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Central Military Commission (China)

People's Republic of China political bodies governing the military


People's Republic of China political bodies governing the military

FieldValue
agency_nameCentral Military Commission of the Chinese Communist Party
Central Military Commission of the People's Republic of China
nativename_a
logoNational Emblem of the People's Republic of China (2).svg
logo_width85px
logo_captionNational Emblem of China
imageChinaDOD.jpg
sealDanghui.svg
seal_width85px
seal_captionEmblem of the Chinese Communist Party
image_captionThe CMC is housed in the same building as the Ministry of National Defense, the "August 1st Building"
formed
preceding1People's Revolutionary Military Commission
(1949–1954)
preceding2National Defense Commission
(1954–1975)
jurisdictionChina
headquartersAugust 1st Building, Beijing
chief1_nameXi Jinping
chief1_positionChairman
chief3_nameGeneral Zhang Shengmin
chief3_positionVice Chairman
parent_agency
child1_agencyPeople's Liberation Army
child2_agencyPeople's Armed Police
child3_agencyMilitia of China
website
(in English)
agency_typeNational level agency

Central Military Commission of the People's Republic of China (1949–1954) (1954–1975) (in English)

The Central Military Commission (CMC) is the supreme military leadership body of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) and the People's Republic of China (PRC), which heads the People's Liberation Army (PLA), the People's Armed Police (PAP), and the Militia of China. There are technically two separate commissions; the Central Military Commission of the Chinese Communist Party and the Central Military Commission of the People's Republic of China, though under the arrangement of "one institution with two names", they function as a single institution.

The CCP first established a military department in 1925. The CCP Central Revolutionary Military Commission was established in 1937, which later evolved to the Central Military Commission in 1945. After the proclamation of the People's Republic of China, in 1949, military leadership was transferred to the People's Revolutionary Military Commission of the Central People's Government; there was no separate CCP organ during this time. In 1954, the CCP Central Military Commission was re-established, while state military authority was transferred to the National Defense Commission. In 1975, during the Cultural Revolution, the NDC was abolished, leaving the Party CMC as the sole governing body of the military. In 1982, the State Central Military Commission was established in order to formalize its role within the government structure. In 2016, a wide-ranging reform of the CMC bodies was undertaken, with PLA'S four general departments being replaced by 15 departments that report directly to the CMC.

Aside from periods of transition, both commissions have identical personnel, organization and functions. The commission's parallel hierarchy allows the CCP to supervise the political and military activities of the PLA, including issuing directives on senior appointments, troop deployments and arms spending. The CMC is chaired by Xi Jinping, the General Secretary of the Chinese Communist Party and paramount leader. Almost all the members are senior generals or admirals, but the chairmanship has always been held by the party's most senior leaders (who are civilians under the principle that the Party commands the Gun) to ensure the loyalty of the armed forces. The chairman has absolute leadership over the commission per the chairman responsibility system. The CMC has 15 general departments and the five theater commands, through which it oversees each of the service branches of the PLA. The CMC is housed in the Ministry of National Defense compound (August 1st Building) in western Beijing.

History

In 1925, the CCP's Central Military Department, was renamed the Central Military Commission. It was first led by Zhang Guotao who was replaced by Zhou Enlai in 1926 as head of the CMC. At the time of the First United Front, the CMC was not a unified military command structure but was more of an administrative liaison with other armed communist groups.

As a commission, the CMC ranks higher in the party hierarchy than departments such as the Organization or United Front Departments. In 1937, the CCP Central Revolutionary Military Commission was created after the Chinese Soviet Republic's Chinese Red Army were integrated into the Kuomintang's army in the Second Sino-Japanese War, and it later evolved into the Central Military Commission after the 7th National Congress of the Chinese Communist Party in 1945. In this period, the committee was always chaired by Mao Zedong.

People's Republic of China

After the proclamation of the People's Republic of China on 1 October 1949, military leadership was transferred to a government body, the People's Revolutionary Military Commission of the Central People's Government. During this period, there was no separate supreme military leadership organ of the CCP. In 1954, the CCP Central Military Commission was re-established, while state military authority was transferred to the National Defense Commission chaired by the Chairman of China with the adoption of the 1954 constitution.

As Mao Zedong was also the Chairman of the Chinese Communist Party and led military affairs as a whole, the CMC and NDC's day-to-day work was carried out by its first-ranking vice-chairman, a post which was occupied by Lin Biao until his death in 1971, then by Ye Jianying. As a consequence of the Cultural Revolution, the Party CMC became the sole military overseeing body, and the National Defence Council was abolished in 1975.

