THE CUBAN TERRITORIAL MILITIA: AN EXPANDED SOURCE OF MANPOWER FOR CUBA'S MILITARY FORCES

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CIA-RDP91T01115R000200280001-3
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RIPPUB
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T
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17
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December 28, 2016
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November 30, 2010
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1
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Publication Date: 
June 1, 1985
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REPORT
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Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/11/30 :CIA-RDP91T01115R000200280001-3 Top Secret Top Secret Directorate of I ntelli?ence The Cuban Territorial Militia: An Expanded - Source of Manpower for Cuba's Military Forces (u) Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/11/30 :CIA-RDP91T01115R000200280001-3 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/11/30 :CIA-RDP91T01115R000200280001-3 National Security Information Dissemination Control Abbreviations Intelligence Sources or Methods Involved (WNINTEL) Unauthorized Disclosure Subject to Criminal Sanctions NOFORN (N F) NOCONTRACT(NC) PROPIN (PR) ORCON (OC) Not releasable to foreign nationals Not releasable to contractors or contractor/consultants Caution-proprietary information involved Dissemination and extraction of information controlled by originator A microfiche copy of this docu- ment is available from OCR/ DLB~rinted copies from CPAS/IMO Regular receipt of DDI reports in either microfiche or printed form can also be arranged through CPAS/IMC. WNINTEL-Intelligence sources or methods involved Declassify: OADR Derived from multiple sources Abbreviations for compartmented codewords are: M -MORAY S -SPOKE U -UMBRA G -GAMMA 7X1 25X1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/11/30 :CIA-RDP91T01115R000200280001-3 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/11/30 :CIA-RDP91T01115R000200280001-3 ~~~W`e~r~ Directorate of _' n '= Intelligence The Cuban Territorial Militia: An Expanded Source of Manpower for Cuba's Military Forces (u) Top Secret 25X1 June 1985 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/11/30 :CIA-RDP91T01115R000200280001-3 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/11/30 :CIA-RDP91T01115R000200280001-3 Too Secret Summary lnli~rnmtion arailahle a.c njmid-:1farrh 1985 n~as used in phis report. ~~ The Cuban Territorial Militia: An Expanded Source of Manpower for Cuba's Military Forces (U) The Territorial Militia Troops (Milicias Tropas Teritoriales, or MTT) was formed in 1980 as a new Cuban reserve force, and it has since be- come an integral part of the country's defense structure. With a cur- rent strength of over 1.2 million, the primary missions of the MTT are fourfold: ? To defend local areas in the event of an invasion of Cuba. ? To support combat operations by constructing fortifications, em- placing obstacles, and providing essential rear services such as secu- rity patrols and traffic control. ? To augment or replace regular Cuban units in last-ditch defense ef- forts, despite having only rudimentary training and being lightly armed. ? To conduct guerrilla warfare should Cuba become occupied by for- eign forces. (s~~ 25X1 In addition to its formal missions, the MTT fulfills two other func- tions. According to special intelligence, special units of the MTT, or uniquely trained militia members with "special destinations," arc helping the Nicaraguans establish their own militia force. These spe- cially trained MTT personnel are possibly also serving as military ad- visers to other Nicaraguan para-military organizations. Another im- portant MTT function is to politically indoctrinate a significant portion of the Cuban population in accordance with C'astro's ideology. (TS 25X1 properly organized and equipped to accomplish its missions. (s There has been no attempt to make the MTT equal in military capa- bility to the Cuban regular or reserve forces. A training system that in- cludes schools and military instruction programs different than those of the regular Cuban military forces has been developed for the MTT. The militia is equipped with the types of small arms common through- out Cuba's regular forces, but has no heavy equipment or