Korean War order of battle: Chinese

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Relationship between the Chinese People's Volunteer Army and the Korean People's Army Chinese Korean Command Korean War.gif
Relationship between the Chinese People's Volunteer Army and the Korean People's Army

This is the order of battle for Chinese People's Volunteer Army during major periods of hostilities in the Korean War. After the People's Republic of China entered the Korean War in October 1950 by designating the People's Liberation Army (PLA) North East Frontier Force as the People's Volunteer Army (PVA), [1] the PVA spent the next two years and nine months in combat operations and five years and three months in garrison duties. Its last elements did not leave Korea until as late as 1958. [2]

Contents

During this period, China paid a huge price for its involvement in the Korean War. [2] According to Chinese archives, about 73 percent of Chinese infantry forces, 67 percent of Chinese artillery forces, 100 percent of Chinese armored forces and 52 percent of Chinese air forces were deployed in Korea at one point or another, alongside 600,000 civilian laborers – in total more than three million civilian and military personnel. [2] [3] Out of those forces, around 152,000 were killed, 383,500 were wounded, 450,000 were hospitalized, 21,300 were captured and 4,000 were missing. Of the captured 14,190 defected to Taiwan after the ceasefire. [3] China had also consumed 5.6 million tons of war materiel, 399 aircraft and 12,916 vehicles for its war efforts. [2] About a third of the Chinese government's annual budget was spent on the military between 1950 and 1953, totaling 10 billion RMB by the war's end. [4] [nb 1] All in all, the Korean War was the largest foreign war in Chinese military history, despite the fact that no declaration of war ever existed between China and United Nations forces. [3]

For many years, historians found it difficult to provide an accurate order of battle for Chinese troops in Korea because most of the information could only be obtained from prisoner interrogations or captured documents. The constant Chinese troop movements and the reattachment of units between different commands further added to the confusion. [5] By the 1980s, however, a large number of primary documents, memoirs and scholarly works on Chinese involvement in the Korean War began to appear in China, enabling historians to make a more comprehensive and accurate assessment of Chinese military operations during the war. [6]

As the term "Corps" does not exist in Chinese military terminology, the term "Army" (军) technically means "Corps" in PLA nomenclature, while the term "Army Group" (集团军 or 兵团) means "Army". [7] For example, the US X Corps is always referred to as the "US 10th Army" (美第10军) among Chinese sources. [8] As such, this article uses the term "Corps" and "Army" to denote Chinese Army and Army Group formations.

First Phase Campaign (October 25 – November 5, 1950)

Although the Chinese leadership did not make the decision to enter the Korean War until United Nations (UN) forces crossed the 38th Parallel in October 1950, [1] [9] it had been preparing for the possibility ever since United States intervened in Korea in June 1950. [10] [11] On July 13, 1950, and soon after UN forces entered the Korean War, Chairman of the Chinese Communist Party, Mao Zedong, ordered the People's Liberation Army (PLA) 13th Army—China's strategic reserve stationed in southern China—to form the PLA North East Frontier Force (NEFF) in Manchuria. [12] Aside from the 38th, 39th and 40th Infantry Corps originally belonged to the 13th Army, the NEFF also included the 42nd Infantry Corps, three artillery divisions, one anti-aircraft regiments and three transport regiments—in total more than 250,000 men. [13] On October 19, 1950, and under strict secrecy, the NEFF officially crossed the Yalu River under the name Chinese People's Volunteer Army (PVA), [1] [14] although advance scouting parties had been spotted by UN forces as early as October 13. [15] On October 23, the PLA 50th and 66th Corps were attached to the PVA 13th Army in order to reinforce the defenses at Sinuiju and Chongju area. [16] At the same time, the 13th Army Headquarters was disbanded to increase coordination between PVA Headquarters and its field units. [17]

Chinese People's Volunteer Army Headquarters

Commander Peng Dehuai [18]
CommissarPeng Dehuai [18]
Chief of Staff Xie Fang [18]
Political Director Du Ping [18]

Frontline

China Emblem PLA.svg PVA Headquarters Subordinate Corps
Unit [19] Commander [18] Sub-units [19] Notes
38th Corps Commander Liang Xingchu
Commissar Liu Xiyuan
Entered Korea on October 19, 1950. [20]
39th Corps Commander Wu Xinquan
Commissar Xu Binzhou
Entered Korea on October 19, 1950. [20] Responsible for the destruction of the ROK 15th Infantry Regiment and 3rd Battalion of the US 8th Cavalry Regiment at the Battle of Unsan. [21] [22]
40th Corps Commander Wen Yucheng
Commissar Yuan Shengping
Entered Korea on October 19, 1950, and the first Chinese unit to make contact with UN forces in Korea. [20] [23] Responsible for the destruction of ROK 6th Infantry Division at the Battle of Onjong. [24]
42nd Corps Commander Wu Ruilin
Commissar Zhou Biao
Entered Korea on October 19, 1950. [20] Its 124th Division was reportedly decimated during the November 2–5 engagement with US 1st Marine Division at the south of Chosin Reservoir. UN intelligence indicated the division did not recover as late as January 1951. [25]
50th Corps Commander Zeng Zesheng
Commissar Xu Wenlie
Entered Korea on October 26, 1950. [26]
66th Corps Commander Xiao Xinhuai
Commissar Wang Zifeng
Entered Korea on October 27, 1950. [27]

Supports

Unit [28] Commander [18] Sub-units [28] Notes
Artillery CommandCommander Kuang Yumin
Commissar Qiu Chuangcheng
Engineer Command BureauDirector Chen Zhengfeng
  • 4th Engineer Regiment
  • 6th Engineer Regiment
Frontline Logistics Command BureauDirector Zhang Mingyuan
Commissar She Zheheng
  • 1st Detachment
  • 2nd Detachment
Formerly PLA Northeast Military Region Logistics Department Forward Command Bureau. Formed in November 1950. [29]

Second Phase Campaign (November 25 – December 24, 1950)

On August 26, 1950, the Chinese Central Military Commission concluded that PVA will eventually be composed of the PLA 9th, 13th and 19th Army—totaling 700,000 men—by the spring of 1951. [30] [31] On October 11, 1950, Mao authorized the PLA 9th Army to be moved from Shandong province to Manchuria as reserves to the 13th Army in Korea. [32] On November 10, 1950, the PLA 9th Army entered Korea in order to reinforce Chinese forces on the east side of Taebaek Mountains. [33] [34] This development brought the total PVA strength to 450,000, [35] including 380,000 combat personnel. [31]

Chinese People's Volunteer Army Headquarters

Commander Peng Dehuai [36]
CommissarPeng Dehuai [36]
Chief of Staff Xie Fang [36]
Political Director Du Ping [36]

Frontline

China Emblem PLA.svg PVA Headquarters Subordinate Corps
Unit [37] Commander [38] Sub-units [37] Notes
38th Corps Commander Liang Xingchu
Commissar Liu Xiyuan
Responsible for the destruction of ROK II Corps, Turkish Brigade and US 2nd Infantry Division at the Battle of the Ch'ongch'on River. [39] Received the title "Ten Thousand Years Corps" for its achievement. [40]
39th Corps Commander Wu Xinquan
Commissar Xu Binzhou
40th Corps Commander Wen Yucheng
Commissar Yuan Shengping
42nd Corps Commander Wu Ruilin
Commissar Zhou Biao
Responsible for the destruction of ROK II Corps. [41] Failed in its attempt to encircle the entire US Eighth Army at the Battle of the Ch'ongch'on River. [42]
50th Corps Commander Zeng Zesheng
Commissar Xu Wenlie
UN intelligence also indicated that the 167th Division of the PLA 56th Corps was attached to the 50th Corps during the campaign, but this is not corroborated by Chinese records. [43]
66th Corps Commander Xiao Xinhuai
Commissar Wang Zifeng
China Emblem PLA.svg 9th Army

Commander: Song Shi-Lun [44]
Commissar: Song Shi-Lun [44]

Unit [37] Commander [38] Sub-units [37] Notes
20th Corps Commander and Commissar Zhang YixiangEntered Korea on November 10, 1950. [45] Destroyed during the Battle of Chosin Reservoir and pulled off the frontline for rest and refit. [46] [47]
26th Corps Commander Zhang Renchu
Commissar Li Yaowen
Entered Korea on November 12, 1950. [48] Its 78th and 88th Division did not arrive in time to participate in the Battle of Chosin Reservoir. [49] Pulled off the frontline for rest and refit in the aftermath of Chosin Reservoir battle. [47]
27th Corps Commander Peng Deqing
Commissar Liu Haotian
Entered Korea on November 10, 1950, and responsible for the destruction of Task Force Faith. [50] Destroyed during the Battle of Chosin Reservoir and pulled off the frontline for rest and refit. [46] [47] Its 94th Division was often misidentified as the 90th Division by UN intelligence. [51]

