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People's Liberation Army Air Force

The People's Liberation Army Air Force (PLAAF; Chinese: 中国人民解放军空军; pinyin: Zhōngguó Rénmín Jiěfàngjūn Kōngjūn), also referred to as the Chinese Air Force (中国空军) or the People's Air Force (人民空军), is an aerial service branch of the People's Liberation Army, the regular armed forces of the People's Republic of China. The PLAAF was officially established on 11 November 1949 and it is composed of five branches: aviation, ground-based air defense, radar, Airborne Corps and other support elements.[4]

People's Liberation Army Air Force
Emblem of the People's Liberation Army Air Force
Founded11 November 1949; 73 years ago (1949-11-11)[1]
Country People's Republic of China
TypeAir force
Role
Size400,000 active personnel (2023)[2]
4,000+ aircraft (2023)[3]
HeadquartersBeijing
Motto(s)为人民服务
("serve the people ")
Colors   Red and Blue
MarchMarch of the Chinese Air Force
Engagements
WebsiteOfficial website
Commanders
CommanderAir Force General Chang Dingqiu
Political CommissarAir Force General Guo Puxiao
Insignia
Roundel
Flag
Aircraft flown
BomberJH-7, H-6
Electronic
warfare
Tu-154, Shaanxi Y-8, Shaanxi Y-9, J-16D
FighterChengdu J-7, Shenyang J-8, Chengdu J-10, Shenyang J-11, Shenyang J-16, Chengdu J-20, Su-27, Su-30MKK, Su-35S
HelicopterHarbin Z-8, Harbin Z-9
Attack helicopterHarbin Z-19, CAIC Z-10
Utility helicopterHarbin Z-20
InterceptorShenyang J-8
TrainerHongdu L-15, Hongdu JL-8, JL-9
TransportXian Y-20, Shaanxi Y-9, Shaanxi Y-8, Xian Y-7, Il-76
TankerH-6U, Il-78
Chinese name
Simplified Chinese中国人民解放军空军
Traditional Chinese中國人民解放軍空軍
Literal meaningChina People Liberation Army Air Army
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinZhōngguó Rénmín Jiěfàngjūn Kōngjūn

The PLAAF first faced combat in the Korean War against the United States using primarily the Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-15 fighter aircraft, aircraft provided by the Soviet Union, which also assisted with the expansion of the Chinese aerospace industry. Changes in the organization of the PLAAF followed by modernization programs in the 1990s and increased technology development in the 21st century has created the J-20 stealth multirole fighter, the first of its kind for China.

History

Origins

Today's People's Liberation Army Air Force (PLAAF) traces its roots back to September 1924 when a small group of nine cadets from the still-young Chinese Communist Party graduated from Sun Yat-sen's military flight school in Guangzhou. Having only been founded three years prior in July 1921, the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) formed a united front with the nationalist Kuomintang (KMT) party against competing warlords in a bid to reunite a fractionalized China. The eighteen graduate pilots of the military flight school, under Sun's Guangzhou Revolutionary Government Aviation Bureau, included nine nationalist and nine communist pilots who were sent to the Soviet Union for two years of advanced flight training under the tutelage of the more experienced Soviet Air Force. Two of the CCP's graduates, Chang Qiankun and Wang Bi, continued to serve in the Soviet Air Force for fourteen years until, in September 1938, they returned to Dihua (now Ürümqi) as instructors. Chang and Wang would play instrumental roles in the founding of the PLAAF.[5]

In January 1941, as intensifying clashes between CCP and KMT forces ended the united front against invading Japanese forces, and despite having neither aircraft nor airfields, the CCP's Central Military Commission (CMC) established the Air Force Engineering School with Wang as commandant and Chang as head instructor. In May 1944, just over a year before the Japanese surrender to Allied forces, the CMC established an Aviation Section in Yan'an with Wang as its director and Chang as deputy director. Two years later in May 1946 and after the withdrawal of Japanese troops, the CMC established the Northeast Old Aviation School in Jilin. By 1949 the Aviation Section of the CMC had 560 trained personnel (125 pilots and 435 ground support specialists), purchased 435 aircraft from the Soviet Union, acquired 115 Nationalist aircraft, and operated seven military flight schools.[5]

Founding

The first organized air unit of the People's Liberation Army was formed in July 1949 at Beijing Nanyuan Airport (built and first operated under the Qing Dynasty) and operated American P-51 Mustangs, PT-19s, and British DH.98 Mosquitos.[6] The squadron had acquired the Western-made aircraft once donated to the KMT for use against the Japanese, through a series of airfield captures and nationalist defections.[7]

