Republic of China Army
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The Republic of China Army (中華民國陸軍; pinyin: Zhōnghuá Mínguó Lùjūn) is the largest branch of the armed forces of the Republic of China (Taiwan). An estimated 80% of the ROC Army is located on the main island of Taiwan, while the remainder are stationed on the islands of Kinmen, Matsu and Penghu.
As the final line of defense against a possible invasion by the People's Republic of China, the primary focus is on defense and counterattack against amphibious assault and urban warfare.
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[edit] Organization
| Republic of China Army | |
|---|---|
ROC Army Flag |
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| Active | 1924-present |
| Country | Republic of China |
| Size | 130,000 (2008 est.) |
| Insignia | |
| Insignia | |
The ROC Army's current operational strength includes 3 armies, 5 corps. As of 2005, the Army's 35 brigades include 25 infantry brigades, 5 armoured brigades and 3 mechanized infantry brigades.[1][2][3]
- Army General Headquarters (陸軍司令部)
- The ROC Army GHQ is headed by a 3-star general and is responsible for overall command of all ROC Army assets. Army GHQ is subordinate to the General Staff (military), the Minister of Defense (civilian) and the ROC President.
- Internal Units: Personnel, Combat Readiness & Training, Logistics, Planning, Communications, Electronics & Information, General Affairs, Comptroller, Inspector General, Political Warfare.
- Aviation and Special Forces Command (航空特戰指揮部)
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- 3 Air Cavalry/Airborne brigades
- 1 Special Warfare brigade
- 6th Army Corps (第六軍團司令部): Northern Taiwan
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- 7 Infantry brigades
- 1 Motorized Infantry brigade
- 1 Armoured Infantry brigade
- 2 Armour brigades
- 8th Army Corps (第八軍團司令部): Southern Taiwan
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- 5 Infantry brigades
- 1 Motorized Infantry brigade
- 1 Armoured Infantry brigade
- 1 Armour brigade
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- 10th Army Corps (第十軍團司令部): Central Taiwan
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- 6 Infantry brigades
- 1 Motorized Infantry brigade
- 1 Armoured Infantry brigade
- 1 Armour brigade
- Hua-Tung Defense Command (花東防衛司令部): Eastern Taiwan
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- 2 Infantry brigades
- Kinmen Defense Command (金門防衛司令部)
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- 3 Infantry brigades
- 1 Armour brigade
- Penghu Defense Command (澎湖防衛司令部)
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- 2 Infantry brigades
- 1 Armour brigade
- Matsu Defense Command (馬祖防衛司令部)
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- 2 Infantry brigades
- Tungyin Defense Command (東引防衛司令部)
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- 1 Infantry brigade
- Armed Force Reserve Command (後備軍人司令部)
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- 24 Reserve brigades (Activated only in time of war)
- Logistics Command (後勤司令部)
- Education, Training and Doctorine Command (教育訓練暨準則發展司令部)
- Republic of China Military Academy, Training & Command Schools, Chemical Warfare Corps, Engineering Corps, Arsenal Development.
ROC Army's former Army Missile Command has become an independent command subordinate to the General Staff, commanding assets from the ROC Army and ROC Navy.
[edit] History
The Republic of China Army was founded as the National Revolutionary Army, the armed wing of Sun Yat-sen's KMT in 1924. It participated in the Northern Expedition, the Second Sino-Japanese War (during World War II) and the Chinese Civil War before withdrawing with the ROC government to Taiwan in 1949. Until the 1970s, the stated mission of the Army was to retake the Mainland from the People's Republic of China. Following the lifting of martial law in 1988 and the democratization of the 1990s, the mission of the ROC Army has been shifted to the defense of Taiwan, Penghu, Kinmen and Matsu from a PLA invasion.
In the defense of Taiwan, it has participated in combat operations against the PLA in the Battle of Kuningtou, and in the First and Second Taiwan Strait Crisis. In addition to these major conflicts, ROCA commandos were regularly sent to raid the Fujianese coast.