Supports

Unit [37] [52] CommanderSub-units [37] [52] Notes
Artillery CommandCommander Wan Yi
Commissar Qiu Chuangcheng [53]
Chinese records and UN intelligence did not indicate any artillery formations were deployed during the campaign. [7] [38] [54]
Engineer Command BureauDirector Chen Zhengfeng [55]
  • 4th Engineer Regiment
  • 5th Engineer Regiment
  • 6th Engineer Regiment
  • 8th Engineer Regiment
Frontline Logistics Command BureauDirector Zhang Mingyuan
Commissar She Zheheng [55]
  • 1st Detachment
  • 2nd Detachment
  • 3rd Detachment
  • 4th Detachment
Railway EngineersCommander Li Shouxuan [55] Entered Korea in November 1950. [37] In total composed of three bridging regiments, one track regiment and one independent regiment. [55]

Third Phase Campaign (December 31, 1950 – January 8, 1951)

Although the PVA succeeded in expelling UN forces from North Korea during the Second Phase Campaign, about a quarter of its original 450,000 men became casualties in the aftermath of the campaign. [56] On December 17, Mao ordered the PVA 9th Army to be removed from the front for rest and refit, [47] reducing the PVA combat personnel to 230,000 by the end of December 1950. [56] [57] UN intelligence, on the other hand, estimated that only 171,117 combat personal were actually available for the PVA on January 1, 1951. [58] By the end of 1950, however, the North Korean People's Army returned to the front and brought about 75,000 men to make up for the Chinese losses. [56] [59]

Chinese People's Volunteer Army Headquarters

Commander Peng Dehuai [60]
CommissarPeng Dehuai [60]
Chief of Staff Xie Fang [60]
Political Director Du Ping [60]

Frontline

China Emblem PLA.svg PVA Headquarters Subordinate Corps
Unit [61] Commander [61] Sub-units [37] Notes
38th Corps Commander Liang Xingchu
Commissar Liu Xiyuan
39th Corps Commander Wu Xinquan
Commissar Xu Binzhou
First Chinese unit to enter Seoul on January 4, 1951. [62]
40th Corps Commander Wen Yucheng
Commissar Yuan Shengping
42nd Corps Commander Wu Ruilin
Commissar Zhou Biao
50th Corps Commander Zeng Zesheng
Commissar Xu Wenlie
Responsible for the destruction of British 1st Battalion, Royal Ulster Rifles during the Third Battle of Seoul. [63] [64] UN intelligence also indicated that the 167th Division of the PLA 56th Corps was attached to the 50th Corps during the campaign, but this is not corroborated by Chinese records. [58]
66th Corps Commander Xiao Xinhuai
Commissar Wang Zifeng

Supports

Unit [37] [52] CommanderSub-units [37] [52] Notes
Artillery CommandCommander Wan Yi
Commissar Qiu Chuangcheng [53]
Elements of 1st, 2nd and 8th Artillery Division were under direct control of PVA Headquarters Subordinate Corps for the duration of campaign. [61]
Engineer Command BureauDirector Chen Zhengfeng [55]
  • 4th Engineer Regiment
  • 5th Engineer Regiment
  • 6th Engineer Regiment
  • 8th Engineer Regiment
Frontline Logistics Command BureauDirector Zhang Mingyuan
Commissar She Zheheng [55]
  • 1st Detachment
  • 2nd Detachment
  • 3rd Detachment
  • 4th Detachment
Railway EngineersCommander Li Shouxuan [55] Composed of three bridging regiments, one track regiment and one independent regiment. [55]

Fourth Phase Campaign (January 30 – April 21, 1951)

By the end of the Third Phase Campaign, the PVA had become completely exhausted after fighting nonstop since the start of the Chinese intervention, [65] and its combat personnel was further reduced to 217,000. [66] According to PVA Deputy Commander Han Xianchu's evaluation of PVA, "many regiments and battalions are completely combat ineffective, with some divisions only half strength". [67] On February 7, 1951, Mao decided that PLA 3rd, 19th, 20th Army and 47th Corps—from Sichuan, Gansu, Hebei and Hunan provinces respectively—would enter Korea to replace the PVA 13th Army currently on the front. [68] [69] But despite the massive mobilization effort, only the 26th Corps from the recovering PVA 9th Army actually arrived at the front during March 1951. [70] [71]

Chinese People's Volunteer Army Headquarters

Commander Peng Dehuai [72]
CommissarPeng Dehuai [72]
Chief of Staff Xie Fang [72]
Political Director Du Ping [72]

Frontline

China Emblem PLA.svg PVA Headquarters Subordinate Corps
Unit [73] Commander [73] Sub-units [73] Notes
38th Corps Commander Liang Xingchu
Commissar Liu Xiyuan
Decimated during Operation Thunderbolt in February 1951. [74] Pulled off the frontline for rest and refit in March 1951. [71]
39th Corps Commander Wu Xinquan
Commissar Xu Binzhou
Responsible for the destruction of ROK 8th Infantry Division at the Battle of Hoengsong. [75] [76] Failed in its attempts to break through the UN front at the Battle of Chipyong-ni. [77]
40th Corps Commander Wen Yucheng
Commissar Yuan Shengping
Responsible for the destruction of ROK 8th Infantry Division at the Battle of Hoengsong. [75] [76] Failed in its attempts to break through the UN front at the Chipyong-ni and Wonju battles. [77] [78]
42nd Corps Commander Wu Ruilin
Commissar Zhou Biao
Participated in the Battle of the Twin Tunnels and responsible for the destruction of ROK 8th Infantry Division at the Battle of Hoengsong. [75] [76] [79] Failed in its attempts to break through the UN front at the Chipyong-ni and Wonju battles. [77] [78] Pulled off the frontline for rest and refit in March 1951. [71]
50th Corps Commander Zeng Zesheng
Commissar Xu Wenlie
Mostly composed of Chinese Nationalist soldiers surrendered to the Communist side during the Chinese Civil War. [68] Its complete destruction during Operation Thunderbolt in February 1951 sparked controversies over the treatment of Nationalist POWs impressed into Communist service. [80] [81] Returned to Manchuria in March 1951 for rest and refit. [71]
66th Corps Commander Xiao Xinhuai
Commissar Wang Zifeng
Responsible for the destruction of ROK 8th Infantry Division at the Battle of Hoengsong. [75] [76] Failed in its attempts to break through the UN front at the Chipyong-ni and Wonju battles. [77] [78] Returned to Northern China in March 1951. [71] [82]
China Emblem PLA.svg 9th Army

Commander: Song Shi-Lun [83]
Commissar: Song Shi-Lun [83]

Unit [73] Commander [73] Sub-units [73] Notes
26th Corps Commander Zhang Renchu
Commissar Li Yaowen
The first element of the 9th Army to recover from the Chosin Reservoir battle. [84] Returned to the battlefield in March 1951. [84]

Supports

Unit [85] CommanderSub-units [86] Notes
Artillery Command DepartmentDirector Kuang Yumin [87] Chinese records indicated only 1st Artillery Division had participated in combat actions against UN forces during the campaign. [83]
Engineer Command BureauDirector Chen Zhengfeng [88]
  • 3rd Engineer Regiment
  • 4th Engineer Regiment
  • 5th Engineer Regiment
  • 6th Engineer Regiment
  • 8th Engineer Regiment
  • 10th Engineer Regiment
  • 18th Engineer Regiment
  • 22nd Engineer Regiment
Frontline Logistics Command BureauCommander Zhang Mingyuan
Commissar She Zheheng [89]
  • 1st Detachment
  • 2nd Detachment
  • 3rd Detachment
  • 4th Detachment
  • 5th Detachment
  • 6th Detachment
  • 7th Detachment
Composed of nine truck regiments, three transport regiments plus seven battalions, three security regiments plus one battalion, two Public Security regiments plus one battalion, one Secret Service regiment and one Battlefield Logistics battalion. [90]
Railway Command BureauDirector Li Shouxuan [88] In total composed of six bridging regiments and three track regiments. 2nd Railway Engineer Division enter Korea in April 1951, while the 3rd Railway Engineer Division entered Korea in February 1951. [91]

Fifth Phase Campaign (April 22 – June 10, 1951)

