The ČSLA was composed of Ground Forces, Air Forces and Air Defence Forces and Border Guard under the direction of the General Staff.
Ground Forces Of the approximately 201,000 personnel on active duty in the ČSLA in 1987, about 145,000, or about 72 percent, served in the ground forces (commonly referred to as the
army). About 100,000 of these were conscripts. There were two military districts,
Western and
Eastern. A 1989 listing of forces shows two Czechoslovak armies in the west, the
1st Army at
Příbram with one tank division and three motor rifle divisions, the
4th Army at
Písek with two tank divisions and two motor rifle divisions. In the Eastern Military District, there were two tank divisions, the
13th and
14th, with a supervisory headquarters at
Trenčín in the Slovak part of the country. Czechoslovak military doctrine prescribed large tank columns spearheading infantry assaults. While the armoured columns secured objectives, the infantry would provide close support with mortars, snipers, anti-tank guns and medium artillery. The majority of the soldiers in the Ground Forces were recruited through conscription, compulsory military service of 24 months for all males between 18 and 27.
Air Force The Air and Air Defence Forces of the CPA celebrated 17 September 1944, as the birth date of their force. On that date, a fighter regiment, manned by Czechoslovak personnel, the
:cs:První československý samostatný stíhací letecký pluk -
1st Czechoslovak Independent Fighter Aviation Regiment - flew out for Slovak soil to take part in the
Slovak National Uprising. This first regiment grew into the
1st Czechoslovak Mixed Air Division, which fought with the Soviets. Yet it was only six years after the war, in 1951, when Czechoslovak units began receiving aircraft - jet fighters - to create a combat capability. The
Czechoslovak Air Force was fully equipped with supersonic jet
fighters,
attack helicopters, air defence systems and electronic tracking equipment.
Air Defence Forces The Army's air defence (PVOS,
Protivzdušná obrana státu) had
anti-aircraft missile units, fighter interceptor aircraft and radar and direction-finding units, known, in accordance with Soviet terminology, as radio-technical units.
Border Guard Pohraniční Stráž, Pohraničná stráž (English: Border guard ) was established in 1950s after the
Second World War. However, it was part of the army only until 1977, when it was subordinated to the federal ministry of Interior. It was the smallest branch of the Czechoslovak peoples army with nearly 17 000 soldiers and staff members by 1951. Their main task was to guard and patrol all borders of
Czechoslovak Socialist Republic. The most guarded borders were
Austrian and
West German borders. == Means of higher military education ==