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Spain Defence and Security Report Q2 2008

Published by: Business Monitor International

Published: May. 29, 2008 - 62 Pages


Table of Contents


Executive Summary
SWOT Analysis
Spain Security SWOT
Spain Defence Industry SWOT
Political Overview
Table: Background Brief: Zapatero’s First Term04-08
Foreign Policy
Security Risk Analysis
BMI’s Security Ratings
Risk Ratings
Table: Europe: Security Ratings
Table: Europe: State Vulnerability To Terrorism Index
Regional Security: Europe
Overview
International Terrorism
Criminal Activities
Spain Security Risk Ratings
Spain Conflict Risk
Spain Terrorism Risk
Spain Physical Safety Risk
Security Risk Overview
Internal Security Situation
Domestic Terrorism
Table: Background Brief: ETA
Latest Developments
Table: Timeline: Internal Threats
External Security Situation
International Terrorism
Latest Developments
Table: Timeline: External Threats
Military Structure & Defence Industry
Armed Forces
Table: Regional Armed Forces (including conscripted) 33
Defence Posture
Defence Reform
International Deployments
Table: Spain Foreign Deployments
Co-ordination and Joint Operations
Weapons of Mass Destruction
Market Structure
Arms Trade Overview
Imports
Exports
Industry Trends & Developments
Table: Timeline: Defence & Procurement
Background
Industry Forecast
Army Enlargements
Table: Army Enlargements
Government Expenditure On Defence Industry
Table: Government Expenditure On Defence Industry
Key Risks to BMI’s Forecast Scenario
Macroeconomic Forecast
Table: Spain - Economic Activity
Company Profiles
Multinational Company Profiles
EADS CASA
General Dynamics Santa Barbara Sistemas
Indra
ITP
Navantia - Formally known as Izar
BMI Forecast Modelling
How We Generate Our Industry Forecasts
Defence Industry
Sources


Abstract

The Spanish general elections on March 9, won by Prime Minister José Luis Rodriguez Zapatero’s ruling Socialist Workers’ Party (PSOE), were the target of disruption by the Basque separatist group ETA. The preceding elections in March 2004 had come only four days after the country’s worst-ever terrorist attack, mounted by al Qaeda militants, who bombed Madrid’s Atocha railway station, killing 191 people. Four years later in 2008, ETA struck two days before the March 9 election, assassinating Isaías Carrasco, a former PSOE town councillor, who was shot outside his house in the Basque town of Mondragón. The organisation did not initially claim responsibility for the killing, but police said it bore all the hallmarks of an ETA operation. Both the PSOE and the opposition People’s Party (PP) responded by immediately closing their elections campaigns. In the elections the PSOE won 169 seats, seven short of an absolute majority in the 350-seat Cortes, meaning that Zapatero would need to govern with smaller regional parties like Catalan Convergence and Unity (Ci U) which won 11 seats, and the Basque National Party (PNV)which won six. The elections were seen as confirming Spain’s evolution into a basically two-party political system. Between them the PSOE and the PP gained 83.7% of the vote, versus 65.4% in the 1989general elections when smaller regional parties began to lose support relative to the two national organisations. Zap atero began his victory speech by remembering the five deaths attributed to ETA since it ended a ceasefire in December 2006 after he had made peace overtures. Despite ETA’s renewed activity, BMI’s newly released Q208 defence and security report predicts a solid outlook for the Spanish defence industry and a stable internal and security outlook.

Relations between the central government in Madrid and the country’s 17 autonomous regions can be difficult, sparking disputes over a wide range of issues. Spanish security forces continue to focus the irattention toward international threats. There are currently no major conventional military threats to the country, but the threat from international and domestic terrorism remains very real. The Madrid bombings had a profound effect on both Spain’s domestic and foreign policy, in terms of Spanish counter-terrorist operations and the withdrawal of Spanish troops from Iraq. The country remains committed to an active international peace-keeping role, despite having to pay the price: six Spanish peacekeeping soldiers were killed in a car bomb attack in Lebanon in June 2007.

The ongoing modernisation process at the heart of the armed forces, combined with an increase in Spain’s involvement in peacekeeping operations, has justified an overall increase in the defence budget. Also, in light of the Madrid bombings and the pressing need to boost counter-terrorism operations, the administration opted for a 17.1% increase in the Security Services’ budget. Total expenditure is forecast to increase steadily from EUR9.03bn in 2005 to reach EUR11.1bn by 2010. The defence industry will benefit from planned increases in government expenditure. Restructuring and consolidation in the Spanish and European defence industry, and the state’s continued relinquishment of its hold on the industry, has allowed Spanish firms to increasingly integrate into pan-European and transatlantic markets, and gain greater access to international markets. As a result, arms exports are expected to rise in the near future, and imports are also likely to benefit from the government’s modernisation plans.


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