Page:NATIONAL INTELLIGENCE SURVEY 18; CZECHOSLOVAKIA; ARMED FORCES CIA-RDP01-00707R000200110009-4.pdf/12

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.

APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2009/06/16: CIA-RDP01-00707R000200110009-4


FIGURE 2. Armed forces personnel strengths (S)
Year (1 January) Ground Forces[1] Air Force Totals Security Forces
1955 170,000 18,000 188,000 45,000
1956 170,000 22,000 192,000 45,000
1957-59 170,000 23,000 193,000 45,000
1961 155,000 24,000 179,000 45,000
1963 200,000 26,000 226,000 47,500
1965 175,000 28,000 203,000 40,000
1966-67 175,000 30,000 205,000 30,000
1968 175,000 32,000 207,000 20,000
1969 146,500 31,000 177,500 13,000
1970-71 154,000 34,000 188,000 13,500
1972 155,000 36,000 191,000 9,500
1973 155,000 38,000 193,000 9,500
1974 143,000 57,500[2] 210,300 9,500


The Frontier Guard has reduced its strength from 30,000 to about 9,500 since 1965. Reductions were predicated on basic realignment and the deactivation of several border brigades formerly responsible for areas along the East German and Polish borders. These border responsibilities were turned over to Czechoslovak Customs Police.


5. Training (S)

Training in the armed forces is patterned generally on that of the Soviet Armed Forces. Nearly all recruits receive some form of preinduction training in various state-controlled paramilitary organizations known collectively as SVAZARM (Svaz pro Spolupraci s Armadon—Union for Cooperation with the Army). This preinduction training is especially important to men interested in the airborne units and the air force; it constitutes an almost mandatory requirement.

All military training is supervised by the military district headquarters under the direction of the General Staff at the federal Ministry of National Defense. Guidance in shaping the military training program is provided by the Soviet Military Mission, and the Czechoslovak training schedule is coordinated with the overall Warsaw Pact plan for combined training of the Eastern European Warsaw Pact forces.

Schools for officers, officer candidates, reservists, and specialists are maintained by the various branches. In addition to a number of specialized branch schools for officer candidates, instruction for field-grade officers of all services is provided by a command and staff college, the Zapotocky Military Academy in Brno. The main training facilities for the air force are located at the air academy in Kosice. In addition to training at these in-country facilities, selected officers from the ground and air forces are sent to high-level military schools in the Soviet Union.

Joint air-ground training exercises, in which ground units are provided tactical air support, are frequently conducted. Helicopters are employed in limited air assault roles and reconnaissance. Air defense exercises, aimed at perfecting the coordination of surface-to-air and conventional antiaircraft elements with fighter aircraft, continually test the effectiveness of the air defense system.

The armed forces have participated in major Warsaw Pact exercises, including the most recent exercise, "Shield," in 1972. Combined Czechoslovak air defense exercises provide practice in the operation of the integrated air defense system of the Warsaw Pact. Within 3 months after the 1968 invasion, the Czechoslovak armed forces were training on a large-unit scale after having been at a full operational and training stand down.

Czechoslovak participation in the training of foreign military students is apparent both at in-country facilities and abroad. Students from Afro-Asian countries as well as from Cuba have been reported to be training at Czechoslovak ground and air forces installations. Civilian technicians usually sent abroad in conjunction with arms shipments have in some instances been accompanied by Czechoslovak military officers. In at least one Asian country Czechoslovak military officers are known to have served as advisors on nearly every facet of military science and tactics. Occasional visits by high-ranking Czechoslovak military officers to Afro-Asian nations and Cuba serve to maintain ties with these countries. Among Warsaw Pact nations, Czechoslovakia's participation in training of foreign military students and in military advisory programs is exceeded only by the Soviet Union.


6. Economic support and military budget (S)

a. Economic support

The Czechoslovak economy is able to supply the armed forces with food, quartermaster items, most ground forces equipment, and trainer aircraft. It is the most nearly self-sufficient of the Eastern European Communist countries in armaments production, but


6


APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2009/06/16: CIA-RDP01-00707R000200110009-4

  1. Until 1970 there were 500 quasi-naval river personnel in the regular ground forces
  2. Includes 32,100 air force and 25,700 air defense force personnel. Prior to 1974 the latter were included in the ground force total.