquarters battery, 1 maritime unit with 10 coastal pa- trol boats, 1 helicopter detachment with 8 helicopters, 1 infantry company, 1 service support unit including engineers; personnel strength is approx. 400; the paramilitary Id- Dejma consists of 1 corps of about 850 person- nel; the Arms of Malta consists of 1 battalion 1,440 Maltese Defense Forces for French military forces Personnel: 1,350 army infantry, 900 civic action, 200 navy, small air force detachment, 300 gendarmes Major ground units: 1 overseas marine in- fantry regiment, 1 command and su ort battallion, and 1 training regiment Ships: 2 patrol craft, 2 amphibious ships, 2 amphibious craft, 1 repair ship, 1 tug 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 Aircraft: 1 maritime patrol aircraft operated by French Navy, 1 air force 9 army helicop- ters 25X1 LJ/~ I 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 North Atlantic Ocean Economy Economy Aid: economic commitments-OPEC ODA Aid: economic commitments-OPEC ODA (1974-82), $1.6 billion; Western (non-US) (1974-82), $25 million, Western (non-US) countries OOF tr9701 countries (1970-82), $288 million; Commu- $100 million; ; Communist ODA mmummu US and including countries Ex-Im (FY70- nist countries (1970-83), $40.2 million; US , 83088 million; military commitments- authorizations (FY70-83), $39 million Communist countries (1976), $4 million ommunications Communications Merchant marine: 1 refrigerated cargo ship Defense Forces Personnel: 8,300 army, 320 navy, 150 air force, 2,200 gendarmerie, 3,000 national guard, 1,700 national police Major ground units: 1 headquarters com- pany, 1 infantry battalion, 1 paratroop bat- talion, 1 engineer company, 1 artillery bat- talion, 2 armored car squadrons, 29 tactical units (company), 1 commando company, 1 air defense battery Ships: 9 patrol craft, 1 landing craft Aircraft: 16 prop (8 transport, 8 utility Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December 1983, $39.4 million; about 17% of central government budget Merchant marine: 4 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 33,164 GRT, 51,146 DWT; includes 3 cargo, 1 bulk Defense Forces Personnel: 700-man paramilitary Special Mobile Force (SMF), 240-man Police Riot Unit (PRU), 4,000-man police force (includes personnel assigned to PRU); SMF is well organized and capable of providing security during small-scale uprisings; the PRU and the police force are capable of as- sisting the SMF; major equipment of the SMF includes small arms, 2 81-mm mortars, 2 Alouette III helicopters, 11 personnel Communications Merchant marine: 84 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 1,310,202 GRT, 2,049,522 DWT; includes 6 short-sea passenger, 17 cargo, 3 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 1 refrigerated cargo, 37 petroleum, oils, and lubricants tanker, 2 chemical tanker, 7 liquefied gas, 2 combination ore/oil, 9 bulk Defense Forces Personnel: 105,000 army, 31,000 navy (in- cluding 9,500 marines, 500 naval air), 7,000 air force (including 450 pilots) Major ground units: 4 brigades (1 presiden- tial guard, 2 infantry, 1 military police), 70 separate infantry battalions, 2 cavalry regi- ments (horse), 21 motorized cavalry regi- ments,1 mechanized cavalry regiment, 3 armored cavalry regiments, 5 artillery regi- ments,1 armored infantry regiment, 1 engi- neer service brigade, 1 combat engineer bat- talion,1 signal battalion, 2 transport battal- ions; regiments are comparable in size to battalions; air force has 1 airborne brigade,1 Ships: 4 destroyers, 6 corvettes, 34 patrol ships, 31 patrol craft, 14 patrol boats, 5 am- phibious warfare personnel transport, 2 am- phibious vehicle landing ships, 13 support ships and other auxiliaries, 33 coastal patrol/ roadstead craft Aircraft: air force 283 (37 jet, 76 turboprop, 146 prop, 23 turbine helicopters, 1 piston 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 `);vi 25X1 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 helicopter); naval air 56 (3 intermediate- range/short-range transports, 20 trainers, 23 utility, 10 utility helicopters Supply: produces small arms, mortars, am- munition, explosives, and quartermaster equipment, as well as its own armored cars-the DN III, DN IV, and DNV; some medical supplies and general purpose motor transport vehicles are procured from domes- tic sources; a small naval ship production capability exists; produces patrol boats; im- ports other materiel, including most naval ships, from US, Western Europe, Israel, Mongolia Communications Civil air: 22 major transport aircraft (1984) Spain, and Japan 3,268 GRT, 4,959 DWT Communications Merchant marine: 1 tanker ship totaling Public Force, domestic Intelligence and Security Directorate of Public Security, domestic; 25X1 25X1 Airfields: 34 total; 10 with permanent- surface runways; 17 with runways 2,500- 3,499 m, 13 with runways 1,000-2,499 m, 4 25X1 with runways less than 1,000 m; 1 heliport Telecommunications: domestic and interna- tional facilities are being modernized and provide fairly good service; 25,805 telephones (96% automatic); about 93 tele- phone exchanges and 25 telegraph offices; 2 main AM radiobroadcast stations supple- mented by about 294 wired broadcast distri- bution stations; 111,000 radio and 67,000 wired broadcast receivers; 3 TV stations; 20,000 TV receivers (est.) 25X1 6,500 air force personnel in Mongoli~ Defense Forces Personnel: (est.) 23,000 ground forces, 1oc25X1 pilots in air force (operate civil airline), 15,700 paramilitary forces; as of 1 January 1985, 60,000 Soviet ground forces troops and bat and service support units Major ground units: 4 identified motorized rifle divisions, 1 artillery brigade, 1 AAA regiment,1 rocket launcher regiment, com- 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret Economy Aid: economic commitments-Western (non-US) countries ODA and OOF (1970-82), $2.8 billion; US, including Ex-Im (FY70-83), $736 million; OPEC ODA (1974-82), $2.6 billion; Communist countries (1970-83), $2.25 billion; military commit- ments-US (FY70-83), $404 million; Com- munist countries (1970-83), $130 million[_ Communications Merchant marine: 49 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 376,014 GRT, 615,278 DWT; includes 1 short-sea passenger, 7 cargo, 2 container, 13 refrigerated, 3 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 4 petroleum, oils, and lubricants tanker, 13 chemical tanker, 6 bulk Defense Forces Personnel: 160,000 army, 7,000 navy, 13,500 air force (270 pilots), 29,000 auxiliary forces, 8,800 royal gendarmerie, 5,800 mo- bile intervention companies of national po- Major ground units: 3 mechanized infantry brigades,1 light security brigade, 1 para- chute brigade, 8 mechanized infantry regi- ments, 24 separate infantry battalions, 7 ar- mored battalions, 10 artillery battalion Ships: 1 Exocet-missile-equipped frigate, 1 submarine chaser, 2 patrol escorts, 2 patrol craft, 4 missile attack boats, 11 patrol boats, 1 coastal minesweeper, 3 medium landing ships, 2 service craft,1 utility landing craft Aircraft: 72 fighter aircraft, 23 transports, 43 trainers/utility, 7 reconnaissance, 118 heli- copters (all services) Supply: dependent entirely on foreign sup- plies, principally France and US, but also obtains some equipment from Warsaw Pact countries; 4 guided missile patrol combat- ants and 1 corvette received from Spain; with French assistance, has begun develop- ment of a trainer aircraft Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December 1984, $769 million; 15.2% of cen- tral government budget Mozambique Mozambique Channel 25X1 Economy Exports: $387 million (c.i.f., 1982); cashew 25X1 nuts, cotton, sugar, mineral products, timber products, tea, copraF__~ 25X1 Imports: $706 million (f.o.b., 1982); machin- ery and electrical equipment, cotton textiles, vehicles, petroleum products, iron and steel 25X1 25X1 Aid: economic commitments-Western (non- US) countries ODA and OOF (1970-82), $1.2 billion; Communist countries (1970-83), $421 million; US, including Ex-Im (FY70- 83), $108 million; OPEC ODA (1974-82), $90 million; military commitments-Com- munist countries (1970-83), $848 million=25X1 Guard, 700 navy, 1,000 air force Defense Forces Personnel: 25,000 army, 7,000 Border Communications Merchant marine: 9 ships totaling 21,902 GRT, 33,520 DWT; includes 8 cargo, 1 pe- troleum, oils, and lubricants tankerF 4 infantry brigades Major ground units: the army has 8 motor- ized infantry brigades,1 counterinsurgency brigade, and 1 armored brigade that serves as a presidential guard; the border guard has 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 Ships: 15 units, including 10 coastal patrol craf 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Namibia Nauru (South-West Africa) er~ 25X1 25X1 Communications Merchant marine: 6 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 65,053 GRT, 92,302 DWT; includes 1 passenger cargo, 2 cargo, 3 bulk 25X1 -2% since 1980 Economy GDP: approximately $1.5 billion (est. 1983), $1,500 per capita; real growth rate about chard products, rock lobster, white fish) cattle and karakul pelts, fish products (pil- Exports: $1.0 billion (f.o.b., 1980 est.); dia- monds, uranium, base metals (blister copper, lead-copper-zinc concentrates, refined lead), lizer, cement, textiles, capital goods Imports: $766 million (f.o.b., 1980 est.); grain and other food products, steel, ferti- Major trade partners: Republic of South Africa supplies about 90% of country's im- ports; most of the rest of Namibia's trade is Defense Forces Personnel: about 18,000 total active duty com- posed of 7,000 South African Defense Force (SADF) personnel in Namibia, 11,000 person- nel in the South-West Africa Territorial Force (SWATF), about 2,000 personnel in an irregu- lar battalion of ex-Angolans, about 2,500 per- sonnel in a reserve infantry brigade (3 battal- ions); SWATF is composed of white, black, and colored personnel; it was formed in 1980 and consists of 10 infantry battalions and a support unit; the air force consists of a liaison/commu- nication aircraft squadron; there are also be- tween 5,000 and 7,000 S W ATF reservists; rebel forces (South-West Africa People's Organiza- tion) number between 6,000 and 8,000 guerril- las, mainly at camps in Angola (fighters are in Angola and families are in Zambia and Angola) 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Nepal Economy Aid: economic commitments-Communist countries (1970-83), $239 million; OPEC ODA (1974-82), $55 million; US (FY70-83), $187 million; other Western countries (1980-82), $822 million; military commit- ments-Communist (1970-83), $8 million F Defense Forces Personnel: 25,000 army Major ground units: 14 infantry battalions (subordinate to 1 palace and 7 infantry bri- gade headquarters elements), 1 parachute battalion, 1 artillery battalion, 1 engineer battalion, the King's Household Cavalry, and other service elements; the army also includes 28 separate infantry companies Supply: produces some small arms ammuni- tion; performs small arms repair; bulk of military supplies obtained from UK and France; lesser amounts from India, US, China, and FRG Merchant marine: 424 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 3,797,058 GRT, 5,889,092 DWT; includes 1 passenger, 3 short-sea passenger, 250 cargo, 42 refrigerated cargo, 27 container, 10 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 2 livestock carrier, 1 multifunction heavy lift, 23 petroleum, oils, and lubri- cants tanker, 23 chemical tanker, 6 lique- fied gas, 1 specialized tanker, 35 bulk F_ Defense Forces Personnel: 72,400 army, 16,900 navy (in- cluding 1,290 naval air, 2,900 marines), 17,879 air force (497 pilots), 3,975 royal con- stabulary Major ground units: 1 NATO-committed corps consisting of 2 active mechanized divi- sions,1 reserve mechanized division, 1 re- serve motorized infantry brigade, l corps artillery group with a Lance battalion, 1 SP 155-mm howitzer battalion, a 175-mm gun battalion, 1 SP 203-mm howitzer battalion (1 reserve field artillery group with 6 155-mm corps command) towed howitzer battalions, 2 203-mm towed howitzer battalions, 1 combat engineer group, 1 aviation group, 1 signal group, 1 warfare ships/craft, 5 auxiliaries Ships: 2 guided missile destroyers, 6 subma- rines, 16 frigates, 9 patrol vessels, 18 mine turboprop, 22 helicopters) Aircraft: 329 (178 jet, 32 turboprop, 119 hel- icopters); 289 air force (178 jet, 14 turbo- prop, 97 helicopters); 40 naval air arm (18 I-HAWK squadrons Supply: naval ships produced domestically include guided missile frigates, submarines, and mine warfare types; has built guided missile frigates, submarines, corvettes for export, 2 transport-type aircraft; produces US F-16 fighters as part of a European con- sortium; moderate quantities of ammuni- tion, some CW/BW defense materiel, and military telecom and electronics equipment; most supplies from other NATO countries; naval surface-to-air missiles and surface-to- surface missiles from the US, torpedoes from the UK and the US Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December 1983, about $4.0 billion; 7.9% of central government budget 25X1 25X1 25X1 L0A] 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 secret Netherlands Antilles New Caledonia c) South Pacific Ocean hristchurch South Island LLINGTON Communications Merchant marine: 38 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 702,874 GRT, 1,112,693 DWT; includes 3 passenger, 1 short-sea pas- senger, 14 cargo, l container, 1 roll-on/roll- off cargo, 4 multifunction heavy lift, l refrig- erated cargo, 1 cargo carrier, 7 petroleum, oils, and lubricants tanker, 2 chemical tanker, 2 liquefied gas, l bulk; all but a few are Dutch owned Defense Forces Local security forces: 675 civil police (in- cluding 40 Dutch under contract in adviser and