PROFILE
OFFICIAL NAME:
Kingdom of Spain
Geography
Area: 504,750 sq. km. (194,884 sq. mi.),
including the Balearic and Canary Islands; about
the size of Arizona and Utah combined.
Cities: Capital--Madrid (5.5 million).
Other cities-- Barcelona (4.9 million),
Bilbao (353,950), Malaga (1.3 million), Seville
(1.8 million), Valencia (2.3 million), Zaragoza
(871,000).
Terrain: High plateaus, lowland areas such as
narrow coastal plains, and mountainous regions.
Climate: Temperate. Summers are hot in the
interior and more moderate and cloudy along the
coast; winters are cold in interior and partly
cloudy and cool along the coast.
Time zone: Spanish mainland and Balearic
Isles--local time is 1 hour ahead of Greenwich
Mean Time (GMT) in winter and 2 hours ahead in
summer. Canary Islands are on GMT.
People
Nationality: Noun--Spaniard(s).
Adjective--Spanish.
Population: 44.1 million.
Annual growth rate: 1%
Ethnic groups: Distinct ethnic groups within
Spain include the Basques, Catalans, and
Galicians.
Religion: Predominantly Roman Catholic.
Languages: Spanish (official) 74%, Catalan-Valenciana
17%, Galician 7%, Basque 2%.
Education: Years compulsory--to age 16.
Literacy—98% (2003 est.).
Work force (19.2 million): Services—65.1%;
agriculture—5.2%; construction—12.5%;
industry—17.2% (2005 est.).
Government
Type: Constitutional monarchy (Juan Carlos I
proclaimed King November 22, 1975).
Constitution: 1978.
Branches: Executive--president of
government nominated by monarch, subject to
approval by democratically elected Congress of
Deputies. Legislative--bicameral Cortes:
a 350-seat Congress of Deputies (elected by the
d'Hondt system of proportional representation)
and a Senate. Four senators are elected in each
of 47 peninsular provinces, 16 are elected from
the three island provinces, and Ceuta and
Melilla elect two each; this accounts for 208
senators. The parliaments of the 17 autonomous
regions also elect one senator as well as one
additional senator for every 1 million
inhabitants within their territory (about 20
senators). Judicial--Constitutional
Tribunal has jurisdiction over constitutional
issues. Supreme Tribunal heads system comprising
territorial, provincial, regional, and municipal
courts.
Subdivisions: 47 peninsular and three island
provinces; two enclaves on the Mediterranean
coast of Morocco (Ceuta and Melilla) and three
island groups along that coast--Alhucemas, Penon
de Velez de la Gomera, and the Chafarinas
Islands.
Political parties: Spanish Socialist Workers
Party (PSOE), Popular Party (PP), and the United
Left (IU) coalition. Key regional parties are
the Convergence and Union (CIU) in Catalonia and
the Basque Nationalist Party (PNV) in the Basque
country.
Economy
GDP (2005): $955.1 billion in current prices
(seventh-largest Organization for Economic
Cooperation and Development--OECD--economy).
Annual growth rate: 3.5%.
Per capita GDP: $22,421.
Natural resources: Coal, lignite, iron ore,
uranium, mercury, pyrites, fluorspar, gypsum,
zinc, lead, tungsten, copper, kaolin,
hydroelectric power.
Agriculture and fisheries (2.9% of GDP, 2004
est.): Products--grains, vegetables,
citrus and deciduous fruits, wine, olives and
olive oil, sunflowers, livestock.
Industry (17.3% of GDP, 2004 est.): Types--processed
foods, textiles, footwear, petrochemicals,
steel, automobiles, consumer goods, electronics.
Trade (2004): Exports--$137.8 billion:
automobiles, fruits, minerals, metals, clothing,
footwear, textiles. Major markets--EU
71.8%, U.S. 4.12%. Imports--$184.1
billion: petroleum, oilseeds, aircraft, grains,
chemicals, machinery, transportation equipment,
fish, consumer goods. Major sources--EU
63.9%, U.S. 3.7%.
Average exchange rate (2004): 0.8038
euros=U.S.$1.
PEOPLE
Spain's population density, lower than that of
most European countries, is roughly equivalent
to New England's. In recent years, following a
longstanding pattern in the rest of Europe,
rural populations are moving to cities.