vehicles. Dc- spite the limited amounts and types of weapons, enough arc provided that, with the help of its ambitious training programs, the MTT is The Militia strengthens Cuba's defense capabilities at limited cost and without any apparent adverse economic impact. We believe the MTT Top Secret !A 85-10046CX Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/11/30 :CIA-RDP91T01115R000200280001-3 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/11/30 :CIA-RDP91T01115R000200280001-3 will further mature, refining its training program and improving its defense capability. Its basic role in Cuba's defense strategy, however, is not likely to change. The MTT's dependence on the Cuban Defense Ministry for some of its funding probably will not change either, though it is supposed to be totally self-supporting. (s 25X1 iv 25X1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/11/30 :CIA-RDP91T01115R000200280001-3 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/11/30 :CIA-RDP91T01115R000200280001-3 Top Secret Summary iii Organization 2 Training and Equipment 5 Page 25X1 25X1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/11/30 :CIA-RDP91T01115R000200280001-3 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/11/30 :CIA-RDP91T01115R000200280001-3 Tnn CP[`TPt The Cuban Territorial Militia: An Expanded Source of Manpower for Cuba's Military Forces (U) During the 1960s, the Cuban Armed Forces had between ?50,000 and 300,000 men and women on active duty. When the Cuban economy worsened in the early 1970s the Cubans, with Soviet urging, reduced their regular forces to 120,000. The Cu- ban government also instituted athree-year obliga- tory term of service for most Cuban men and cre- ated regular reserve forces. This reduced the cost of maintaining the Armed Forces, which since then has been a combination of active duty and regular reserve units. The active duty component has grown gradually since the early 1970s to its present strength of about 150,000, and an addi- tional 1 10,000 to 135,000 ersonnel are in the reg- ular reserve component. ( Militia units are also assigned combat support missions, according to Cuban military journals. This role may be their most valuable contribution to the Cuban military, as it relieves many active duty and regular reserve units from a support role and frees them to concentrate on combat. Cuban military journals show that MTT units receive training and conduct exercises for building fight- ing positions and emplacing land mines and obsta- cles. They also train to provide security for select- ed facilities, control traffic, and direct military convoys. Further, the units practice aiding and re- locating civilians and manufacturing articles such as ammunition pouches and uniforms (figure 1). Militia units also prepare and disseminate defense information and political propaganda to the civil- ian population. ~s 25X1 An additional reserve force, called the Territorial Militia Troops (MTT), was formed in 1980 to en- compass those people not already in the armed forces. The Castro ideology encourages revolution- ary zeal and calls for all Cuban citizens to partici- pate in defense. Militia training, in consonance with this view, helps keep the population ideologi- cally aligned and disinclined toward dissent. (S~ Open sources indicate that the primary mission of the MTT is to help defend the island against for- eign aggression. Cuba considers the US its princi- pal threat and has expected invasion several times. Most of the MTT consists of light infantry forces whose collective purpose is to protect their home localities. According to open sources, most defense scenarios for the MTT involve repelling an enemy paratroop assault or similar action. MTT units are probably assigned to defend specific local targets, such as bridges and radio relay stations, as well as homes and workplaces. (S ~ ~~ Should Cuba become occupied by invading forces, MTT members are under standing orders to con- duct guerrilla warfare to harass and weaken the oc- cupying forces, according to the Cuban press. Mili- tia members are encouraged to identify strongly with this guerrilla role, as it is in keeping with the revolutiona s grit of the Cuban Communist Party. IS r 25X1 Our analysis of all available information indicates that MTT units are decidedly inferior in training, equipment, and capability to their active duty and regular reserve counterparts in the Cuban military. They nonetheless