The structure of the Spanish Army as of April 2023 is as follows:
Chief of the Army General Staff
editThe Chief of the Army General Staff heads the Spanish Army.
Army Headquarters
editThe Army Headquarters is made up of six organizations, which report directly to the Chief of the Army General Staff.[1][2]
- Army Headquarters, in Madrid[1][2]
- Army General Staff
- Command, headed by the Deputy Chief of the Army General Staff
- Army General Staff Main Secretariat
- Planning Division
- Operations Division
- Logistic Division
- Cabinet of the Chief of Staff of the Army
- Information Systems, Telecommunications and Technical Assistance Command
- Technical Assistance Sub-directorate
- Information Systems and Telecommunications Sub-directorate
- Signal Regiment No. 22, in Pozuelo de Alarcón[3] (National Signal Infrastructure)
- Signal Battalion I/22, in Pozuelo de Alarcón
- Signal Battalion II/22, in Pozuelo de Alarcón
- Signal Battalion III/22, in Seville
- Signal Battalion IV/22, in Barcelona
- Signal Battalion V/22, in A Coruña
- Signal Battalion VI/22, in Santa Cruz de Tenerife
- Signal Battalion Support VII/22, in Pozuelo de Alarcón
- Signal Regiment No. 22, in Pozuelo de Alarcón[3] (National Signal Infrastructure)
- Cyberspace and Electromagnetic Activities Sub-directorate
- Electronic Warfare Regiment No. 32, in Dos Hermanas
- Electronic Warfare Battalion I/32
- Electronic Warfare Battalion II/32
- Electronic Warfare Battalion III/32
- Electronic Warfare Regiment No. 32, in Dos Hermanas
- Army Geographical Center, in Madrid
- Military History and Culture Institute, in Madrid
- Historical Studies Sub-directorate
- Historical and Cultural Heritage Sub-directorate
- Army Museum
- Military History and Culture Centers
- Military Archives
- Army Legal Council
- Army Intervention Delegate (Financial controlling, part of the Defense Main Intervention Office)[1]
- Infantry Regiment "Inmemorial del Rey" No. 1, in Madrid
- Army General Staff
Operational Force
editThe Operational Force is made up of three organizations, which report directly to the Chief of the Army General Staff.[1][2]
High Readiness Land Headquarters
editThe High Readiness Land Headquarters is one of NATOs Rapid Deployable Corps and headed by a three-star general.
- High Readiness Land Headquarters, in Valencia[1][2]
- Headquarters Battalion, in Bétera
- Military Police Battalion I, in Bétera
Land Force
editThe Land Force is a higher command based in Seville, which is responsible to establish, train and maintain the operational units of the Spanish Army based in continental Spain. The command is headed by a three-star general and has four subordinate units:[1][2]
- Land Force, in Seville[1][2]
- Land Force Headquarters, in Seville
- Division "Castillejos", in Huesca
- Division "San Marcial", in Burgos
- Maneuver Support Command, in A Coruña
- Cavalry Regiment "España" No. 11, in Zaragoza[4]
- Light Armored Cavalry Group "Lanceros de Borbón" I/11 (Centauro tank destroyers and VEC-M1 reconnaissance vehicles)
- Light Armored Cavalry Group "Numancia" II/11 (Centauro tank destroyers and VEC-M1 reconnaissance vehicles)
Division "Castillejos"
editThe Division "Castillejos" is tasked to organize, equip, prepare and generate operational organizations for joint and combined operations.[1][2] The division provides forces for NATO, United Nations and European Union missions.