Spain has no official religion. The
constitution of 1978 disestablished the Roman
Catholic Church as the official state religion,
while recognizing the role it plays in Spanish
society. More than 90% of the population are at
least nominally Catholic.
Educational System
About 70% of Spain's student population
attends public schools or universities. The
remainder attend private schools or
universities, the great majority of which are
operated by the Catholic Church. Compulsory
education begins with primary school or general
basic education for ages 6-14. It is free in
public schools and in many private schools, most
of which receive government subsidies. Following
graduation, students attend either a secondary
school offering a general high school diploma or
a school of professional education
(corresponding to grades 9-12 in the United
States) offering a vocational training program.
The Spanish university system offers degree and
post-graduate programs in all fields--law,
sciences, humanities, and medicine--and the
superior technical schools offer programs in
engineering and architecture.
HISTORY
Spain’s Iberian Peninsula has been settled for
millennia. In fact, some of Europe's most
impressive Paleolithic cultural sites are
located in Spain, including the famous caves at
Altamira that contain spectacular paintings
dating from about 15,000 to 25,000 years ago.
The Basques, Europe’s oldest surviving group,
are also the first identifiable people of the
peninsula.
Beginning in the ninth century BC,
Phoenicians, Greeks, Carthaginians, and Celts
entered the Iberian Peninsula. The Romans
followed in the second century BC and laid the
groundwork for Spain's present language,
religion, and laws. Although the Visigoths
arrived in the fifth century AD, the last Roman
strongholds along the southern coast did not
fall until the seventh century AD. In 711, North
African Moors sailed across the straits, swept
into Andalusia, and within a few years, pushed
the Visigoths up the peninsula to the Cantabrian
Mountains. The Reconquest—efforts to drive out
the Moors—lasted until 1492. By 1512, the
unification of present-day Spain was complete.
During the 16th century, Spain became the
most powerful nation in Europe, due to the
immense wealth derived from its presence in the
Americas. But a series of long, costly wars and
revolts, capped by the defeat by the English of
the "Invincible Armada" in 1588, began a steady
decline of Spanish power in Europe. Controversy
over succession to the throne consumed the
country during the 18th century, leading to an
occupation by France during the Napoleonic era
in the early 1800s, and led to a series of armed
conflicts throughout much of the 19th century.
The 19th century saw the revolt and
independence of most of Spain's colonies in the
Western Hemisphere: three wars over the
succession issue; the brief ousting of the
monarchy and establishment of the First Republic
(1873-74); and, finally, the Spanish-American
War (1898), in which Spain lost Cuba, Puerto
Rico, and the Philippines to the United States.
A period of dictatorial rule (1923-31) ended
with the establishment of the Second Republic.
It was dominated by increasing political
polarization, culminating in the leftist Popular
Front electoral victory in 1936. Pressures from
all sides, coupled with growing and unchecked
violence, led to the outbreak of the Spanish
Civil War in July 1936.
Following the victory of his nationalist
forces in 1939, General Francisco Franco ruled a
nation exhausted politically and economically.
Spain was officially neutral during World War II
but followed a pro-Axis policy. Therefore, the
victorious Allies isolated Spain at the
beginning of the postwar period, and the country
did not join the United Nations until 1955. In
1959, under an International Monetary Fund
stabilization plan, the country began
liberalizing trade and capital flows,
particularly foreign direct investment.
Despite the success of economic
liberalization, Spain remained the most closed
economy in Western Europe—judged by the small
measure of foreign trade to economic
activity—and the pace of reform slackened during
the 1960s as the state remained committed to
"guiding" the economy. Nevertheless, in the
1960s and 1970s, Spain was transformed into a
modern industrial economy with a thriving
tourism sector. Its economic expansion led to
improved income distribution and helped develop
a large middle class. Social changes brought
about by economic prosperity and the inflow of
new ideas helped set the stage for Spain's
transition to democracy during the latter half
of the 1970s.
Upon the death of General Franco in November
1975, Franco's personally designated heir Prince
Juan Carlos de Borbon y Borbon assumed the
titles of king and chief of state. Dissatisfied
with the slow pace of post-Franco
liberalization, he replaced Franco's last Prime
Minister with Adolfo Suarez in July 1976. Suarez
entered office promising that elections would be
held within one year, and his government moved
to enact a series of laws to liberalize the new
regime. Spain's first elections since 1936 to
the Cortes (Parliament) were held on June 15,
1977. Prime Minister Suarez's Union of the
Democratic Center (UCD), a moderate center-right
coalition, won 34% of the vote and the largest
bloc of seats in the Cortes.