are considered integral to the de- fense force. The MTT could conceivably augment or even assume the mission of some of Cuba's reg- ular forces in island defense, although they would probably do so only under extraordinary circum- stances-for example, if a lightly defended area were attacked unex ectedly, or in an overall final defensive effort. (~~ 25X1 25X1 25X1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/11/30 :CIA-RDP91T01115R000200280001-3 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/11/30 :CIA-RDP91T01115R000200280001-3 Tnn CPrrPf Figure 1 MTT Member Making Ammunition Pouch, 17 May 1984 The MTT also plays a political role. Political in- doctrination is a vital aspect of military training in Cuba, as in most communist societies, and the po- litical officer holds an important position in the force structure of all Cuban armed forces-includ- ing the MTT. The MTT's provincial structure al- lowsthe Cuban government to reach more people individually with their intense indoctrination pro- grams than arc reached through conventional ci- vilian propaganda methods, such as broadcasts and posters. ~ With its revolutionary overtones, the MTT is an excellent propaganda generator for the Cuban Communist Party. A great deal of Cuban press coverage praises the country's militiamen, and fea- tures stories detailing their heroic resolve and nu- merous sacrifices. Many militia training events are undoubtedly staged or timed for propaganda pur- poses. MTT units are often the showpieces of civil defense exercises in Cuba and frequently are fea- tured in Cuban military magazines. Well-orches- irated provincial exercises (recent examples being Baluarte 84 and Defensa 84) involve civilians in defense scenarios, but highlight MTT units simu- lating combat missions. These staged exercises usually involve repelling an enemy airborne attack or beach landing. ~s .Ioining the MTT has apparently become a politi- cally astute thing to do for party members and po- litical climbers. A human source of undetermined reliability reports that aspiring party members view MTT membership almost as obligatory, sug- gesting that some MTT leaders may exert more ef- fort making good political contacts than in devel- opingtheir military skills. (s Organization The MTT is an organization of Cuban citizen-sol- diers. It is most aptly described as a Home Guard and consists of citizens who have received some military training. The MTT is subordinate to the Ministry of the Armed Forces (MINFAR), as are the rest of the Cuban ground, navy, air, and air de- fense forces and regular reserves. In late 1983, MINFAR announced that the position of Deputy Minister for the MTT was created in the MINFAR and a division general was appointed, his stature indicating the importance of the position. An MTT Directorate was established at the same time within the MINFAR general staff, which the Dep- uty Minister for the MTT heads. (c') The MTT's structure, as established by the Direc- torate, consists of conventionally organized pla- toons, companies, battalions, regiments, and divi- sions. Cuban military journals indicate that there is also one army corps uniquely organized in the Havana area. An unsubstantiated human source described the strength of an MTT regiment at just under 2,000 members. According to this source, a regiment consists of four infantry battalions, one sapper company, one communications and recon- naissance company, one service company, one ar- tillery battery (most equipped with mortars), one bazooka company, a medical unit, and a regimen- tal Headquarters (figure 2). The elements of a sin- gle regiment may be scattered over several munici- palities or provinces. (s Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/11/30 :CIA-RDP91T01115R000200280001-3 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/11/30 :CIA-RDP91T01115R000200280001-3 Tnn Cecret Figure 2 Organization of An MTT Regiment MTT Regiment Headquarters 4 Infantry Battalions Communications and Reconnaissance Company The organizational structure of MTT units paral- lels provincial subdivisions within the country. Each provincial and municipal people's president (roughly equivalent to a state or county chief exec- utive) has a FAR officer assigned to him for Mili- tia matters.' This officer is the Military Adjunct to the President and frequently is referred to as the MTT Chief of Staff for that area. A human source of undetermined reliability reports that