PLA – A quick Reference.

xinhui

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PLA – A quick Reference.

PLA – A quick reference.

State Council ------------------Central Military Commission (CMC)
|
Ministry of National Defense
|
|
People’s Armed Police
Commission of Science, Technology and Industry for National Defense (The new CONSTIND)



Central Military Commission (CMC) ------------- People’s Armed Police
|
General Staff Department ----------------- Ministry of National Defense
General Political Department ----------------- Ministry of National Defense
General Logistic Department ----------------- Ministry of National Defense
General Armament/Equipment Department ----------------- Ministry of National Defense
(Included the old Commission of Science, Technology and Industry for National Defense (CONSTIND)
|
|
PLA Academy of Military Science
PLA National Defense University
Air Force
Navy
Strategic Missile Force (Second Artillery Corp)
Seven Military Regions
15 Airborne Corp
HongKong garrison
Macao garrison
Central Guard.

http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/china/index.html
Globalsecurity’s China military guide has great write up on PLA.




Seven Military Regions:
Beijing MR - Beijing, Tianjiang, Hebei, Shanxi, Inner Mongolia
Shenyang MR – Jilin, Heilongjiang, Liaoning
Jinan MR – Henan, Shangdong
Nanjing MR – Zhejiang, Jiangsu, Jiangxi, Fujian, Shanghai, Anhui
Guangzhou MR – Guangdong, Guangxi, Hainan, Hubei, Hunan
Chengdu MR – Sichuan, Chongqing, Yunan, Guizhou, Tibet
Lanzhou MR Shaanix, Gansu, Qinghai, Xinjiang, Ningxia.





The following drawing is taken from the current edition (2008) of the Annual Pentagon China Military Power Report
http://www.defenselink.mil/pubs/pdfs/China_Military_Report_08.pdf
 
CMC

15 Airborne Corp
43rd Airborne Division
44th Airborne Division
45th Airborne Division

Beijing Military Region
27th GA
235 Mech Infantry Brigade
80th Motor Infantry Brigade
188th Mech Infantry Brigade
82nd Motor Infantry Brigade
Arty Brigade
Armor Brigade
AD Brigade

38th GA
6th Armor Division
112th Heavy Mech Infantry Division
113th Light Mech Infantry Division
4th AD Brigade
6th Arty Brigade

65th GA
207th Moto Infantry Brigade
193rd Motor Infantry Division
70th Motor Infantry Brigade
1st Armor Division
Arty Brigade
AD Brigade


Beijing Garrison
1st Beijing Garrison Division
2nd Beijing Garrison Division
3rd Beijing Garrison Division


Tainjin Garrision
196th Motor Infantry Brigade
Motorized Infantry Brigade




Shengyang Military Region

16th GA

4th Armor Division
48th Motor Infantry Division
68th Motor Infantry Brigade
69th Motor Infantry Division
10th Arty Brigade
AD Brigade


39th GA

3rd Armor Division
115 Mech Infantry Division
116 Mech Infantry Division
190 Mech Infantry Brigade
Arty Brigade
AD Brigade

40th GA

118th Motor Infantry Brigade
119th Motor Infantry Brigade
5th Armor Brigade
Arty Brigade
AD Brigade.

Three Fortification Zones. (each with a Division)



Nanjing Military Region

Tactical Surface-to-Surface Missile Brigade

1st GA

10th Armor Division
1st Amphibious Mech Infantry Division
3rd Motor Infantry Brigade
9th Artillery Division
AD Brigade


12th GA

2nd Armor Division
34th Motor Infantry Brigade
36th Motor Infantry Brigade
179th Motor Infantry Brigade
Arty Brigade
AD Brigade

31st GA

86th Motor Infantry Division
91st Motor Infantry Division
92nd Motor Infantry Brigade
Amphibious Armor Brigade
Arty Brigade
13th AD Brigade



Shanghai Garrison
1st Shanghai Garrison Brigade
2nd Shanghai Garrison Brigade

Fujian Provincial Military District
11th Costal Defense Division
12th Costal Defense Division
13th Costal Defense Division
15th Costal Defense Division


Changdu Military Region

13th GA

149th Mech Infantry Division
37th Motor Infantry Division
Armor Brigade
Arty Brigade
AD Brigade

14th GA

31st Motor Infantry Division
40th Motor Infantry Division
Armor Brigade
Arty Brigade
AD Brigade

