Minister of National Defense (China)

The Minister of National Defense of the People's Republic of China is the head of the Ministry of National Defense and one of the top positions in the State Council. The minister usually is also a member of the Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party and a member of the Central Military Commission (CMC), the top governing body of China's armed forces including the People's Liberation Army (PLA).

Minister of National Defense of
the People's Republic of China
中华人民共和国国防部部长
Incumbent
Dong Jun
since 29 December 2023
Ministry of National Defense
StatusProvincial-Ministerial level official
Member ofState Council
Reports toCentral Military Commission
SeatBeijing
NominatorPremier
(chosen within the Chinese Communist Party)
AppointerPresident
with the confirmation of the National People's Congress or its Standing Committee
PrecursorMinister of National Defense of the Republic of China
Formation28 September 1954 (1954-09-28)
First holderPeng Dehuai
Websiteeng.mod.gov.cn/xb/Ministry/index.html

Unlike in other countries, the minister does not have command authority over the armed forces, with the post generally used for diplomatic purposes. Nevertheless, the post has always been held by a member of the CMC.

The current minister of National Defense is Dong Jun.[1]

History

Historically, both the position and the ministry carried greater power.[2] In the first decades of the PRC, the ministry included several more departments. all overseen by vice ministers. The minister was held by influential generals, including Peng Dehuai, Lin Biao and Ye Jianying.[2] The ministry was reformed into its current state in the 1982 constitutional revision. Between 1982 and 2008, the minister usually concurrently served as a vice chairman of the Central Military Commission, and was usually a member of the Politburo.

After 2008, holders of the position stopped serving concurrently as a CMC vice chair, further weakening the position.[2] Notably, under the tenure of the President and CMC Chairman Xi Jinping, a series of major military scandals occurred from 2023 to June 2024, which eventually saw two of his former defence ministers, Wei Fenghe and Li Shangfu, expelled from the Party, with their military titles revoked.[3] In prior, Li was removed from the office only a couple of months after his appointment in March 2023, causing the position to be briefly vacant from October, until Admiral Dong Jun was appointed into the office in December of the same year, making Dong the first person with a navy background to become the defence minister of the PRC.

Among all its officeholders, Geng Biao was the only defence minister with a civil background, having no military rank of the PLA, neither was he a member thereof. Nonetheless, Geng did serve in the Red Army long before PLA’s foundation. With the exception of the aforementioned officeholder, all defence ministers in prior to Wei Fenghe came from the PLA Ground Force.

Process of appointment

Officially, the minister is nominated by the premier of the State Council, who is then approved by the National People's Congress or its Standing Committee and appointed by the president.[4]

Functions

The military is under the governance of the CMC, putting the Ministry of National Defense out of the chain of command,[5] the minister is significantly less powerful than his counterparts from other countries, and has no direct command function over the military.[6] The post is generally seen as a diplomatic and ceremonial role, with the minister handling military-to-military ties with other countries.[7] However, the office has always been held by a member of the CMC.[8] Though the minister has historically been assisted by vice ministers, the ministry currently has no vice ministers.[2]

List of officeholders

No. Portrait MinisterTook officeLeft officeTime in officeDefence branch
1
Dehuai, PengMarshal
Peng Dehuai
彭德怀

(1898–1974)
28 September 195417 September 19594 years, 201 days PLA Ground Force
2
Biao, LinMarshal
Lin Biao
林彪

(1907–1971)
17 September 195913 September 197112 years, 149 days PLA Ground Force
Vacant
13 September 1971 – 17 January 1975
3
Jianying, YeMarshal
Ye Jianying
叶剑英

(1897–1986)
17 January 197526 February 19783 years, 40 days PLA Ground Force
4
Xiangqian, XuMarshal
Xu Xiangqian
徐向前

(1901–1990)
26 February 19786 March 19812 years, 345 days PLA Ground Force
5
Biao, GengGeng Biao
耿飚

(1909–2000)
6 March 198119 November 19821 year, 105 daysNone, formerly Chinese Red Army
6
Aiping, ZhangGeneral
Zhang Aiping
张爱萍

(1910–2003)
19 November 198212 April 19885 years, 145 days PLA Ground Force
7
Jiwei, QinGeneral
Qin Jiwei
秦基伟

(1914–1997)
12 April 198829 March 19934 years, 351 days PLA Ground Force
8
Haotian, ChiGeneral
Chi Haotian
迟浩田

(born 1929)
29 March 199317 March 20039 years, 353 days PLA Ground Force
9
Gangchuan, CaoGeneral
Cao Gangchuan
曹刚川

(born 1935)
17 March 200317 March 20085 years, 0 days PLA Ground Force
10
Guanglie, LiangGeneral
Liang Guanglie
梁光烈

(born 1940)
17 March 200816 March 20135 years, 0 days PLA Ground Force
11
Wanquan, ChangGeneral
Chang Wanquan
常万全

(born 1949)
16 March 201319 March 20185 years, 3 days PLA Ground Force
12
Fenghe, WeiGeneral
Wei Fenghe
魏凤和

(born 1954)
19 March 201812 March 20234 years, 358 days PLA Rocket Force
13
Shangfu, LiGeneral
Li Shangfu
李尚福

(born 1958)
12 March 202324 October 2023226 days PLA Strategic Support Force
Vacant
24 October – 29 December 2023
14
Jun, DongAdmiral
Dong Jun
董军

(born 1961)
29 December 2023Incumbent183 days PLA Navy

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.