Board of Joint Chiefs of Staff

Board of Joint Chiefs of Staff
Junta de Jefes de Estado Mayor
Emblem
Active1977–2005
CountrySpain
BranchArmed forces
TypeMilitary staff
Part ofSpanish Armed Forces
HeadquartersMadrid
Commanders
First PresidentLieutenant General Carlos Fernández Vallespín
Last PresidentLieutenant General Álvaro de Lacalle Leloup
Insignia
AbbreviationJUJEM

The Board of Joint Chiefs of Staff (Spanish: Junta de Jefes de Estado Mayor, JUJEM) was the highest joint military command body of the Spanish Armed Forces that operated between 1977 and 2005. The Board, subject to the political dependence of the Prime Minister, constituted the highest collegiate body of the chain of military command of Army, the Navy and the Air Force. The Board consisted of a president, selected from among lieutenant generals or admirals of the three branches of the Armed Forces, their chiefs of staff (Army, Navy and the Air Force) and a secretary. The president had to belong to the Group of Arms Command or Group "A" and was also chief of the Defence High Command, until the dissolution of this body in 1980.[1] The Board also had a General Headquarters, created in 1980 as a result of the dissolution of the Defence High Command, where the organs of aid to the command were integrated. Of the General Headquarters of the JUJEM they depended:

  • The General Technical Secretariat of the General Headquarters.
  • The Joint Staff of the Board, constituted in a balanced way by members of each of the three branches of the Armed Forces. The command of the Board fell to a divisional general or vice admiral of the same scale and group as the members of the Board, at the proposal of the same.
  • The Higher Center for National Defence Studies.
  • The Command of the General Headquarters.
  • Legal Service.

After its dissolution, the functions of the Board were assumed by the current Defence Staff.

  1. ^ JAYME BIOBDI, Diego (2010). "El Alto Estado Mayor" (PDF). Los Ejércitos del Franquismo (1939-1975). Instituto Universitario General Gutiérrez Mellado - UNED: 56. ISBN 978-84-608-1110-7. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 March 2016.