Tibet Military District

52nd Mountain Infantry Brigade
53rd Mountain Infantry Brigade



Guangzhou Military Region
32nd Pontoon Bridge Brigade

41st GA

123rd Mech Infantry Division
121st Motor Infantry Division
Armor Brigade
Artillery Brigade
19th AD Brigade

42nd GA

124th Amphibious Mech Infantry Division
163nd Motor Infantry Division
1st Art Division
AD Brigade
9th Armor Brigade

Guangzhou Garrison
Guangzhou Garrison Division



Lanzhou Military Region


21st GA

12th Armor Division
55th Mountain Infantry Brigade
61st Mech Infantry Division
15th Arty Brigade
AD Brigade

47th GA

139th Mech Infantry Brigade
56th Motor Infantry Brigade
1st Arty Briagde
AD Brigade
Armor Brigade

Xinjiang Military District

4th Highland Motor Infantry Division
6th Highland Mech Infantry Division
8th Highland Motor Infantry Division
11th Highland Motor Infantry Division
AD Brigade
2nd Arty Briagde



Jinan Military Region


20th GA

Armor Brigade
58th Mech Infantry Brigade
60th Motor Infantry Brigade
11th Armor Brigade
Arty Brigade
AD Brigade

26th GA

8th Armor Division
138th Motor Infantry Brigade
77th Motor Infantry Brigade
199th Motor Infantry Brigade
Arty Brigade
54th AD Brigade

54th GA

127th Light Mech Infantry Division
162nd Motor Infantry Division
11th armor Division
Arty Brigade
AD Brigade
 
Xinhui, what guns do each artillery brigades and divisions have? Also, what is the organisation and table of equipment with the divisional engineer regiment regiments? Which kind of pontoons do the PLA River crossing Regiments have?
 
Klrajiv,

Good sir, the answers are somewhat complicated. There are still divisions awaiting new equipment while the 38th and 39th Group Armies have discarded their 1960 era systems. Add to that a splattering of independent artillery and engineering regts, then there is a mix of old and new still around.

The best place for all your answers would be the China-Defense.com/forum where Andy and I run this academic (read you would have more fun staring at a dead fish) centric forum.
 
Last edited:
Xinhui, what guns do each artillery brigades and divisions have? Also, what is the organisation and table of equipment with the divisional engineer regiment regiments? Which kind of pontoons do the PLA River crossing Regiments have?

There are only two Arty division in PLA's orbat, the 1st and the 9th, both of them are stationary with one purpose, Taiwan. I don't think many folks would consider them tactical units as they are equipped with A-100 300mm long-range rackets for offshore bombardment.

PLA is slowly, (I mean painfully slow) moving away from the Soviet/Russian 130mm/152mm cal systems toward 155mm based system, it took them 20 years and still only very limited number of elite arty formations (38th GA, 39th GA, 54th GA, 1st GA, 142nd GA) have 155mm systems in their TOE (PLZ05, PLZ91, PLL01)
 
xinhui,

for an amateur groundpounder watcher, can you explain the cost/benefits of the shift?
 
The short answer is that if you want to put a HE round some where near the target, the Soviet system will work just fine and much cheaper, but if you want mobility, accuracy, long service life, all those good stuff, well, a western based system might be a better answer.
 
Section 8 wrote the following unpublished article and it should explain (in general) some of the short comings of the Soviet systems as demonstrated with the Type59 Howitzer.





The First Modernization:

The Chinese engineers began to work on the improved
variant of the Type 59 in the late 1960s. The goal was
to the fixing many of the shortcomings of the Type
59’s design while try to expands its capability. Many
of the new components for the improved design were
borrowed or influenced by the Type 66 152mm howitzer
and Type 60 122mm field gun.

The first thing that got changed was the Type 59’s
carriage. The new carriage was based on that of the
new Type 66 152mm howitzer’s spit-trail wheel
carriage. The new carriage offered many features the
old carriage lacked. It removed the need to uses a
limber wheels and therefore not only it offered better
cross-country mobility but also greatly reduced deploy
and recovery time. The newly added flip-up metal
coaster wheel at the end each trails makes it much
easier to open and close the spit-trail. The new
carriage also added a base-plate that when lowered to
the ground, it helps improve the overall stability and
reduce recoil during firing. The lowered base-plate
together with the coaster wheels on the trail also
allows 360 degree traverse for the field gun.

