The Spanish army was deployed after the blackout in anticipation that it might be an attack
[Read the original version, in Catalan, of this article]
The Spanish army was deployed after the major power outage that collapsed the Iberian grid on Monday to protect important military installations.
Specifically, VilaWeb has confirmed that several units of the Centauro B1 wheeled armored howitzer were deployed around the Jaume I base in Bétera (Valencian Country), where the NATO Rapid Deployment Headquarters in the Spanish Kingdom (HQ NRDC-ESP) is located.
It is a multinational command structure of the Spanish Army and NATO, designed to direct large-scale military land operations, where military personnel from thirteen different states work (Germany, Spain, France, the United States, Slovakia, Greece, Italy, Poland, Portugal, the United Kingdom, the Czech Republic, Romania, and Türkiye).
The units deployed around the perimeter of the base were Centauro B1 vehicles, also known as VRCC-105, which belong to the neighboring military base of General Almirante, located in Marines.
These are wheeled reconnaissance and combat vehicles, armed with 105-millimeter cannons. These vehicles offer great mobility and have participated, as part of the Lusitania Regiment number 8, in several international missions, including deployments to Slovakia as part of NATO’s Multinational Combat Group.
The distance between the Jaume I base in Bétera, which has no armored vehicles, and the General Almirante base in Marines is thirteen kilometers in a straight line.
VilaWeb has been able to verify from information from several witnesses the presence of at least three of these vehicles outside the perimeter of the base, in civilian areas, all three with camouflage elements.
One was stationed near the Doctor Moliner Hospital, located north of the base. Another at the beginning of the Serra Calderona natural park and a third south of the base, on the rural path known as Camí d’Alcubles.
This newspaper has had access to a photograph of this third armored vehicle and has been able to verify with geolocation tools that it was indeed located in this area.
VilaWeb contacted the Jaume I base, which merely said that it did not have vehicles like these and explained that it did deploy the UME (Military Emergency Unit), which includes antennas, tanker trucks, and more vehicles that assisted facilities such as the Manises hospital, which needed to power generators.
VilaWeb did not get any response from the General Almirante base.
Shortly after the blackout, according to what this newspaper has been able to find out, among the political authorities, the hypothesis of an attack as the cause of the network’s collapse was seriously considered.
Along these lines, it is noteworthy that, in the midst of the crisis, the president of the Spanish government, Pedro Sánchez, held a conversation with the president of Ukraine, Volodymyr Zelensky, made public by the latter, in which Zelensky offered him help to restore the electrical and communications network based on the knowledge acquired by his country in the recovery of these networks after Russian attacks.