In the aftermath of the Fourth Phase Campaign, the PVA 13th Army's 38th and 42nd Corps were forced to leave the frontline for rest and refit, while its 50th and 66th Corps were evacuated back to China. [92] Following Mao's orders, however, the PLA 3rd and 19th Army began to enter Korea in February 1951, [93] alongside four field artillery divisions, two long range artillery divisions, four anti-aircraft divisions, one multiple rocket launcher division and four tank regiments. [94] The PVA 9th Army had also returned to the front in April 1951 after four months of rest. [94] Those development soon brought the total PVA strength to over one million men, including 548,000 combat personnel and 180,000 logistics personnel. [95] [96] On April 21, 1951, the 39th and 40th Corps of the PVA 13th Army were placed under 9th Army's control. [97] On April 22, 1951, the reorganized PVA launched a full-scale offensive in Korea, and the resulting clashes between Chinese and UN forces is often described as the largest battle of the entire Korean War. [98]

Chinese People's Volunteer Army Headquarters

Commander Peng Dehuai [99]
CommissarPeng Dehuai [99]
Chief of Staff Xie Fang [99]
Political Director Du Ping [99]

Frontline

China Emblem PLA.svg 3rd Army

Commander: Chen Geng [100]
Acting Commander: Wang Jinshan
Commissar: Chen Geng [100]

Unit [100] Commander [100] [101] Sub-units [100] [101] Notes
12th Corps Commander Zeng Shaoshan
Commissar Li Zhen
Entered Korea on March 25, 1951. [102] Routed during the Battle of the Soyang River. [103]
15th Corps Commander Qin Jiwei
Commissar Gu Jingsheng
Entered Korea in February 1951. [102]
60th Corps Commander Shu Jie
Commissar Yuan Ziqin
Entered Korea on March 20, 1951. [93] Routed during the Battle of the Soyang River with its 180th Division suffering 7,000 casualties, majority of them captured by UN force. [103] This incident is often cited as the worse Chinese defeat during the entire Korean War. [104] [105]
2nd Artillery Division Commander Zhu Guang
Commissar Zhang Bailing
  • 28th Artillery Regiment
  • 29th Artillery Regiment
  • 30th Artillery Regiment
China Emblem PLA.svg 9th Army

Commander: Song Shi-Lun [100]
Commissar: Song Shi-Lun [100]

Unit [106] Commander [101] [106] Sub-units [101] [106] Notes
20th Corps Commander and Commissar Zhang YixiangIts 89th Division was disband in February 1951. [46] Recovered from Chosin Reservoir battle around April 1951. [107]
26th Corps Commander Zhang Renchu
Commissar Li Yaowen
27th Corps Commander Peng Deqing
Commissar Zeng Ruqing
Its 94th Division was disband in February 1951. [46] Recovered from Chosin Reservoir battle around April 1951. [108]
39th Corps Commander Wu Xinquan
Commissar Li Xuesan
Misidentify by UN intelligence as a part of the 13th Army. [109]
40th Corps Commander Wen Yucheng
Commissar Yuan Shengping
Misidentify by UN intelligence as a part of the 13th Army. [109]
1st Artillery Division Commander Wen Ji
Commissar Zhang Ying
  • 25th Artillery Regiment
  • 26th Artillery Regiment
  • 27th Artillery Regiment
7th Artillery Division Commander Yan Fu
Commissar Zhu Li
  • 20th Artillery Regiment
China Emblem PLA.svg 19th Army

Commander: Yang Dezhi [99]
Commissar: Li Zhimin [99]

Unit [99] Commander [99] [101] Sub-units [99] [101] Notes
63rd Corps Commander Fu Chongbi
Commissar Long Daoquan
Entered Korea on February 18, 1951. [110] Responsible for the destruction of British 1st Battalion, Gloucestershire Regiment at the Battle of the Imjin River. [111]
64th Corps Commander Zeng Siyu
Commissar Wang Zhao
Enter Korea in February 1951. [110] Decimated during the Battle of the Imjin River. [112] Failed to achieve its mission of capturing Seoul and encircle the US I and IX Corps. [94] [113]
65th Corps Commander Xiao Yingtang
Commissar Wang Daobang
Entered Korea on February 23, 1951. [114] Decimated during the Battle of the Imjin River. [112]
8th Artillery Division Commander Wang Heng
Commissar Li Zhenbang
  • 31st Artillery Regiment
  • 43rd Artillery Regiment
Its 31st Artillery Regiment was under the operational control of 65th Corps. [113]

Supports

Unit [115] CommanderSub-units [116] Notes
Armor Command BureauDirector Huang Huxian [117]
  • 1st Tank Regiment
  • 2nd Tank Regiment
  • 3rd Tank Regiment
  • 6th Independent Tank Regiment
Formed in March 1951 from elements of the PLA 1st Tank Division. [88] Entered Korea near the end of Fourth Phase Campaign. [88]
Artillery Command BureauDirector Kuang Yumin [118] All divisions entered Korea near the end of Fourth Phase Campaign. [119]
Engineer Command BureauDirector Chen Zhengfeng [120]
  • 3rd Engineer Regiment
  • 7th Engineer Regiment
  • 10th Engineer Regiment
  • 14th Engineer Regiment
  • 15th Engineer Regiment
  • 16th Engineer Regiment
  • 17th Engineer Regiment
  • 18th Engineer Regiment
  • 22nd Engineer Regiment
Logistics CommandCommander Hong Xuezhi
Commissar Zhou Chunquan [121]
  • 1st Detachment
  • 2nd Detachment
  • 3rd Detachment
  • 4th Detachment
  • 5th Detachment
  • 7th Detachment
Reorganized from Frontline Logistics Command Bureau on May 19, 1951. [121] [122] Composed of 22 service stations, 10 truck regiments, six transport regiments and six security regiments. [123]
Railway Command BureauDirector Li Shouxuan
Commissar Cui Tianmin [120]
Composed of six bridging regiments and three track regiments. [120]

UN limited offensives (June 11 – December 3, 1951)

The Fifth Phase Campaign ended as a complete operational disaster for the PVA. [105] [124] About 12 divisions from the PVA 3rd and 19th Army were rendered combat ineffective, and between 85,000 and 110,000 men became casualties in the aftermath. [103] [125] With the frontline on the verge of collapse in the face of UN attacks, [126] the 42nd and 47th Corps were sent as reinforcements on May 27, 1951. [103] But the UN forces soon broke off their pursuit on June 1, and armistice negotiations started on July 10, 1951. [127]

The presence of UN forces at the north of the 38th Parallel, however, prompted the PVA to plan a limited offensive dubbed the "Six Phase Campaign". [128] Although the offensive was cancelled on September 4, 1951, it allowed the PLA 20th Army to be deployed in the Kumsong area by early September. [129] The PVA had also decided to assume defensive posture on September 4 while postponing all major offensive operations, and the West Coast and East Coast Commands were created to guard against UN amphibious landings as the result. [130] Finally, the Chinese Central Military Commission authorized the PLA Air Force to join the war in September 1951 as a response to Operation Strangle II conducted by the US Far East Air Force. [131] [132] By the end of October 1951, the total PVA strength in Korea reached 1.15 million men, including 19 infantry corps, nine artillery divisions, five tank regiments, 12 air force divisions, four railway engineering divisions and eight logistical corps. [133]

Chinese People's Volunteer Army Headquarters

Commander Peng Dehuai [134]
CommissarPeng Dehuai [134]
Chief of Staff Xie Fang (nominal) [134] [nb 2]
Zhang Wenzhou (acting) [134]
Political Director Gan Siqi [134]

Frontline

China Emblem PLA.svg PVA Headquarters Subordinate Corps
Unit [135] Commander [135] Sub-units [135] Notes
42nd Corps Commander Wu Ruilin
Commissar Zhou Biao
Returned to the front in early June 1951. [136]
China Emblem PLA.svg 3rd Army

Commander: Chen Geng [137]
Commissar: Chen Geng [137]

Unit [137] Commander [137] Sub-units [137] Notes
12th Corps Commander Zeng Shaoshan
Commissar Li Zhen
Reserve unit. [137]
15th Corps Commander Qin Jiwei
Commissar Gu Jingsheng
Reserve unit. [137]
60th Corps Commander Shu Jie
Commissar Yuan Ziqin
Reserve unit. [137]
China Emblem PLA.svg 9th Army

Commander: Song Shi-Lun [138]
Commissar: Song Shi-Lun [138]

Unit [138] Commander [138] Sub-units [138] Notes
26th Corps Commander Zhang Renchu
Commissar Li Yaowen
Returned to China in June 1952. [139]
China Emblem PLA.svg 19th Army