Under Suarez, the new Cortes set about
drafting a democratic constitution that was
overwhelmingly approved by voters in a national
referendum in December 1978.
GOVERNMENT AND POLITICAL CONDITIONS
Parliamentary democracy was restored following
the death of General Franco in 1975, who had
ruled since the end of the civil war in 1939.
The 1978 constitution established Spain as a
parliamentary monarchy, with the prime minister
responsible to the bicameral Cortes (Congress of
Deputies and Senate) elected every 4 years. On
February 23, 1981, rebel elements among the
security forces seized the Cortes and tried to
impose a military-backed government. However,
the great majority of the military forces
remained loyal to King Juan Carlos, who used his
personal authority to put down the bloodless
coup attempt.
In October 1982, the Spanish Socialist
Workers Party (PSOE), led by Felipe Gonzalez,
swept both the Congress of Deputies and Senate,
winning an absolute majority. Gonzalez and the
PSOE ruled for the next 13 years. During that
period, Spain joined the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization (NATO) and the European Community.
In March 1996, Jose Maria Aznar's Popular
Party (PP) won a plurality of votes. Aznar moved
to decentralize powers to the regions and
liberalize the economy, with a program of
privatization, labor market reform, and measures
designed to increase competition in selected
markets. During Aznar's first term, Spain fully
integrated into European institutions,
qualifying for the European Monetary Union.
During this period, Spain participated, along
with the United States and other NATO allies, in
military operations in the former Yugoslavia.
President Aznar and the PP won reelection in
March 2000, obtaining absolute majorities in
both houses of parliament.
After the terrorist attacks on the U.S. on
September 11, 2001, President Aznar became a key
ally in the fight against terrorism. Spain
backed the military action against the Taliban
in Afghanistan and took a leadership role within
the European Union (EU) in pushing for increased
international cooperation on terrorism. The
Aznar government, with a rotating seat on the UN
Security Council, supported the intervention in
Iraq.
Spanish parliamentary elections on March 14,
2004 came only three days after a devastating
terrorist attack on Madrid commuter rail lines
that killed 191 and wounded over 1,400. With
large voter turnout, PSOE won the election and
its leader, Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero, took
office on April 17, 2004. The Zapatero
government has supported coalition efforts in
Afghanistan, including maintaining troop support
for 2004 and 2005 elections, supported
reconstruction efforts in Haiti, and cooperated
on counterterrorism issues. Carrying out
campaign promises, it immediately withdrew
Spanish forces from Iraq but has continued to
support Iraq reconstruction efforts.
Local Government
The 1978 constitution authorized the creation of
regional autonomous governments. By 1985, 17
regions covering all of peninsular Spain, the
Canaries, and the Balearic Islands had
negotiated autonomy statutes with the central
government. In 1979, the first autonomous
elections were held in the Basque and Catalan
regions, which have the strongest regional
traditions by virtue of their history and
separate languages. Since then, autonomous
governments have been created in the remainder
of the 17 regions. The central government
continues to devolve powers to the regional
governments, which will eventually have full
responsibility for health care and education, as
well as other social programs.
Terrorism
The Government of Spain is involved in a
long-running campaign against Basque Fatherland
and Liberty (ETA), a terrorist organization
founded in 1959 and dedicated to promoting
Basque independence. ETA targets Spanish
security forces, military personnel, Spanish
Government officials, and politicians of the
Popular Party and the Socialist Party (PSOE.)
The group has carried out numerous bombings
against Spanish Government facilities and
economic targets, including a car bomb
assassination attempt on then-opposition leader
Aznar in 1995, in which his armored car was
destroyed but he was unhurt. The Spanish
Government attributes over 800 deaths to ETA
terrorism since its campaign of violence began.
In recent years, the government has had more
success in controlling ETA, due in part to
increased security cooperation with French
authorities.
