Alfonso_Pardo_de_Santayana_y_Coloma

Alfonso Pardo de Santayana y Coloma

Alfonso Pardo de Santayana y Coloma

Chief of Staff of the Spanish Army (1998–2003)


Alfonso Pardo de Santayana y Coloma (4 April 1936, Valladolid, Spain – 28 February 2015, Madrid, Spain)[1] was a Spanish military officer who became General of the army and Chief of Staff of the Spanish Army (JEME).

Military career

He entered the General Military Academy in 1950, belonging to the 11th promotion of the Artillery. In 1954, he was promoted to lieutenant.[2] In 1963, as a lieutenant, he was assigned to Artillery Regiment No. 11.[3] In 1964, the Army's first missile unit, the HAWK Group,[4] was created in Antiaircraft Artillery Regiment No. 71, and he was assigned to that unit as a captain. As a captain, in 1975 he was assigned as a trainee to the Headquarters of the Army Airmobile Forces (FAMET).[5] In 1980, he became a military attaché in Washington (US).[6] Promoted to colonel in 1988, he was assigned as Chief of Staff of the FAMET.[7]

In 1989, he was promoted to Brigadier general[8] and assigned to the General Staff of the Army.[9] He was promoted to Divisional general[10] of the General Corps of the Army in 1992 and assigned as Second Chief of Staff of the Army.[11]

In 1995, he was promoted to Lieutenant general and assigned as General Chief of Staff of the III Military Region, Levante Military Region.[12]

In 1997, he became the first General Chief of the Army Manoeuvre Force[13] at the Jaime I Military Base in Bétera, this unit specialized in international missions.

He continued to rise through the ranks and in 1998 reached one of the most important posts in the Spanish Army, being appointed Chief of Staff of the Spanish Army (JEME).[14] He was promoted to the rank of General of the army in 1999[15] and one of the most notable moments of his tenure as JEME was the Perejil Island crisis in July 2002, when he commanded Operation Romeo-Sierra, a special operations commando to recover the Perejil Island, after it had been invaded for six days by Moroccan gendarmes. In 2003, he resigned as General of the Army and JEME, and went into reserve.[16] In 2000, he joined the Order of Alcántara.[17]

Awards


References

  1. "ABC CORDOBA 05-03-2015 página 73 – Archivo ABC". abc. 2019-06-28. Retrieved 2023-10-17.
  2. Diario oficial del Ministerio del Ejército: 28/07/1954. Madrid: Servicio de Publicaciones del Ministerio del Ejército. 1954-07-28.
  3. Diario oficial del Ministerio del Ejército: 16/02/1965. Madrid: Servicio de Publicaciones del Ministerio del Ejército. 1965-02-16.
  4. Diario oficial del Ministerio del Ejército: 30/04/1975. Madrid: Servicio de Publicaciones del Ministerio del Ejército. 1975-04-30.
  5. "Alfonso Pardo de Santayana". www.larazon.es (in Spanish). 2015-03-05. Retrieved 2023-10-17.
  6. Boletín oficial del Ministerio de Defensa: Año IV Número 64 – 1988 abril 5. Madrid: Servicio de Publicaciones del Ministerio de Defensa. 1988-05-04.
  7. "Decreto de 19 de febrero de 2002". pesquisa.in.gov.br. 19 February 2002.

Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Alfonso_Pardo_de_Santayana_y_Coloma, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.