Deng Xiaoping's efforts to institutionally separate the CCP and the state led to the establishment of today's State CMC, which was created in 1982 by the state constitution in order to formalize the role of the military within the government structure. Both the National Defense Commission and State CMC have been described as 'consultative' bodies. Contrarily to the National Defense Council, however, the party and state CMCs are almost identical in leadership, composition, and powers.

After the United States bombing of the Chinese embassy in Belgrade during the NATO bombing of Yugoslavia, Jiang Zemin instructed the CMC to strengthen the PLA. The CMC began a broad effort to reform its doctrine, operations, and equipment in anticipation of what Chinese leadership expected would be an increasingly hostile United States.

The Commission included the post of secretary-general until 1992. This post was held by Yang Shangkun (1945–1954), Huang Kecheng (1954–1959), Luo Ruiqing (1959–1966), Ye Jianying (1966–1977), Luo Ruiqing (1977–1979), Geng Biao (1979–1981), Yang Shangkun (1981–1989), Yang Baibing (1989–1992).

In 2016, the four traditional general departments were dissolved by order of Chairman Xi Jinping, and in their place 15 new departments were created as part of the ongoing modernization of the PLA.

Functions

According to the Law of the People's Republic of China on National Defense, the CMC exercises leadership over border, maritime, air and other critical security defense. The CMC has the ultimate command authority over the armed forces of the People's Republic of China, including the People's Liberation Army (PLA), the People's Armed Police (PAP), and the Militia.

In China's state-party-military tripartite political system, the CMC itself is a decision-making body whose day-to-day affairs are not nearly as transparent as that of the Central Committee or the State Council. As one of China's three main decision-making bodies the relative influence of the CMC can vary depending on the time period and the leaders. The CCP practices a strict division of power in military affairs between the Politburo and the CMC; no civilian Politburo member is authorized to handle military affairs except for the CMC chairman, while military personnel are forbidden to intervene in civilian affairs.

Unlike in most countries, the Central Military Commission is not an organizational equivalent of other government ministries. Although China does have a Ministry of National Defense, it exists solely for liaison with foreign militaries and does not have command authority.

Structure

There are two separate commissions; the Central Military Commission of the Chinese Communist Party and the Central Military Commission of the People's Republic of China. However, under the arrangement of "one institution with two names", both commissions have identical personnel, organization and function. The commission's parallel hierarchy allows the CCP to supervise the political and military activities of the PLA, including issuing directives on senior appointments, troop deployments and arms spending. The CMC is extremely opaque, and its meetings are almost never publicized.

The CMC is composed of a chairman, vice chairpersons, and other members. The CMC chairman is usually concurrently the CCP general secretary. Per the chairman responsibility system, all significant issues in national defense and Army building are planned and decided by the CMC chairman, who holds the final deciding vote on major military decisions and oversees the CMC's and the military's leadership and operations. Other members of the CMC are the Chairman's top aides to assist his final say over key CMC matters. The chairman is the decision-maker regarding the decisions to enter war, formulates China's national defense strategy, orders troop deployments, and decides on research and development and the induction of strategic weapons. The chairman also has the exclusive right to appoint of CMC members and commanders up to the level of a headquarters department, military region, and service command.

Election

The members of the Party CMC are elected by the CCP's Central Committee. In practice, membership is very closely controlled by the CCP's Politburo Standing Committee. Similarly, the state constitution states that the State CMC is elected by the National People's Congress (NPC) and theoretically reports to the NPC and its Standing Committee, but is in practice indistinguishable from the Party CMC.

Departments

Prior to 2016, the PLA was governed by four general departments. These were abolished after the military reforms in 2016 by order of Chairman Xi Jinping, replaced with 15 departments that report directly to the CMC. The new 15 departments are:

  1. General Office (Deputy Theater Grade)
  2. Joint Staff Department (CMC Member Grade)
  3. Political Work Department (CMC Member Grade)
  4. Discipline Inspection Commission (CMC Member Grade)
  5. Politics and Legal Affairs Commission (Theater Grade)
  6. Logistic Support Department (Deputy Theater Grade)
  7. Equipment Development Department (Deputy Theater Grade)
  8. Training Administration Department (Deputy Theater Grade)
  9. National Defense Mobilization Department (Deputy Theater Grade)
  10. Science and Technology Commission (Deputy Theater Grade)
  11. Office for Strategic Planning (Corps Grade)
  12. Office for Reform and Organizational Structure (Corps Grade)
  13. Office for International Military Cooperation (Corps Grade)
  14. Audit Office (Corps Grade)
  15. Agency for Offices Administration (Corps Grade)

The Joint Staff Department is the nerve center of the entire Chinese military command and control system, responsible for daily administrative duties of the CMC. The General Office processes all CMC communications and documents, coordinate meetings, and convey orders and directives to other subordinate organs.

