Spain are naturally the favourites, backed to become the first holders to retain the Henri Delaunay trophy, and will face Italy, Ireland and Croatia in a Group C which the southern European superpowers should both advance from.
Spain have never beaten Italy in a major tournament apart from a penalty shoot-out win over the Azzurri in the quarter-finals of the last Euros in Vienna in 2008.
The draw brought a wry smile to the face of Ireland's Italian coach Giovanni Trapattoni, who will face his countrymen for the fourth time since taking charge of Ireland, winning one and drawing twice against the team he used to manage.
"We all know Italy and their strengths so it is not going to be easy," he said. "But like the last times I have faced them, I will be wanting to beat them on the day."
The draw was conducted by UEFA general secretary Gianni Infantino at Kiev's Palace of Arts before a crowd of invited guests and soccer celebrities.
He was assisted by four former European champions, Zinedine Zidane of France, Dutch ace Marco Van Basten, Danish goalkeeper Peter Schmeichel and German striker Horst Hrubesch.
The finals will be the third to be co-hosted and will be played at four stadiums in Poland -- Warsaw, Gdansk, Wroclaw and Poznan, and four in Ukraine -- Kiev, Donetsk, Kharkiv and Lviv.
Euro 2012 will be the last tournament to be staged with 16 teams. The tournament expands to 24 nations at its next edition in 2016 in France.
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