- Division "Castillejos", in Huesca[5][1][2]
- Division "Castillejos" Headquarters Battalion, in Huesca
- Signal Regiment No. 1, in Castrillo del Val
- Signal Battalion I/1, in Castrillo del Val
- Signal Battalion II/1, in Huesca
Brigade "Aragón" I
edit- Brigade "Aragón" I, in Zaragoza[6]
- Headquarters Battalion I, in Zaragoza
- Armored Regiment "Pavia" No. 4, in Zaragoza
- Tank Battalion "Flandes" I/4 (Leopard 2E tanks)
- Armored Cavalry Group "Húsares de la Princesa" II/4 (Leopard 2E tanks and VEC-M1 reconnaissance vehicles)
- Infantry Regiment "Arapiles" No. 62, in Sant Climent Sescebes
- Mechanized Infantry Battalion "Badajoz" I/62 (Pizarro infantry fighting vehicles)
- Infantry Regiment "Barcelona" No. 63, in Barcelona[7]
- Motorized Infantry Battalion "Cataluña" I/63
- Field Artillery Regiment No. 20, in Zaragoza
- Field Artillery Group I/20 (M109A5 self-propelled howitzers)
- Sapper Battalion I, in Zaragoza
- Logistic Group I, in Zaragoza
Brigade "King Alfonso XIII" II of the Legion
edit- Brigade "King Alfonso XIII" II of the Legion, in Viator[8]
- Headquarters Bandera II of the Legion, in Viator
- Light Armored Cavalry Group "Reyes Católicos" II of the Legion, in Ronda (Centauro tank destroyers and VEC-M1 reconnaissance vehicles)
- Tercio "Juan de Austria" No. 3 of the Legion, in Viator
- Protected Infantry Bandera "Valenzuela" VII/3 (BMR-M1 armored personnel carriers)
- Protected Infantry Bandera "Colón" VIII/3 (BMR-M1 armored personnel carriers)
- Tercio "Alejandro Farnesio" No. 4 of the Legion, in Ronda
- Motorized Infantry Bandera "Millán Astray" X/4
- Field Artillery Group II of the Legion, in Viator (L-118A1 towed howitzers)
- Sapper Bandera II of the Legion, in Viator
- Logistic Group II of the Legion, in Viator
Brigade "Galicia" VII
edit- Brigade "Galicia" VII, in Pontevedra[9]
- Headquarters Battalion VII, in Figueirido
- Cavalry Regiment "Farnesio" No. 12, in Santovenia de Pisuerga
- Light Armored Cavalry Group "Santiago" I/12 (Centauro tank destroyers and VEC-M1 reconnaissance vehicles)
- Infantry Regiment "Príncipe" No. 3, in Siero
- Protected Infantry Battalion "San Quintín" I/3 (RG-31 Nyala and VAMTAC ST5 vehicles)
- Protected Infantry Battalion "Toledo" II/3 (BMR-M1 armored personnel carriers)
- Infantry Regiment "Isabel la Católica" No. 29, in Pontevedra
- Motorized Infantry Battalion "Zamora" I/29
- Field Artillery Group VII, in Pontevedra (L-118A1 towed howitzers)
- Sapper Battalion VII, in Pontevedra
- Logistic Group VII, in Pontevedra
Brigade "Guzmán el Bueno" X
edit- Brigade "Guzmán el Bueno" X, in Cerro Muriano[10]
- Headquarters Battalion X, in Cerro Muriano
- Infantry Regiment "La Reina" No. 2, in Cerro Muriano
- Protected Infantry Battalion "Princesa" I/2 (M113 armored personnel carriers)
- Mechanized Infantry Battalion "Lepanto" II/2 (Pizarro infantry fighting vehicles)
- Armored Regiment "Córdoba" No. 10, in Cerro Muriano
- Infantry Regiment "Garellano" No. 45, in Mungia
- Motorized Infantry Battalion "Guipúzcoa" I/45
- Field Artillery Group X, in Cerro Muriano (M109A5 self-propelled howitzers)
- Sapper Battalion X, in Cerro Muriano
- Logistic Group X, in Cerro Muriano
Brigade "Extremadura" XI
edit- Brigade "Extremadura" XI, in Badajoz[11]
- Headquarters Battalion XI, in Badajoz
- Infantry Regiment "Saboya" No. 6, in Badajoz
- Armored Regiment "Castilla" No. 16, in Badajoz
- Infantry Regiment "Tercio Viejo de Sicilia" No. 67, in San Sebastián
- Motorized Infantry Battalion "Legazpi" I/67
- Field Artillery Group XI, in Badajoz (M109A5 self-propelled howitzers)
- Sapper Battalion XI, in Badajoz
- Logistic Group XI, in Badajoz
Brigade "Guadarrama" XII
edit- Brigade "Guadarrama" XII, in Madrid[12]
- Headquarters Battalion XII, in Madrid
- Infantry Regiment "Asturias" No. 31, in Madrid
- Mechanized Infantry Battalion "Covadonga" I/31 (Pizarro infantry fighting vehicles)
- Protected Infantry Battalion "Uad-Ras" II/31 (M113 armored personnel carriers)
- Armored Regiment "Alcázar de Toledo" No. 61, in Madrid
- Tank Battalion "León" I/61 (Leopard 2E tanks)
- Armored Cavalry Group "Villaviciosa" II/61 (Leopard 2E tanks and VEC-M1 reconnaissance vehicles)
- Field Artillery Group XII, in Madrid (M109A5 self-propelled howitzers)
- Sapper Battalion XII, in Madrid
- Logistic Group XII, in Colmenar Viejo
Division "San Marcial"
editThe Division "San Marcial" is tasked to organize, equip, prepare and generate high readiness operational organizations for joint and combined operations.[1][2] The division provides forces for high intensity operations and Spanish national missions.
