- Chinese Paramilitary Forces
The Chinese Paramilitary Forces are composed of three main forces, the
People's Armed Police (PAP), themilitia , and thereserve force , and they act as auxiliaries to thePeople's Liberation Army (PLA). They generally perform a wide range of roles. Altogether, the paramilitary has 3,969,000 troops, as of 2006.cite news|title=China's Armed Forces, CSIS (Page 24)|date=2006-07-25 |url=http://www.csis.org/media/csis/pubs/060626_asia_balance_powers.pdf] SeeList of countries by number of total troops .People's Armed Police
The People's Armed Police Force (PAP) is a paramilitary police force primarily responsible for law enforcement and
internal security nationwide during peacetime. In time ofwar , the PAP would be used aslight infantry to support the PLA. According to the constitution of the PRC, the PAP is one the three integral elements of the Chinese armed forces, along with the People's Liberation Army (PLA) and the militia and reverse forces. The China's National Defence White Paper published in 2006 claimed that the total strength of the PAP was 660,000 people.Militia
China's Militia, a mass force engaged in daily production under the leadership of the
Communist Party of China (CCP), forms part of the Chinese armed forces. Under the command of the military organs, it undertakes such jobs as war preparation services, security and defense operation tasks and assistance in maintainingsocial order and public security. [ [http://english.gov.cn/2005-09/02/content_28491.htm The Components of the Armed Forces] , PRC's official website]History
The role of the
militia and the degree of party and PLA control over it have varied over the years. During the 1940s the militia served primarily as a PLA support force. After 1949 the party consolidated control over the country and gradually used the militia to maintain order and help the PLA with defense of the borders and coast. In the mid-1950s Minister of National DefensePeng Dehuai attempted to build a reserve system incorporating the militia. Peng's efforts were thwarted when the party expanded the militia, assigning it duties as a production force and internal security force during theGreat Leap Forward .Lin Biao reduced the size of the militia and reemphasizedmilitary training in the early 1960s. The militia was fragmented during the early years of the Cultural Revolution, but in the 1970s it was rebuilt and redirected to support the PLA. TheGang of Four attempted to build up the urban militia as an alternative to the PLA, but the urban militia failed to support the Gang of Four in 1976, whenHua Guofeng and moderate military leaders deposed them. The militia'slogistic al support of the PLA was essential during theSino-Vietnamese border war of 1979. In the 1980s Chinese leaders undertook to improve the militia's military capabilities by reducing its size and its economic tasks.In 1987 the militia was controlled by the PLA at the military district level and by people's armed forces departments, which devolved to civilian control at the county and city levels as part of the reduction in force. The militia was a smaller force than previously, consisting of 4.3 million basic or primary—armed—militia, and the 6-million-strong general or ordinary militia. The basic militia was made up of men and women aged eighteen to twenty-eight who had served or were expected to serve in the PLA and who received thirty to forty days of military training per year. The basic militia included naval militia, which operated armed fishing trawlers and coastal defense units, as well as specialized detachments, such as air defense, artillery, communications, antichemical, reconnaissance, and engineering units, which served the PLA. The ordinary militia included men aged eighteen to thirty-five who met the criteria for
military service ; they received some basic military training but generally were unarmed. The ordinary militia had some air defense duties and included the urban militia. Efforts were made tostreamline militia organization andupgrade militia weaponry. By 1986 militia training bases had been established in over half the counties and cities in the nation.The militia's principal tasks in the 1980s were to assist in production, to undergo military training, and to defend China's
frontier s in peacetime. In wartime, the militia would supply reserves formobilization , provide logistical support to the PLA, and conductguerrilla operations behindenemy lines .Reserve service system
The 1984 Military Service Law stipulated the combination of the militia and the reserve service system.
Military training for senior middle-school and college and university students commenced in 1984 as China sought to provide additional qualified reserve service officers. The reserve force consisted primarily of the militia and was organized into reserve-service divisions and regiments. In 1987 China began to make reference to the National Defense Reserve Force, which apparently consisted of reserve soldiers (including all militia,demobilized soldiers, and specialized technical personnel registered forreserve service ) and reserve officers (including demobilized officers and soldiers assigned to reserve officer service, college and university graduates, and civilian officials and specialized technicians.Production and Construction Corps
Before the
Cultural Revolution , the Production and Construction Corps was a paramilitary organization of 3 to 4 million people under joint government, party, and PLA control. The Production and Construction Corps was used in remote and unproductive areas to build roads, reclaim land, construct defense and water works, and operate mines, state farms, and industrial plants. A secondary role wasborder defense , and some units were armed withlight infantry weapons. All receivedbasic military training . Unlike the militia, Production and Construction Corps personnel were full time and uniformed. The PLA took over the Production and Construction Corps during the Cultural Revolution, then civilianized it in the 1970s. In the 1980s the corps appeared to have been abolished except inXinjiang Autonomous Region . There it operated under regional party and government organizations, theXinjiang Military District , and theMinistry of Agriculture, Animal Husbandry, and Fishery .ee also
Other paramilitary forces:
*Paramilitary forces of India References
loc [http://lcweb2.loc.gov/frd/cs/cntoc.html]
Further reading
*Andy Bunk. [http://www.sinodefence.com/research/militia/Militia-Forgotten.pdf "Forgotten"] A look at the changing roles of the Chinese militia system in the Communist era from its inception to the present.
External links
* [http://www.sinodefence.com/organisation/armedpolice/default.asp People's Armed Police] SinoDefence.com
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