In November 1999, ETA ended a cease-fire it
declared in September 1998. Since that time, ETA
has conducted a campaign of violence and has
been blamed for the deaths of some 46 Spanish
citizens and officials. Each attack has been
followed by massive anti-ETA demonstrations
around the country, clearly demonstrating that
the majority of Spaniards, including the
majority of Spain's Basque populace, have no
tolerance for continued ETA violence. The
government continues to pursue vigorous
counterterrorist policy.
Spain also contends with a resistance group,
commonly known as GRAPO. GRAPO is an urban
terrorist group that seeks to overthrow the
Spanish Government and establish a Marxist
state. It opposes Spanish participation in NATO
and U.S. presence in Spain and has a long
history of assassinations, bombings, and
kidnappings mostly against Spanish interests
during the 1970s and 1980s.
In a June 2000 communiqué following the
explosions of two small devices in Barcelona,
GRAPO claimed responsibility for several
terrorist attacks throughout Spain during the
past year. These attacks included two failed
armored car robberies, one in which two security
officers died, and four bombings of political
party offices during the 1999/2000 election
campaign. In 2002 and 2003, Spanish and French
authorities were successful in hampering the
organization’s activities through sweeping
arrests, including some of the group’s
leadership.
Al Qaeda is known to operate cells in Spain.
On March 11, 2004, only three days before
national elections, 10 bombs were detonated on
crowded commuter trains during rush hour. Three
were deactivated by security forces and one was
found unexploded. Evidence quickly surfaced that
jihadist terrorists with possible ties to the al
Qaeda network were responsible for the attack
that killed 191 people. Spanish investigative
services and the judicial system have
aggressively sought to arrest and prosecute
suspected al Qaeda members and actively
cooperate with foreign governments to diminish
the transnational terrorist threat.
Principal Government Officials
Chief of State, Commander in Chief of the Armed
Forces--King Juan Carlos I
President of the Government (Prime
Minister)--Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero
Minister of Foreign Affairs--Miguel Angel
Moratinos
Ambassador to the United States--Carlos
Westendorp y Cabeza
Spain maintains an
embassy in the United States at 2375
Pennsylvania Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20037
(tel. 202-728-2340) and consulates in many
larger U.S. cities.
ECONOMY
Spain's accession to the European Community--now
European Union (EU)--in January 1986 required
the country to open its economy, modernize its
industrial base, improve infrastructure, and
revise economic legislation to conform to EU
guidelines. In doing so, Spain increased gross
domestic product (GDP) growth, reduced the
public debt to GDP ratio, reduced unemployment
from 23% to 15% in 3 years, and reduced
inflation to under 3%. The fundamental
challenges remaining for Spain include
decreasing unemployment further, reforming labor
laws lowering inflation, and raising per capita
GDP.
Following peak growth years in the late
1980s, the Spanish economy entered into
recession in mid-1992. The economy recovered
during the first Aznar administration
(1996-2000), driven by a return of consumer
confidence and increased private consumption,
although growth has slowed in recent years.
Unemployment remains a problem at 8.42% (2005
est.), but this still represents a significant
improvement from previous levels. Devaluations
of the peseta during the 1990s made Spanish
exports more competitive, but the strength of
the euro since its adoption has raised recent
concerns that Spanish exports are being priced
out of the range of foreign buyers.
FOREIGN RELATIONS
After the return of democracy following the
death of General Franco in 1975, Spain's foreign
policy priorities were to break out of the
diplomatic isolation of the Franco years and
expand diplomatic relations, enter the European
Community, and define security relations with
the West.
As a member of NATO since 1982, Spain has
established itself as a major participant in
multilateral international security activities.
Spain's EU membership represents an important
part of its foreign policy. Even on many
international issues beyond Western Europe,
Spain prefers to coordinate its efforts with its
EU partners through the European political
cooperation mechanism.
With the normalization of diplomatic
relations with Israel and Albania in 1986, Spain
virtually completed the process of
universalizing its diplomatic relations. The
only country with which it now does not have
diplomatic relations is North Korea.
Spain has maintained its special
identification with Latin America. Its policy
emphasizes the concept of Hispanidad, a mixture
of linguistic, religious, ethnic, cultural, and
historical ties binding Spanish-speaking America
to Spain. Spain has been an effective example of
transition from authoritarianism to democracy,
as shown in the many trips that Spain's King and
Prime Ministers have made to the region. Spain
maintains economic and technical cooperation
programs and cultural exchanges with Latin
America, both bilaterally and within the EU.