- Division "San Marcial", in Burgos
- Division "San Marcial" Headquarters Battalion, in Burgos
- Information Operations Regiment No. 1, in Valencia[13]
- Information Operations Group I/1
- Information Operations Group II/1
Paratroopers Brigade "Almogávares" VI
edit- Paratroopers Brigade "Almogávares" VI, in Paracuellos de Jarama[14]
- Headquarters Battalion VI, in Paracuellos de Jarama
- Cavalry Regiment "Lusitania" No. 8, in Marines
- Paratroopers Infantry Regiment "Nápoles" No. 4, in Paracuellos de Jarama
- Paratroopers Infantry Bandera "Roger de Flor" I/4
- Protected Infantry Bandera "Roger de Lauria" II/4 (RG-31 Nyala and VAMTAC ST5 vehicles)
- Infantry Regiment "Zaragoza" No. 5, in Alcantarilla
- Field Artillery Group VI, in Paracuellos de Jarama (L-118A1 towed howitzers)
- Engineer Battalion VI, in Paracuellos de Jarama
- Logistic Group VI, in Paracuellos de Jarama
Special Operations Command "Órdenes Militares"
edit- Special Operations Command "Órdenes Militares", in Alicante[15][1]
- Special Operations Command Headquarters Group, in Alicante
- Special Operations Group "Valencia" III, in Alicante
- Special Operations Group "Tercio del Ampurdán" IV, in Alicante
- Special Operations Bandera "Legionario Maderal Oleaga" XIX of the Legion, in Alicante
- Special Operations Command Logistic Unit, in Alicante
- Special Operations Command Signal Company, in Alicante
Mountain Troops Command "Roncesvalles"
edit- Mountain Troops Command "Roncesvalles", in Pamplona[16]
- Headquarters Battalion, in Pamplona
- Mountain Hunters Infantry Regiment "Galicia" No. 64, in Jaca
- Mountain Hunters Infantry Regiment "América" No. 66, in Berrioplano
- Mountain Hunters Battalion "Montejurra" I/66 (Bv 206s armored vehicles)
- Mountain and Special Operations Military School, in Jaca
Army Airmobile Forces
edit- Army Airmobile Forces, in Colmenar Viejo[17]
- Army Airmobile Forces Headquarters Battalion, in Colmenar Viejo
- Attack Helicopter Battalion I, in Almagro (Tiger HAD)
- Emergency Helicopter Battalion II, in Bétera and Colmenar Viejo (AS532 UL Cougar)
- Maneuver Helicopter Battalion III, in Agoncillo (NH90 TTH)
- Maneuver Helicopter Battalion IV, in El Copero (AS332 B1 Super Puma)
- Transport Helicopter Battalion V, in Colmenar Viejo, (CH-47F Chinook)
- Army Airmobile Forces Logistic Group, in Colmenar Viejo
- Melilla Helicopter Detachment, in Melilla
Maneuver Support Command
editThe Maneuver Support Command is tasked to organize, equip, prepare and generate operational combat support and combat logistic support organizations for joint and combined operations.[1][2]
- Maneuver Support Command, in A Coruña[18]
- Maneuver Support Command Headquarters Battalion, in A Coruña
- Intelligence Regiment No. 1, in Valencia
- Intelligence Group I/1
- Terrestrial Reconnaissance Group II/1
- Aerial Reconnaissance Group IV/1 (IAI Searcher MK II J and RQ-11 Raven Unmanned Aerial Vehicles), in San Andrés del Rabanedo
- NBC-defense Regiment "Valencia" No. 1, in Valencia
Field Artillery Command
edit- Field Artillery Command, in San Andrés del Rabanedo[19]
- Coastal Artillery Regiment No. 4, in San Fernando
- Field Artillery Regiment No. 11, in Castrillo del Val
- Rocket Artillery Regiment No. 63, in Astorga
- Rocket Artillery Group I/63 (155/52 APU-SIAC towed howitzers - to be replaced with PULS multiple rocket launchers)
- Target Acquisition Group II/63 (ARTHUR and AN/TPQ-36 artillery fire locating radars and IAI Searcher MK II J drones), in San Andrés del Rabanedo
Anti-aircraft Artillery Command