command- ers for MTT regiments and divisions are regular FAR officers with command experience. Com- manders of lower-level units are appointed from within the MTT. ~s The MTT Corps in Havana City is different from other MTT units. A Cuban military journal states that the FAR officers serving as instructors at the Maximo Gomez Revolutionary Armed Forces Academy, in Havana city, also command the MTT units that make up the Corps; the academy direc- 'FAR is the abbrc~iation for Fucrzas Armadas Rcvolucionarias, which Iranslatcs to Revolutionary Armed Forces. This term refers to all regular career soldiers, conscripts on active duty, and Cuban reservists. Refer- ences to hattalions or schools alone denote an active duty or regular co- scnc unit. Territorial Militia units arc always separately identified as MIT banalions. M"rT schools, and so nn. (U) for serves as corps commander. The academy fac- ulty wrote the MTT regulations and developed the training courses for MTT units and command cadres. (u) Open source references to MTT units show that they are identified by three-digit military unit numbers (MUNs), as opposed to four-digit num- bers for FAR units. The exceptions are MTT train- ing schools, which also have four-digit MUNs- perhaps denoting their full-time status (see appen- dix). The three-digit MUNs for militia units corre- spond with geographic areas (figure 3). MUNs in 25X1 the 100 sequence are MTT units from Havana City Province-the MTT Corps there is MUN 163, for example. Militia units with 200 and 300 identifiers are in the central provinces of Sancti Spiritus, Villa Clara, Cienfuegos, and Matanzas. The 400, 500, and 600 identifiers are in the east- ern provinces of Guantanamo, Granma, Holguin, Santiago de Cuba, and Camaguey. The 700 identi- fiers are in Pinar del Rio Province. (c) The MTT has nearly doubled in size since mid- 1982, and open sources place its current strength at over 1.2 million, out of a total population of 10 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/11/30 :CIA-RDP91T01115R000200280001-3 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/11/30 :CIA-RDP91T01115R000200280001-3 million. Membership is open to any Cuban citi- zens who do not have active or reserve military obligations. Thus, a large part of some MTT units arc composed of women, and men too old or young to be regular soldiers or active reservists. The main criteria for membership seems to be that the individual be physically capable of participat- ing in training. Membership is "voluntary," though pressure to volunteer is probably exerted on individuals in some areas where recruitment falls short of goals. (s Militia members fall into three categories: Figure 3 Location of MTT Training Centers MUNs 100s Guines (2) Corralillo ~ Havana (2)? I / Mari ~ JovellanoS \'~MUNs700s~'. MUNs'200saad300s ~, Santa Clara Nueva Gerona .~i ? /6-to-25-dear-olds who are exempted from active service (usually university students). ? 25-to-60-tlea~~-olds who are less physicially capa- ble for combat. They are mainly oriented to- wards civil defense activities, such as shelter construction, defense of the workplace, and aid- ing civilians. ? Special Units who have received unique training and have "special destinations" (one of which may recently have been Nicaragua). Their mis- sion and disposition remain obscure. (s ~Ilaaar Eleuthera Naw ! Providence "~c~0 Ciego de Avila /Ceyo Coco MUNs 4006. S!?OS, 9gQH ,.. Fy~D F~ 4 RE~NA Lesser Caymans {KKI ~ `~ Grand Cayman ~;,~~:. rv.Kl 0 b 00 M~laa ~~! 0 IO 801(IlomNere and 800sHolguin (2) . Sen -Salvador L Great e ~ Exuma 4 ~_ \\\ ~ ~ LOn~ Crooked Island Island ~ ~, . u e...a Santiago de Cuba (2) ~ACklins " Island Greaf Inagua; Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/11/30 :CIA-RDP91T01115R000200280001-3 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/11/30 :CIA-RDP91T01115R000200280001-3 Toa Secret MTT Special Forces: The Cuban-Nicaraguan Connection Spacial intalliganca indicates that special MTT units have bean %rnned in eastern Cuba. The pra- cisamission and disposition ~f these units is not known, but at least one MTT unit underwent spe- cial h?uining in preparation ron? deplovrnent to Nica- ragua. Special Intelligence has indicated that indi- vidual ,~9TT nnemhars ware sent to a rnilitarv school idantiliad as l:'l Cacho, in western Cuba, before lauvingfor Nicaragua in September 1984. Signif- cantly, Nicaragua has started its own territorial rnl- litia, patterned arta-? the Cuban MTT organisation. Somc>, il?not all, o~~tha Cohan nnilitiarnen sent to Nirarugua prohuhly want tq help organise and train the Nicaraguan militia. (ts Cuba has sent civilians to Nicaragua since 1979 as educators, technicians, and adminlsh?ators under Cuhu's general assistance program to Nicaragua. 