Commander: Yang Dezhi [138]
Commissar: Li Zhimin [138]

Unit [140] Commander [140] Sub-units [140] Notes
47th Corps Commander Cao Lihuai
Commissar Li Renlin
Entered Korea on April 11, 1951, as airfield construction labor. [141] [142] Did not participate in the Fifth Phase Campaign. [143]
63rd Corps Commander Fu Chongbi
Commissar Long Daoquan
Reserve unit. [138]
64th Corps Commander Zeng Siyu
Commissar Wang Zhao
65th Corps Commander Xiao Yingtang
Commissar Wang Daobang
China Emblem PLA.svg 20th Army

Commander: Yang Chengwu [135]
Commissar: Zhang Nansheng [135]

Unit [135] Commander [135] Sub-units [135] Notes
67th Corps Commander Li Xiang
Commissar Kuang Fuzhao
Entered Korea in June 1951. [144]
68th Corps Commander Chen Fangren
Commissar Li Chengrui
Reserve unit. [135] Entered Korea in June 1951. [145]

West coast defense

China Emblem PLA.svg West Coast Command

Commander: Han Xianchu [146]

Unit [146] Commander [146] Sub-units [146] Notes
38th Corps Commander Liang Xingchu
Commissar Liu Xiyuan
Reserve unit. [146] Did not return to the front until May 1952. [147]
39th Corps Commander Wu Xinquan
Commissar Li Xuesan
Reserve unit. [146]
40th Corps Commander Wen Yucheng
Commissar Yuan Shengping
Reserve unit. [146]
50th Corps Commander Zeng Zesheng
Commissar Xu Wenlie
Reentered Korea around July–August 1951. [148] [149]

East coast defense

China Emblem PLA.svg East Coast Command

Commander: Song Shi-Lun [150]

Unit [150] Commander [150] Sub-units [150] Notes
16th Corps Commander Yin Xianbing
Commissar Chen Yunkai
Reserve unit. Stationed in Manchuria during this period. [130]
20th Corps Commander and Commissar Zhang YixiangReserve unit. [146]
27th Corps Commander Peng Deqing
Commissar Zeng Ruqing
Reserve unit. [137]

Air

China Emblem PLA.svg Air Force Command

Commander: Liu Zhen [134]

Unit [151] Commander [151] Sub-units [151] [nb 3] Notes
2nd Aviation Division Commander Zhang Qinhe
Commissar Zhang Baichun
  • 4th Regiment
  • 6th Regiment
Mixed La-11/MiG-15 fighter unit. [152] Entered combat in October 1951 and returned to China in January 1952. [153]
3rd Aviation Division Commander Yuan Bin
Commissar Gao Houliang
  • 7th Regiment
  • 9th Regiment
MiG-15 fighter unit. [152] Entered combat in October 1951 and returned to China in January 1952. [153]
4th Aviation Division Commander Fang Ziyi
Commissar Xie Xiyu
  • 10th Regiment
  • 12th Regiment
MiG-15 fighter unit. [152] Elements of the division were assigned to the Soviet 64th Aviation Corps for training purposes and engaged UN air forces from December 1950 to July 1951 under Soviet command. [154] Officially entered combat as an independent unit in September 1951 and returned to China in October 1951. [155]
5th Aviation Division Commander Ma Yong
Commissar Ma Zeying
  • 13th Regiment
  • 15th Regiment
Il-10 ground attack unit and a part of the short-lived Ground Attack Command. [152] [156] It did not enter combat in Korea due to the lack of Korean airfields and returned to China in November 1951. [152] [156]
6th Aviation Division Commander Bei Sha
Commissar Zhang Zhiyong
  • 16th Regiment
  • 18th Regiment
Mixed MiG-9/MiG-15 fighter unit. [152] Entered combat in November 1951 and returned to China in March 1952. [157]
7th Aviation Division Commander Han Cesan
Commissar Qiu Renhua
  • 19th Regiment
  • 21st Regiment
Mixed MiG-9/MiG-15 fighter unit. [152] It did not enter combat in Korea and returned to Northern China in November 1951. [157] [158]
8th Aviation Division Commander Wu Kai
Commissar Ge Zhenyue
  • 22nd Regiment
  • 24th Regiment
Tu-2 bomber unit and a part of the short-lived Bomber Command. [152] [159] After entering combat in Korea in October 1951, it was involve in a bombing campaign against South Korean outposts on the Pansong archipelago. [160] [161] The campaign ended with a disastrous bombing mission to the Taehwado island which resulted in four Tu-2 bombers, three La-11 fighters and one MiG-15 fighter being shot down by the US 4th Fighter Wing on November 30, 1951. [162] All Chinese bomber units in Korea were grounded in the aftermath of this disaster. [163] Returned to China in March 1952. [164]
9th Aviation Division Commander He Jilin
Commissar Xu Xinghua
  • 25th Regiment
  • 27th Regiment
La-9 fighter unit and a part of the short-lived Ground Attack Command. [152] [156] It did not enter combat in Korea due to the lack of Korean airfields and returned to China in November 1951. [152] [156]
10th Aviation Division Commander Liu Shanben
Commissar Wang Xuewu
  • 28th Regiment
  • 30th Regiment
Tu-2 bomber unit and a part of the short-lived Bomber Command. [152] [159] After entering combat in Korea in October 1951 it was grounded due to the Taehwado island disaster. [160] [163] Returned to China in March 1952. [164]
11th Aviation Division Commander Zhang Qiangsheng
Commissar Huang Feng
  • 31st Regiment
  • 33rd Regiment
Il-10 ground attack unit and a part of the short-lived Ground Attack Command. [152] [156] It did not enter combat in Korea due to the lack of Korean airfields and returned to China in November 1951. [152] [156]
14th Aviation Division Commander Wang Yuhuai
Commissar Xie Jiyou
  • 40th Regiment
  • 42nd Regiment
Mixed MiG-9/MiG-15 fighter unit. [152] Entered combat in November 1951 and returned to China in February 1952. [157]
15th Aviation Division Commander Huang Yuting
Commissar Cui Wenbin
  • 43rd Regiment
  • 45th Regiment
MiG-15 fighter unit. [152] Did not enter combat during this period. [157]
China Emblem PLA.svg 23rd Army

Commander: Jin Qiwu [165]
Commissar: Gao Kelin [165]

Unit [166] Commander [166] Sub-units [166] Notes
36th Corps Commander Wang Jianye
Commissar Kang Jianmin
Entered Korea in September 1951 and tasked with constructing airfields in Korea for bomber and ground attack aircraft. [142] [165] Returned to China in November 1951 after UN bombings made the construction efforts impossible. [142] [165] [167]
37th Corps Commander Zhang Shizhen
Commissar Gu Jingsheng
Entered Korea in September 1951 and tasked with constructing airfields in Korea for bomber and ground attack aircraft. [142] [165] Returned to China in November 1951 after UN bombings made the construction efforts impossible. [142] [165] [167]

Supports

Unit [168] Commander [168] Sub-units [169] Notes
Armor Command BureauDirector Huang Huxian
  • 1st Tank Regiment
  • 2nd Tank Regiment
  • 3rd Tank Regiment
  • 6th Independent Tank Regiment
  • Independent Motorized Infantry Regiment
Artillery Command BureauDirector Kuang Yumin
Engineer Command BureauDirector Chen Zhengfeng
  • 1st Engineer Regiment
  • 3rd Engineer Regiment
  • 4th Engineer Regiment
  • 7th Engineer Regiment
  • 10th Engineer Regiment
  • 14th Engineer Regiment
  • 15th Engineer Regiment
  • 16th Engineer Regiment
  • 17th Engineer Regiment
  • 18th Engineer Regiment
  • 21st Engineer Regiment
  • 22nd Engineer Regiment
Subordinate of Logistics Command. [170]
Logistics CommandCommander Hong Xuezhi
Commissar Zhou Chunquan
Composed of 28 service stations, 19 supply regiments, 15 temporary truck regiments, three security regiments plus one battalion, five Public Security regiments and one Public Order regiment. Also in control of Engineer Command Bureau. [171]
Railway Transport CommandCommander He Jinnian
Commissar Zhang Mingyuan
Composed of eight bridging regiments and four track regiments. [172]

Collapse of armistice negotiation (September 18 – November 25, 1952)