edit- Anti-aircraft Artillery Command in Madrid[20]
- Anti-aircraft Artillery Regiment No. 71, in Madrid
- Anti-aircraft Artillery Group I/71 (Mistral surface-to-air missiles)
- Anti-aircraft Artillery Group II/72 (GDF 07 twin 35mm autocannons and Aspide surface-to-air missiles with Skydor fire direction systems)
- Anti-aircraft Artillery Regiment No. 73, in Cartagena
- Anti-aircraft Artillery Group I/73 (GDF 07 twin 35mm autocannons and Aspide surface-to-air missiles with Skydor fire direction systems)
- Anti-aircraft Artillery Group II/73 (NASAMS surface-to-air missile systems)
- Anti-aircraft Artillery Group III/73 (MIM-104 Patriot surface-to-air missile systems), in Marines
- Anti-aircraft Artillery Regiment No. 74, in Dos Hermanas
- Anti-aircraft Artillery Group I/74 (MIM-23 Hawk surface-to-air missile systems)
- Anti-aircraft Artillery Group II/74 (MIM-23 Hawk surface-to-air missile systems), in San Roque
- Maintenance Group III/74
- Anti-aircraft Artillery Command Signal Unit, in Madrid and Dos Hermanas
- Anti-aircraft Artillery Regiment No. 71, in Madrid
Engineer Command
edit- Engineer Command, in Salamanca[21]
- Engineer Regiment No. 1, in Castrillo del Val
- Special Engineer Regiment No. 11, in Salamanca
- Bridge and Special Engineer Regiment No. 12, in Zaragoza
Signal Command
edit- Signal Command, in Bétera[22]
- Signal Regiment No. 21, in Marines
- Signal Battalion Command Posts I/21
- Signal Battalion Hubs II/21
- Signal Battalion Support III/21
- Electronic Warfare Regiment No. 31, in El Pardo
- Electronic Warfare Battalion I/31
- Electronic Warfare Unit II/31
- Signal Regiment No. 21, in Marines
Logistic Brigade
edit- Logistic Brigade, in Zaragoza[23]
- Transport Grouping No. 1, in Madrid
- Special Transport Group I/1
- Deployment Support Group II/1, in Alcalá de Henares
- Harbor terminal units in San Fernando, Los Barrios, Viator and Paterna
- Logistic Support Grouping No. 11, in Colmenar Viejo
- Logistic Support Grouping No. 21, in Seville
- Supply Group I/21
- Maintenance Group II/21
- Transport Group III/21, in Granada
- Services and Workshops Unit 212, in Granada
- Logistic Support Grouping No. 41, in Zaragoza
- Supply Group I/41
- Maintenance Group II/41
- Transport Group III/41
- Services and Workshops Unit 412, in Sant Boi de Llobregat
- Logistic Support Grouping No. 61, Valladolid
- Supply Group I/61
- Maintenance Group II/61
- Transport Group III/61
- Services and Workshops Unit 612, in Burgos
- Logistic Support Grouping No. 81, in San Cristóbal de la Laguna
- Medical Grouping No. 1, in Pozuelo de Alarcón
- Medical Logistic Support Unit, in Madrid
- Transport Grouping No. 1, in Madrid
Canary Islands Command
editThe Canary Islands Command is a higher command based in Santa Cruz de Tenerife, which is tasked to establish and prepare operational units and tasked to carry out military operations in its assigned area. The command consists of all Spanish Army units outside continental Spain and is headed by a three-star general.[1][2]
- Canary Islands Command, in Santa Cruz de Tenerife[1][2][24]
- Ceuta General Command, tasked with defending the exclave of Ceuta
- Melilla General Command, tasked with defending the exclave of Melilla
- Balearic General Command, tasked with defending the Balearic Islands
- Brigade "Canarias" XVI, tasked with defending the Canary Islands
- Anti-aircraft Artillery Regiment No. 94, in Las Palmas
- Maneuver Helicopter Battalion VI, in San Cristóbal de La Laguna (AS332 B1 Super Puma)
Ceuta General Command
editThe command is headed by a two-star general.