11 ?a currently estimate that there are between 3, 775 and 4, 7?S Cohan civilians in Nicaragua.? Since the CAS arliort in Granada in October 1983, all civilians stint hi? Cuba to Nicaragua have had soma military training, and it is highly likely that some are Terri- torial .t9ilitia nnamhars. (s 7'ha ntnnher and distribution of the Cubans in Nic- crru,~~uu ara sorb shat in the major population cen- ters tharaara probably enough to corm all-Cuban rnilitiu traits. Open press sources have stated that Ctrhuns in Nicaragua ~ti~ill fight alongside their San- dinista countarpan7s if necessary, and that "no nrora Granudas" ~a~ill occur. A source oTtrndeter- nrinad raliahilit y said that Cubans in Nicaragua /cacti been told wham to raport?for military duty in Iha avant o/~a US im?asion of Nicaragua. (s~ 11 'bather Cohan militia rnernhers stint to Nicaragua as civilian specialists ara parTonning those jobs, or whether thew ara using their titles as covers /or mili- tun~y colas, is cwt kno~a~n. By using civilian positions us a scn?aant, however, Cuba and Nicaragua could nrora easily conceal the true nunnber of Cuban mili- lur.y persomtal in Nicaragzra. (s aFor further information on the Cuban resence in Nicaragua, sec OIA Research Napo IA AS-100390, (TS~May 1985. (7~hans in :~'iru~z~,~i~u: (?u.riro's (bnlinuirr,e (?ommiNnnn( In the Sandfni.rlas. (S Training and Equipment The MTT has a training program distinct from that of the rest of Cuba's military forces. Most mi- litia members receive basic training at one of ap- proximately 22 MTT military training centers or MTT schools located throughout Cuba (figure 3), according to Cuban military journals. Each of Cu- ba's 15 provinces has at least one center to train militia command cadres, either exclusively or in conjunction with courses for non-cadre militiamen (figure 4).~ Satellite imagery confirms open source reporting that several abandoned military facilities have been reopened and refurbished to become MTT training centers. Also, many new centers have been built-often under short deadlines, which underscores the importance placed on these 25X1 schools. The schools are the only facilities associ- ated with the MTT that can be seen on overhead photography. Individual MTT units may have only an equipment room and perhaps asmall-arms range at their disposal in their own locale. ~s~ ~ 25X1 25X1 Several Cuban sources of undetermined reliability have described militia training programs for both militia officers and enlisted personnel. The train- 25X1 ing centers, staffed mainly by regular FAR officers and instructors, give a variety of courses devel- oped by the faculty at Cuba's military academy. New militia officers first receive a 45-day course at an MTT school, and eventually attend either a 5 1 /2- or 1 1-month course for command cadres. Whether the brief or longer version is attended may depend on the time that can be devoted to such training with respect to one's civilian occupa- tion, or the specific skills required for the position. For example, a course qualifying a political or ar- 25X1 tillery officer for the MTT would probably require 1 1 months of training, compared to a 5 1/2-month session for an infantry officer. (.' 25X1 All militia members are required to participate in a concentrated 10-day training program at the bat- talion level every 5 years (figure 5). These pro- grams, conducted at the MTT training centers, 25X1 'C'uba has 13 provinces. but the Isle of Youth and Havana City are also25X1 counted as provinces in the MTT organization. (S) 25X1 Top Secret Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/11/30 :CIA-RDP91T01115R000200280001-3 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/11/30 :CIA-RDP91T01115R000200280001-3 consist of daily military classes and field exercises, as well as political study, sports, and physical training. The training centers hold a 5-day cadre course for each battalion command group prior to each I 0-day course for the entire unit, so that com- mand groups can help train their units. Special courses for political officers and regimental and battalion staffs arc also part of the MTT