With the end Operation Commando on October 23, 1951, signaling the end of UN limited offensives, [173] the Korean front had settled into a period of stalemate. [174] [175] Although the Chinese had lost 36,000 ground troops from the UN offensives, the losses were mostly replaced by the summer of 1952. [176] The PVA Air Force, on the other hand, suffered major setbacks in constructing airfields in Korea. [167] By late December 1951, all PVA Air Force personnel were stationed back to China due to the lack of airfields, and its ground support missions were soon abandoned. [142] [167]

With the front stabilized and no major offensives in planning, the PVA focused its attentions on logistics build up, troop rotations and political controls. [177] In the area of logistics, the Railway Transport Forward Command was established in August 1951, and its Anti-Aircraft Artillery Command Bureau was organized in December 1951. [178] This allowed four additional anti-aircraft artillery regiments to be deployed in Korea. [179] The PVA headquarters had also planned to rotate all troops in Korea by the end of 1953, and the Chinese Central Military Commission authorized the PLA 23rd, 24th and 46th Corps to replace 20th, 27th and 42nd Corps by September 1952. [180] Finally, the political mobilization programs strengthened the Communist Party's hold on the field units, and mass purges were carried out against undesirables while award systems were established for role models. [181]

The armistice negotiations at Panmunjom began to fall apart in September 1952, primarily due to Sino-Korean insistence that all prisoners of war be repatriated to their respective original countries, regardless of their personal preferences. [182] As a significant number of Chinese and North Korean POWs had expressed their desire to defect permanently to South Korea or Taiwan, the demand was met with strong opposition from the United States and South Korea. [183] Feeling that the negotiations would soon fail, military commanders on both sides approved numerous tactical plans as means of applying pressure on their opponents. [184] In late September, the PVA authorized its frontline troops to conduct tactical strikes against more than 20 UN outposts. [185] [186] The armistice negotiations officially ceased on October 8, 1952. [187]

Chinese People's Volunteer Army Headquarters

Commander Peng Dehuai (nominal) [188] [nb 4]
Deng Hua (acting) [188]
CommissarPeng Dehuai (nominal) [188] [nb 4]
Deng Hua (acting) [188]
Chief of Staff Xie Fang (nominal) [188] [nb 2]
Zhang Wenzhou (acting) [188]
Political Director Gan Siqi [188]

Frontline

China Emblem PLA.svg PVA Headquarters Subordinate Corps
Unit [189] Commander [190] Sub-units [189] Notes
38th Corps Commander Jiang Yonghui
Commissar Wu Dai
39th Corps Commander and Commissar Wu Xinquan
40th Corps Commander Wen Yucheng
Commissar Yuan Shengping
46th Corps Commander Xiao Quanfu
Commissar Wu Baoshan
Entered Korea in September 1952. [189]
47th Corps Commander Cao Lihuai
Commissar Liu Xianquan
Reserve unit. [191]
China Emblem PLA.svg 3rd Army

Commander: Wang Jinshan [192] [nb 5]
Commissar: She Yide [192]

Unit [189] Commander [193] Sub-units [189] Notes
12th Corps Commander Zeng Shaoshan
Commissar Li Zhen
15th Corps Commander Qin Jiwei
Commissar Gu Jingsheng
60th Corps Commander Zhang Zuliang
Commissar Yuan Ziqin
China Emblem PLA.svg 19th Army

Commander: Han Xianchu [194] [nb 6]
Commissar: Li Zhimin [194]

Unit [195] Commander [196] Sub-units [189] Notes
63rd Corps Commander Fu Chongbi
Commissar Long Daoquan
Reserve unit. [197]
65th Corps Commander and Commissar Wang Daobang
China Emblem PLA.svg 20th Army

Commander: Zheng Weishan [198] [nb 7]
Commissar: Zhang Nansheng [198]

Unit [199] Commander [200] Sub-units [189] Notes
67th Corps Commander Qiu Wei
Commissar Kuang Fuzhao
Reserve unit. [192]
68th Corps Commander Chen Fangren
Commissar Li Chengrui

West coast defense

China Emblem PLA.svg West Coast Command

Commander: Liang Xingchu (acting) [191]

Unit [201] CommanderSub-units [189] Notes
42nd Corps Commander: Wu Ruilin
Commissar: Guo Chengzhu [202]
Reserve unit. [191] Returned to China in November 1952. [202]
50th Corps Commander Zeng Zesheng
Commissar Xu Wenlie [203]
64th Corps Commander Tang Zian
Commissar Wang Zhao [204]
Reserve unit. [191]

East coast defense

China Emblem PLA.svg 9th Army

Commander: Wang Jianan [192] [nb 8]
Commissar: Wang Jianan [192]

Unit [189] Commander [205] Sub-units [206] Notes
20th Corps Commander Zhang Yixiang
Commissar Tan Youming
Reserve unit. [192] Returned to China in October 1952. [189]
23rd Corps Commander Zhong Guochu
Commissar Lu Sheng
Entered Korea in September 1952. [189]
24th Corps Commander and Commissar Pi DingjunEntered Korea in September 1952. [189]
27th Corps Commander Peng Deqing
Commissar Zeng Ruqing
Reserve unit. [192] Returned to China in October 1952. [189]

Air

China Emblem PLA.svg Air Force Command

Commander: Nie Fengzhi (acting) [188] [nb 9]

Unit [207] Commander [208] Sub-units [208] [nb 3] Notes
3rd Aviation Division Commander Yuan Bin
Commissar Luo Ping
  • 7th Regiment
  • 9th Regiment
MiG-15 fighter unit. [152] Reentered combat in May 1952 and returned to China in January 1953. [153]
4th Aviation Division Commander Fang Ziyi
Commissar Ye Songsheng
  • 10th Regiment
  • 12th Regiment
MiG-15 fighter unit and started its third tour in December 1952. [209] Previously entered combat during January–May 1952 as part of its second tour. [153]
6th Aviation Division Commander Bei Sha
Commissar Zhang Zhiyong
  • 16th Regiment
  • 18th Regiment
Mixed MiG-9/MiG-15 fighter unit. [152] Reentered combat in December 1952. [157]
12th Aviation Division Commander Wang Mingli
Commissar Li Minggang
  • 24th Regiment
  • 36th Regiment
Mixed MiG-9/MiG-15 fighter unit. [152] Entered combat in March 1952 and returned to China in March 1953. [157]
15th Aviation Division Commander Liu Chengqi
Commissar Cui Wenbin
  • 43rd Regiment
  • 45th Regiment
MiG-15 fighter unit and started its second tour in October 1952. [210] Previously entered combat during January–May 1952 as part of its first tour. [157]
17th Aviation Division Commander Li Shurong
Commissar Luo Bin
  • 49th Regiment
  • 51st Regiment
Mixed MiG-9/MiG-15 fighter unit. [211] Entered combat in March 1952. [157]
18th Aviation Division Commander Wang Dinglie
Commissar Li Zhensheng
  • 52nd Regiment
  • 54th Regiment
MiG-15 fighter unit. [211] Entered combat in March 1952 and returned to China in March 1953. [164]
China Emblem PLA.svg 3rd Aviation Corps

Commander: Zeng Guohua [212]
Commissar: Li Zaishan [212]

Unit [212] Commander [212] Sub-units [212] [nb 3] Notes
5th Aviation Division Commissar Yu Yinglong
  • 13th Regiment
  • 15th Regiment
Il-10 ground attack unit and under the control of the PLA North East Military Region Air Force. [152] [212] Did not enter combat during this period. [213]
8th Aviation Division Commander Wu Kai
Commissar Sun Cunfeng
  • 22nd Regiment
  • 24th Regiment
Tu-2 bomber unit and under the control of the PLA North East Military Region Air Force. [152] [212] Did not enter combat during this period. [164]
9th Aviation Division Commander He Jili
Commissar Xie Jiyou
  • 25th Regiment
  • 27th Regiment
La-9 fighter unit and under the control of the PLA North East Military Region Air Force. [152] [212] Did not enter combat during this period. [213]

Railway

China Emblem PLA.svg Railway Transport Forward Command

Commander: Liu Juying [214]
Commissar: Liu Juying [214]

Unit [215] Commander [215] Sub-units [216] Notes
Railway Repair Command BureauCommander Peng MinComposed of eight bridging regiments, four track regiments and four independent regiments. [216]
Anti-Aircraft Artillery Command BureauCommander Wu Changchi
  • 502nd Anti-Aircraft Artillery Regiment
  • 509th Anti-Aircraft Artillery Regiment
  • 511th Anti-Aircraft Artillery Regiment
  • 512th Anti-Aircraft Artillery Regiment
  • 523rd Anti-Aircraft Artillery Regiment
  • 533rd Anti-Aircraft Artillery Regiment
  • Anti-Aircraft Machine-Gun Regiment
  • 101st Searchlight Regiment
Also assumes control of 62nd, 63rd and 64th Anti-Aircraft Artillery Division from the Artillery Director Office. [178] [217]