In March 1949, the CMC elevated its Aviation Section to the shortly-lived Aviation Bureau with Chang and Wang appointed as the bureau's director and political commissar, respectively. On 1 October 1949, the victorious communist forces established the People's Republic of China and, on 11 November 1949, the CMC dissolved its Aviation Section founding instead the People's Liberation Army Air Force. Initially manned by a variety of units from ground forces, the new PLAAF organized its headquarters (PLAAF HQ) in Beijing and organized administrative aviation divisions for each of the PLA's six military regions, later to each be named a Military Region Air Force (MRAF). The new organization, which was not yet seen as a service separate from the army, was headed by ground force commander Li Yalou with Xiao Hua (former ground force commander and political commissar) as the PLAAF's first political commissar.[5][6] Chang was appointed as a PLAAF deputy commander and as director of the PLAAF's Training Department while Wang was named deputy political commissar and director of the Aeronautical Engineering Department.[5]

In June 1950, the first PLAAF aviation unit, the 4th Composite Air Brigade (混成旅) was established in Nanjing based on the 30th Army's 90th Division and commanding the 10th, 11th and 12th Air Regiments. In the same year, the PLAAF created the 2nd and 3rd Composite Air Brigades. Although the 4th Composite Air Brigade would be renamed in 1950 to the PLAAF 4th Air Division, it would become the 1st Air Division in 1956 with the 2nd and 3rd Composite Air Brigades becoming the 2nd and 3rd Air Divisions, respectively.[5]

Korean War to the Sino-Soviet Split

 
PLAAF female pilots in 1952
 
PLAAF fighter pilots in 1967

The PLAAF expanded rapidly during the Korean War. Two brigades were created in 1950, but disbanded in the early 1950s and replaced by division; both had subordinate regiments.[8] During the war, 26 divisions and a smaller number of independent regiments and schools were created by personnel transfers from the army; the air force inherited the army's organization and was commanded by army officers.[9] By early 1954, there were 28 divisions, with 70 regiments, and five independent regiments operating 3000 aircraft.[8] The Soviets provided Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-15 aircraft (J-2 in Chinese service), training, and support for developing the domestic aviation industry. Shenyang Aircraft Corporation built the two-seat MiG-15UTI trainer as the JJ-2,[citation needed] and during the war manufactured various components to maintain the Soviet-built fighters. By 1956 the People's Republic was assembling licensed copies[10] of MiG-15s and eight years later was producing both the Shenyang J-5 (MiG-17) and the Shenyang J-6 (MiG-19) under license.[11]

The PLAAF emerged from the war as an air defense force. The main role was to support the army by achieving air superiority using fighters, radar, and ground-based weapons.[12] This was reinforced through the 1950s and 1960s when the PLAAF's main activities were skirmishing with the Republic of China Air Force near the Taiwan Strait, and intercepting American aircraft. The PLAAF was passive in applying offensive airpower due to the limited range of capabilities and political considerations.[13] PLAAF was used as a deterrence due to the political culture at the time. The Chinese leadership, in many instances, would cancel offensive bombing missions to prevent escalation, affecting the decision-making autonomy of the PLAAF.[14]

In 1960, Soviet engineers and advisors left China due to the Sino-Soviet split; although the Soviet Union granted licensed rights to MiG-15, MiG-17, MiG-19, MiG-21, Il-28, and Tu-16, China didn't retain the technical material or machinery as the Soviet advisory withdrew. China had to reverse-engineer aircraft and missile systems to set up production lines.[10] Internal political and economic chaos from the Cultural Revolution, the Great Leap Forward severely impacted the modernization and development of the PLAAF.[15]

The prioritization of the missile and nuclear weapon programs also removed necessary resources from the aviation industry, which markedly declined through 1963.[11] PLAAAF as a whole stagnated, in metrics such as flight safety, pilot education, training, and strategic planning. However, flight hours recovered around 1965 as China started to support North Vietnam and was involved in the Vietnam War. Due to difficult conditions, the accident rates raised from 0.249 to 0.6 per 10,000 sorties in 1965.[10]

Between January 1954 and 1971, 22 divisions were created for a total of 50.[8]

1970s to 1980s

In the 1970s, the Culture Revolution (1966-1976) continued to damage the PLAAF readiness, leading to devastating impacts on pilot training, maintenance operation, and logistics. All PLAAF technical and maintenance schools were closed for a prolonged time, halting nearly every activity besides pilot flights. Moreover, the Chinese aviation industrial base was vandalized heavily due to the political turmoil, with many aircraft development programs stretched out, and the quality control in factories wasn't sustained due to disruptions caused by Red Guards. Political fallouts from the Culture Revolution could still be felt by the leadership, and recovery only began in the 1980s.[16]

PLAAF leadership recognized the importance of modern airpower and the existing weakness of the force in the late 1980s.[17] After critical assessments, the 1985 reform led to force reduction, reorganization, and streamlining. Before the 1985 reorganization, the Air Force reportedly had four branches: air defense, ground attack, bombing, and independent air regiments.[18] In peacetime the Air Force Directorate, under the supervision of the PLA General Staff Department, controlled the Air Force through headquarters located with, or in communication with, each of the seven military region headquarters. In war, control of the Air Force probably reverted to the regional commanders. In 1987 it was not clear how the reorganization and the incorporation of air support elements into the group armies affected air force organization. The largest Air Force organizational unit was the division, which consisted of 17,000 personnel in three regiments. A typical air defense regiment had three squadrons of three flights; each flight had three or four aircraft. The Air Force also had 220,000 air defense personnel who controlled about 100 surface-to-air missile sites and over 16,000 AA guns. In addition, it had a large number of early-warning, ground-control-intercept, and air-base radars operated by specialized troops organized into at least twenty-two independent regiments.[citation needed]