The Type 59’s recoil mechanism had to be redesigned in
order to fits into the new carriage. The original Type
59 uses an over and under configuration for its recoil
and counter recoil buffers. In the new carriage the
bottom position is taking up by the new base-plate.
The counter-recoil buffer cylinder had to be relocated
to the top of the breech assembly and along side of
the recoil buffer cylinder. The side benefit of the
new configuration is that it makes servicing both
buffer cylinders a much simpler job.

A simpler double-buffed muzzle brake replaced the
multi-port “pepperbox” type design used on the
original Type 59. The new muzzle brake is cheaper and
easier to manufacture, weights less and it also
increases the efficiency to over 45 percents.

The Type 59’s breech mechanism also received an
upgrade. The old manually operated horizontal
sliding-wedge breech was replaced by a semi-automatic
vertical sliding-wedge breech. The new breech was
based on the Type 66 152mm howitzer’s breech. The new
breech added a coil spring and uses gravity to reduce
the effort in open and close the breechblock. The
“semi-automatic” function is that the breech mechanism
can be configured to automatically to open the
breechblock and ejects the spent propellant case at
the end of the recoil cycle. This does help speed up
the reloading operation somewhat. The maximum firing
rate had increased from the original’s 6-8 rpm to 8-10
rpm with the Type 59-1’s new semi-automatic breech.
However, the realistic rate of fire is still depends
on the efficiency of the gun crew. After the first few
minutes of firing, even the most experienced crew will
be slow down due to fatigue. The other improvements to
the breech assembly include a retention device that
holds the projectile or the propellant case in place
while the breechblock is opened during high-angle ammo
loading operation. The redesigned firing mechanism has
added safety to prevent it from firing if the
breechblock is not closed completely.

Besides those major changes, there were other smaller
but no less significant improvements. New ball
bearings and rollers were added to the field gun’s
mechanical components. Those help to reduce frictions
while improve the reliability. Light emitting diodes
and fiber optic lightings replaced conventional light
buds for the sight illumination and the running
lights. The automotive braking system was replaced by
a pneumatic brake system that’s comparable with common
PLA trucks and artillery prime movers.

The 130mm field gun’s formidable ballistic performance
remains unchanged in the Type 59-1. Most of the
upgrades were focused on improve its mobility and
operational efficiency. The biggest improvement
resulted from all those upgrades is a major 2,100
kilograms weight reduction from the original Type 59’s
8.2 tons towing weight to new Type 59-1’s 6.1 tons.
This in term, lead to a significant improvement to the
field gun’s mobility and it’s light enough to be tow
by most of the medium trucks in service with the
Chinese military.

The Type 59-1 variant’s development was completed in
the early 1970s. However, due the turmoil of the Mao’s
Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution the Type 59-1’s
initial production was grinded to a halt after few
small batches. The Chinese military only started to
receive the Type 59-1 130mm field gun in numbers in
the early 1980s.


The Second Modernization:

The second modernization of the Type 59 field gun
system occurred the 1980s. The emphases of the second
modernization was not on the Type 59 field gun itself
but to enhance its targeting capability, effective
range, ammunitions and an attempt of developing a
self-propel version of it.

Combat experiences learned from the Sino-Vietnamese
War in 1979 indicated that the PLA artillery units had
ineffective surveillance and target acquisition
ability. The major cause of this deficiency was not
enough artillery forward observers (FO) and the few
FOs that they had were either poorly equipped or often
poorly trained for their jobs.

The PLA used a two-prong approach to modernize their
artillery target acquisition capability. The first one
was the creation more FO positions in the artillery
units. The best surveillance and communication
equipment the PLA had at the time were issued to those
new FOs. They were one of the first to received
light-intensifier night version equipment, handheld
laser range finder and digital communication gears in
the PLA. Their trainings were also updated with new
tactics and modified according to the new equipments.

The second approach was by adding artillery radars to
the Type 59 unit’s organic table of equipment (TOE).
In the early 1980s, China’s relation with the European
and American begin to warming up. The Western nations
started to allow military sales to the China. Since
one of the Type 59 unit’s main tactical role is
counter-battery operation, the artillery locating
radar was on the top of the PLA’s shopping list. The
first artillery radar the PLA ordered was the British
made Green Archer Mark I. The first four Green Archer
units were sent to the initial stage of the Second
Sino-Vietnamese War in 1984. The imported artillery
radars together with the newly trained and better
equipped FOs demonstrated to be highly effective in
combat engagements. The Vietnamese artillery supports
were quickly eliminated by the Chinese artillery radar
equipped Type 59 batteries. The well directed Chinese
artillery fires inflicted devastating causality on the
unsupported Vietnamese infantries. The PLA was so
impressed with the artillery radar’s combat
performance; they later brought the production license
for the Green Archer series.