school curriculum. ~s Most of an enlisted militiaman's training takes place in his own home locality with his unit, not at a training center. The local training is conducted by both militia cadre and FAR advisers to the MTT. New MTT recruits receive 22 hours of pre- liminary training, including target practice, before taking their military oath. Militia unit training is usually for four hours one Sunday per month, 10 months per year. This 40-hour training require- ment is halved every fifth year, when the 10-day training event occurs. Is Most of the available information on militia train- ing comes from Cuban open press sources. Given Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/11/30 :CIA-RDP91T01115R000200280001-3 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/11/30 :CIA-RDP91T01115R000200280001-3 Top Secret Figure 5 MTT Member Undergoing Training, 17 May 1984 their obvious propaganda viewpoint, it is difficult to say how effective the militia training program is-for example, there is no reporting on how seri- ously it is taken. Some special intelligence reports have made reference to periodic breakdowns in supply and transportation support for some MTT schools, but this is unlikely to seriously degrade training operations. Most of the exercises reported in the open press appear to be relatively simple, but nonetheless they strongly support the militia's primary mission of defending and securing their home locales. (~~ The MTT is equipped with an assortment of stan- dard Soviet-manufactured light arms typically found throughout the Cuban forces: light machine- guns, antitank weapons, and 82-mm mortars, as well as rifles and pistols. There is no evidence of heavier weapons and equipment or vehicles being assigned to MTT units, although civilian vehicles may be routinely used. In an emergency MTT units arc probably to use readily available civilian transportation, tools, and materials, and to draw on local areas for medical supplies. They undoubt- edly receive ammunition allotments, first aid sup- plies, and civil defense equipment from the FAR each year, though probably in small quantities. (Ts The MTT was designed to be aself-supporting or- ganization, according to a former Cuban govern- ment official Members, who receive no pay, pur- chase their own uniforms and equipment, but weapons arc provided by the Soviet Union. Other expenses are defrayed by contributions from labor organizations and fund drives. Despite these mea- sures, the Cuban Ministry of Armed Forces (MIN- FAR) still has to help support the MTT, especially by funding training programs. According to a Cu- ban government official quoted in an open source, the MTT cost $66 million from l May 1980 to 15 March 1982. Of this amount, the Cuban national and local governments had to provide $25 million, the rest being covered by fund drives. ~c> Although the MTT has not been totally self-sup- porting, the cost is much less than that necessary to maintain a large standing army. Although it is of lesser quality than other Cuban military forces, the MTT has moderately increased Cuba's defense posture, while permitting most militia members to hold full-time civilian jobs. (s~~ 25X1 We believe the MTT is firmly entrenched as part of the Cuban military structure, and the Cuban government will continue to commit the necessary resources for the MTT's training and develop- ment. ~s 25X1 The MTT has grown very rapidly during the last three years, but the rate will inevitably slow as the majority of those eligible for membership become recruited. Cuban officials have projected an even- tual militia strength of 2.5 million. This figure probably will not be reached for several years, if at all, as it most likely hinges unrealistically on re- taining most members from the original recruiting drive and adding new members as they reach eligi- ble age or finish other military obligations. (s~25X1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/11/30 :CIA-RDP91T01115R000200280001-3 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/11/30 :CIA-RDP91T01115R000200280001-3 The training programs will probably improve. The force and its training program are barely five years old, and consequently it is reasonable to expect that as militia members gain experience, the quali- ty and thoroughness of the training will be en- hanccd.ts~~ The MTT is not likely to take on new missions or roles. Its organization and training now support its assigned missions, but the force cannot do more without considerably upgrading its equipment, training, and support. The MTT was obviously creatrd to perform specific roles within Cuba. MTT units will probably not deploy outside of Cuba-or even outside of their own localities within the country-except for limited numbers of militiamen nn special missions, as in Nicaragua's casc.