With the downsizing of ROC armed forces in recent years, the Army has endured the largest number of cutbacks as ROC military doctrine has begun to emphasize the importance of offshore engagement with the Navy and Air Force; subsequent to this shift in emphasis, the ROC Navy and Air Force have taken precedence over the ROC Army in defense doctrine and weapons' procurement.[4] Recent short term goals in the Army include acquisition and development of joint C2 systems, advanced attack helicopters and armored vehicles, MLRS and field air defense systems. The Army is also in the process of transitioning to an all volunteer force.[3]
[edit] Equipment
From the 1990s onwards, the Republic of China Army launched several upgrade programmes to replace out-dated equipment with cutting-edge state of the art advanced weapons, also increasing its emphasis on forces that could be rapidly deployed and were suited for combat in Taiwan's heavily urbanized environment. Orders were placed with the United States for M60A3 Patton tanks, M109A6 "Paladin" howitzers and AH-1W SuperCobra attack helicopters, as well as updating existing equipment.
Along with the other ROC military branches, the ROC Army has extensive experience in the construction and utilization of underground tunnels and bases gained during the People's Republic of China's bombardments of Kinmen and Matsu during the Cold War and many facilities are rumoured to be located underground in undisclosed locations.
In July 2007 it was reported that the ROC Army would request the purchase of 30 AH-64D Apache Longbow attack helicopters from in the 2008 defence budget.[5] The 2008 defense budget also listed a request for 60 UH-60M Black Hawk helicopters as a partial replacement for the UH-1Hs currently in service.[6] It has been reported that the ROC Army will seek new third generation main battle tanks, as the M60A3s are aging. The possible tanks under consideration are the US M1A2, UK Challenger, German Leopard 2A6, French Le Clerc and the Israeli Merkava. However it is expected to procure the US M1A2 due to closer military ties.[1]
The U.S. government announced on October 3 that it plans to sell $6.5 billion dollars worth of arms to Taiwan ending the freeze of arms sales to Taiwan. Amongst other things, the plans include $2.532 billion dollars worth of 30 AH-64D Apache Longbow Block III Attack helicopters with night-vision sensors, radar, 173 Stinger Block I air-to-air missiles and 1000 AGM-114L Hellfire missiles. [7] and 182 Javelin missiles will also be available with 20 Javelin command launchers and is estimated to cost $47 million.[8][9]
[edit] Armoured Vehicles
| Vehicle | Origin | Type | In service | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| M60A3 | MBT | 480 | ||
| CM-11 (M48H) | MBT | 450 | Modified in Taiwan | |
| CM-12 | MBT | 100 | Modified in Taiwan | |
| M41 | Light tank | 675 | 50 M41D modified in Taiwan | |
| CM-32 | Eight-wheeled armoured vehicle | 600 | In production | |
| CM-21 | M113 APC variant | 225 | ||
| M113 | Tracked APC | 650 | ||
| V-150 | amphibious APC | 300 | ||
| AM General Humvee | General purpose armoured vehicle | 2,000-2,500 |
[edit] Artillery
| Vehicle | Origin | Type | In service |
|---|---|---|---|
| M110 | 203 mm self-propelled howitzer | 60 | |
| M109A2 | 155 mm self-propelled howitzer | 225 | |
| M108 | 105 mm self-propelled howitzer | 100 | |
| M115 | 203 mm towed howitzer | 70 | |
| M59 "Long Tom" | 155 mm towed howitzer | 90 | |
| M101 | 105 mm towed howitzer | 650 | |
| Kung Feng IV | 117 mm Tracked MLRS | ||
| Thunderbolt-2000 | 117 mm Wheeled MLRS |
[edit] Helicopters
| Aircraft | Origin | Type | In service[3][10] | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Boeing AH-64D Apache Longbow Block III | attack helicopter | 30 | on order | |