At the same time, the PLA was also looking for larger
and longer range artillery radar system with more
capabilities for their artillery division level TOE.
The state of the art American made Fiefinder AN/TPQ-37
was chosen by the PLA for the task. The AN/TPQ-37
utilizes a phased array antenna and computer
controlled digital signal processor. It’s capable of
first round detection at range up to 50km for mortar,
tube artillery and rockets. Its phased array antenna
allows the radar to tracks multiple targets
simultaneously and the onboard computer automatically
calculates both the firing position and the impact
point of each projectiles. Only two units of the
AN/TPQ-37 were delivered to the PLA in the late 1980s
before the new American led arms embargo cancelled the
rest of the order. Subsequently, the Chinese engineer
developed a reverse engineer AN/TPQ-37 copy based on
the two examples they received. The Chinese made copy
was designated the Type 704 artillery radar. However,
the early version was still relied heavily on foreign
made components. It took the Chinese engineers ten
years to achieve the completely indigenous production
of the Type 704.

By the 1980s, the Type 59 finally gave up its class
leading long-range crown to the new long barrel 155 mm
howitzers; which including China’s own 45 calibers
155mm howitzer. To close the performance gap, a new
family of enhanced 130mm ammunitions was developed for
the Type 59. The first to become available was the
Extended Range Full-bore Base-Bleed (ERFB-BB) rounds.
It increases the Type 59’s maximum range from 27.5km
to 35km and 37km if fires at 52 degrees instead of the
standard 45 degrees. The ERFB-BB ammo works by having
a very streamlined projectile shape and burns gas
generating chemicals at its tail in flight to reduce
air drags. Comparing to the old rocket-assisted
extended range ammo, the base-bleed ammo is not only
more efficient in increase the range but it also
without having the penalty of decrease the size of the
main explosive charge. The gas generating chemical
base burner takes up much less space than the rocket
motor in the rocket assisted round. In fact, the
base-bleed rounds actually carries slightly more
explosive than the regular high-explosive (HE) round
due to its longer projectile. The 130mm ERFB-BB round
has a dispersion of 1/170 or 0.58% at its maximum
range.

The 130mm cargo carrying ammo was developed along side
with the base-bleed round. For the longest time, no
one had developed a cargo carry round for the 130mm
field gun. The difficulty was due to the 130mm’s
projectile design. It needs a thick projectile case
wall construction to cope with the Type 59’s high
chamber pressure design. However, in the mid 1980s,
the Chinese engineers had finally overcome that
obstacle and developed the cargo carrying round for
the Type 59. The new 130 mm cargo ammo is what the
American military would calls it the DPICM or
Dual-Purpose Improved Conventional Munitions. The
130mm DPICM contains 35 dual-purpose bomblets. Each of
those bomblets is capable of penetrating 80mm of
rolled homogeneous steel with the build-in small
shape-charge warhead. The detonation of the bomblet
also produces fragmentation for incapacitating near by
unprotected infantries. The 130mm cargo carrying ammo
has a maximum range of 25km.

Those new enhanced 130mm rounds indicated a major
advance in Chinese munitions technology. On the other
hand, the Chinese engineers may have gotten some
outside helps. In coincidence, the infamous
Canadian-born artillery ballistic genius Dr. Gerald
Bull was doing some consulting works for the Chinese
arms industry during the mid 1980s. In fact, the new
Chinese 45 caliber 155mm long range howitzer was
designed by Dr. Bull. It’s highly possible that Dr.
Bull may have provided technical assistances to the
Chinese engineers in developing those enhanced 130mm
ammo. In addition, the new 130mm ERFB-BB round also
resembles the Dr. Bull’s signature base-bleed extended
range ammo design.

Even the Type 59’s conventional ammos received some
upgrades. The more powerful RDX replaced the TNT as
the main explosive charge in the standard HE round.
However, the old TNT filled HE round remain in
production because of its lower cost.
 
WOW,
The maps speak a 1000 words.
puts things in perspective, as to what the PLA assumes is the primary opponents.
Thanks very much!!
 
From their new official website





Armed Forces

Structure and Organization of the Armed Forces

The armed forces of the People's Republic of China (PRC) are composed of the People's Liberation Army (PLA), both the active and reserve components, the Chinese People's Armed Police Force (APF) and the militia. The Central Military Commission (CMC) of the PRC directs and assumes unified command of the nation's armed forces. The Ministry of National Defense under the State Council directs and administers national defense work.