- Ceuta General Command, in Ceuta[25]
- Ceuta General Command Headquarters Battalion
- Cavalry Regiment "Montesa" No. 3
- Armored Cavalry Group "Cazadores de África" I/3 (Leopard 2A4 tanks and Pizarro infantry fighting vehicles)
- Tercio "Duque de Alba" No. 2 of the Legion
- Regulares Group "Ceuta" No. 54
- Mixed Artillery Regiment No. 30
- Engineer Regiment No. 7
- Logistic Unit No. 23
Melilla General Command
editThe command is headed by a two-star general.
- Melilla General Command, in Melilla[26]
- Melilla General Command Headquarters Battalion
- Cavalry Regiment "Alcántara" No. 10
- Tercio "Gran Capitán" No. 1 of the Legion
- Regulares Group "Melilla" No. 52
- Mixed Artillery Regiment No. 32
- Engineer Regiment No. 8
- Logistic Unit No. 24
Balearic General Command
editThe command is headed by a two-star general.
- Balearic General Command, in Palma de Mallorca[27]
- Infantry Regiment "Palma" No. 47, in Palma de Mallorca
Brigade "Canarias" XVI
edit- Brigade "Canarias" XVI, in Las Palmas (Gran Canaria)[28]
- Headquarters Battalion XVI, in Las Palmas
- Light Armored Cavalry Group "Milán" XVI, in Marines (Province of Valencia) (Centauro tank destroyers and VEC-M1 reconnaissance vehicles)
- Infantry Regiment "Soria" No. 9, in Puerto del Rosario (Fuerteventura)
- Infantry Regiment "Tenerife" No. 49, in Santa Cruz de Tenerife
- Infantry Regiment "Canarias" No. 50, in Las Palmas
- Protected Infantry Battalion "Ceriñola" I/50 (RG-31 Nyala and VAMTAC ST5 vehicles)
- Field Artillery Regiment No. 93, in San Cristóbal de La Laguna (Tenerife)
- Field Artillery Group I/93 (L-118A1 towed howitzers)
- Mistral Battery (Mistral surface-to-air missiles)
- Sapper Battalion XVI, in San Cristóbal de La Laguna and Las Palmas
- Logistic Group XVI, in Las Palmas
Support Force
editThe Support Force is made up of five organizations, which report directly to the Chief of the Army General Staff.[1][2]
Personnel Command
editThe Personnel Command is responsible for the planning, management, administration and control of the army's personnel management, personnel assistance, and healthcare.[1]
- Personnel Command, in Madrid[1]
- Personnel Command Headquarters
- Main Secretariat
- Personnel Directorate
- Military Career Sub-directorate of
- Evaluation Sub-directorate
- Personnel Management Sub-directorate
- Personnel Assistance Directorate
- Personnel Support Sub-Directorate
- Social Centers Management Sub-Directorate
- Military residences, sport centers, and sociocultural centers
- Healthcare Directorate
- Personnel Command Headquarters
Training and Doctrine Command
editThe Training and Doctrine Command is responsible for the planning, inspection, coordination and investigation of the army's knowledge management, which includes the doctrine, organization, materials, education and instruction systems, training, and evaluation.[1]
- Training and Doctrine Command, in Granada[1][29]
- Training and Doctrine Command Headquarters
- Main Secretariat
- Research, Doctrine, Organization, and Materials Directorate
- Doctrine, Organization, and Materials Sub-Directorate
- Research and Lessons Learned Sub-Directorate
- Education, Instruction, Training, and Evaluation Directorate
- Education Sub-directorate
- Instruction, Training and Evaluation Sub-directorate
- General Military Academy, in Zaragoza
- Non-commissioned Officers Basic General Academy, in Talarn
- Infantry Academy, in Toledo
- Cavalry Academy, in Valladolid
- Artillery Academy, in Segovia
- Engineer Academy, in Hoyo de Manzanares
- Logistic Academy, in Calatayud
- Army Aviation Academy, in Colmenar Viejo
- Army War School, in Madrid
- Army Higher Polytechnic School, in Madrid
- Nuclear, Biological and Chemical Defense Military School, in Hoyo de Manzanares