(s Top Secret g Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/11/30 :CIA-RDP91T01115R000200280001-3 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/11/30 :CIA-RDP91T01115R000200280001-3 Appendix ('alumna Imasora Ciro Rcdon Granma U/I` MTT Rapid Deployment Baraco a Comnumdante Camilo Cienfuegos Unknown (Guantanamo) Force Conunandantc Pinares MTT School Guillcn (Pinar Dcl U/1 MTT Unit Imias ( Guantanamo) Rio) U/I MTT Unit San An tonio Del Sur (Guan tanamo) Conunandantc Gust Macil Bcchc Vuelta .Abajo (Pinar Dcl Rio) U/I MTT School Nueva Gerona (Isle of Corallilu MTT School Villa Clara Youth ) ka Cacho MTT School (MUN 1790 Los Palacios (Pinar U/I MTT School Bueyci to and 3~~7) Dcl Rio) Yatcritas MTT School San A ntonio Del Sur ~nwnio Macro Far Gen Havana Province (Guan tanamo) : Gen Jose Macro MTT School Santiago De Cuba 101 MTT Regiment Havan a City I I? MTT Regiment Dicz. D e Octubre Havana City Province MTT Colinas De Villareal (Hava na City) School (Havana City) 113 MTT Regiment Diez D e Octubre La Coronclla MTT Schoolh Havana City (Reparto (Hava na City) Alamar) ' 115 MTT Battalion Guana bacoas (Havana La l uca MTT School Cienfuegos City) Los Cocos School Holguin 117 MTT Regiment Dicz D e Octubre Maricl MTT Ofticcrs School Maricl (Havana) (Hava na City) (MIiN X881) 118 MTT Regiment Cerro (Havana City) Micas Military School Mayari I?i MTT Battalion Guana bacoa MTT Cadrr Formation School Corallilo (Villo Elguca , I ~3 MTT Regiment Rcgla District Clara) _ (Hava na City) MTT center in Marti Marti (Matanzas) 144 MTT Regiment Dicz D e Octubre MTT Training Center Central Santa Rosa, Remedios (Hava na City) ~rmv __ (Villa (Clara) _ 147 MTT Division Havan a City Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/11/30 :CIA-RDP91T01115R000200280001-3 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/11/30 :CIA-RDP91T01115R000200280001-3 Locations of 1~ITT Units and Schoolsa (continued) ~I I"I t nits and Schools Ig3 M~I~"f Regiment ?(ll Ml~~h I)iv ision '0_' M~h~I Regiment _'tl-I Ml~l~ Battalion Santa Cruz Dcl Sur (Camaguc}') Matanzas (Possible Bucc Jaca) Juan Francisco, Yaguaja~~. Sancti Spiritus SOU MT~I Regiment Ciego De Avila Province Palma Soriano (Santiago Dc Cuba) ~ 18-1 MTT School Fomcnto Sancti Spiritus (EI Pcdrero) i73 MTT Battalion El Salvador (Guantanamo) Placctas (Villa Clara) - _ __ X79 MTT Battalion 31U MTT Uicision Villa Clara, Santa (.Tara Abel Santia Maria Plaza (Santa Clara) EI Sah-actor (Guantanamo) J91 MTT Battalion EI Salvador (Guantanamo) Sangua la Grande _- _ -- (Villa Clara) 6461 MTT School 33'_ M~I~~h Regiment Manicaragua (Villa 6~~1 MTT Regiment Clara) -- - --- ---- - - -_ _ _ 661 MT"h Regiment 361) MT"I Regiment Cienfuegos (~itv -- - -- - - _--- -- 69(1 MTT Regiment 363 MTT Regiment Encrucijada (Villa ?~,,, , -. 373 MTT Regiment Santa Clara (Villa 7aR MTT Regiment Clara) Segundo Frcntc (S. Dc Cuba) Minas Dc Matahambrc (Pinar Dcl Rio) Sumidcro (Minas Dc Matahambrc) 379 l i/I M I~~h l~nit Caibarien (Villa Clara) --- -- - - __ - 779 MTT Regiment Vinales (Pinar Dcl ?3~0 MTT I~isision Holguin City Rio) a31 M'h~i~ Regiment Cnice De Los Banos, Pros~incc MTT School Jovcllanos (Matanzas) Tcrccr Frcntc ''This list was compiled irom open sources. and is not necessarily com- ~'Probabh two names for the same school. pletc. Some schools or units may be listed twice under different names. `l'/I Unidcnlilicd. or once by name and once by MUN. Because sources refer to these This school in Holguin province is named either Los Cocos or Camilo schools varioush by names or MUNs, some confusion results. In some Cienfuegos. both of which arc listed by name in the appendix as well. rases two Ml~~f Schools. one for cadres and one for troops. arc colo- caicd. Some units have been referenced in sources, but remain unloaucd. Top Secret 10 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/11/30 :CIA-RDP91T01115R000200280001-3 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/11/30 :CIA-RDP91T01115R000200280001-3 Top Secret Top Secret Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/11/30 :CIA-RDP91T01115R000200280001-3