The active components of the PLA are the country's standing army, which mainly undertake the task of defensive military operations, and help to maintain social order, if necessary, in accordance with the law. Its basic organizational structures can be categorized into the general headquarters/departments, the services and arms and the military area commands.

- The general headquarters/departments. The PLA's general headquarters/departments system is composed of the General Staff Headquarters, the General Political Department, the General Logistics Department and the General Armaments Department, which are placed under the leadership of the CMC. The CMC, through these four general headquar-ters/departments, directs and commands all the military area commands and the services and arms. The routine work of the Ministry of National Defense is handled, respectively, by these four general headquarters/departments. The General Staff Headquarters is the leading organ of all military work of the nation's armed forces. It organizes and leads the military construction of the nation's armed forces, and organizes and commands their military operations. Under it there are departments in charge of operations, intelligence, training, adjutant and force structure, mobilization, etc. The General Political Department is the leading organ of all po-litical work of the nation's armed forces. It administers the armed forces' Party work, and organizes their political work. Under it there are departments in charge of Party affairs, personnel, publicity, security, etc. The General Logistics Department organizes and directs the armed forces' logistics construction and logistical support. Under it there are departments in charge of financial affairs, quartermaster, health administration, military transportation, materials and POLs, capital construction and barracks, auditing, etc. The General Armaments Department organizes and directs the weaponry and equipment construction work of the armed forces. Under it there are departments in charge of planning; armaments for Navy, military aviation and strategic equipment; Army equipment research, development and procurement; general equipment support; electronics and information infrastructure, equipment and technology cooperation, etc.

- The services and arms. The PLA is composed of three services - the Army, Navy and Air Force - and an independent arm, the Second Artillery Force. The Army has such arms as the infantry, artillery, armor, engineering, communications, anti-chemical warfare and Army aviation, as well as other specialized units. The Navy has such arms as the surface, submarine, naval aviation, coastal defense and marine corps, as well as other specialized units. The Air Force has such arms as the aviation, surface-to-air missile and antiaircraft artillery, radar, and airborne, as well as other specialized units. The Second Artillery Force is composed of the strategic missile, conventional missile, and other specialized units.

- The military area commands. The military area commands (theaters of war) of the PLA are military organizations set up according to the state's administrative divisions, geographical locations, strategic and operational orientations, and operational tasks. Under each military area command are a number of Army combined corps, units of various arms, logistical support units, and provincial or garrison commands. Their major functions include organizing and coordinating the joint operations and exercises of the ground, naval and air forces in each military area; exercising direct leadership over Party affairs, military training, administration, political work, logistical and armaments support of the Army units under its jurisdiction; and directing the militia, military service, mobilization, civil air defense and battlefield construction work in the military area. At present, the PLA has seven military area commands, namely, Shenyang, Beijing, Lanzhou, Jinan, Nanjing, Guangzhou and Chengdu.

The PLA has the Academy of Military Science (AMS), the National Defense University (NDU), and the National University of Defense Technology (NUDT). The AMS is the PLA's highest-level research institute and center of military science. The NDU and the NUDT are the two institutions of higher learning directly under the CMC. The former is mainly responsible for the education and training of senior commanding and staff officers and researchers, while the latter is mainly responsible for the education and training of senior scientists and engineers, and specialized commanding officers.

The PLA's reserve force is a force with its preset organizational structure, with the reserve personnel as the base and active personnel as the backbone. The reserve force, which is incorporated into the PLA's order of battle, receives military training in peacetime according to relevant regulations, and helps to maintain social order, if necessary, in accordance with the law. In wartime, it may be called into active service in pursuance of a state mobilization order.

The Chinese People's Armed Police Force undertakes the task of maintenance of security entrusted by the state. It is under the dual leadership of the State Council and the CMC, and consists of internal security forces, and gold mine, forest, water and power, and transportation security forces.

The militia is a component of the state's armed forces. The militiamen and women, under the command of military organs, perform combat readiness support and defensive operations, and help to maintain social order. The General Staff Headquarters is in charge of nationwide militia work. Each military area command is responsible for the militia work under its jurisdiction. Each provincial command exercises leadership and command over the militia in its region.
Ministry of National Defense of the People?s Republic of China
 
Who are you, and why are you giving the deployment of the P L A to the public? If you are from China, then have you been arrested? I thought the C C P (Chinese Communist Party) did not allow such things. Anyway, I will go through what you have posted, because it is interesting.
 