Supports

Unit [218] CommanderSub-units [219] Notes
Armor Command BureauCommander Zhao Jie
Commissar Li Zhizhou [220]
  • 1st Independent Tank Regiment
  • 2nd Independent Tank Regiment
  • 4th Tank Regiment
  • 5th Tank Regiment
  • 6th Tank Regiment
Elements of PLA 3rd Tank Division arrived in Korea in June 1952. Its 4th, 5th and 6th Tank Regiments relieved 1st, 2nd and 3rd Tank Regiments in June, while its 2nd Independent Tank Regiment relieved 1st Independent Tank Regiment in October. [220]
Artillery Director OfficeDirector Kuang Yumin [199] Its 62nd, 63rd and 64th Anti-Aircraft Artillery Divisions were under the operational control of Railway Transport Forward Command Anti-Aircraft Artillery Command Bureau. [221]
Engineer Command BureauCommander Tan Shanhe [220]
  • 4th Engineer Regiment
  • 7th Engineer Regiment
  • 10th Engineer Regiment
  • 12th Engineer Regiment
  • 14th Engineer Regiment
  • 15th Engineer Regiment
  • 16th Engineer Regiment
  • 17th Engineer Regiment
  • 18th Engineer Regiment
  • 21st Engineer Regiment
  • 22nd Engineer Regiment
Logistics CommandCommander Hong Xuezhi
Commissar Zhou Chunquan [222]
Composed of 30 service stations, 13 truck regiments, 16 hospitals, five security regiments, three Public Security regiments and one Public Order regiment. [223]

Signing of armistice agreement (May 13 – July 27, 1953)

The fighting that followed the collapse of the armistice negotiation were some of the worst of 1952. [224] The Battle of White Horse had crippled four regiments from the PVA 38th Corps, while Operation Showdown resulted in 11,500 Chinese casualties. [225] Despite the heavy losses, the Chinese managed to exhaust the UN forces through two months of attrition warfare, and the United Nations Command soon renounced all major ground operations for the rest of the war. [225] [226] The front was stabilized once again by November 1952. [227]

Despite the success on the ground, the PVA Air Force was unable to challenge the air supremacy of the US Air Force. [228] By May 1953, the US Air Force was able to launch 22,639 sorties per month against North Korean targets, while the PVA Air Force could only respond with 1,164 sorties during the same time period. [229] The situation was further worsen when the Soviet Union withdrew 40 percent of its aircraft in the spring of 1953. [228] The North Korean Premier Kim Il Sung began to sue for peace under the constant UN bombardment, [230] and the PVA could only counter by encouraging the North Koreans to continue night bombing missions with Po-2 biplanes. [231]

Dwight D. Eisenhower was elected as the President of the United States on November 4, 1952. [232] After being elected, Eisenhower promised to end the Korean War with "deeds", not "words", while amphibious exercises were carried out around Korea. [232] Although Eisenhower had no plans to end the war through military victory, [233] the Chinese leadership interpreted those signs as an impending amphibious attack. [234] As the result, the PLA 1st, 16th, 21st, 54th Infantry Corps, 33rd Infantry Division and 1st Tank Division were ordered into Korea on December 17, 1952. [235] Those new reinforcements soon brought the total PVA strength to 1.35 million men by the summer of 1953. [236]

To the surprise of Chinese leadership, the expected UN attack did not occur, and the armistice negotiations was later resumed on April 26, 1953. [237] [238] In order to end the war on favorable terms to the Communist, the reinforced PVA struck 10 UN outposts in early May 1953, while two major offensives were carried out against South Korean forces on June 10 and July 13 respectively. [239] The resulting clashes soon produced 124,912 Chinese casualties against 60,360 UN losses from May to July. [240] The armistice was signed at 10:12 on July 27, 1953, [241] and the PVA ended the war with a total of 1.35 million men, including 19 infantry corps, 15 artillery divisions, 9 air force divisions, 10 railway engineer divisions and one Public Security division. [242] The last Chinese formations left Korea on October 26, 1958. [243] [244]

Chinese People's Volunteer Army Headquarters

Commander Peng Dehuai (nominal) [235] [nb 4]
Deng Hua (acting) [235]
CommissarPeng Dehuai (nominal) [235] [nb 4]
Deng Hua (acting) [235]
Chief of Staff Li Da [235] [nb 10]
Political Director Li Zhimin [235] [nb 11]

Frontline

China Emblem PLA.svg 9th Army

Commander: Wang Jianan [245]
Commissar: Wang Jianan [245]

Unit [246] Commander [247] Sub-units [246] Notes
16th Corps Commander Yin Xianbing [nb 12]
Commissar Chen Yunkai
Reserve unit. [248] Entered Korea in January 1953 and left Korea in April 1958. [244] [249]
23rd Corps Commander Zhong Guochu
Commissar Lu Sheng
Left Korea in March 1958. [244]
24th Corps Commander and Commissar Zhang ZhenLeft Korea in April 1955. [244]
47th Corps Commander Zhang Tianyun
Commissar Chen Fahong
Reserve unit. [250] Left Korea in September 1954. [244]
China Emblem PLA.svg 19th Army

Commander: Huang Yongsheng [245] [nb 13]

Unit [246] Commander [251] Sub-units [246] Notes
1st Corps Commander Huang Xinting
Commissar Liang Renjie
Enter Korea on February 2, 1953. [252] Last Chinese unit stationed in Korea before its withdrawal in October 1958. [243] [244]
46th Corps Commander Xiao Quanfu
Commissar Wu Baoshan
Left Korea in October 1955. [244]
63rd Corps Commander Fu Chongbi
Commissar Long Daoquan
Reserve unit. [253] Left Korea in September 1953. [244]
64th Corps Commander Tang Zian
Commissar Huang Wenming
Reserve unit. [254] Left Korea in August 1953. [244]
65th Corps Commander and Commissar Wang DaobangLeft Korea in October 1953. [244]
China Emblem PLA.svg 20th Army

Commander: Yang Yong [245] [nb 14]
Commissar: Wang Ping [245] [nb 15]

Unit [255] Commander [256] Sub-units [255] Notes
21st Corps Commander Wu Yongxiang
Commissar Xie Fulin
Entered Korea in March 1953. [257] Left Korea in August 1958. [244]
54th Corps Commander Ding Sheng
Commissar Xie Ming
Entered Korea around May 1953. [258] Left Korea in August 1958. [244]
60th Corps Commander Zhang Zuliang
Commissar Zhao Tian
Left Korea in October 1953. [244]
67th Corps Commander Qiu Wei
Commissar Kuang Fuzhao
Left Korea in September 1954. [244]
68th Corps Commander Chen Fangren
Commissar Li Chengrui
Left Korea in April 1955. [244]

West coast defense

China Emblem PLA.svg West Coast Command

Commander: Deng Hua [235]

Unit [246] Commander [259] Sub-units [246] [260] Notes
38th Corps Commander Jiang Yonghui
Commissar Wu Dai
Left Korea on July 10, 1953. [244]
39th Corps Commander Zhang Jiecheng
Commissar Shi Ying
Reserve unit. [248] Left Korea in May 1953. [244]
40th Corps Commander and Commissar Wen YuchengReserve unit. [248] Left Korea in July 1953. [244]
50th Corps Commander Zeng Zesheng
Commissar Xu Wenlie
Left Korea in April 1954. [244]
2nd Armor Command BureauDirector Luo Jie
Commissar Mao Pengfei
  • 1st Tank Regiment
  • 2nd Tank Regiment
  • 3rd Independent Tank Regiment
  • Artillery Regiment
Naval OfficeUnknown
  • Navy Fast Attack Craft Group
Formed in December 1952. [235]

East coast defense

China Emblem PLA.svg 3rd Army

Commander: Xu Shiyou [253] [nb 16]
Commissar: She Yide [253]

Unit [246] Commander [261] Sub-units [262] Notes
12th Corps Commissar Li ZhenReserve unit. [253] Left Korea in April 1954. [244]
15th Corps Commander Li Chengfang
Commissar Gu Jingsheng
Reserve unit. [253] Left Korea in May 1954. [244]
33rd Independent Division Commander Tong Guogui
Commissar Shi Jingban
  • 97th Regiment
  • 98th Regiment
  • 99th Regiment
  • Artillery Regiment
  • Tank Regiment
Entered Korea in December 1952. [245] Left Korea in September 1954. [263]