warrant officer duties); 200 Antilles ma- rines; 200 National Guard (force is a reserve unit Personnel: Dutch forces-1,600 navy, 400 marines with 200 Antillean conscripts (600 total); local civil police force cooperates with Dutch forces) Ships: 1 frigate and 1 medium landing craft from the Netherlands inventory South Pacific Ocean Q Ile des Pins Defense Forces France provides for defense; there are about 3,000 military personnel in New Caledonia with 3,000 paramilitary forces (gendarmes and police agents); a Gendarmerie division is stationed in New Caledonia; officers of this force are recruited in France; there is also an auxiliary Gendarmerie of Melanesians; the police force, as distinct from the Gendar- merie, is locally recruited and operates in Noumea under a French officer Major ground units: 1 infantry regiment (3 motorized infantry companies 1 airborne company on rotation from France) Ships: 2 patrol combatants, 1 amphibious ship, 3 hydrographic survey ships home- ported at Noumea Aircraft: 2 French air force utility fixed- wing aircraft, 5 helicopters New Zealand Chatham Bi Islands Communications Merchant marine: 25 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 223,562 GRT, 268,670 DWT; includes 2 short-sea passenger, 5 cargo, 4 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 1 railcar carrier, 3 pe- troleum, oils, and lubricants tanker, 1 lique- fied gas, 9 bulk 25X1 Defense Forces Personnel: 5,675 army, 2,781 navy, 4,220 air forceF__~ 25X1 Major ground units: 2 infantry regiments 25X1 (battalion), including 1 in Singapore, 1 spe- cial air service squadron (remainder of army essentially a cadre force) Ships: 4 frigates, 9 coastal patrol, 4 auxiliai25X1 Supply: capable of producing some small 25X1 arms ammunition; produces some utility aircraft; dependent on foreign sources for other materiel, principally UK, US, FRG,25X1 Australia (also Canada for naval items)L125X1 25X1 25X1 Islands not shown in true geographical position Sint Maarten i Philipsburg Saba Sint Eustatiu Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 aecrei Nicaragua Niger ar1Mo MANff' North Pacific Ocean Communications Merchant marine: 3 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 13,215 GRT, 18,661 DWT; includes 1 cargo, 1 roll-on/roll-off cargo,1 petroleum, oils, and lubricant tanker Defense Forces Personnel: est. 35,000 (includes Sandinista Popular Army, Border Guard troops, navy, air force, and Ministry of Interior troops) Major ground units: 10 infantry battalions, at least 10 counterinsurgency battalions, 1 armor brigade (6 battalions), 1 artillery bri- gade (8 battalions), assorted logistics units, 6 Border Guard battalions, 60-80 reserve in- fantry battalions, 90-100 militia battalions; air force controls 1 Air Defense Group Ships: at least 17 patrol craft plus an unknown number of armed fishing craO Aircraft: 66 (3 jet, 43 mixed prop and turbo- prop, 20 helicopters Supply: dependent primarily upon Cuba, Bulgaria, and the USSR since 1979; has pur- chased aircraft and patrol boats from France and has obtained 4 patrol boats from the Military budget: estimated for fiscal year ending 31 December 1985, $1.1 billion; 40% of central government budget (includes both defense and security expenditures Economy Aid: economic commitments-Western (non- US) countries ODA and OOF (1970-82), $1.6 billion; US, including Ex-Im (FY70-83), $168 million; Communist countries (1970-83), $55 million; OPEC ODA (1974-81),$45 million; military commitments-US (FY81-83), $7.3 Defense Forces Personnel: 3,500 army, 100 air force, 900 gen- darmerie, 1,600 Republican Guard, 1,000 na- tional police, 200 Presidential Guard 25X1 25X1 LOA I Major ground units: 3 defense zones with 1 small battalion in each for a total of 1 head- quarters company, 1 airborne company, 2 armored reconnaissance squadrons, 1 engi- neer company, 6 Saharan motorized infan- 25X1 try companies Aircraft: 9 (8 transport, 1 utility) Supply: dependent on France exclusively until 1964; since then has obtained ground force materiel from other non-Communist countries, including Belgium, Israel, FRG, Military budget: for fiscal year ending 30 September 1984; $10.7 million, about 5.6% of central government budget 25X1 11 C ,1 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret Nigeria Economy Aid: economic commitments-Western (non- US) countries ODA and OOF (1970-82), $1.2 billion; US, including Ex-Im (FY70-82), $540 million; Communist countries, (1970-83), $1.6 billion; military commitments-Com- munist countries (1970-83), $227 million Communications Merchant marine: 25 cargo ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 392,091 GRT, 566,226 DWT; includes 21 cargo, 3 petroleum, oils, and lubricants tanker, 1 chemical tanker Defense Forces Personnel: army 110,000, navy 6,000, air force 11,000, police force 93,000; military advisers-40 UK, 25 Pakistani, 34 Indian, 10 Soviet Major ground units: 3 mechanized divi- sions, l armored division, 1 artillery (5 mech- anized, 4 armored, 3 artillery, 1 infantry, l airborne, 1 air portable, l amphibious, l air defense brigade), 12 division combat support units (battalion size-4 field engineer, 4 sig- nal, 4 maintenance), 16 division service units (battalion size-4 medical, 4 provost mar- shal, 4 supply and transport, 4 ordnance/ammunition depots Ships: 39 total (1 frigate, 1 guided missile frigate, 6 guided missile patrol combatants, 3 patrol combatants, l amphibious landing craft, 1 hydrographic survey craft, 1 tug, 25 patrol boats 45 helicopters) Aircraft: 147 (47 jet, 12 turboprop, 43 prop, UK and France more recently Supply: produced some small arms and am- munition in the past; army materiel obtained from France, FRG, Austria, Bel- gium, Italy, and UK; other materiel imported primarily from UK, USSR, and FRG; dependent for ships on UK, FRG, and France; received aircraft from Czechoslova- kia, Sudan, Egypt, and USSR in the past and Norway Communications Merchant marine: 488 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 15,403,259 GRT, 26,912,396 DWT; includes 14 passenger, 24 short-sea passenger, 58 cargo, 8 refrigerated cargo, 2 container, 33 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 12 vehi- cle carrier, 6 multifunction heavy lift, 92 petroleum, oils, and lubricants tanker, 6125X1 chemical tanker, 55 liquefied gas, 37 com25X1 nation ore/oil, 86 bulk Defense Forces Personnel: 17,900 army; 7,600 navy, includ- ing coast artillery and coast guard, 9,950,6 by I force (235 pilots); 90,000 Home Guard E:25X1 25X1 Major ground units: 1 active brigade, 1 ac- tive infantry battalion, 13 mobilization bri- gades) 25X1 Ships: (including Coast Guard assets) 8 frig- ates, 14 submarines, 2 patrol combatants, 4 patrol ships, 39 missile attack boats, 8 tor- pedo boats, 3 minelayers, 9 coastal minesweepers, 1 coastal minehunter, 8 auxil- iaries, 7 amphibious craft 5X1 Aircraft: 271 (176 jet)I 25X1 Missiles: 1 NIKE battalion (4 batteries), `25X1 70 (36 launchers); 6 additional batteries t., begin deployment in 1985F__1 25X1 Supply: ammunition and explosives, some light armaments, electronic equipment, Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 secret Norway (continued) chemical warfare defensive materials, air- craft, avionics, engine parts, and naval ships (except submarines) produced domestically; has exported missile attack boats; producing small antiship missile, Penguin; most equip- ment from other NATO countries, Sweden, Boundary repre entation is not necessarily authoritahre lion; US (FY70-83), $39 million Economy Aid: economic commitments-OPEC ODA (1974-82), $1.6 billion; Western (non-US) countries ODA and OOF (1970-82), $33 mil- Communications Merchant marine: 1 roll-on/roll-off cargo ship totaling 1,500 GRT, unknown DWTP Major ground units: 2 infantry brigades, 1 royal guard brigade, 1 special forces unit, 1 artillery regiment, 1 armored regiment,1 air force (350 officers, 40 pilots) Defense Forces Personnel: 21,000 army, 1,500 navy, 2,200 iaries, 1 amphibious landing ship Ships: 1 guided missile boat, 3 guided missile patrol combatants, 25 patrol boats/craft, 6 medium landing craft, 1 personnel landing craft,1 command amphibious ship, 7 auxil- Aircraft: 115 (54 jet, 9 prop, 18 turboprop, 34 helicopters Supply: mostly from UK; some ground equipment and aircraft from China, Bel- gium, France, Italy, Iran, Jordan, and Saudi Boundary rep- entaboo is not nece sarily aulhordatrve Economy Aid (including Bangladesh before 1972): economic commitments-US (FY70-83), $3.2 billion authorized (excluding what is now Bangladesh); other Western countries ODA and OOF (1980-82), $4.6 billion; OPEC ODA (1970-82), $2.5 billion commit- ted; Communist countries (1970-83), $1.6 billion; military commitments-US (FY70- 83), $264 million; Communist countries (1970-83), $908 million Communications Merchant marine: 47 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 495,250 GRT, 721,948 DWT; includes 5 passenger cargo, 41 cargo, 1 petro- leum, oils, and lubricants tanker Defense Forces Personnel: 450,000 army, 13,000 navy, about 25,000 air force (600 pilots), 76,000 Major ground units: 7 corps headquarters, 17 infantry divisions, 2 armored divisions, 11 independent infantry brigade groups, 7 corps artillery brigades, 4 independent ar- mored brigade groups, 3 AAA brigades, 8 SAM squadrons, and 1 special services group, plus an army air arm Ships: 1 nonoperational training cruiser, 8 destroyers, 6 submarines, 5 midget subma- rines, 22 coastal patrol, 3 mine warfare, 3 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 auxiliary, guided missile patrol boat or'y Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret Aircraft: 520 (476 jet, t5 turboprop, 21 prop, 8 helicopters) operationally assigned to air force; 10 helicopters,1 turboprop aircraft, 3 long-range maritime patrol aircraft assigned to navy air Supply: produces infantry weapons, mor- tars, small arms, ammunition and aerial bombs and has limited capability to repair its armor inventory; has produced support ships and produces training aircraft under license; US and Western Europe were princi- pal suppliers until arms embargo in Septem- ber 1965; since then, China and France have become major sources; US reinitiated arms deliveries between March 1975 and April 1979 and provided armored personnel carri- ers and TOW missile systems, but all US mil- itary sales were then suspended in response to Pakistan's continued nuclear weapons development program; infantry weapons, tanks, and artillery provided by China; artil- lery and ammunition by North Korea; tank maintenance service from Iran; aircraft by China, France, Italy, Sweden, FRG, and US; helicopters provided by USSR, US, UK, and France; transport vehicles supplied by China, USSR, US, Czechoslovakia, and Ja- pan; France has provided 6 submarines, 88 Mirage fighters, and Exocet missiles; China has supplied over 400 jet fighters and train- ers, 8 guided missile patrol boats, 12 Shanghai-11-class patrol boats, 4 Hainan- class subchasers, 4 Hu-Chwan-class torpedo boats; other naval ships have come from Italy, UK, and U~ PANAMA, Communications Merchant marine: 3,409 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 38,747,299 GRT, 63,577,872 DWT; includes 25 passenger, 17 short-sea passenger, 8 passenger cargo, 1,565 cargo, 125 refrigerated cargo, 137 container, 61 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 85 vehicle carrier, 8 livestock carrier, 2 multifunction heavy lift, 333 petroleum, oils, and lubricants tanker, 87 chemical tanker, 33 combination ore/oil, 72 liquefied gas, 6 specialized tanker, 845 bulk; all foreign owned and operated; 133 ships are owned by China, 10 by Vietnam, 5 by Yugoslavia, and 17 by Cuba basic training as infantry riflemen Defense Forces Personnel: (approx.) 