Liang Guanglie

General
Liang Guanglie
梁光烈
上将
Minister of National Defense
In office
17 March 2008  16 March 2013
Premier Wen Jiabao
Preceded by Cao Gangchuan
Succeeded by Chang Wanquan
Head of the People's Liberation Army General Staff Department
In office
November 2002  2007
Preceded by Fu Quanyou
Succeeded by Chen Bingde
Personal details
Born (1940-12-01) 1 December 1940
Santai, Republic of China
Political party Communist Party of China
Alma mater Henan University
Military service
Allegiance People's Republic of China
Service/branch People's Liberation Army
Years of service 1958–2013
Rank General
This is a Chinese name; the family name is Liang.

Liang Guanglie (Chinese: 梁光烈; pinyin: Liáng Guāngliè; born December 1940 in Santai, Mianyang, Sichuan) is a retired general and former Minister for National Defense in the People's Republic of China.

Life and career

Liang with the visiting U.S. Secretary of Defense Robert M. Gates in Beijing, 2011

Liang joined the army in January 1958 and the Communist Party of China in November 1959. His first assignment was with the Second Regiment, First Division of the 1st Ground Force Army (1958–63), where he rose to the ranks of commander of an engineering company, quartermaster of the special agent company and staff officer in the operations and training branch. Liang studied at the Xinyang Infantry School (1963–64) and graduated from Henan University's political theory correspondence education program (1984–86).[1] After finishing his studies, Liang returned to his unit until 1970 when he was promoted to the Operational Department staff of the Wuhan military command headquarters where he remained until 1979.

Liang was named Deputy Commander of the 58th Division, 20th Group Army in 1979 and became commander in 1981-83. After a study break at the PLA Military Academy (March 1982 to January 1983), he was named deputy Commander of the 20th Army in 1983 and Commander in 1985. In June 1989, he led the 20th Army to enforce martial law in Beijing to suppress the Tiananmen Square Protests. In 1990 he was transferred to command the 54th Army and from December 1993 to July 1995, he was the chief of staff in Beijing Military Region. From July 1995 to December 1997, he was the deputy commander in Peking Military Region. From December 1997 to December 1999, he was the commander of Shenyang Military Region, and from December 1999 to November 2002, he was the commander of Nanjing Military Region and deputy secretary of CCP's committee.

Liang was the Chief of General Staff of the Chinese People's Liberation Army from 2002 to 2007. He then served as a State Councilor and the Minister of National Defense. Additionally Liang was a member of Central Military Commission. He was also an alternate member of the 13th and 14th CCP Central Committees, and a member of the 15th, 16th and 17th Central Committees.

Liang retired at the 18th National Congress of the Communist Party of China in late 2012 and was replaced by General Chang Wanquan.[2]

References

Citations

Sources

Military offices
Preceded by
Fu Quanyou
Head of the People's Liberation Army General Staff Department
2002–2007
Succeeded by
Chen Bingde
Government offices
Preceded by
Cao Gangchuan
Minister of National Defence
2008–2012
Succeeded by
Chang Wanquan
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