Who are you, and why are you giving the deployment of the P L A to the public? If you are from China, then have you been arrested? I thought the C C P (Chinese Communist Party) did not allow such things. Anyway, I will go through what you have posted, because it is interesting.

LOL. Yep, He is in a Chinese prison now and still posting military secrets on the internet.
 
Who are you, and why are you giving the deployment of the P L A to the public? If you are from China, then have you been arrested? I thought the C C P (Chinese Communist Party) did not allow such things. Anyway, I will go through what you have posted, because it is interesting.

US DoD posts what I assume you're referring to annually in a form of a report to congress. It's available to anyone with an internet connection.
 
The military options seem to be very elaborate. Isn't it a waste of resources? If the Chinese military are building up, for their own sake, then I guess one can say nothing on the matter. If one looks at the situation, what is the People's Liberation Army around for? There are no threats to her sovereignty, either from internal, or external sources. Perhaps, because the nation is so large, she needs the armed forces in close proximity to every border.
 
The military options seem to be very elaborate.
Actually, they are behind the times.

Isn't it a waste of resources? If the Chinese military are building up, for their own sake, then I guess one can say nothing on the matter. If one looks at the situation, what is the People's Liberation Army around for?
To defend the CCP.

There are no threats to her sovereignty, either from internal, or external sources. Perhaps, because the nation is so large, she needs the armed forces in close proximity to every border.
Are you freaking serious? The last time China had a weak army, she got invaded by Japan.
 
Chinese Minister of National Defense said on Tuesday it had reduced the country's military reserves forces from 600,000 to 510,000 men and women over the past five years.

China has also reduced the number of people in its militias from 10 million to eight million during the same period, said Gen. Liang Guanglie in an interview with Xinhua.

It is the first time the Chinese government has given the exact number of people in the reserve forces and militias. In times of emergencies, the reserve forces and militias can be ordered to assist China's 2.3-million regular troops, the People's Liberation Army (PLA).

Although China has experienced around 30 years of peace, Gen. Liang said the PLA has never relaxed its military preparations and vigilance especially at a time when "regional military conflicts can not be ruled out."

In times of peace, the PLA's reserves conduct regular military training and participate in non-combat military operations, such as disaster relief work.

The minister said the PLA had pushed forward military reforms in the past five years to build a more powerful military with upgraded weapon systems and high-quality personnel.

Currently, 80 percent of the PLA's officers have four years of higher education compared with 25.8 percent in 1998, Gen. Liang said.

To improve the quality of military personnel, the Chinese government has encouraged university graduates to join the armed forces since 2009. More than 100,000 college graduates gained their uniforms in 2010.

In the past five years, China has dispatched more than 13,000 United Nations-commissioned peacekeepers to carry out 13 U.N. missions around the world, according to Liang.

The PLA also sent professional units to Haiti, Pakistan and other countries and regions for disaster relief efforts and to give medical aids and other humanitarian relief, he said.
DM: China Has 510,000 in Military Reserves
 
Actually, they are behind the times.
Beijing probably realized just how high the price tag is if you want to maintain a military much like what the US has. Surely they do not want to end up like the Soviet Union - which collapsed as a result of all that Cold War military spending.

To defend the CCP.
I thought that was the job of the People's Armed Police - at least through their immediate task of enforcing public order in high-risk situations.

Are you freaking serious? The last time China had a weak army, she got invaded by Japan.
True, 100%. Lucky for the Allies in WW2; had China fought for the Japanese side, WW2 would've taken longer to finish and China's industrial might would've allowed Japan to sustain a war effort on the same scale as the Americans. An "Arsenal of Tyranny", as it would've been termed in 1940's America.
 
China Politics Junkie Fix

China Politics Junkie Fix

China Leadership Monitor current issue
China Leadership Monitor current issue | Hoover Institution

The 18th Party Congress and Foreign Policy: The Dog that Did Not Bark
by Michael D. Swaine

Following the 18th Party Congress: Moving Forward Step-by-Step
by Alan D. Romberg

The New Central Military Commission
by James Mulvenon

Signaling Change: New Leaders begin the Search for Economic Reform
by Barry Naughton

The 18th Party Congress: Testing the Limits of Institutionalization
by Joseph Fewsmith

The New Party Politburo Leadership
by Alice L. Miller
 
w.r.t light General Zhang Yang, another 42nd Group Army boys at the top.... must be nice to have your ticket punched by one of those "Taiwan" units.
 
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