12,000 uniformed (civil- ian detectives, immigration officials, and administrative support personnel account for an additional estimated 2,000), including about 3,000 National Guard military ground forces; 8,350 police and highway patrol/ traffic police; 250 National Navy; 400 Pana- manian Air Force; most personnel, including police, air force, and navy, have received Major ground units: infantry trained and equipped units are an embryonic 400-man combined weapons battalion; 7 rifle compa- nies, 2 military police companies, 5 rifle pla- toons, 1 public order company, 1 Presiden- tial Guard company, I horse cavalry troop, 1 antiterrorist /SWAT element; remainder primarily police; forces are deployed in 11 geographic administrative zones; bulk of forces concentrated in Panama City area; remainder of forces assigned to units scat- tered throughout the country; effective 30 September 1983 all military/police/internal security forces were consolidated-at least on paper-into a new organization known 25X1 the Defense Forces of the Republic of Pan ama; includes the military ground forces- National Guard (which previously combined all police/military/internal security func- tions), National Navy, Panamanian Air Force, Panama Canal Defense Force, Na- tional Department of Investigations, and Department of Immigration Ships: 6 patrol boats, 5 amphibious warfare craft,1 service/utility craft0 25X1 Aircraft: 53 (19 transport, 9 utility, and 25 helicopters)0 25X1 Supply: principally dependent on US but has acquired infantry weapons and ammunition from Western Europe, Israel, and Taiwan; light transport aircraft from Canada, UK, and Spain; 2 motor gunboats from UK; a medium lift turbine helicopter from France (projected delivery early 1985) 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret Papua New Guinea Defense Forces Personnel: Papua New Guinea Defense Forces (PNGDF), consists of a land element (3,050 personnel with 2 infantry battalions, 1 engineer battalion, 2 signal squadron), a maritime element (414 personnel), and an air element (82 personnel); the PNGDF has 5 patrol craft, 2 amphibious craft, 7 C-47 transports, approximately 5 Nomad N-22 utility aircraft; additionally, there are 250 Australian personnel integrated into the PN- Ships: 5 coastal patrol-river/roadstead craft, Paraguay Boundary representation ~s not necessarily authoritative Communications Merchant marine: 20 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 29,322 GRT, 39,366 DWT; includes 17 cargo, 3 petroleum, oils, and lu- Defense Forces Personnel: 12,500 army, 2,540 navy (includ- ing 55 in naval air, 346 in marines), 1,067 air Major ground units: 3 corps (comprising 8 infantry divisions, 1 cavalry division), 1 pres- idential escort regiment, 1 combat support command,1 logistics command, 1 military copters) Aircraft: 127 total; 112 air force (9 jet, 3 tur- boprop, 89 prop, 11 helicopters, plus 28 non- flyable); 15 navy (9 prop, 6 helicopters; plus 2 nonflyable fixed wing and 2 nonflyable heli- bor tugs, 1 floating workshop barge Ships: 2 patrol combatants, 13 patrol craft,1 amphibious command ship, 2 utility landing craft, 3 materiel support ships, 5 light cargo ships, 1 small floating dry dock, 4 small har- Japan, and Belgium) for all materiel Supply: dependent on foreign sources (pri- marily US, Brazil, Argentina, South Africa, 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Decrer South Pacific Ocean Boundary re pre sonlatwn is not necessarily authoritative Economy Aid: economic commitments-US, includ- ing Ex-Im (1970-83), $1,160 million; other Western countries ODA and OOF (1970-82), $2.4 billion; Communist countries (1970-83), $565 million; military commitments-US (FY70-83), $104 million; Communist (1970-83), $1.6 billion Communications Merchant marine: 48 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 540,401 GRT, 850,838 DWT; includes 33 cargo,1 refrigerated cargo, 3 petroleum, oils, and lubricants tanker,1 chemical tanker, 10 bulk; additionally, 5 naval tankers are sometimes used commer- cially Defense Forces Personnel: 75,000-90,000 army, 21,500 navy (including 120 naval air officers, 4,000 ma- rines), 40,000 air force (including 580 pilots), 42,000 Civil Guard (400 coast guard plus 400 civilians), 4,500 Republican Guard (plus 65 civilians) Major ground units: 15 combat divisions (8 infantry,1 airborne, 4 armored, 1 jungle, 1 cavalry), 1 division-size detachment, 7 groups (2 infantry,1 air defense artillery, 1 surface-to-air missile, 2 artillery,1 engineer), 3 separate regiments (1 horse cavalry, 2 ar- mored cavalry), 13 separate combat and combat support battalions (5 motorized in- fantry, 2 artillery,1 air defense artillery, 2 combat engineer, 3 construction engineer) guard patrol vessels) Ships: 2 light cruisers, 10 destroyers, 3 frig- ates, 12 submarines, 6 patrol combatants, 2 inshore minesweepers, 3 amphibious war- fare ships and craft (4 additional amphibious vehicle landing ships will be added in early 1985), 5 patrol boats, 6 oilers, 8 other auxilia- ries, 13 service craft (not including 20 coast copters) in army Aircraft: 375 (156 jet), including 33 (13 tur- boprop, 8 prop, 12 helicopters) in naval air, 310 (156 jet, 49 turboprop, 35 prop, 70 heli- copters) in air force, and 32 (1 prop, 31 heli- Supply: produces some small arms ammuni- tion and hand grenades; built 1 guided mis- sile frigate with Italian assistance; second unit is under construction; army materiel is supplied by Western Europe and the US; USSR has supplied tanks and helicopters since 1973 and engineer equipment, mili- tary trucks, artillery, and guided missiles since 1975; aircraft and ships from France and UK represent three-fourths of the total value of non-US imports since 1953; ships also furnished by US, Netherlands, Italy, and FRG; fighter aircraft from USSR plus license to produce spare parts for SU-22 Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December 1984, $1,134.0 million; about 25.4% of central government budge Philippines Economy Aid: economic commitments-US, includ- ing Ex-Im (FY70-83), $1.9 billion; Western (non-US) ODA and OOF (1970-82),$3.3 bil- lion; Communist (1975-83), $107 million; OPEC ODA (1974-82), $35,million; military commitments-US (FY70-83), $587 million Communications Merchant marine: 366 ships (1,000 GRT 25X1 over) totaling 3,766,605 GRT, 6,162,710 DWT; includes 1 passenger, 9 short-sea pas- senger, 20 passenger cargo, 145 cargo, 19 refrigerated cargo, 11 vehicle carrier, 51'25X1 stock carrier, 4 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 3 con- tainer, 38 petroleum, oils, and lubricants- -11 1 tanker, 2 chemical tanker, 2liguefied ga:, combination ore/oil, 100 bulk Defense Forces Personnel: 70,000 army, 28,000 navy (in- cluding 9,200 marines and 3,000 coast guard), 16,400 air force, 40,000 constabulary 25X1 Major ground units: 5 infantry divisions, 2 engineer brigades, 4 artillery regiments, 1 light armor regiment, 1 scout ranger regi- ment, 3 marine brigade 25X1 Ships: 7 frigates, 3 patrol combatants, 105 coastal patrol-river/roadstead patrol, 36 amphibious, 17 support/auxiliaries, 19 yard and service craft0 25X1 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Philippines (continued) Aircraft: approximately 270 (42 jet) in air force, 6 (nonjet) in navy air group countries, $1.8 billion (1954-83) Boundaryy rep,e emano,, is of -m-,Y aotnorirabve Economy Aid: Western countries est. $20 billion (short-, medium-, and long-term debt, end of 1979); Polish bilateral economic aid commit- ments to non-Communist less developed tanker, 95 bulk Communications Merchant marine: 263 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 2,896,072 GRT, 4,145,273 DWT; includes 1 passenger, 4 short-sea pas- senger, 2 passenger cargo, 137 cargo, 6 con- tainer, 9 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 5 petroleum, oils, and lubricants tanker, 4 chemical Civil air: 39 major transport aircraft ways less than 1,000 m; 4 heliport Airfields: 162 total; 89 with permanent- surface runways; 2 with runways 3,500 m or over, 34 with runways 2,500-3,499 m, 93 with runways 1,000-2,499 m, 33 with run- telephones (86.1 % automatic) Telecommunications: adequate for govern- ment needs but only limited service is availa- ble to the public; international facilities are adequate; modern radio and TV network is used effectively to educate and entertain the public; 31 AM and 29 FM broadcast stations, 8,500,000 receivers; 32 TV stations and 61 TV transmitters; 7,200,000 TV receivers; Supply: produces infantry weapons, armored personnel carriers, tanks, ammuni- tion, electronic equipment including radar, Defense Forces Military manpower: males 15-49, 9,276,000; 7,355,000 fit for military service; 287,000 reach military age (19) annually Personnel: 232,000 (est.) ground forces; So- viet forces (NGF) in Poland as of 1 January 1978, 57,500 (43,500 ground, 14,000 air); in addition, there are 9,000-12,000 Internal Defense Forces (WOW); 28,000 Territorial Defense Forces (OT); 30,000 engineer con- struction units (JIB); 21,500 Border Guards (WOP), which are nominally part of the ground forces; 19,100 naval forces; 43,500 air forces; 47,700 national air defense forces; 21,500 paramilitary forces; personnel in re- serve (not on active duty)-2,000,000 (est.) ground forces, 31,000 naval forces, 12,500 Major ground units: 15 divisions (8 mecha- nized, 5 armored, 1 airborne, 1 sea landing), 8 brigades (4 SCUD tactical missile, 3 artil- lery, 1 SA-4), 13 regiments (3 antitank, I ar- tillery, 7 SA-6, and 2 SA-8) Ships: 3 submarines, 1 principal surface combatant, 3 patrol combatants, 23 amphib- ious warfare ships, 23 mine warfare ships, 54 coastal patrol/river roadstead craft, 18 am- phibious warfare craft, 30 mine warfare craft, 3 underway replenishment ships, 7 fleet support ships, 11 other auxiliariesF Aircraft: 1,196 operational, including 71 in naval air (36 attack, 21 reconnaissance, 14 helicopters), 1,125 in air and air defense forces (303 air defense fighters, 108 counter air fighters, 226 ground attack fighters, 53 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 reconnaissance, 135 transports, 300 helicop- ters-224 helicopters in ground force avia- 25X1 tion)F__~ 25X1 Missiles: 35 operational SA-2 SAM sites (210 launchers); 16 operational SA-3 sites (64 four- rail type launchers); 7 regiments of the SA-6 tactical missile system, 21 SA-8 regiments, 1 SA-4 brigade are deployed with the Polish ground forces; SA-9 and SA-7 tactical sys- tems are also deployed on a limited scale F_7 5X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 .,cc1ci Portugal trucks, chemical and biological defensive materiel, and small quantities of chemical warfare agents; builds small combatants and naval auxiliary ships for the Polish navy and coast guard and is a major supplier of am- phibious warfare ships and naval auxiliaries for USSR; an indigenous principal combat- ant program began in 1984 (navy); also produces helicopters, jet trainers, small transport utility aircraft, and tactical and surface-to-air antitank missiles; other equip- ment primarily from USSR Communications Merchant marine: 66 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 1,266,553 GRT, 2,254,206 DWT; includes 1 passenger, 1 short-sea pas- senger, 35 cargo, 2 refrigerated cargo, 2 con- tainer, 17 petroleum, oils, and lubricants tanker, l chemical tanker, l liquefied gas, 6 bulk Defense Forces Personnel: (est.) 44,600 army, 12,500 navy (including 2,500 marines), 9,000 air force (400 pilots, 1,200 paratroops); 14,100 Na- tional Republican Guard, 6,160 Fiscal Guard, 14,600 Public Security Police Major ground units: metropolitan army has 1 mixed infantry brigade, 24 regiments (14 infantry, 2 cavalry, 4 artillery, 1 armored, 2 engineer, and 1 signal; Azores and Madeira Islands have total of 3 infantry regiments; changes in organization are continuing; cur- rent plans call for formation of a second bri- gade using existing units Ships: 3 submarines, 17 frigates/corvettes, 13 minor amphibious, 5 auxiliaries, 18 patrol craft, 1 service craft0 Supply: produces transport vehicles, small arms, mortars, ammunition, aerial bombs, military telecom and electronics equipment, and incendiary, smoke, and tear agent muni- tions; also produces naval ships up to frigate size; made wheeled armored personnel carriers in the past, other military equip- ment imported from other NATO countries; navy ships, weapons, and equipment from 25X1 US, FRG, UK, Canada, Italy, France, Rrazi., Austria, South Africa, Spain 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 aecre( Qatar Boundary representat,on s not necessanIy aut hon tat i Ye Economy Aid: Qatar pledged $1.6 billion in ODA to less developed countries (1974-82 Communications Merchant marine: 19 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 342,514 CRT, 517,030 DWT; includes 12 cargo, 3 container,1 livestock carrier, 3 petroleum, oils, and lubricants Defense Forces Qatar Public Security Forces comprise a 4,000-man army, a 2,500-man police force, a 300-man air force, and a 700-man sea arm; equipment includes 140 armored cars, 24 tanks, 87 armored personnel carriers, 6 155- mm howitzers, 12 Rapier SAM launchers, 3 guided missile patrol boats, 40 patrol boats/craft, 1 utility landing craft, 1 auxil- iary craft, 12 Mirage F-1C fighters, 8 Alpha jets, 12 helicopters, I transport Defense Forces Reunion has no security forces; security for the island is maintained by French forces; about 1,800 military personnel are stationed on the island, including an 800-man rein- forced parachute regiment, a 175-man navy, a 300-man air force, and 500 gendarmes; the remainder of the personnel belong to the French Indian Ocean Naval Command; ships homeported at French naval base at Ports-des-Gatets include 3 patrol boats,1 amphibious ship, 3 amphibious craft,1 re- pair ship, 2 tugs; other French ships are available in the Indian Ocean at Djibouti; French Air Force unit operates 2 medium- range transports, 2 helicopters; the gendar- merie operates 5-9 helicopters Economy Aid: Western countries-estimated net in- debtedness at end of 1984, $7.9 billion; Ro- mania has extended bilateral economic aid totaling $3.1 billion to non-Communist less developed countries (1956-83 Communications Merchant marine: 234 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 2,499,438 GRT, 3,932,684 DWT; includes 1 passenger cargo, 164 cargo, 2 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 1 livestock carrier, 8 petroleum, oils, and lubricants tanker, 58 bulk Airfields: 165 total; 30 with permanent- surface runways; 3 with runways 3,500 m or over, 12 with runways 2,500-3,499 m, 29 with runways 1,000-2,499 m, 121 with run- ways less than 1,000 m; 2 heliport Telecommunications: systems are used pri- marily for government and military pur- poses; only a few facilities are available to public; wired-broadcast network offers broad coverage; 15 AM and 5 FM stations, 3,250,000 receivers; 13 major and 20 relay TV stations, 3,200,000 receivers; 1, 133,000 (est.) telephones (84.3% automatic Defense Forces Personnel: 170,000 ground forces, 7,600 naval forces, 34,000 air and air defense forces, 35,000 paramilitary forces; personnel 11GV.1 25X1 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret in reserve (not on active duty)-1,300,000 (est.) ground forces, 11,800 naval forces, un- known air force Major ground units: 10 divisions (8 motor- ized infantry, 2 tank), 13 brigades (2 artil- lery, 1 antitank brigade, 2 SCUD tactical missile, 4 mountain infantry, 4 antiaircraft artillery), 4 airborne regiments, 5 artillery regiments,1 antiaircraft artillery regiment, 3 SA-6 regiments, 5 antitank regiments F_ Ships: 3 principal surface combatants, 3 pa- trol combatants, 6 mine warfare ships, 89 coastal patrol-river/roadstead craft, 3 am- phibious warfare craft, 34 mine warfare craft, 2 materiel support