- Troop Formation Center No. 1, in Cáceres
- Troop Formation Center No. 2, in San Fernando
- National Training Center "San Gregorio", in Zaragoza
- National Training Center "Chinchilla", in Chinchilla de Montearagón
- Training and Doctrine Command Headquarters
Logistic Support Command
editThe Logistic Support Command is responsible materiel and logistical support processes, which includes the supply, maintenance and transportation functions and corresponding support engineering.[1]
- Logistic Support Command, in Madrid[1]
- Logistic Support Command Headquarters
- Main Secretariat
- Engineering Command
- Economic Affairs Command
- Procurement Directorate
- Weapon Systems Sub-directorate
- Supplies and Services Sub-directorate
- Logistic Functions Integration Directorate
- Logistic Management Sub-directorate
- Analysis Management Sub-directorate
- Logistic Centers Command
- Supply Depot and Center for Logistics Materiel, in Madrid
- Maintenance Depot and Center for Armored Systems No. 1, in Madrid
- Maintenance Depot and Center for Armored Systems No. 2, in Segovia
- Maintenance Depot and Center for Wheeled Vehicles No. 1, in Torrejón de Ardoz
- Maintenance Depot and Center for Wheeled Vehicles No. 2, in Cordoba
- Maintenance Depot and Center for Artillery Weapons and Materiel, in Valladolid
- Maintenance Depot and Center for Anti-aircraft, Coastal, and Missile Systems, in Pozuelo de Alarcón
- Maintenance Depot and Center for Engineer Materiel, in Guadalajara
- Maintenance Depot and Center for Signal Materiel, in El Pardo
- Maintenance Depot and Center for Helicopters, in Colmenar Viejo
- Maintenance Depot and Center for Hardware and Software Systems, in El Pardo
- Logistic Support Command Headquarters
Army Main Inspectorate
editThe Army Main Inspectorate is responsible for the planning, management, administration and control of the army's infrastructures, environmental protection, and occupational hazards prevention.[1]
- Army Main Inspectorate, in Barcelona[1]
- Army Main Inspectorate Headquarters
- Main Secretariat
- Quartermaster Directorate, in Madrid (doubles as First Main Sub-inspectorate (Center))
- Second Main Sub-inspectorate (South), in Seville
- Third Main Sub-inspectorate (Pyrenees), in Barcelona
- Fourth Main Sub-inspectorate (Northwest), in Valladolid
- Fifth Main Sub-inspectorate (Canary Islands), in Santa Cruz de Tenerife
- Infrastructure Directorate
- Army Main Inspectorate Headquarters
Economic Affairs Directorate
editThe Economic Affairs Directorate is responsible for the planning, management, administration and control of the financial resources made available to the Army, and also for contracting and accounting.[1]
- Economic Affairs Directorate, in Madrid[1]
- Accounting and Budget Sub-directorate
- Economic Management and Contracting Sub-directorate
Graphic overview of the Spanish Army
editGeographic distribution of operational forces
editRgt. "Córdoba" 10
Rgt. "Castilla" 16
Community of Madrid | Province of Valencia | Province of Seville | Other provinces | Overseas |
---|---|---|---|---|
Madrid: Rgt. "Inmemorial del Rey" 1 |
Valencia: High Readiness Land HQ |
Seville: |
Castrillo del Val: |
Ceuta: |
Colmenar Viejo: |
Bétera: |
Dos Hermanas: Electronic Warfare Rgt. 32 |
Zaragoza: |
Melilla: |
Paracuellos de Jarama: |
Marines: Cavalry Rgt. "Lusitania" 8 |
S. Andrés d. Rabanedo: Field Artillery Command |
Canary Islands: | |
Pozuelo de Alarcón: |
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y "Orden DEF/708/2020, de 27 de julio" (PDF). Ministerio de Defensa. Retrieved 21 September 2020.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m "Organizacion del Ejército de Tierra". Ejército de Tierra. Retrieved 21 September 2020.