Air

China Emblem PLA.svg Air Force Command

Commander: Nie Fengzhi (acting) [245]

Unit [264] Commander [265] Sub-units [265] [nb 3] Notes
3rd Aviation Division Commander Yuan Bin
Commissar Luo Ping
  • 7th Regiment
  • 9th Regiment
MiG-15 fighter unit. [152] Reserve unit and did not enter combat during this period. [153] [266]
4th Aviation Division Commander Fang Ziyi
Commissar Ye Songsheng
  • 10th Regiment
  • 12th Regiment
MiG-15 fighter unit. [152] Ended its third combat tour in July 1953. [153]
6th Aviation Division Commander Bei Sha
  • 16th Regiment
  • 18th Regiment
Mixed MiG-9/MiG-15 fighter unit. [152] Ended its second combat tour in July 1953. [157]
12th Aviation Division Commander Wang Mingli
Commissar Kang Yushan
  • 34th Regiment
  • 36th Regiment
Mixed MiG-9/MiG-15 fighter unit. [152] Reserve unit and did not enter combat during this period. [157]
14th Aviation Division Commander Wang Yuhuai
Commissar Zhao Shaochang
  • 42nd Regiment
Mixed MiG-9/MiG-15 fighter unit. [152] Started its second combat tour in April 1953 and ceased combat in July 1953. [157]
15th Aviation Division Commander Liu Chengqi
Commissar Cui Wenbin
  • 43rd Regiment
  • 45th Regiment
MiG-15 fighter unit. [152] Ended its second tour in July 1953. [157]
16th Aviation Division Commander Sun Tongsheng
Commissar Zhang Yonggeng
  • 46th Regiment
  • 48th Regiment
Mixed MiG-9/MiG-15 fighter unit. [211] Entered combat in January 1953 and ceased combat in July 1953. [157]
17th Aviation Division Commander Li Shurong
Commissar Luo Bin
  • 49th Regiment
  • 51st Regiment
Mixed MiG-9/MiG-15 fighter unit. [211] Ceased combat in July 1953. [157]
China Emblem PLA.svg Dandong Air Defense District Command [nb 17]

Commander: Cheng Jun [267]

Unit [264] Commander [268] Sub-units [268] Notes
Forward Command BureauDirector Wu Changchi
  • 502nd Anti-Aircraft Artillery Regiment
  • 507th Anti-Aircraft Artillery Regiment
  • 509th Anti-Aircraft Artillery Regiment
  • 510th Anti-Aircraft Artillery Regiment
  • 512th Anti-Aircraft Artillery Regiment
  • 515th Anti-Aircraft Artillery Regiment
  • 523rd Anti-Aircraft Artillery Regiment
  • 533rd Anti-Aircraft Artillery Regiment
  • 542nd Anti-Aircraft Artillery Regiment
  • 401st Searchlight Regiment
  • 402nd Searchlight Regiment
  • 205th Sentry Regiment
62nd Anti-Aircraft Artillery Division Commander Wang Xing
Commissar Qiu Tiexiong
  • 604th Anti-Aircraft Artillery Regiment
  • 605th Anti-Aircraft Artillery Regiment
  • 606th Anti-Aircraft Artillery Regiment
63rd Anti-Aircraft Artillery Division Commander Wu Zhongtai
Commissar Li Yunlong
  • 607th Anti-Aircraft Artillery Regiment
  • 608th Anti-Aircraft Artillery Regiment
  • 609th Anti-Aircraft Artillery Regiment
Left Korea in September 1955. [244]
64th Anti-Aircraft Artillery Division Commander Lu Rui
Commissar Peng Danling
  • 610th Anti-Aircraft Artillery Regiment
  • 611th Anti-Aircraft Artillery Regiment
  • 612th Anti-Aircraft Artillery Regiment
Left Korea in August 1954. [244]
65th Anti-Aircraft Artillery Division Commander Yuan Jinli
Commissar Shi Youhe
  • 613th Anti-Aircraft Artillery Regiment
  • 614th Anti-Aircraft Artillery Regiment
  • 615th Anti-Aircraft Artillery Regiment
Entered Korea in June 1953. [267] Left Korea in December 1954. [244]
102nd Anti-Aircraft Artillery Division Unknown
  • 501st Anti-Aircraft Artillery Regiment
  • 504th Anti-Aircraft Artillery Regiment
  • 506th Anti-Aircraft Artillery Regiment
  • 411th Searchlight Regiment
Responsible for air defense north of the Yalu River. [269]

Railway

China Emblem PLA.svg Railway Transport Forward Command

Commander: Liu Juying [269]
Commissar: Cui Tianmin [269]

Unit [264] Commander [270] Sub-units [264] Notes
Railway Repair Command BureauCommander Liu KeAll Chinese railway unit left Korea by September 25, 1955. [271]
Railway Construction Command BureauDirector Guo WeichengAll Chinese railway unit left Korea by September 25, 1955. [271]
Railway Military Administration BureauDirector Liu Juying
  • 1st Sub-Bureau
  • 2nd Sub-Bureau
  • 3rd Sub-Bureau
  • 4th Sub-Bureau
  • 5th Sub-Bureau
All Chinese railway unit left Korea by September 25, 1955. [271]

Supports

Unit [272] Commander [273] Sub-units [273] Notes
1st Armor Command BureauCommander Zhao Jie
Commissar Li Zhizhou
  • 2nd Independent Tank Regiment
  • 4th Tank Regiment
  • 5th Tank Regiment
  • 6th Tank Regiment
Left Korea in May 1954. [274]
Artillery Command BureauCommander Gao Cunxin
Commissar Liu He
33rd Anti-Tank Artillery Division entered Korea in early 1953 with two regiments of the 31st Anti-Tank Artillery Division transferred under its command. 22nd Rocket Artillery Division entered Korea in June 1953. 3rd Artillery Division entered Korea in July 1953. All Chinese artillery units left Korea by February 1957. [244] [275]
Engineer Command BureauCommander Tan Shanhe
  • 3rd Engineer Regiment
  • 4th Engineer Regiment
  • 6th Engineer Regiment
  • 7th Engineer Regiment
  • 9th Engineer Regiment
  • 10th Engineer Regiment
  • 12th Engineer Regiment
  • 14th Engineer Regiment
  • 17th Engineer Regiment
  • 18th Engineer Regiment
  • 21st Engineer Regiment
  • 22nd Engineer Regiment
Logistics CommandCommander Hong XuezhiComposed of 23 service stations, 15 truck regiments, 21 hospitals, five security regiments and six Public Security regiments. [276]

Notes

  1. Equivalent to 3.3 billion USD. See Li 2007 , p. 112.
  2. 1 2 Xie Fang served as a representative in the armistice negotiation until the breakdown of armistice talks on October 8, 1952. See Chinese Military Science Academy 2000b , pp. 557, 563 and Hermes 1992 , pp. 281, 422.
  3. 1 2 3 4 Following the Soviet model, a typical Chinese air force division is only composed of two regiments. See Zhang 2004 , p. 108
  4. 1 2 3 4 Recalled back to China in April 1952 for medical reasons. Peng served the rest of the war by administering daily operations in the Central Military Commission. See Zhang 1995 , pp. 217, 304.
  5. Cheng Geng briefly commanded PVA in June 1952, then left for China in July 1952 to build the PLA Military Academy of Engineering and Technology. See Zhang 1995 , p. 217.
  6. Yang Dezhi became the Deputy Commander of PVA in July 1952. See Zhang 1995 , p. 217.
  7. Formerly the Deputy Commander of 19th Army. Zheng Weishan replaced Yang Chengwu in July 1952. See Zhang 1995 , p. 217.
  8. Song Shi-Lun returned to China in July 1952. See Zhang 1995 , p. 217.
  9. Liu Zhen returned to China around early July 1952. See Zhang 2004 , p. 176.
  10. Relieved Xie Fang in May 1953. See Zhang 1995 , p. 236.
  11. Relieved Gan Siqi in May 1953. See Zhang 1995 , p. 236.
  12. Yin was soon removed from command on charges of sexual misconduct and abuse of authority. See Zhang 1995 , p. 211.
  13. Relieved Han Xianchu in May 1953. See Zhang 1995 , p. 237.
  14. Relieved Zheng Wishan in May 1953. See Zhang 1995 , p. 237.
  15. Relieved Zhang Nansheng in May 1953. See Zhang 1995 , p. 237.
  16. Relieved Wang Jinshan in May 1953. See Chinese Military Science Academy 2000b , p. 575.
  17. Subordinate of PVA Air Force Command, it was created on April 6, 1953 by combining all anti-aircraft troops in Korea and along the Yalu River. See Hu & Ma 1987 , p. 192.