ships, 2 fleet sup- port ships, 5 other auxiliaries Aircraft: 448 operational (232 air defense fighters, 108 ground attack, 21 reconnais- sance, 26 transports, 113 helicopters) Missiles: 18 operational SA-2 SAM sites (108 launchers); 3 regiments of the SA-6 tactical missile system are deployed with the Roma- nian ground forces; the SA-7 is also deployed; the SA-3 may be in country Supply: produces tanks, rocket launchers, artillery, infantry weapons, armored person- nel carriers, ammunition, medium trucks and jeeps, tactical missiles, chemical warfare offensive and defensive materiel, and sev- eral types of coastal patrol-river/roadstead craft; building naval ships of up to helicopter- carrying destroyer size; limited quantity of subsonic fighters; assembles aircraft and heli- copters under license from UK and France; dependent on imports from Communist countries, primarily USSR, for other mili- tary equipmen~ Rwanda Economy Aid: economic commitments-Western (non- US) countries ODA and OOF (1970-82), $726 million; OPEC ODA (1974-82), $35 million; Communist countries (1970-83), $58 million; US, including Ex-Im (1970-83),$49 million; military commitments-Commu- nist countries (1970-83), $10 million; US (FY80-83), $1.7 million Defense Forces Personnel: about 5,500 army, 1,500 gendar- merie (activated in late 1975 and still orga- nizing); military advisers-16 Belgian, 20 French, 3 FRG, 14 Chinese Major ground units: 4 battalions (2 infantry, 2 paracommando), 9-10 prefectural compa- nies, 1 reconnaissance squadron, 1 heavy weapons company, 1 engineer company, 1 aviation company, 1 logistic support base Aircraft: 10 (2 turboprop, 1 prop, 7 helicop- ters) FRG, Belgium, Italy, Libya, and China Supply: dependent primarily on Belgium; has received equipment from France, UK, St. Christopher and Nevis (formerly St. Christopher-Nevis- Anguilla) Saint Christopher Defense Forces 25X1 Local security forces: 301-man Royal St. Christopher-Nevis Police Force; Coast 25X1 Guard has 130-foot port security boat and launch; the police commissioner is the im- mediate supervisor of the Coast Guard 25X1 I 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 secret Defense Forces Local security forces: 485-man Royal St. Lucia Police Force; Coast Guard has 165- foot patrol boat and 1 launch; the police commissioner is the immediate supervisor of the Coast Guard St. Vincent and The Grenadines Sao Tome and Principe eorgetown Saint KINGSTOWN incent North Bequia Atlantic Sea e5 eMustique ca e 'canouan See regional map III Communications Merchant marine: 12 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 111,481 GRT, 175,520 DWT; includes 3 cargo,1 combination ore/oil, 8 Defense Forces Local security forces: 503-man Royal St. Vincent and The Grenadines Police Force; Coast Guard has 1 75-foot fast patrol boat and 2 launches; the police commissioner is the immediate su isor of the Coast Guard ilha do canto Antonio Principe . Pedras Tinhosas Gulf of Guinea Defense Forces Personnel: Army, est. 1,200; foreign person- nel include 1,000 (est.) Angolan troops, 20 Soviet military advisers; 100 Cuban military Aircraft: 4 (2 An-26, 2 An-2 transports) p Supply: receives all military equipment and technical assistance from USSR and Soviet 7F,X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 ,.25X1 LOA I 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret Saudi Arabia Boundary repre entatron is nol necessarily authonlahve Economy Aid: large aid donor; bilateral ODA commit- ments (1974-82), $24 billion Communications Merchant marine: 193 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 3,162,838 GRT, 5,328,906 DWT; includes 2 passenger, 12 short-sea passenger, 1 passenger cargo, 61 cargo, 12 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 4 container, 8 refriger- ated cargo, 8 livestock carrier, 48 petroleum, oils, and lubricants tanker, 8 chemical tanker,1 liquefied gas, 1 combination ore/oil, 1 specialized tanker, 26 bulk Defense Forces Personnel: 31,000 army, 5,500 navy, 2,000 air defense, 17,000 air force (325 pilots), 25,000 national guard Major ground units: 1 infantry brigade, 3 mechanized infantry brigades, 1 airborne brigade, 2 armored brigades, 4 battalions (1 royal guard, 1 light armored, 2 field artil- lery), 12 I-HAWK air defense missile batter- ies; in addition, national guard has 1 mecha- nized brigade, 2 mechanized battalions, 41 battalion-size units Ships: 1 guided missile frigate, 13 guided missile patrol combatants, 4 coastal mine- sweepers, 2 utility landing craft in naval force, 8 medium landing craft, 16 personnel landing craft, 133 patrol boats/craft (includ- ing coast guard), 16 hovercraft 43 helicopters Supply: produces some ammunition, small arms, and aerial bombs; otherwise relies on Western sources, particularly US, FRG, UK, Italy, and France; 4 guided missile frigates and 2 replenishment oilers are on order from France tral government budget Military budget: for fiscal year ending 21 March 1985, $22.7 billion; about 31 % of cen- Senegal 150km 25X1 Boundary rep,, en1ahon is not necessarily aulhorllahve Economy Aid: economic commitments-Western (non-US) countries ODA and OOF 25X1 (1970-82), $2.4 billion; Communist countries (1970-83), $88 million; OPEC ODA (1974-82), $445 million; US, including Ex-Im (FY70-83), $230 million; military commit- ments-US (FY70-83), $9.3 million=25X1 Communications Merchant marine: 4 ships (1,000 GRT and over) totaling 10,876 GRT, 15,922 DWT; includes 2 cargo,1 specialized tanker,1 bulk 25X1 Defense Forces Personnel: 10,196 army, 700 navy, 565 air force, 3,195 gendarmerie, 3,700 Surete Na- tionale, 1,100-1,400 French forces, 27 French advisers 25X1 LOA I Major ground units: 6 infantry battalions,1 training battalion, 1 armor battalion, 1 artil- lery battalion, 1 parachute group (2 compa- nies), 1 commando group (2 companies), 1 engineer battalion,1 reconnaissance squad- ron,1 motor transport battalion,1 communi- cation company,1 medical company, 1 s1 25X1 ply compan~ LOA I Ships: Senegalese units-1 patrol combat- ant, 2 patrol boats, 3 patrol craft, 1 utility landing craft, 2 medium landing craft,1 training craft, 1 tug; French units-2 me- dium landing craft, 2 tugs; Dakar is home2 r,X 1 port for French naval vessel 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret Senegal (continued) Aircraft: 20 (4 fighter trainers, 13 prop trans- ports, 3 helicopters); French Air Force oper- ates 0-8 Jaguar fighter bombers, 1 C-160 transport, 4 helicopters; French Navy often deploys an Atlantic maritime patrol aircraft Supply: primarily dependent on France, Netherlands, and Canada; beginning to di- versify sources of suppl Seychelles Aldabra Islands or over) totaling 2,388 GRT, 3,698 DWT VICTORIA+" Amirante- Mahe Isles , Island 'Farquhar Group Communications Merchant marine: I cargo ship (1,000 GRT navy, 12-man air force Defense Forces Personnel: 800-man army, 300-man Presi- dential Protection Unit composed of a presi- dential guard unit and a commando unit (each unit reports directly and separately to the President), 1,000-man militia, 500-man police force capable of assisting the army in maintaining internal stability, 100-man air defense and artillery weapons Major ground units: army includes 8 infan- try companies (vary in size from 50-200 men) and associated headquarters; equip- ment includes 6 BRDM-2 armored cars, BM- 21 multiple rocket launchers, 37-mm antiair- craft guns, SA-7/GRAIL SAM systems, 75- mm recoilless rifles, RPG-7 grenade launch- ers, 14.5-mm antiaircraft machine guns, 12.7-m antiaircraft machine guns, small arms, 4 Sheetbend coastal surveillance radar systems; the Presidential Guard controls all Supply: equipment supplied primarily by Aircraft: 2 Alouette helicopters, 2 utility Ships: 5 patrol craft Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December 1984, $6.8 million, 10.5% of cen- tral government budget0 25X1 25X1 ZoA] 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 secret Singapore North Atlantic Ocean Economy Aid: economic commitments-Western (non- US) countries ODA and OOF (1970-82), $357 million; US, including Ex-Im (FY70- 83), $95 million; Communist countries (1970-83), $95 million; military commit- ments-Communist countries (1970-83), $5 million Communications Merchant marine: 1 cargo ship (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 2,000 GRT, 3,000 DWT Defense Forces Personnel: 3,000 army, 45 navy, 3,300 po- lice and security units, 800-man special secu- rity division Major ground units: 2 infantry battalions Ships: 1 fast patrol boat,1 auxiliary tained by the French Supply: most army materiel from UK; some small arms, ammunition, and a patrol boat from UK and armored cars from Switzer- land; other materiel from FRG and Switzer- land Military budget: for fiscal year ending 30 June 1983, $10.8 million, 4.6% of central government budget Communications Merchant marine: 464 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 6,542,074 GRT, 11,166,763 DWT; includes 5 passenger cargo, 204 cargo, 54 container, 3 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 7 re- frigerated cargo, 8 vehicle carrier, 2 live- stock carrier, 82 petroleum, oils, and lubri- cants tanker, 10 chemical tanker, 2 combin'25X1 tion ore/oil,1 specialized tanker, 86 bulkEzoki Power Defense Arrangement (FPDA), which replaced Anglo-Malayan Defense Agreement of 1957; FPDA, effective since 1 November 1971 25X1 Personnel: 50,000 army, 3,500 navy, 6,00025X1 air force, 7,500 police force, 170,000 army reserve, 30,000 People's Defense Force, 4525X1 naval reserve (People's Defense Force/Sea, 750 air force reserve; in addition, the navy 25X1 can be augmented by the 700-man marine police and over 80 small craft Major ground units: 1 infantry division comprising 3 infantry brigades, 9 infantry battalions, l artillery brigade (6 battalion- size units), 1 armored brigade (with 1 tank, 1 reconnaissance, 2 mechanized battalions), 1 commando battalion, 5 engineer battalion; 3 signal battalions, 2 reserve infantry divi- sions (1 at full strength, 1 building up since 1979); reserves include 1 commando, 5 ar- mor, 5 artillery, 5 engineer, 3 signals, 18 in 7 ~iy 1 fantry battalions 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret Singapore (continued) Ships: 6 missile attack boats, 13 amphibious warfare ships/craft, 19 coastal patrol-river/ roadstead craft, 2 mine warfare craft, 1 Aircraft: approximately 226 (145 jet Missiles: 3 Bloodhound SAM sites; I-HAWK and Rapier units in formation Supply: self-sufficient in production of small arms, mortars, mortar ammunition, and quartermaster-type individual equipment; some small patrol craft and missile gunboats built; all other materiel imported, mainly from UK, US, Taiwan, Israel, and Switzer- land; 2 missile gun boats from FRG, ship-to- Solomon Islands (formerly British Solomon Islands) Choiseul South Pacific Ocean ao ' =Santa Isabel Gizo 11 Malaita Vandina GuadaRC nal its obal Santa Cruz r, .. Islands tute part of Papua New Guinea. NOTE: Independent as of 7 July 1978, this archipelagic nation includes southern Solo- mon Islands, primarily Guadalcanal, Malaita, San Cristobal, Santa Isabel, and Choiseul. Northern Solomon Islands consti- Boundary representation s not necessarily authontanve Economy Aid: economic commitments-OPEC ODA (1974-82), $1.2 billion; Communist countries (1970-83), $280 million; Western (non-US) countries ODA and OOF (1970-82), $1.0 billion; US (FY70-83), $308 million; military commitments-Communist countries (1970-83), $425 million; US (FY80-82), $96 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 Communications Merchant marine: 5 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 22,093 GRT, 24,097 DWT; includes 3 cargo, 2 refrigerated cargo Defense Forces Personnel: 36,000 army, about 2,000 navy, 2,000 air force, 3,500 air defense forces, Major ground units: 4 corps headquarters, 11 divisions, 29 infantry brigades, 2 mecha- nized infantry brigades, 4 armored brigades, 3 field artillery brigades, 5 commando bri- gades, 8 air defense brigades Ships: 12 patrol craft, including 2 OSA II guided missile patrol boats, 2 MOL torpedo boats, 4 P-6 torpedo boats, 2 MOL patrol boats, 2 POLUCHAT; none of the craft pos- sess a full range of combat capabilities F Aircraft: 108, including 50 fighter, 8 fighter bombers, 3 bombers, 4 utility, 13 transports, 20 fighter trainers, 10 helicopters Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Supply: produces some small arms and am- munition; dependent primarily on outside sources; ground materiel predominantly from USSR and since mid-1977 from several European and Middle Eastern countries; naval ships from USSR; aircraft from USSR, Italy, Egypt, China, and UAE; SAM systems and associated radar equipment from USSR Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December 1984, $111.6 million, 28% of cen- tral government budget urban Atlantic Ocean leum, oils, and lubricants tanker, 3 bulk Communications Merchant marine: 21 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 534,069 GRT, 643,223 DWT; includes 1 passenger, 1 passenger cargo, 4 cargo, 9 container, 1 vehicle carrier, 2 petro- Defense Forces Personnel: 76,500 army, 5,000 navy, 11,300 air force (1,100 pilots); Citizen Force (active reserve)-100,000 army, 11,000 navy, 30,000 air force; 90,000 Army Commandos (home defense force); 8,500 Medical Services and 250 Commando units Major ground units: 25 combat-type battal- ions, plus 75 Citizen Force reserve battalions Mozambique, and Tanzania Independent homeland forces: Bophutha- tswana, 600-man national guard; Transkei, 1,000-man army; Venda, 550-man defense force; Ciskei, 400-man defense force; rebel forces-6,000-8,000 Namibian South-West Africa People's Organization (SWAPO) rebel elements largely in Angola and Zam- bia; 1,500-2,000 African National Congress (ANC) rebel elements largely in Angola, craft, 11 auxiliaries, 7 service craft Ships: 3 submarines, 1 frigate, 8 missile pa- trol boats, 33 patrol type, 5 mine warfare prop, 194 helicopters Missiles: SSM Scorpion (modified version of Israeli Gabriel); AGM, AS20, AS30; AAM, R530, R550 (MATRA), V3 KUKRI-indige- nously developed; ATGM, Entac and SS-11; SAM, 24 Cactus/Crotale launchers, 36 Tigercat launchers (various Soviet SAM cap- tured by South African Defense Force in Angola)0 25X1 LOA I Nuclear weapons: may be developing a nu- clear weapons capabilityF___1 25X1 Supply: produces all of the small arms, mor?25X1 tars, and ammunition it requires; manufac- tures armored cars, armored personnel Carr. ers, artillery, and guided missile patrol com- batants; most naval ships originally supplied by UK; submarines from France; guided missile patrol combatants, initially supplied by Israel, now being produced domestically under Israeli license; has produced MB 326 (Impala) jet trainer and attack aircraft under license; has assembled Mirage F-1 jet fighter under license; has developed and is produc-25X1 ing air-to-air missiles Military budget: for year ending 31 March 1985, $3.19 billion; 15.1 % of central govern- ment budget F__~ 25X1 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 The United St.le. Government h.. not recognized the mcorppr.lion *1Eetonu. L.tvi.. end Ldhu.nu to the Soviet Unwn. Other bound.ry repreeenlation is not nIy.ulhom.hve. NOTE: The US Government does not rec- ognize the incorporation of the Baltic States-Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania- into the Soviet Union. Communications Merchant marine: 1,757 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 15,375,964 GRT, 21,149,935 DWT; includes 64 passenger, 1,118 cargo, 43 container, 78 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 280 petroleum, oils, and lubricants tanker, 11 liquefied gas, 11 combination ore/oil, 10 specialized carrier, 142 bulk; 679 merchant ships based in Black Sea, 404 in Baltic Sea, 423 in Soviet Far East, and 251 in Barents/White Seal (1984) Airfields: 4,367 total; 947 with permanent- surface runways; 54 with runways over 3,500 m, 392 with runways 2,500-3,499 m, 1,038 with runways 1,000-2,499 m, 2,883 with runways less than 1,000 m; 78 heliports Telecommunications: extensive and rela- tively 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 offices; about 135 main AM broadcast network stations; 280 FM broadcast and 40,000 wired-broadcast distribution stations; 59.8 million radio and 56 million wired broadcast receivers; 1,620 million TV receivers Defense Forces Personnel: (estimated as of January 1983) 2,841,000 ground forces; 427,700 naval forces (excluding Maritime Border Guard); 530,000 air forces; 322,000 strategic rocket forces; 494,000 strategic air defense forces; 550,000 paramilitary forces, including bor- der guards; these strengths, redistributed to correspond with US force programs rather than with Soviet military structure, are shown below Military and paramilitary strength: (est.) total, 5,185,900-Command and General Support, 1,568,000 (includes 126,200 com- mand and general naval support personnel); General Purpose Ground Forces, 1,812,000; General Purpose Naval Forces, 301,500 (ex- cludes SSBN and MBG personnel); General Purpose Air Forces, 352,000; Strategic At- tack Forces (including MRBM/IRBMs), 288,000 (includes 14,500 SSBN personnel); Strategic Defense Forces, 386,000; Frontier Troops, 192,000 (includes 22,000 Maritime Border Guard personnel); Internal Troops, 264,000 Personnel released into reserve system for last 5 years: (est.) total, 9,119,000-Com- mand and General Support, 2,879,000 (in- cludes 224,000 naval support personnel); General Purpose Ground Forces, 3,298,000; General Purpose Naval Forces (including naval infantry), 424,000 (excludes SSBN, MBG, and support personnel); General Pur- pose Air Forces, 504,000; Strategic Attack Forces, 485,000; Strategic Defense Forces, 768,000; Frontier Troops, 270,000; Internal Troops, 466,000 (includes 33,000 Maritime Border Guard personnel) Major ground units: General Purpose Ground Forces-27 armies, 10 corps, 197 active divisions, 2 (new type) corps struc- tures, plus 16 artillery divisions, 200 bri- gades, 280 regiments, and many smaller combat and combat support units Ships: submarines-65 nuclear-powered ballistic missile, 15 ballistic missile, 48 nuclear-powered cruise missile attack, 17 cruise missile attack, 73 nuclear-powered attack, 136 attack, 12 auxiliary, 4 communi- cations, 11 unknown, 1 radar picket, 4 train- ing; surface ships-3 guided missile VSTOL aircraft carriers, 2 guided missile aviation cruisers, 2 nuclear-powered guided missile cruisers, 26 guided missile cruisers, 8 light cruisers, 40 guided missile destroyers, 25 destroyers, 32 guided missile frigates, 36 frigates, 110 corvettes, 174 patrol combat- ants, 78 amphibious warfare ships, 132 mine warfare ships, 411 coastal patrol-river/ roadstead craft, 99 amphibious warfare craft, 256 mine warfare craft, 83 underway replenishment ships, 72 materiel support 25X1 ships, 146 fleet support ships, 487 other auxil- iaries Aircraft: (est.) 16,520 operational aircraft; by force, strength data follows-Strategic Bomber Force 912 (303 long-range bombers [includes 131 Backfire], 423 intermediate- range bombers [includes 228 support air- craft-tankers, reconnaissance, ECM]); Avi- 25X1 ation of Air Defense, 1,234 fighters (9 air- borne warning and control); Tactical Avia- tion, 6,400 combat aircraft (2,660 ground attack, 2,870 fighters, 870 reconnaissance/ ECM/SIGINT); Army Aviation, 4,100 heli- copters (1,525 attack, 1,145 transport, 156 ECM, 1,274 support; Naval Aviation, 1,243 combat aircraft (100 long-range and 278 intermediate-range bombers; 134 fighters/ fighter-bombers; 46 long-range, 49 inter- mediate-range, 9 transport-type, and 26 rotary-wing reconnaissance aircraft; 45 ECM support aircraft; 73 tankers; 471 ASW aircraft to include 203 fixed-wing and 268 25X1 rotary-wing types; and 12 MCM rotary-wing aircraft) and 154 miscellaneous training air- craft; support aircraft strength of all serv- ices, 2,474 transports and helicopters (1,659 transports [291 long-range, 652 medium- range, and 716 short-range], 815 25X1 administrative/ liaison helicopter 25X1 1 Defensive missiles: about 7 SA-2 regiments, 36 SA-3 battalions, 52 SA-4 brigades, 2 SA-5 complexes, 44 SA-6a/b regiments, 3 SA-11 regiments, and 33 SA-8 regiments are de- ployed with Soviet Theater General Purpose 25X1 Forces and Soviet forces in GDR, Czechoslo- vakia, Hungary, Poland, and Mongolia; ap- proximately 316 SA-9/SA-13 fire units and about 25,000 SA-7/14 missiles are available in maneuver regiments; some of these SAM Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 systems could augment the national air de- fense forces in times of crisis; the defensive missile force for national defense includes 1,222 operationally deployed surface-to-air missile sites (14,054 launch rails); 50 SA-1 sites (2,840 launch rails) deployed only in defense of Moscow; 468 SA-2 sites (2,808 launch rails) provide point defense of impor- tant strategic targets and barrier defense of the country; deployed primarily in periph- eral areas and in already SAM-defended areas to provide low-altitude coverage are 302 SA-3 sites (313 dual-rail and 919 four- rail platforms) with 4,302 launch rails; 131 SA-5 complexes (2,516 launch rails) and 60 SA-10 sites (2,088 launchers) provide a bar- rier and vital area defense of targets through- out the Soviet Union; deployed around the city of Moscow are 4 ABM-lb complexes (16 operational launchers); there are also 13 coastal defense cruise missile sites located throughout the 4 fleet areas that utilize the SSC-lb (SEPAL) cruise missile Offensive missiles: strategic-about 1,378 ICBM launchers and about 526 MR/IRBMs; because of constant change in the dismantle- ment of SS-4s and the deployment of SS-20s, the number of MR/IRBMs is fluid ments of Soviet forces Supply: fully supplies own needs and produces large quantities of all types of ma- teriel for export; Warsaw Pact countries pro- vide the bulk of amphibious and auxiliary ship replacements as well as trainers and other light aircraft; some trucks and light armored vehicles have also been obtained from Eastern Europe as an economic meas- ure Military budget: announced for fiscal year ending 31 December 1985, only the figure 19.063 billion rubles was released; this figure is manipulated for political purposes and covers only a small portion of total military expenditures, which are as much as six times greater; the estimated cost of military activi- ties in 1982, excluding pensions, is $236 bil- lion (in 1982 dollars; Spain Communications Merchant marine: 536 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 6,161,655 GRT, 10,865,225 DWT; includes 2 passenger, 15 short-sea passenger, 217 cargo, 34 container, 33 roll- 25X1 on/roll-off cargo, 37 refrigerated cargo, 1 multifunction heavy lift, 82 petroleum, oils, and lubricants tanker, 17 chemical tanker, 14 liquefied gas, 4 specialized tanker, 2 com- bination ore/oil, 78 bulk Defense Forces Personnel: 294,000 army, 47,300 navy (not including 11,925 marines), 42,000 air force 25X1 (1,170 pilots), 65,000 civil guard, 45,000 armed police Major ground units: 5 combat divisions (1 mechanized infantry, 1 motorized infantry, 2 mountain, 1 armored), 16 brigades (1 para- chute infantry, 1 air transportable, 1 high mountain, 1 cavalry, 10 infantry, 2 artillery), 16 combat regiments (14 infantry, 2 light cavalry), 22 combat support regiments (12 25X1 artillery, 6 engineer, 4 air defense artillery) Ships: 1 VSTOL aircraft carrier, 11 destroy- ers, 7 submarines, 6 patrol ships, 5 guided missile frigates, 10 frigates/corvettes, 92 patrol ships and craft, 12 mine warfare ships/craft, 6 amphibious ships, 14 auxilia- arm 25X1 25X1 Aircraft: 1,109 (335 jet)-872 (325 jet) in air force, 65 (10 jet) in naval air, and 172 in Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Spain (continued) Missiles: 1 NIKE Hercules battalion (9 launchers) and 1 I-HAWK battalion (24 launchers) under army control; will deploy 18 Roland fire units Supply: produces naval ships to VSTOL air- craft carrier size, small arms, mortars, some artillery, ammunition, armored and trans- port vehicles; French-designed tanks; mili- tary telecom and electronic equipment; produces C-101 AVIO JET trainer, C-212 utility, and assembles GDR BO-105 helicop- ter; all other equipment primarily from US and secondarily from West European coun- tries (1970-83), $36 million Economy Aid: economic commitments-Communist countries (1970-83), $291 million; OPEC ODA (1974-82), $325 million; US, including Ex-Im (FY70-83), $609 million; other West- ern countries ODA and OOF (1980-82), $2.4 billion; military commitments-US (FY70- 83), $5.4 million; Communist countries tanker, 1 combination ore/oil, 10 bulk Communications Merchant marine: 43 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 626,515 GRT, 965,138 DWT;" includes 20 cargo, 5 refrigerated cargo, 4 container, 3 petroleum, oils, and lubricants Defense Forces Personnel: 13,000 army, 2,824 navy, 3,386 air force, 15,000 police, 12,000-man Volun- teer Force (approximately one-third of Sri Lanka's Volunteer Force is on active duty at all times regiment, 1 signal regimen Major ground units: 5 infantry regiments and supporting units; 1 commando squad- ron,1 artillery regiment (4 batteries),1 ar- mored reconnaissance regiment, 1 engineer house support vessel Ships: 8 fast patrol craft, 8 patrol boats, 5 harbor patrol boats, 10 patrol craft, 1 light- Supply: has a limited shipbuilding capabil- ity; currently producing patrol craft; de- pendent on imports for all categories of mili- tary materiel; ground force equipment from 25X1 UK, China, USSR, Yugoslavia, Australia, and India; naval ships have been acquired mainly from UK but with Italy, Israel, and Singapore each supplying some craft; 7 Shanghai II-class patrol boats provided by China;1 coastal patrol boat provided by USSR; jet aircraft and helicopters have been purchased from USSR 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 6ood.r, reprosemonoo S ~o~~o~ossardy aulhon~alrve Government Communists: party decimated following July 1971 coup and countercoup; by mid- 1979 party had built up to an estimated 15,000 members; its role in student demon- strations and strikes in August 1979 again resulted in government crackdown on party, but it probably retains capability to instigate Economy Aid: economic commitments-OPEC ODA (1974-82), $2.3 billion; Western (non-US) countries ODA and OOF (1970-82), $2.4 billion; Communist countries (1970-83), $369 million; US, including Ex-Im (FY70- 83), $667 million; military commitments- Communist countries (1970-83), $115 mil- lion; US (FY70-83), $209 million Communications Merchant marine: 11 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 93,098 GRT, 126,134 DW includes 9 cargo, 2 roll-on/roll-off carg Defense Forces Personnel: 51,000 army, 1,500 navy, 3,000 air force (less than 100 pilots), 3,000 air de- Major ground units: 10 infantry brigades (32 infantry battalions), 1 armored corps (1 armored division, 2 armored brigades, 4 in- dependent armored battalions), 1 artillery corps, 1 airborne brigade, 1 engineer corps, 1 border guard brigade,1 special protective troop (battalion-size), plus support troops Ships: 9 patrol boats (3 operational), 2 utility landing craft, 4 river/roadstead patrol boats, 3 auxiliaries, 4% operational Aircraft: 89 (39 jet, 10 prop transport, and 40 helicopters), 30 percent operational Missiles: 1 SA-2 brigade, 3 SA-7 platoons Supply: produces some small arms ammuni- tion; all other materiel imported; formerly 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 