- ^ "Regimiento de Transmisiones nº22 - Organización y misión". Ejército de Tierra. Retrieved 21 September 2020.
- ^ "Regimiento de Caballería "España" Nº 11 - Organización y misión". Ejército de Tierra. Retrieved 21 September 2020.
- ^ "Cuartel General de la División "Castillejos"". Ejército de Tierra. Retrieved 21 September 2020.
- ^ "Brigada "Aragón" I - Organización y misión". Ejército de Tierra. Retrieved 21 September 2020.
- ^ "La ministra de Defensa resalta la contribución a la paz de las misiones en el exterior de la Brigada 'Aragón I'". Europa Press. Retrieved 1 August 2021.
- ^ "Brigada "Rey Alfonso XIII" II de la Legión - Organización y misión". Ejército de Tierra. Retrieved 21 September 2020.
- ^ "Brigada "Galicia" VII - Organización y misión". Ejército de Tierra. Retrieved 21 September 2020.
- ^ "Brigada "Guzmán el Bueno" X - Organización y misión". Ejército de Tierra. Retrieved 21 September 2020.
- ^ "Brigada "Extremadura" XI - Organización y misión". Ejército de Tierra. Retrieved 21 September 2020.
- ^ "Brigada "Guadarrama" XII - Organización y misión". Ejército de Tierra. Retrieved 21 September 2020.
- ^ "Regimiento de Operaciones de Información Nº 1 - Organización y misión". Ejército de Tierra. Retrieved 21 September 2020.
- ^ "Brigada "Almogávares" VI de Paracaidistas - Organización y Misión". Ejército de Tierra. Retrieved 21 September 2020.
- ^ "Mando de Operaciones Especiales - Organización y misión". Ejército de Tierra. Retrieved 21 September 2020.
- ^ "El Ejército ultima la activación del nuevo mando de Tropas de Montaña". www.infodefensa.com. Retrieved 12 March 2021.
- ^ "Fuerzas Aeromóviles del Ejército de Tierra - Organización y misión". Ejército de Tierra. Retrieved 21 September 2020.
- ^ "Mando de Apoyo a la Maniobra". Ejército de Tierra. Retrieved 12 March 2021.
- ^ "Mando de Artillería de Campaña - Organización y misión". Ejército de Tierra. Retrieved 21 September 2020.
- ^ "Mando de Artillería Antiaérea - Organización y misión". Ejército de Tierra. Retrieved 21 September 2020.
- ^ "Mando de Ingenieros - Organización y misión". Ejército de Tierra. Retrieved 21 September 2020.
- ^ "Mando de Transmisiones - Organización y misión". Ejército de Tierra. Retrieved 21 September 2020.
- ^ "Brigada Logística - Historial". Ejército de Tierra. Retrieved 21 September 2020.
- ^ "Mando de Canarias - Organización y misión". Ejército de Tierra. Retrieved 22 September 2020.
- ^ "Comandancia General de Ceuta - Organización y misión". Ejército de Tierra. Retrieved 22 September 2020.
- ^ "Comandancia General de Melilla - Organización y misión". Ejército de Tierra. Retrieved 22 September 2020.
- ^ "Comandancia General de Baleares - Organización y misión". Ejército de Tierra. Retrieved 22 September 2020.
- ^ "Brigada "Canarias" XVI - Organización y misión". Ejército de Tierra. Retrieved 22 September 2020.
- ^ "Mando de Adiestramiento y Doctrina Centros Docentes y Cenad,s". Ejército de Tierra. Retrieved 22 September 2020.