| Bell AH-1W SuperCobra | attack helicopter | 62 | ||
| Boeing CH-47SD Chinook | transport helicopter | 9 | ||
| Bell OH-58D Kiowa | observer/light attack helicopter | 39 | ||
| Bell TH-67A Creek | utility helicopter | 30 | ||
| AIDC UH-1H Iroquois | utility helicopter | 80 | built under licence by AIDC |
[edit] Anti-Air Weapons
| Platform | Origin | Type | In service | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| M1097 Avenger | Short-range air defense | 70 | ||
| FIM-92 Stinger | Shoulder-launched SAM | 728 | 728 delivered between 1996 and 1998 | |
| Antelope air defence system | Surface-to-air missile |
[edit] Anti-Tank Weapons
| Platform | Origin | Type | In service | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| M72 LAW | Rocket-propelled grenade | |||
| Type 66 | Rocket-propelled grenade | |||
| M136 | Anti-tank weapon | |||
| APILAS | Anti-tank weapon | 1,000 | Over 1,000 delivered by 1998 | |
| FGM-148 Javelin | Anti-tank guided missile | 360 and 40 launchers | 182 with 20 launchers on order | |
| BGM-71 TOW-2A/B | Anti-tank guided missile | 2,076 | Unknown number of launchers |
[edit] Small Arms
| Weapon | Origin | Type | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| T75 | 9 mm pistol | ||
| T51 | .45 ACP pistol | ||
| USP | 9mm pistol | ||
| Glock 17 | 9 mm pistol | ||
| T77 | 9 mm submachine gun | ||
| M12 | 9 mm submachine gun | ||
| Calico M960 | Submachine gun | ||
| MP5 | Submachine gun | ||
| Uzi | Submachine gun | ||
| M1014 | Semi-automatic shotgun | ||
| Franchi SPAS-12 | Combat shotgun | ||
| T65 | Assault rifle | Standard issue | |
| T86 | Assault rifle | T65 with M4 carbine | |
| T91 | Assault rifle | ||
| M4A1 | Carbine | ||
| M1 carbine | Carbine | ||
| M24 Sniper Weapon System | Sniper rifle | ||
| T93 | Sniper rifle | ||
| M82A1 | Sniper rifle | ||
| PSG-1 | Sniper rifle | ||
| SSG-2000 | Sniper rifle | ||
| T74 | General purpose machine gun | ||
| T75 | Squad automatic weapon | ||
| M2 | Heavy machine gun | ||
| T85 | 40 mm grenade launcher | ||
| MGL Mk-1 | 40 mm grenade launcher |
[edit] See also
[edit] References & notes
- ^ "Speculative ROC Army ORBAT". Taiwanmilitary.org. http://www.taiwanmilitary.org/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?t=8213. Retrieved on 2006-03-08.
- ^ "ROC Army". GlobalSecurity.org. http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/taiwan/army.htm. Retrieved on 2006-03-08.
- ^ a b c "2004 National Defense Report" (PDF). ROC Ministry of National Defense. 2004. http://report.mnd.gov.tw/eng/pdf/all-1-360.pdf. Retrieved on 2006-03-05.
- ^ Roy, Denny (2003) (PDF). Taiwan's Threat Perceptions: The Enemy Within. Asia-Pacific Center for Security Studies. http://www.apcss.org/Publications/Ocasional%20Papers/OPTaiwanThreat.pdf. See "Reforming the Armed Forces", page 5.
- ^ "Taiwan to Buy Apaches to Counter China Threat". Defense News. 2007-07-09. http://www.defensenews.com/story.php?F=2886256&C=asiapac. Retrieved on 2007-10-07.
- ^ "Report says Taiwan sold 1 billion rifle bullets to U.S.". http://www.chinapost.com.tw/taiwan/2007/11/06/129723/Taiwan-ships.htm. Retrieved on 2007-11-05.
- ^ http://www.dsca.mil/PressReleases/36-b/2008/Taiwan_08-41.pdf
- ^ http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/10/03/AR2008100303240.html
- ^ http://asia.news.yahoo.com/081003/afp/081003211458asiapacificnews.html
- ^ "Aviation & Special Warfare Command". Globalsecurity.org. http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/taiwan/army-avn.htm. Retrieved on 2007-07-16.
[edit] External links
- ROC (Taiwan) Army webpage (Chinese)
- ROC Army webpage (English)
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