Joint control organs

The Central Military Commission Joint Operations Command Center was separated from the Joint Staff in the 2015 reforms and made directly commanded by the CMC. As well as serving as the command center for overall PLA joint operations, it supervises the Joint Operation Command Organs of each of the five command theaters.

Members

According to military regulations, the chairman of the CMC shall be conferred with no military rank, while vice chairmen and members of the CMC are conferred the rank of general or admiral by the virtue of their office. The make-up of the current Central Military Commission of the CCP was determined at the 20th Party Congress held in October 2022; the state commission was confirmed at the 1st Session of the 14th National People's Congress.

; CMC Chairman: : Flag of the Chinese Communist Party.svgPRC Xi Jinping, also General Secretary of the Chinese Communist Party, President of China

; CMC Vice Chairmen (2)

  1. [[File:Ground Force Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg|23px|link=People's Liberation Army Ground Force]] General Zhang Youxia, member of the 19th Politburo and the 20th Politburo
  2. [[File:Rocket Force Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg|23px|link=People's Liberation Army Rocket Force]] General Zhang Shengmin, also Secretary of the Discipline Inspection Commission

; CMC Members (1)

  1. [[File:Ground Force Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg|23px|link=People's Liberation Army Ground Force]] General Liu Zhenli, Chief of Staff of the Joint Staff Department

High command

, China's Ministry of National Defense lists its high command as:

** Institution **** Leaders **
**Membership of the Central Military Commission**
ChairmanXi Jinping (习近平)
Vice ChairmenZhang Youxia (张又侠)
Zhang Shengmin (张升民)
MembersLiu Zhenli (刘振立)
**CMC Functional Departments**
General OfficeDirector: PLAGF Lt Gen Fang Yongxiang: (方永祥)
Joint Staff DepartmentChief of Staff: PLAGF Gen Liu Zhenli (刘振立)
Political Work DepartmentDirector: Vacant
Logistic Support DepartmentDept Head: Vacant
Political Commissioner: Vacant
Equipment Development DepartmentDept Head: PLAGF Gen Xu Xueqiang (许学强)
Political Commissioner: Vacant
Training Administration DepartmentDirector: Vacant
Political Commissioner: Vacant
National Defense Mobilization DepartmentDirector: PLAGF Lt Gen Zhang Like (张立克)
Political Commissioner: PLAGF Lt Gen Wang Donghai (王东海)
Discipline Inspection CommissionSecretary: PLARF Gen Zhang Shengmin (张升民)
Politics and Legal Affairs CommissionSecretary: Vacant
Science and Technology CommissionDirector: PLAN Vice Adm Zhao Xiaozhe (赵晓哲)
Office for Strategic PlanningDirector: PLAGF Maj Gen Shen Fangwu (沈方吾)
Office for Reform and Organizational StructureDirector: PLAGF Maj Gen Li Pengyi (李鹏翼)
Office for International Military CooperationDirector: PLAAF Maj Gen Li Bin (李斌)
Audit OfficeChief Auditor: Vacant
Agency for Offices AdministrationDept Head: PLAAF Maj Gen Liu Changchun (刘长春)
Political Commissioner: PLAAF Maj Gen Han Guoqi (韩国启)
**Joint Operations Command Center**
JOCCCommander-in-Chief: Xi Jinping (习近平)
**Theater Commands**
Eastern Theater CommandCommander: PLAAF Gen Yang Zhibin (杨志斌)
Political Commissioner: PLAN Adm Liu Qingsong (刘青松)
Southern Theater CommandCommander: PLAGF Gen Wu Yanan (吴亚男)
Political Commissioner: PLAGF Gen Wang Wenquan (王文全)
Western Theater CommandCommander: PLAGF Gen Wang Haijiang (汪海江)
Political Commissioner: PLAGF Gen Li Fengbiao (李凤彪)
Northern Theater CommandCommander: PLAGF Gen Huang Ming (黄铭)
Political Commissioner: PLAGF Gen Zheng Xuan (郑璇)
Central Theater CommandCommander: PLAAF Gen Han Shengyan (韩胜延)
Political Commissioner: PLAGF Gen Xu Deqing (徐德清)
**PLA Branches**
PLA Ground ForceCommander: PLAGF Gen Li Qiaoming (李桥铭)
Political Commissioner: PLAGF Gen Chen Hui (陈辉)
PLA NavyCommander: PLAN Adm Hu Zhongming (胡中明)
Political Commissioner: Vacant
PLA Air ForceCommander: PLAAF Gen Chang Dingqiu (常丁求)
Political Commissioner: PLAAF Gen Guo Puxiao (郭普校)
PLA Rocket ForceCommander: PLARF Gen Lei Kai (雷凯)
Political Commissioner: PLARF Gen Xu Xisheng (徐西盛)
**PLA Arms**
Aerospace ForceCommander: PLAGF Lt Gen Hao Weizhong (郝卫中)
Political Commissioner: Vacant
Cyberspace ForceCommander: PLAGF Lt Gen Zhang Minghua (张明华)
Political Commissioner: PLAAF Lt Gen Han Xiaodong (韩晓东)
Information Support ForceCommander: PLAGF Lt Gen Bi Yi (毕毅)
Political Commissioner: PLAGF Gen Li Wei (李伟)
Joint Logistics Support ForceCommander: PLAAF Lt Gen Wang Kangping (王抗平)
Political Commissioner: Vacant
**CMC Directly Subordinated Academic Institutions**
Academy of Military SciencesDean: PLAGF Gen Yang Xuejun (杨学军)
Political Commissioner: PLAGF Gen Ling Huanxin (凌焕新)
National Defense UniversityPrincipal: PLAGF Gen Xiao Tianliang (肖天亮)
Political Commissioner: PLAGF Lt Gen Zhong Shaojun (钟绍军)
National University of Defense TechnologyPrincipal: PLAGF Maj Gen Li Xiang (黎湘)
Political Commissioner: PLAAF Lt Gen Chen Guoqiang (陈国强)
**Headquarters of the People's Armed Police Force**
People's Armed PoliceActing Commander: PAP Lt Gen Cao Junzhang (曹均章)
Political Commissioner: Vacant