Spain also continues to focus attention on
North Africa, especially on Morocco. This
concern is dictated by geographic proximity and
long historical contacts, as well as by the two
Spanish enclave cities of Ceuta and Melilla on
the northern coast of Africa. While Spain's
departure from its former colony of Western
Sahara ended direct Spanish participation in
Morocco, it maintains an interest in the
peaceful resolution of the conflict brought
about there by decolonization. These issues were
highlighted by a crisis in 2002, when Spanish
forces evicted a small contingent of Moroccans
from a tiny islet off Morocco’s coast following
that nation’s attempt to assert sovereignty over
the island.
Meanwhile, Spain has gradually begun to
broaden its contacts with Sub-Saharan Africa. It
has a particular interest in its former colony
of Equatorial Guinea, where it maintains a large
aid program.
In relations with the Arab world, Spain has
sought to promote European-Mediterranean
dialogue. Spain strongly supports the EU’s
"Barcelona Process" which seeks to expand
dialogue and trade between Europe and the
nations of North Africa and the Middle East,
including Israel. The latest meeting on this
initiative was held in Barcelona on November 29,
2005.
Spain has been successful in managing its
relations with its two European neighbors,
France and Portugal. The accession of Spain and
Portugal to the EU has helped ease some of their
periodic trade frictions by putting these into
an EU context. Franco-Spanish bilateral
cooperation is enhanced by joint action against
Basque ETA terrorism. Ties with the United
Kingdom are generally good, although the
question of Gibraltar remains a sensitive issue.
U.S.-SPANISH RELATIONS
Spain and the United States have a long history
of official relations and are closely associated
in many fields. In addition to U.S. and Spanish
cooperation in NATO, defense and security
relations between the two countries are
regulated by a 1989 Agreement on Defense
Cooperation, revised in 2003. Under this
agreement, Spain authorized the United States to
use certain facilities at Spanish military
installations.
The two countries also cooperate in several
other important areas. Under a 1964 agreement
(currently being renegotiated), the U.S.
National Aeronautics and Space Administration
(NASA) and the Spanish National Institute of
Aerospace Technology (INTA) jointly operate the
Madrid Deep Space Communications Complex in
support of Earth orbital and solar system
exploration missions. The Madrid Complex is one
of the three-largest tracking and data
acquisition complexes comprising NASA's Deep
Space Network.
An agreement on cultural and educational
cooperation was signed on June 7, 1989. A new
element, supported by both the public and
private sectors, gives a different dimension to
the programs carried out by the joint committee
for cultural and educational cooperation. These
joint committee activities complement the
binational Fulbright program for graduate
students, postdoctoral researchers, and visiting
professors, which became the largest in the
world in 1989. Besides assisting in these
exchange endeavors, the U.S. Embassy also
conducts a program of official visits between
Spain and the United States.
Spain and the U.S. are strong allies in the
fight against terrorism.
Principal U.S. Embassy Officials
Ambassador--Eduardo
Aguirre, Jr.
Deputy Chief of Mission--J. Robert Manzanares
Counselor for Management Affairs--Michael S.
Hoza
Counselor for Agricultural Affairs--Stephen
Hammond
Counselor for Commercial Affairs--Jim Wilson
Counselor for Consular Affairs--Laura Clerici
Counselor for Economic Affairs--Whitney Y. Baird
Counselor for Political Affairs--Kathleen
Fitzpatrick
Counselor for Public Affairs--Josie Shumake
Chief, Office of Defense Cooperation--Capt.
Carlos A. Sotomayor, USN
Defense Attaché--Kevin Little
Drug Enforcement Administration Attaché--Alfredo
Christlieb
NASA Representative--Marcus Watkins
Regional Security Officer--Randall D. Bennett
Consul General Barcelona--Juan Alsace
Border and Transportation Security Directorate
(BTS), Dept. of Homeland Security--Walter D.
Cadman
Defense Communication Support Group
(DCSG)--Jackie C. Gendron
The
U.S. Embassy is located at Serrano, 75,
28006 Madrid (tel. 34-1-587-2200; fax
34-1-587-2303). Consulate General, Barcelona,
Paseo Reina Elisenda 23, Barcelona 08034 (tel.
34-3-280-2227; fax 34-3-205-5206).