FRG, Canada, France, UK, Egypt, Algeria, Netherlands, Yugoslavia, Romania, US, and Communications Merchant marine: 4 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 9,210 GRT, 12,977 DWT; in- cludes 3 cargo,1 container Defense Forces Personnel: 1,525 Suriname National Army (1,275 army, 100 military police, 100 navy, 50 air force); 760 civil police (constabulary) Major ground units: 1 independent infantry battalion (headquarters company, 4 infantry companies, 1 commando company, logistics elements, and a military hospital Ships: 3 river patrol craft, 3 coastal patrol boats, 3 high seas patrol boats 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 LOA I Aircraft: 4 turboprop, 1 prop) 125X1 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Defense Forces Personnel: 2,950 army, of which only 1,350 are physically fit; 1,100 police (including 306-man police mobile unit) Major ground units: 1535-man Royal Guard Unit; 1350-man Border Guard Unit, 4 325-man infantry battalions Aircraft: 2 light transports (leased from Israel) Supply: mostly from UK and South Africa; the army is attempting to get military assist- ance from other Western and African sources Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 March 1983, $23.3 million; 9.2% of central government budget Aircraft: 899 (658 jet); 780 (658 jet) in air force, 33 helicopters in navy, 86 aircraft in army STOCKHOLM Gotebor Baltic .._...... / Sea Merchant marine: 232 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 2,697,210 GRT, 3,982,661 DWT; includes 12 short-sea passenger, 40 cargo, 8 container, 58 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 12 vehicle carrier, 1 railcar carrier, 9 refrigerated cargo, 32 petroleum, oils, and lubricants tanker, 27 chemical tanker, 1 liquefied gas, 3 combination ore/oil, 7 specialized liquid cargo, 22 bulk Defense Forces Personnel: 45,700 army (10,000 regulars on staff and in training cadre, remaining troops are conscripts for training), 300,000 field army reservists, 300,000 local defense re- serves, 110,000 home guard reserves, 11,285 navy (including 4,400 coast artillery, 214 naval helicopter service), 15,100 air force (including 750 pilots, 4,470 civilian engineer, 4 service) Major ground units: the Swedish Army has no standing tactical units; the mobilization field army (300,000 army reservists) is orga- nized into 19 infantry, 4 Norrland (arctic trained), 5 armored brigades, 150 independ- ent battalions; planning, supply, and train- ing are performed in 48 peacetime training regiments (16 infantry, 7 armored, 7 field artillery, 5 air defense, 2 cavalry, 2 signal, 3 service craft Ships: 2 destroyers, 12 submarines, 47 patrol boats, 12 minelayers, 29 minesweepers, 80 miscellaneous amphibious, auxiliary, and Missiles: 1 HAWK/I-HAWK (16 launchers), RBS-70 (252 launchers)I 25X1 Supply: can produce vehicles, tanks, air- craft; currently producing specialized vehi- cles, infantry weapons, artillery, ammuni- tion, chemical and biological warfare defen- sive materiel, RBS-70 surface-to-air and RBS- 15 antiship missiles; is developing an anti- tank missile and the JAS 39 aircraft; imports considerable quantities from NATO coun- tries; most naval ships produced domesti- cally, including submarine 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Syria Boundary representation is not necessarily authoritative Merchant marine: 33 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 335,696 GRT, 525,617 DWT; includes 11 cargo, 1 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 4 refrigerated cargo, 3 chemical tanker, 2 spe- cialized liquid cargo, 12 bulk Defense Forces Personnel: 19,600 army (includes cadre of 1,400 permanent personnel; remainder are recruits undergoing training), 3,500 air force (about 150 pilots and 30 trainees), about 600 frontier guard, 1,800 fortification guard Aircraft: 700 (453 jet, 73 prop, 78 turboprop, 96 helicopters) Missiles: 6 batteries of Bloodhounds; 60 Ra- pier systems will be added beginning in 1985 Supply: can produce armored vehicles, artil- lery, rocket launchers, mortars, small arms, ammunition, a variety of chemical warfare agents, military electronics, and optical equipment; some medium and heavy equip- ment and tanks are imported from US and Western Europe; 60 Rapier surface-to-air missile systems, purchased from the UK; extensive in-ground operational and storage facilities for war reserve stocks; assembles jet aircraft (under license); produces light trainer aircraft and utility transports, is col- laborating with US on ADATS SAM system Economy Aid: economic commitments-OPEC ODA (1974-82), $6.6 billion; Communist countries (1970-83), $1.9 billion; US (1970-82), $537.9 million; Western (non-US) countries 25X1 (1970-82), $461 million; military commit- ments-Communist countries (1970-83), $14.6 billion l 25X1 Communications Merchant marine: 13 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 38,410 GRT, 53,372 DWT; 2.SX 1 includes 12 cargo,1 bulkF-----] 25X1 Defense Forces Personnel: army 300,000, navy 2,500, air force 40,000 (with air defense having an ad- ditional 60,000), police and security force 10, Major ground units: 5 armored divisions; 3 mechanized infantry divisions; separate units include 2 infantry brigades, 31 reserve infantry regiments, 1 border guard brigade, 2 artillery brigades, 3 SSM brigades, 30 com- Ships: 2 frigates, 21 missile attack boats, 20 patrol boats, 4 minesweepers, 1 torpedo re- triever 2.5X1 25X1 Aircraft: 1,173 (862 jet, 10 turboprop, 41 prop, 260 helicopters 25X1 Missiles: 46 SA-2 battalions, 47 SA-3 battal- 25X1 ions, 2 SA-5 battalions, 51 SA-6 battalions, 305 SA-7 platoons, 3 SA-8 brigades, 16 SA-9 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret Syria (continued) batteries, an unknown number of SSC-16 and SSC-3 coastal defense missile Supply: capable of producing limited quan- tities of small arms ammunition; otherwise dependent on outside sources, principally USSR, as well as Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, GDR, Hungary, and Poland; some equip- ment from West European countries, includ- ing France, FRG, and UK Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December 1983, $4.0 billion; 41% of central government budget Aircraft: 75 (32 jet, 32 transports, 11 helicop- ters)I___1 25X1 Supply: produces some ammunition; de- pendent on external sources, primarily the USSR, but also China, Bulgaria, Canada, Yugoslavia, and UK; Tanzanian Peoples De 25X1 fense Force (TPDF) ships supplied by GDR, FRG, UK, USSR, and China; SAMs from USSR Military budget: for fiscal year ending 30 June 1984, $125 million; 7.3% of central gov- ernment budget0 25X1 $566 million Economy Aid: economic commitments-Western (non-US) countries ODA and OOF (1970-82), $5.3 billion; Communist countries (1970-83), $475 million; OPEC ODA (1974-82), $325 million; US, including Ex-Im (FY70-83), $288 million; military commit- ments-Communist countries (1970-83), Communications Merchant marine: 8 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 38,368 GRT, 49,001 DWT; includes 2 passenger cargo, 4 cargo, 1 roll- on/roll-off cargo, 1 petroleum, oils, and lu- 50,000 (est.) people's militia Defense Forces Personnel: 40,000 army, 850 naval wing, 1,000 (est.) air wing (60 pilots), 1,400 police field force unit, 130 police marine unit, neer regiments Major ground units: 3 infantry divisions, 8 infantry brigades, 26 infantry battalions, 11 artillery regiments, 1 armor battalion, 2 tank regiments, 1 heavy mortar regiment, 10 service battalions, 9 air defense regiments, 1 communications battalion, 1 communica- tions regiment, 2 engineer battalions, 2 engi- marine unit has its own patrol craft Ships: 30 patrol and utility craft, including 6 Shanghai-class patrol boats and 4 hydrofoil torpedo boats provided by China; police Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret Economy Aid: economic commitments-US, includ- ing Ex-Im (FY70-83), $580 million; Western (non-US) countries ODA and OOF (1970-82), $3.6 billion; OPEC ODA (1974-82), $150 million; military commit- ments-US (1970-83), $966 million Communications Merchant marine: 104 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 489,600 GRT, 727,313 DWT; includes 1 short-sea passenger, 1 passenger cargo, 69 cargo, 6 container, 19 petroleum, oils, and lubricants tanker, 5 liquefied gas, 3 Defense Forces Personnel: 163,000 army; 35,300 navy (in- cluding 20,000 marines), 43,100 air force, 23,000 border patrol police (includes 1,300 Police Aerial Reinforcement Unit), 3,500 Special Action Forces, 500 Police Aviation Division, 1,700 Thai Marine Police, 37,000 Volunteer Defense Corps; also 12,500 irregu- Major ground units: 8 infantry divisions (includes 1 cavalry division that operates as infantry) 1 armor division (more akin to a mechanized infantry division), 2 special forces divisions, marine corps (2 infantry, 1 artillery, 1 security regiments) Ships: 6 principal combatants, 1 patrol com- batant, 100 coastal-river/roadstead, 9 am- phibious warfare ships, 44 amphibious war- fare craft, 2 mine warfare ships, 9 mine war- 6 auxiliaries, 9 yard and service craft Aircraft: 664 operational; 373 air force (144 combat, 44 reconnaissance, 6 electronic war- fare, 46 transports, 85 trainers, 4 utility glid- ers, 44 helicopters); 234 army (99 reconnais- sance, 23 trainers, 7 transports, 105 helicop- ters); 57 navy (3 antisubmarine warfare, 21 maritime patrol, 2 search and rescue, 10 re- connaissance, 7 command/control/ communication, 6 trainer, 8 helicopters); 80 police aviation (16 transport, 1 trainer, 1 utility, 62 helicopters) Supply: limited local production of small arms ammunition, rifles, small naval craft, personal equipment, howitzers, rockets, and artillery ammunition; most other equipment from US; ground force equipment from Aus- tria, Sweden, Netherlands, Singapore, UK, ROK, FRG, and Canada; 1 frigate purchased from UK; 3 missile attack boats from Singapore, 3 patrol boats from Italy and 3 more on order; 154 tracked reconnais- sance vehicles from UK; began licensed as- sembly and production of FRG fantrainer in 1984 Togo Economy Aid: economic commitments-Western (non- US) countries ODA and OOF (1970-82), $885 million; US, including Ex-Im (FY70- 83), $67 million; OPEC ODA (1974-82), $35 million; Communist countries (1970-83), $45 million; military commitments-Commu- 25X1 nist countries (1970-83), $4 million 25X1 Merchant marine: 3 cargo ships (1,000 GR) or over) totaling 28,843 GRT, 43,815 DWT25X1 guard, 67 French military advisers 25X1 25X1 Defense Forces Personnel: 4,000 army, 260 air force, 105 regiments 25X1 Major ground units: 1 presidential guard regiment, 1 paracommando regiment, 1 service and support regiment, 2 infantry 25X1 25X1 Aircraft: 22 (5 transport, 3 helicopters, 14 jet trainers)0 25X1 from France, Canada, and Brazil 9 X1 25X1 Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December 1984, $14.3 million, 7.8% of cen- tral government budge(__~ 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret Togo (continued) Tonga South Pacific Ocean Ha'apai. Group NUKU'ALOFA* Tongatapu Group See regional map X 1 liquefied gas,1 bulk ~Neiafu Vava'u Group Communications Merchant marine: 7 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 12,625 GRT, 18,093 DWT; includes 3 cargo, 1 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 1 petroleum, oils, and lubricants tanker, comprise approx. 250 men Defense Forces Personnel: the Tongan Defense Services Major ground units: 1 infantry company; 1 territorial infantry company; 1 police unit personnel Intelligence and Security Police Special Branch, domestic Trinidad and Tobago Defense Forces Personnel: 2,090 Major ground units: 1 regiment (consisting of 1 infantry battalion, 1 service support battalion, 3 reserve companies 25X1 Ships: 2 fast patrol craft, 4 patrol craft, 8 patrol boats, 1 launch,1 small harbor tug Aircraft: 1 light observation (under Coast Guard), 3 helicopters (under Ministry of Na- tional Security) Supply: mostly UK but 2 fast patrol craft from Sweden and 2 helicopters from US 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 2bAl Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December 1982, $149 million; about 5% of the central government budge(-----] 25X1 Intelligence and Security Trinidad and Tobago Police Service, domes- tic; Special Branch of the Trinidad and To- bago Police Service, domestic; Trinidad and Tobago Defense Force, Trinidad and To- Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret Supply: dependent on foreign sources; mostly US, with lesser amounts from France, Austria, Italy, and FRG; two patrol boats delivered from UK and two motor gunboats from China in 1977; artillery and small arms also received from China; produces some small arms ammunition Economy Aid: economic commitments-Western (non-US) countries ODA and OOF (1970-82), $3.1 billion; US, including Ex-Im (FY70-83), $505 million; OPEC ODA (1974-82), $955 million; Communist coun- tries (1970-83), $406 million; military com- mitments-Communist countries (1970-83) $31 million; US (FY70-83), $355 million Communications Merchant marine: 24 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 163,579 GRT, 221,394 DWT; includes 1 short-sea passenger, 5 cargo, 2 refrigerated cargo, 2 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 2 petroleum, oils, and lubricants tanker, 6 chemical tanker,1 liquefied gas, 5 bulk Defense Forces Personnel: 30,000 army, 4,500 navy, 3,500 air force (180 pilots), 9,000 paramilitary Major ground units: 4 brigades (2 infantry, 1 paracommando,1 Sahara border), 10 inde- pendent combat support and combat service support regiments (1 signal, 2 air defense artillery,1 armored reconnaissance,1 anti- tank, 1 artillery, 1 engineer, 1 transporta- tion, 1 military police, 1 maintenance Ships: 1 frigate, 3 missile attack boats, 