Notes

References

Works cited

References

  1. Guo, Xuezhi. (2012-08-29). "China's Security State: Philosophy, Evolution, and Politics". [[Cambridge University Press]].
  2. Zhang, Heng. (27 July 2025). "第二次国内革命战争时期的“中革军委”".
  3. Chang, Yu-Nan. (1956). "The Chinese Communist State System Under the Constitution of 1954". [[The Journal of Politics]].
  4. Cohen, Jerome Alan. (1978). "China's Changing Constitution". [[The China Quarterly]].
  5. (2002). "The People's Liberation Army as Organization". [[RAND Corporation]].
  6. Cunningham, Fiona S.. (2025). "Under the Nuclear Shadow: China's Information-Age Weapons in International Security". [[Princeton University Press]].
  7. (26 December 2020). "Law of the People's Republic of China on National Defense".
  8. Liu, Zhen. (18 October 2022). "What is China's Central Military Commission and why is it so powerful?". [[South China Morning Post]].
  9. (October 26, 2023). "Rumours swirl after China's defence minister, Li Shangfu, is sacked". [[The Economist]].
  10. "Sicherheitskommission beim Politbüro des ZK der SED".
  11. (2020-12-31). "3. The Riddle in the Middle: China's Central Military Commission in the Twenty-first Century". [[Stanford University Press]].
  12. "How China is Ruled: Military Affairs Commission". [[BBC News]].
  13. (4 October 2024). "Decoding Chinese Politics: Military".
  14. Zheng, William. (2025-12-03). "Chinese military issues new rules to 'prioritise strict political discipline'".
  15. Mulvenon, James. "The Yuan Stops Here: Xi Jinping and the "CMC Chairman Responsibility System"".
  16. Ji, You. (2026-01-14). "Chinese Communist Party Endeavors to Institutionalize Armed Power: Civilian Control of China's Central Military Commission". [[The China Journal]].
  17. "Constitution of the People's Republic of China".
  18. (23 April 2019). "How China is replacing America as Asia's military titan". [[Reuters]].
  19. "国防部新闻事务局官微发布中央军委机关英文译名".
  20. Erickson, Andrew. (2024-04-11). "CMSI Note #5: Admiral Wang Renhua: Exemplifying Jointness and Oversight for China's Navy amid Xi's Grade-and-Rank Reforms". CMSI Notes.
  21. (January 2026). "Introduction Appendix: Central Military Commission Reforms".
  22. "Regulations on the Military Ranks of Officers of the Chinese People's Liberation Army".
  23. (2017-10-27). "新一届中央军委委员中3位是从战火中走出的将军".
  24. (11 March 2023). "New PRC Central Military Commission vice chairmen, members pledge allegiance to Constitution". [[Xinhua News Agency]].
  25. "CMC Departments".
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