APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2009/06/16: CIA-RDP01-00707R000200090014-1
Auditing Academy, Madrid | Advanced specialization course, usually 8 months in length, consisting of 3 to 4 months of instruction by correspondence, followed by 4 months of classroom instruction at the school; requirement for promotion to major. This school also provides 1 to 2 years of instruction for officer candidates, as noted above. |
Listed in the following tabulation are locations and instructional specialties of summer training camps for the university students enrolled in the Superior Paramilitary Instruction program:
- Segovia: Infantry, artillery (field and air defense), engineer and signal
- Cadiz: Infantry, cavalry, artillery (field), engineer and signal coast artillery
- Tarragona: Infantry, artillery (field and air defense), engineer and signal
- Zaragoza: Infantry, cavalry, artillery (field), engineer and signal
- Santa Cruz de Tenerife: Infantry, artillery (field) and engineer
The Medical Academy in Madrid conducts training as required for medical students enrolled in the Superior Premilitary Instruction Program.
The following is a location list of the 17 recruit training centers:
- No. 1: Madrid
- No. 2: Alíala de Henares
- No. 3: Caceres
- No. 4 and No. 5: Cordoba
- No. 6 and No. 17: Almeria
- No. 7: Valencia (provisionally at Betera)
- No. 8: Alicante
- No. 9: Gerona
- No. 10: Zaragoza
- No. 11: Alava
- No. 12: Leon
- No. 13: Lugo
- No. 14: Majorca
- No. 15: Santa Cruz de Tenerife
- No. 16: Cadiz
4. Logistics (C)
The Ministry of Army procures all types of materiel and supplies for the army through two directorates controlled by the Under Secretary of the Army - the Directorates General of Industry and Materiel and of Services. Funds for procurement are made available by the Comptroller General, also controlled by the under secretary. The Directorate General of Industry and Materiel handles procurement (including manufacturing requirements) of weapons, equipment, and ammunition. The Directorate General of Services either procures or authorizes procurement of all other supplies and maintains careful control over the use of POL, determining the amount of POL items which can be procured and making allocations to the units. Tactical units not belonging to the Immediate Intervention Forces obtain their own POL supplies from local CAMPSA [1] stations on the basis of allotments given them by the Directorate General of Services. POL tankers provide support for units of the Immediate Intervention Forces.
Equipment and supplies, other than POL, are stored according to type and service in army depots strategically located throughout the regions and commands; the army has no depots for POL. The depots are under the regulating control of the Directorate General of Services; responsibility for their technical operations is given to the chiefs of services. The captain general of the region in which the installation is located has operational control over the activities of the depots. He is provided some funds for local purchase of various supplies and repair parts and to cover contracts for repairs performed by civilian facilities. Supplies are issued by the depots in accordance with allotments made by the Directorate General of Services and the 4th Section, Services, of the Army Central General Staff; many items are very carefully controlled. The Directorate General of Services, in accordance with the "national plan" prepared by the chiefs of artillery, transportation, engineers, and signal and approved by the Chief of the Central General Staff and the Minister of Army, controls allotments for artillery, automotive, engineer, and signal items. Service or logistics units are responsible for the distribution of supplies. The
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APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2009/06/16: CIA-RDP01-00707R000200090014-1
- ↑ Compania Arrendataria del Monopoly de Petroleos, S.A., the government-owned organization for import, manufacture, and distribution of petroleum products