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The Battle of the Imjin River, also known as the Battle of Solma-ri or Battle of Gloster Hill in South Korea, or as Battle of Xuemali in China, took place 22–25 April 1951 during the Korean War. Troops from the Chinese People's Volunteer Army (PVA) attacked United Nations Command (UN) positions on the lower Imjin River in an attempt to achieve a breakthrough and recapture the South Korean capital Seoul. The attack was part of the Chinese Spring Offensive, the aim of which was to regain the initiative on the battlefield after a series of successful UN counter-offensives in January–March 1951 had allowed UN forces to establish themselves beyond the 38th Parallel at the Kansas Line.

Who are the Most Beloved People? is the title of a famous essay about the People's Volunteer Army (PVA) in Korea written by Chinese journalist Wei Wei.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">People's Volunteer Army</span> Communist Chinese forces during the Korean War

The People's Volunteer Army (PVA), officially the Chinese People's Volunteers (CPV), was the armed expeditionary forces deployed by the People's Republic of China during the Korean War. Although all units in the PVA were actually transferred from the People's Liberation Army (PLA) under the orders of Chairman Mao Zedong, the PVA was separately constituted in order to prevent an official war with the United States. The PVA entered Korea on 19 October 1950 and completely withdrew by October 1958. The nominal commander and political commissar of the PVA was Peng Dehuai before the ceasefire agreement in 1953, although both Chen Geng and Deng Hua served as the acting commander and commissar after April 1952 following Peng's illness. The initial units in the PVA included 38th, 39th, 40th, 42nd, 50th, 66th Corps; totalling 250,000 men. About 3 million Chinese civilian and military personnel had served in Korea throughout the war.

The 50th Army was a military formation of the People's Liberation Army. Initially it was mostly composed of Chinese Nationalist soldiers surrendered to the Communist side during the Chinese Civil War.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Zhao Nanqi</span> Korean Chinese general (1927–2018)

Zhao Nanqi, or Cho Nam-gi (Korean: 조남기), was a General of the People's Republic of China and Vice Chairman of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference from 1998 to 2003, and Vice-chairman of the 5th National People's Congress.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">First Battle of Maryang-san</span> Battle of the Korean War

The First Battle of Maryang-san, also known as the Defensive Battle of Maliangshan, was fought during the Korean War between United Nations Command (UN) forces—primarily Australian, British and Canadian—and the Chinese People's Volunteer Army (PVA). The fighting occurred during a limited UN offensive by US I Corps, codenamed Operation Commando. This offensive ultimately pushed the PVA back from the Imjin River to the Jamestown Line and destroyed elements of four PVA armies following heavy fighting. The much smaller battle at Maryang-san took place over a five-day period, and saw the 1st Commonwealth Division dislodge a numerically superior PVA force from the tactically important Kowang-san, Hill 187, and Maryang-san features.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Battle of Triangle Hill</span> Battle of the Korean War

The Battle of Triangle Hill, also known as Operation Showdown or the Shangganling Campaign, was a protracted military engagement during the Korean War. The main combatants were two United Nations (UN) infantry divisions, with additional support from the United States Air Force, against elements of the Chinese People's Volunteer Army (PVA) 15th and 12th Corps. The battle was part of UN attempts to gain control of the "Iron Triangle" and took place from 14 October to 25 November 1952.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Battle of the Samichon River</span> Korean War battle

The Battle of the Samichon River was fought during the final days of the Korean War between United Nations (UN) forces—primarily Australian and American—and the Chinese People's Volunteer Army (PVA). The fighting took place on a key position on the Jamestown Line known as "the Hook", and resulted in the defending UN troops, including the 2nd Battalion, Royal Australian Regiment from the 28th British Commonwealth Brigade and the US 7th Marine Regiment, repulsing numerous assaults by the PVA 137th Division during two concerted night attacks, inflicting numerous casualties on the PVA with heavy artillery and small-arms fire. The action was part of a larger, division-sized PVA attack against the US 1st Marine Division, with diversionary assaults mounted against the Australians. With the peace talks in Panmunjom reaching a conclusion, the Chinese had been eager to gain a last-minute victory over the UN forces, and the battle was the last of the war before the official signing of the Korean armistice.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Battle of Unsan</span> 1950 Korean War battle

The Battle of Unsan, also known as the Battle of Yunshan, was a series of engagements of the Korean War that took place from 25 October to 4 November 1950 near Unsan, North Pyongan province in present-day North Korea. As part of the People's Republic of China's First Phase Campaign, the People's Volunteer Army (PVA) repeatedly attacked the Republic of Korea Army's (ROK) 1st Infantry Division near Unsan beginning on 25 October, to surprise the advancing United Nations Command (UNC). The United States' (US) 8th Cavalry Regiment was encircled on 1–2 November and broke out with the loss of most of its heavy equipment.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Battle of Onjong</span> Battle between Chinese and United Nations forces

The Battle of Onjong, also known as the Battle of Wenjing, was one of the first engagements between Chinese and South Korean forces during the Korean War. It took place around Onjong in present-day North Korea from 25 to 29 October 1950. As the main focus of the Chinese First Phase Offensive, the People's Volunteer Army (PVA) 40th Corps conducted a series of ambushes against the Republic of Korea Army (ROK) II Corps, effectively destroying the right flank of the United States Eighth Army while stopping the UN advance north toward the Yalu River.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Battle of Wawon</span> 1950 battle of the Korean War

The Battle of Wawon(Korean: 군우리 전투; hanja: 軍隅里戰鬪; rr: Gunuri Jeontu; Turkish: Kunu-ri Muharebesi), also known as the Battle of Wayuan, was a series of delay actions of the Korean War that took place from 27–29 November 1950 near Wawon in present-day North Korea. After the collapse of the US Eighth Army's right flank during the Battle of the Ch'ongch'on River, the Chinese People's Volunteer Army (PVA) 38th Corps advanced rapidly towards the critical road junction at Kunu-ri in an effort to cut off United Nations forces' retreat route. In what was considered to be Turkey's first real combat action since the aftermath of World War I, the Turkish Brigade attempted to delay the Chinese advances at Wawon. Although during the battle the Turkish Brigade was crippled after being encircled by Chinese forces with superior numbers, they were still able to breach the Chinese trap and rejoin the US 2nd Infantry Division. Delay of the PVA advance after meeting with heavy Turkish resistance helped the other United Nations forces to withdraw without suffering many casualties and reassemble later in December.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Battle of the Ch'ongch'on River</span> Part of the Korean War

The Battle of the Ch'ongch'on River, also known as the Battle of the Ch'ongch'on, was a decisive battle in the Korean War that took place from November 25 to December 2, 1950, along the Ch'ongch'on River Valley in the northwestern part of North Korea. In response to the successful Chinese First Phase Campaign against the United Nations (UN) forces, General Douglas MacArthur launched the Home-by-Christmas Offensive to expel the Chinese forces from Korea and to end the war. Anticipating this reaction, the Chinese People's Volunteer Army (PVA) Commander Peng Dehuai planned a counteroffensive, dubbed the "Second Phase Campaign", against the advancing UN forces.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Third Battle of Seoul</span> 1950–1951 battle in the Korean War

The Third Battle of Seoul was a battle of the Korean War, which took place from December 31, 1950, to January 7, 1951, around the South Korean capital of Seoul. It is also known as the Chinese New Year's Offensive, the January–Fourth Retreat or the Third Phase Campaign Western Sector.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">First and Second Battles of Wonju</span> 1950 - 51 battle between North Korean and United Nations forces during the Korean War

The First and Second Battles of Wonju, also known as the Wonju Campaign or the Third Phase Campaign Eastern Sector, was a series of engagements between North Korean and United Nations (UN) forces during the Korean War. The battle took place from December 31, 1950, to January 20, 1951, around the South Korean town of Wonju. In coordination with the Chinese capture of Seoul on the western front, the North Korean Korean People's Army (KPA) attempted to capture Wonju in an effort to destabilize the UN defenses along the central and the eastern fronts.

The Battle of Haktang-ni was a skirmish in which elements of the People's Volunteer Army attacked an advanced position held by the Belgium–Luxembourg Battalion along a ridge-line known as "Broken Arrow" or "Broken Arrow Hill" between 9 and 13 October 1951.

The 67th Group Army was a military formation of the People's Liberation Army that existed from the civil war era until the disarmament of 1999. In its last years it was part of the Jinan Military Region with its headquarters at Zibo.

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