16 patrol boats, 2 coastal minesweepers, 2 auxil- iary Aircraft: 120 (25 jet, 50 prop, 45 helicopters) Turkey 25X1 25X1 Economy Aid: economic commitments-US, includ- ing Ex-Im (FY70-83), $1.6 billion; other Western ODA and OOF (1970-82), $4.9 bil- lion; Communist (1970-83), $3.9 billion; OPEC ODA (1974-82), $915 million; mili- tary commitments-US (1970-83), $3.0 bil- lion 0 25X1 25X1 25X1 Merchant marine: 302 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 3,339,451 GRT, 5,834,991 DWT; includes 10 short-sea passenger, 1 passenger cargo, 175 cargo, 5 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 4 refrigerated cargo, 38 petroleum, oils, and lubricants tanker, 11 chemical tanker, 1 liquefied gas, 1 combination ore/oil, 1 specialized tanker, 55 bulk 025X1 Defense Forces Personnel: 527,000 army, 54,800 navy (in- cludes naval air and naval infantry), 60,00(25X1 air force (970 pilots), 126,000 gendarmerief25X1 25X1 Major ground units: Turkish Land Forces Command (TLFC)-4 armies, 10 corps with corps troops, 14 infantry divisions, 2 mecha- nized divisions, 6 separate armored brigades, 4 mechanized infantry brigades, 11 infanti25X1 brigades, 1 airborne brigade, 1 commando brigade, 3 mobile gendarmerie brigades, 3 regiments (2 infantry, 1 armored), 34 battal- ions (23 artillery, 11 border); each field arrr25X1 has 1 aviation regiment assigned and each corps has 1 aviation battalion 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret Turkey (continued) Ships: 14 destroyers, 4 frigates, 17 subma- rines, 13 guided missile patrol boats, 38 pa- trol craft, 7 amphibious ships, 35 mine war- far~ Aircraft: 1,218 (614 jet); 775 (614 jet) in air force, 424 in army aviation, 19 in naval air Missiles: 8 SAM squadrons (NIKE Hercules with 72 launchers); 36 Rapier systems to be deployed (12 will be assigned to ground and 24 to air force Supply: mostly dependent on foreign sources, primarily US, Canada, and FRG; manufactures some small arms, mortars, trucks, and adequate quantities of ammuni- tion; builds some of its naval ships, including submarines, with technical and materiel assistance Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December 1983, $2.6 billion; about 17% of proposed central government budget Tuvalu (formerly Ellice Islands) ,Niutao Nanumanga .Nut .Vaitupu Nukutetau4 FUNAF UTI*---f1 (Nukulaelae), and Nurakita (Niulakita). Funafuti Nukulailai. NOTE: On 1 October 1975, by Constitu- tional Order, the Ellice Islands were for- mally separated from the British colony of Gilbert and Ellice Islands, thus forming the colony of Tuvalu. The remaining is- lands in the former Gilbert and Ellice Is- lands Colony are now named Kiribati. Tuvalu includes the islands of Nanumanga, Nanumea, Nui, Niutao, Vai- tupu, and the four islands of the Tuvalu group formerly claimed by the United States-Funafuti, Nukufetau, Nukulailai lice post is located at Funafuti Defense Forces No military forces maintained; a small po- Uganda 25X1 LJ/~ I Economy Aid: economic commitments-OPEC ODA (1974-82), $305 million; Western (non-US) 25X1 ODA and OOF (1970-82), $420 million; US, including Ex-Im (1970-83), $50 million; Communist countries (1970-83), $70 million; military commitments-Communist coun- tries (1970-83), $140 million Communications Merchant marine: 1 cargo ship (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 5,500 GRT, 9,100 DWT F_ Defense Forces Personnel: 15,000 army, 200 air force artillery battalion Aircraft: no operational combat aircraft (S) Supply: dependent on external sources- UK, USSR, Czechoslovakia, Egypt, Canada, Military budget: for fiscal year ending 30 June 1982, $114.3 million; 25.7% of central government budget 25X1 25X1 25X1 2bAl 25X1 25X1 LOA-1 25X1 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret United Arab Emirates Boundary repre enlalion is not necessa0dy aulhmda LVe Economy Major industries: oil production, fishing, trading (oil production began in Abu Dhabi in 1962 and in 1982 reached.900 million b/d; Dubai has best port and is a commercial center; oil was discovered in commercial quantities in 1966 and production began in 1969; 1982 production 350 thousand b/d; Sharjah began production in 1974; revenues paid to UAE in 1979 were $14 billion); fishing, some boat building, handicrafts, ani- mal husbandry, pearling throughout area less developed countries (1974-82) Communications Merchant marine: 59 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 761,616 GRT, 1,321,832 DWT; includes 1 passenger, 31 cargo, 7 re- frigerated cargo, 3 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 14 petroleum, oils, and lubricants tanker, 3 bulk Defense Forces Personnel: 40,150 army, 2,500 air force, 1,500 navy, 9,800 paramilitary Major ground units: 3 infantry brigades, 2 mechanized infantry brigades, 1 field artil- lery brigade, 1 air defense artillery brigade, 1 armored brigade 0 boats/craft, 17 harbor patrol boat 56 helicopters Missiles: 12 Rapier SAM launchers, 9 Crotale SAM launchers, 12 RBS-70 SAM launchers from FRG, Italy, and Jordan United Kingdom Shetland 25X1 Islands 'Orkney 25X1 25X1 Communications Merchant marine: 659 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 15,436,474 GRT, 24,338,363 DWT; includes 10 passenger, 5 short-sea passenger, 108 cargo, 60 container, 40 roll- on/roll-off cargo, 20 refrigerated cargo, 1 vehicle carrier, 1 railcar carrier, 177 petro- leum, oils, and lubricants tanker, 38 chemi- cal tanker, 34 liquefied gas, 14 combination ore/oil, 3 specialized tanker, 148 bulk 25X1 Defense Forces 25X1 Personnel: about 159,069 army (plus 9,8Gv colonials, including 1,493 locally entered personnel-Maltese, Goans, and Hong K(25X1 and Singapore Chinese); 71,300 navy (in- cluding 9,530 naval air and 7,700 marines), 90,500 air force (3,860 pilots) 25X1 Major ground units: army is organized into 1 corps with 3 armored,1 infantry, and 1 artillery divisions; 10 infantry brigades, 1 airborne infantry brigade; 7 nonbrigade25X1 infantry battalions and 3 nonbrigaded art?- lery regiments in the UK; 5 overseas infantry battalions and 1 Gurkha field force; army aviation is organized into 1 Army Air CoI25X1 25X1 Ships: 3 ASW carriers, 12 destroyers, 42 frig- ates, 4 nuclear-powered ballistic missiles 2'5X1 marines, 13 nuclear-powered attack subs.... rines, 15 submarines, 16 patrol-type ships, 40 mine warfare ships, 8 amphibious warfaJ,) r_y,1 ships, 44 auxiliaries 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret United Kingdom (continued) Aircraft: 2,437 (1,341 jet), including 325 (296 helicopters) in army aviation, 344 (65 jet) in naval air, 1,768 (1,276 jet) in air force Missiles: 8 flights of Bloodhound MKII (92 launchers), 9 squadrons Rapier (156 launch- ers), Lance S-5 missile; also collaborating with FRG for ASRAAM air-to-air missileP Nuclear weapons: 4 SSBNs, each armed with 16 missiles; 2 SSBNs retrofitted with Chevaline warheads (2-3 RVs per missile); 1 SSBN currently receiving Chevaline; l SSBN operating with the original Polaris A-3 warheads (3 RVs per missile) Supply: capable of producing all types of equipment, but some aircraft supplies, as well as Polaris missiles, come from US; all types of naval ships constructed, including nuclear-powered ballistic missile subma- rines; exports destroyers, frigates, corvettes, submarines, patrol craft, missiles and air- craft; produces surface-to-air, air-to-air, Uruguay Boundary representation is not necessarily authoritative Communications Merchant marine: 11 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 75,050 GRT, 100,895 D W T; includes 6 cargo, 1 refrigerated cargo, 1 con- tainer, 2 petroleum, oils, and lubricants tanker, 1 bulk; additionally, 2 naval tankers are sometimes used commercially Defense Forces Personnel: 22,300 army, 4,700 navy (includ- ing 430 in naval air arm and 500 marines), 3,260 air force (including 341 pilots), 1,685 maritime police, 520 Republican Guard, 650 Major ground units: 4 army divisions com- prising 7 brigades (4 infantry, 3 cavalry) and 11 battalion-size units (6 field artillery, 4 engineering, 1 air defense), 3 independent brigades (1 cavalry, 1 engineering, l commu- iaries, 1 training ship, 7 service craft Ships: 3 frigates, 7 patrol ships and craft, 2 former minesweepers now designated as corvettes with no mine warfare capability, 5 amphibious warfare craft, 2 tankers, 6 auxil- Aircraft: 131, including 107 in air force (12 jet, 20 turboprop, 64 prop, 11 helicopters), 24 in naval air arm (1 turboprop, 18 prop, 5 gentina, Brazil, Spain, Portugal, ROK, France, and FRG for major equipment Supply: since 1976 has relied heavily on Ar- 25X1 25X1 9 Y1 25X1 25X1 LJ/\ I 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret Vanuatu (formerly New Hebrides) Ep C. ?. Vatican City Coral See L. E/ate PORT-VILA Ambrym South Pacific Ocean QsErromango Tannab 0 Communications Merchant marine: 7 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 83,223 GRT, 139,114 DWT; includes 4 cargo, 1 petroleum, oils, and lubri- cants tanker, 2 bulk; a flag of convenience registry Intelligence and Security Police Special Branch, domestic Boundary rep- entation is not necessarily authoritative Economy 25X1 Aid: economic commitments-US, includ- ing Ex-Im (FY70-83), $486 million; Commu- nist countries (1970-83), $10 million; mili- tary commitments-US (FY70-83), $49.2 million Communications Merchant marine: 78 ships (1,000 GRT or 25X1 over) totaling 857,944 GRT, 1,338,780 DWT; includes 1 passenger, 5 short-sea pas- senger, 39 cargo, 1 refrigerated cargo, 3 roll- on/roll-off cargo, 19 petroleum, oils, and lubricants tanker, 2 chemical tanker, 2 lique- fied gas, 6 bulk Defense Forces Personnel: 27,000 army, 9,100 navy (includ- ing 4,500 marines), 4,500 air force, 15,000 national guard, 450 (est.) coast guard Major ground units: 4 divisions (2 infantry, 1 cavalry, 1 jungle), 1 armored brigade, 1 ranger brigade,1 airborne regimen' 25X1 Ships: 3 submarines, 2 frigates, 6 guided mis- sile frigates, 6 amphibious warfare ships, 3 missile attack boats, 3 patrol craft, 56 patrol boats, 6 auxiliary ships, 3 service craft 25X1 Aircraft: 312 operational (84 jet, 44 turbo- prop, 99 prop, 85 helicopters), 213 (84 jet) in air force; additional 77 aircraft not assigned to operational units in storage awaiting dis- posal; 26 aircraft assigned to navy; 29 to army, 44 to national guard; air force total includes 6 F-16 jet aircraft; an additional 18 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret Venezuela (continued) Supply: produces portion of small arms and ammunition, aerial bombs, and military explosives and propellants; dependent upon US, Brazil, and Western Europe for all other materiel; 2 submarines purchased from FRG, 6 fast patrol boats from UK, 6 frigates from Italy, and 24 armored vehicles from Brazil Military budget: proposed for fiscal year ending 31 December 1983, $1,094 million; about 6.1 % of central government budget Boundary representation is not necessarily authoritative South China Sea Ships: 165 total-5 frigates, 2 patrol combat- ants, 111 coastal patrol-river/roadstead craft (9 missile attack boats), 6 amphibious war- fare ships, 7 mine warfare ships, 32 amphibi- ous warfare craft, 2 auxiliary /service craft Aircraft: 734, including 225 jet fighters/ ground attack aircraft, 2 reconnaissance air- craft, 66 jet trainers, 22 jet transports, 62 turboprop transports, 37 prop transports, 101 helicopters, 4 ASW turboprop aircraft, 14 ASW helicopters; 159 jet fighters and 42 helicopters in storage Missiles: 17 SAM regiments, 36 AAA regi- Supply: limited production of small arms and ammunition; dependent for all other equipment on USSR DWT under the Panamanian flag Merchant marine: 51 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 244,235 GRT, 360,097 DWT; includes 1 short-sea passenger, 38 cargo, 2 refrigerated cargo, 1 roll-on/roll-off cargo, 6 petroleum, oils, and lubricants tanker, 3 bulk; Vietnam owns 7 cargo ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 78,572 GRT, 114,069 ters;11 AM, 1 FM, 6 TV stations Telecommunications: government require- ments fulfilled mainly through radio- communications and radio-relay networks; radio stations provide alternate communica- tion 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 commu- nications; about 60,000 telephones; estimated 3-4 million radios and over 300,000 TV sets; approximately 18 short- wave and 5 medium-wave radio transmit- preliminary Defense Forces NOTE: all figures under defense forces are navy, 12,200 air force Personnel: 1,200,000 army, 3,000-6,000 regiments, 22 engineer brigades Major ground units: 61 infantry divisions, 12 economic construction divisions, 11 engi- neer divisions, 4 training divisions, 1 trans- portation division, 11 armor brigades, 11 AAA brigades, 19 artillery brigades/ 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret Western Sahara (formerly Spanish Sahara) North Atlantic Ocean Yemen Arab Republic (North Yemen) ? kAt dsh Red Sea Communications Telecommunications: sparse and fragmen- tary system with facilities concentrated in northwest area; some radio-relay, wire, and radiocommunications stations in use; 1,000 telephones (0.7 per 100 popl.); 2 satellite ground stations for traffic to Rabat Defense Forces Western Samoa has informal defense ties to New Zealand but has no formal defense structure and no regular armed forces; a na- tive police force of 245 men is maintained; the 1972 budget for police and prisons was $405,230, or 3.8% of total government budget Boundary repre entatwn is not necessarily authoritative. Economy Aid: economic commitments-OPEC ODA (1974-82), $3.4 billion; US, including Ex-Im (1970-83), $157 million; Western countries (non-US) ODA and OOF (1970-82), $852 million; Communist countries (1970-83), $195 million; military commitments-Con, 1 munist countries (1970-83), $1.7 billion; US25X1 (1970-83), $22 million Jyx I 25X1 Defense Forces Personnel: 30,000 army, 850 navy, 1,000 air force (50 pilots Major ground units: 9 infantry brigades, 1 airborne brigade, 5 armored brigades, 3 mechanized brigades, 3 field artillery bri- Ships: 2 inshore minesweepers, 3 torpedo boats, 6 patrol boats, 4 medium landing craft 25X1 Aircraft: 180 (122 jet, 10 turboprop, 4 prop, 44 helicopters0 25X1 Missiles: 9 SA-2 sites in operation or under construction; SA-7 with YAR ArmyunitsP25X1 Supply: heavily dependent on outsider sources, primarily USSR; some aid from Saudi Arabia and Saudi-sponsored programs 25X1 Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December 1982, $750 million; 38% of cen- tral government budge~~ 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret Yemen Arab Republic (continued) Yemen, People's Democratic Republic of (South Yemen) Boundary repre entation of not necessarily art ho,itahvx Arabian Sea Socotra Economy Aid: economic commitments-OPEC ODA (1974-82), $705 million; Communist coun- tries (1970-83), $985 million; Western (non- US) countries ODA and OOF (1970-82), $144 million; US (FY70-82), $4.5 million; military commitments-Communist coun- tries (1970-83), $2.2 billion Communications Merchant marine: 3 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 4,309 GRT, 6,568 DWT; in- cludes 2 cargo, 1 petroleum, oils, and lubri- Defense Forces Personnel: 22,000 army, 1,000 navy, 2,500 air force (100 pilots), 15,000 people's police (paramilitary), 15,000 people's militia (para- military) Major ground units: 10 infantry brigades (3 battalions per brigade), 1 mechanized infan- try brigade, 1 armored brigade (training), 1 field artillery brigade (training), 1 missile/ Ships: 8 guided missile patrol boats, 2 tor- pedo boats, 7 patrol boats, I landing ship, 3 medium landing ships, 5 landing craft,1 fireboat, 1 auxiliary Aircraft: 204 (130 jet, 5 prop, 14 turboprop, Missiles: 4 SA-2 batteries; SA-7s are deployed with PDRY Army units; SA-6s and SA-9s newly acquired and being incorpo- rated into inventory Supply: dependent on outside sources, pri- Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December 1983, $186 million; 21 % of cen- tral government budget 25X1 25X1 of 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret Yugoslavia Economy Debt and aid: Yugoslav outstanding net ex- ternal debt (medium/long-term) end 1983, $19 billion; Yugoslavia has extended bilat- eral economic aid totaling about $1.3 billion to non-Communist less developed countries (1966-80) Communications Merchant marine: 264 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 2,696,100 GRT, 4,215,900 DWT; includes 3 passenger, 4 short-sea pas- senger, 174 cargo, 4 container, 10 roll-on/ roll-off cargo, 1 multifunction heavy lift, 9 petroleum, oils, and lubricants tanker, 1 chemical tanker, 58 bulk; Yugoslavia owns 7 cargo ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 32,148 GRT, 81,579 DWT, which are regis- tered under the Panamanian flag Airfields: 139 total; 48 with permanent- surface runways; 19 with runways 2,500- 3,499 m, 45 with runways 1,000-2,499 m, 75 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, multicon- ductor, coaxial, and submarine cables; radio and TV broadcast facilities provide coverage to nearly all sections of country; 26 main and 48 relay AM stations, 47 FM stations; 4,650,000 receivers; 25 major and 152 relay telephones (97% automatic) Defense Forces Personnel: 151,332 ground forces, 12,800 naval forces, 36,700 air and air defense forces, 20,000 paramilitary forces; personnel in reserve (not on active duty)-(est.) 2,100,000 ground forces, 35,000 naval forces, air force unknown Major ground units: 10 infantry divisions, 29 brigades (16 infantry, 3 mechanized, 1 mountain, 8 tank, 1 parachute), 37 regiments (1 infantry, 10 artillery, 6 antitank, 13 anti- aircraft artillery, 6 SA-6 regiments, 1 attack), 1 FROG 7 battalion Ships: 7 submarines, 2 principal surface combatants, 85 coastal patrol-river/ roadstead craft, 40 amphibious warfare craft, 32 mine warfare craft, 2 underway replenishment ships, 2 fleet support ships, 8 other auxiliaries Aircraft: (in operational units) 522, includ- ing 122 air defense fighters, 178 ground at- tack, 64 reconnaissance, 31 transports, 119 helicopter Missiles: 9 operational SA-2 sites (54 launch- ers); 12 operational SA-3 sites (48 four-rail launchers); 6 regiments of the SA-6 SAM system are deployed with the ground forces; the SA-7 and SA-9 systems are deployed on a limited basis; a new Yugoslav-built tracked SAM system, similar to the SA-9 missile, has been identified with the army Supply: produces weapons and ammunition up to medium artillery, ATGMs and SA-7s, tanks, T-72s, trucks, MICV, T-72 tank (under Soviet license), signal equipment, offensive/defensive chemical warfare mate- riel; builds submersibles, midget subma- rines, submarines, missile attack boats, am- phibious warfare craft, and up to frigate-size surface combatants and naval auxiliary ships; builds limited quantity of subsonic fighter aircraft and assembles limited quan- tities of helicopters; other materiel now ob- tained primarily from USSR, although lim- ited quantities of military equipment have been received from non-Communist coun- tries, r ,' t .' Swede 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 LOA I 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret Boundary repre entation is not necessarily authoritative Economy Aid: economic commitments-Western (non- US) countries ODA and OOF (1970-82), $3.8 billion; US, including Ex-Im (1970-83), $698 million; Communist countries (1970-83), $138 million; OPEC ODA (1974-82), $200 million; military commitments-US (1970-83), $156 million; Communist coun- tries (1970-83), $63 million Communications Merchant marine: 7 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 70,095 GRT, 105,742 DWT; includes 1 passenger cargo, 6 cargo Defense Forces Personnel: 22,000 army, 2,750 air force, 1,150 navy, 24,000 gendarmerie, 3,000 Spe- cial Presidential Brigade, 5,000 Corlog, 1 armed forces headquarters; military advis- ers-110 Belgian, 125 French, 116 Chinese, 10 FRG, 17 Israeli, 15 Egyptian Major ground units: 1 infantry division, 1 airborne brigade (3 battalions), 1 armored brigade, 3 infantry brigades, 1 special bri- gade (headquarters, ceremonial, and miscel- laneous units, as well as 1 Presidential Guard battalion,1 parachute battalion, and 1 artil- lery regiment) Ships: 19 total (4 coastal escorts, 15 patrol boats) Aircraft: 66 (26 jet, 8 turboprop, 20 prop, 12 helicoptersr-__1 Supply: historically dependent on Western sources, principally France and US, and to a lesser extent Belgium, Israel, and Italy; in 1975 began receiving Chinese, FRG, and North Korean equipment Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December 1983, $48.26 million; 7.1 % of central government budget Zambia (formerly Northern Rhodesia) Bou__ dary es enta1-is not ardy authoritative Economy Aid: economic commitments-Western (non- US) countries ODA and OOF (1970-82), $2.2 billion; Communist countries (1970-83), $512 million; US, including Ex-Im (1970-83), $302 million; OPEC ODA (1974-82), $160 million; military commitments-Commu- nist countries (1970-83), $332 million 5,500 GRT, 9,100 DWT Communications Merchant marine: 1 cargo ship totaling Defense Forces Personnel: 12,500 army, 1,800 air force, 12,000 police, 1,400 paramilitary, 15,000 Zambian national service, 4,000 army re- Major ground units: 6 infantry battalions, 1 armored regiment, 1 artillery regimentF_ Aircraft: 160 (62 jet, 57 prop, 41 helicopters) Missiles: SAM-7, SAM-3; Tigercat and Ra- pier SAM launchers (nonoperational) F_ country Supply: until 1970s heavily dependent on UK; since then, equipment received from USSR, China, North Korea, and several West and East European countries; USSR became major supplier of military equip- ment in 1979; Zambia has shown willingness to seek military assistance from virtually any 25X1 25X1 25X1 LJ/~ I 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 I Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Military budget: for fiscal year ending 31 December 1980, $324.4 million; 21 % of cen- Zimbabwe (formerly Southern Rhodesia) Taiwan (China listed alphabetically) Boundary representation is not necessarily authoritative 25X1 25X1 tral government budget Philippine Sea 6,000-8,000 militia Defense Forces Personnel: 40,200 army, 1,800 air force, 9,500 police, 3,000 paramilitary police, battalion Major ground units: 5 brigade headquar- ters, 20 battalions, 1 artillery regiment,1 armored-car regiment, 1 parachute group, 1 Presidential Guard Brigade, 1 air defense regiment,1 tank regiment,1 mechanized arm Supply: mainly dependent upon UK since independence on 8 April 1980; North Korea supplied material to equip 1 brigade of the Communications Merchant marine: 143 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 1,827,855 GRT, 2,779,780 DWT; includes 1 passenger, 85 cargo, 17 25X1 container, 13 tanker, 25 bulk, 1 combination ore/oil,1 specialized carrier0 25X1 Defense Forces Personnel: 290,000 army, 61,200 navy 25X1 (31,000 marines), 65,000 air force, 39,600 Ministry of National Defense (not included in service totals), 7,600 Combined Service 7r-,XI forces0 25X1 Major ground units: the army has 3 field armies, 1 defense command, and 6 corps comprising 12 heavy infantry divisions, 6 25X1 light infantry divisions, 3 marine divisions, 6 armored brigades, 4 tank groups, 2 airborne25X1 brigades, 1 Taiwan Garrison General Head- quarters (25,000 national security police), 1 Anti-Communist National Salvation Corps (light division equivalent), 25 GS field artil- lery battalions, 2 NIKE Hercules missile bat- talions, 4 I-HAWK missile battalions; army aviation has 3 general support aviation bat- talions; 9 reserve infantry divisions (cadre only for reserve, recruit, and ROTC train- ing)I 25X1 Ships: 189 combatant units (not including 19 yard/service craft and 302 minor amphibi- ous craft), supported by 3 underway replen- ishment ships, 1 materiel support ship, 6 fleet 99 Secret Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret Taiwan (continued) support ships, and 7 other auxiliaries; com- batant units include 2 training submarines, 26 destroyers, 9 frigates, 2 guided missile patrol combatants, 5 patrol combatants, 29 amphibious warfare ships, 74 coastal patrol- river/roadstead craft (50 of which are to be missile-equipped fast patrol craft; to date only 2 have had their missile launchers in- stalled), 21 amphibious warfare craft, 21 mine warfare craft' Aircraft: 1,054, including 863 (558 jet) in air force, 169 in army aviation, 22 in marine aviation Missiles: NIKE Hercules, HAWK Chap- paral, Ching Feng short-range missile, Hsiung Feng cruise missile, Kunwu ("sword") antitank guided missile Supply: some production of missile- equipped patrol boats, infantry weapons, armored vehicles, artillery weapons, tactical communications equipment, artillery am- munition, chemical/biological warfare pro- tective masks, assembly of general purpose vehicles, quartermaster items; moderate reliance upon US for other military supplies; producing an indigenous trainer and assem- bling US F-5E fighters under license; 2 sub- marines on order from Netherlands 25X1 I Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret Appendix Acres Hectares 0.4046856 Meters, cubic Tons, register 0.353147 Acres Kilometers, square 0.004046856 Miles, nautical Kilometers 1.852 Acres Meters, square 4046.856 Miles, statute Centimeters 160934.4 Centimeters Meters 0.01 Miles, statute Meters 1609.344 Centimeters, square Meters, square 0.0001 Miles, statute Kilometers 1.609344 Degrees, Fahrenheit Degrees, Celsius subtract 32 and Miles, square Hectares 258.9998 multiply by 5/9 Miles, square Kilometers, square 2.589998 Feet Centimeters 30.48 Ounces, avoirdupois Grams 28.349523 Feet Meters 0.3048 Ounces, avoirdupois Kilograms 0.028349523 Feet Kilometers 0.0003048 Ounces, troy Pounds, troy 0.083333 Feet, cubic Liters 28.316847 Ounces, troy Grams 31.10348 Feet, cubic Meters, cubic 0.028316847 Pints, liquid Milliliters 473.176473 Feet, square Centimeters, square 929.0304 Pints, liquid Liters 0.473176473 Feet, square Meters, square 0.09290304 Pounds, avoirdupois Grams 453.59237 Gallons, US liquid Liters 3.785412 Pounds, avoirdupois Kilograms 0.45359237 Gallons, US liquid Meters, cubic 0.003785412 Pounds, avoirdupois Quintals 0.00453592 Grams Ounces, troy 0.032151 Pounds, avoirdupois Tons, metric 0.000453592 Grams Pounds, troy 0.002679 Pounds, troy Ounces, troy 12 Hectares Kilometers, square 0.01 Pounds, troy Grams 373.241722 Hectares Meters, square 10,000 Quarts, dry Liters 1.101221 Inches Centimeters 2.54 Quarts, dry Dekaliters 0.1101221 Inches Meters 0.0254 Quarts, liquid Milliliters 946.352946 Inches, cubic Milliliters 16.387064 Quarts, liquid Liters 0.946352946 Inches, cubic Liters 0.016387064 Quintals Tons, metric 0.1 Inches, cubic Meters, cubic 0.000016387064 Tons, long Kilograms 1016.047 Inches, square Centimeters, square 6.4516 Tons, long Tons, metric 1.016047 Inches, square Meters, square 0.00064516 Tons, metric Quintals 10 Kilograms Ounces, troy 32.15075 Ton-miles, long Ton-kilometers, metric 1.635169 Kilograms Pounds, troy 2.679229 Ton-miles, short Ton-kilometers, metric 1.459972 Kilograms Tons, metric 0.001 Tons, register Meters, cubic 2.831685 Kilometers, square Hectares 100 Tons, short Kilograms 907.185 Liters Milliliters 1000 Tons, short Tons, metric 0.907185 Liters Meters, cubic 0.001 Yards Centimeters 91.44 1000 Yards Meters 0.9144 100 Yards, cubic Liters 764.5549 0.001 Yards, cubic Meters, cubic 0.7645549 1000 Yards, square Meters, square 0.836127 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6 Secret Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP08-00534R000100060001-6