In the 1980s, the Air Force made serious efforts to raise the educational level and improve the training of its pilots.[18] Superannuated pilots were retired or assigned to other duties. All new pilots were at least middle-school graduates. The time it took to train a qualified pilot capable of performing combat missions reportedly was reduced from four or five years to two years. The training emphasized raising technical and tactical skills in individual pilots and participation in combined-arms operations. Flight safety also increased.[citation needed]

From 1986 to 1988, each military region converted a division into a division-level transition training base (改装训练基地),[19] which replaced training regiments in operational divisions.[20]

In 1987 the Air Force had serious technological deficiencies — especially when compared with its principal threat, the Soviet Armed Forces — and had many needs that it could not satisfy.[21] It needed more advanced aircraft, better avionics, electronic countermeasures equipment, more powerful aircraft weaponry, a low-altitude surface-to-air missile, and better controlled antiaircraft artillery guns. Some progress was made in aircraft design with the incorporation of Western avionics into the Chengdu J-7 and Shenyang J-8, the development of refueling capabilities for the B-6D bomber and the A-5 attack fighter, increased aircraft all-weather capabilities, and the production of the HQ-2J high-altitude surface-to-air missile and the C-601 air-to-ship missile.[citation needed]

Although the PLAAF received significant support from Western nations in the 1980s when China was seen as a counterweight to Soviet power, this support ended in 1989 as a result of the Chinese crackdown on the Tiananmen protests of 1989 and the later collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991. After the fall of the USSR, the Russian Federation became China's principal arms supplier, to the extent that Chinese economic growth allowed Russia to sustain its aerospace industry.[citation needed]

1990s to 2000s

 
PLAAF airmen on parade during a full honors arrival ceremony in 2000

In the late 1980s and early 1990s, PLAAF still remained a large yet antiqued force. As of 1995, the air force consisted of approximately 4,500 combat aircraft based on the 1950s and 1960s technologies, which were approaching the end of their service life. The overall force strategy is defensive, with the primary objectives limited to protecting cities, airbases, economic and industrial centers, and important institutions and facilities. The air fleet continued to shrink, with RAND Corporation predicting PLAAF being halved by the early 2000s.[16] PLAAF leadership also lacked strategic options, given the severe constraints in China's budgets, manpower, and technology at the time. The force lacked joint operation capabilities, had no combat experience since 1979, and lacked command and control infrastructure to support offensive operations beyond the Chinese borders. The Chinese aviation industrial base was inadequate and weak, and China lacked the capacity to produce modern avionics, composites, turbofan engines, and integrated systems.[16]

Despite the difficulties, PLAAF was determined to introduce modern airpower and secure technological self-sufficiency.[16] The air force inducted Sukhoi Su-27, the most sophisticated fighter Soviets had at the time. The sales were approved in December 1990, with three fighters delivered to China before the disintegration of the Soviet Union in 1991.[22] Contract with Soviet Union and later Russia also included manufacture license for China to build the Su-27 domestically, which helped Chinese aviation industry to accumulate know-how and experience.[22] Other technology transfer and license agreements were also signed between China and countries such as Russia, France,[23] Israel,[24] which allowed Chinese access to many state-of-the-art technologies.[16] China and Western countries also made several attempted to modernize the aging Chinese fleet in the form of Peace Pearl program and Chengdu Super 7. However, the political fallout from the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests terminated some of these efforts.[25][26][23]

In the early 1990s, PLAAF continued to invest in domestic aircraft programs, including the J-10,[16] the Project Sabre II, and the Sino-Pakistani FC-1.[25][26] However, the concerns over the US possible intervention during Taiwan independence scenario in 1992 to 1993 pressurized PLAAF to build near-term combat capability by prioritizing procurement of foreign platforms, which led to the further induction of platforms such as Sukhoi Su-30 and S-300 PMU-1.[27]

At the same time, PLAAF leadership advocated for more active roles in the Chinese military but was sidelined by the PLA headquarters due to concerns over political reliability and a general lack of capabilities. PLAAF continued persuasive efforts, and their plans were eventually endorsed by the PLA leadership in the late 1990s and early 2000s.[17] In 1999, PLAAF set up a combined arms training base to conduct multi-force joint operations. In 2003, PLAAF began structural reforms and reduced the number of personnel by 200,000 (85% were officials), freeing up resources for the force overhaul. The leadership was consolidated to become more operationally efficient. Three dedicated training bases were established to provide research, testing, training, and combat support.[28] In 2004, PLAAF released the force reform concept "Strategic Air Force", aiming to reconstruct the PLAAF into an integrated fighting force capable of both offensive and defensive operations in air and space.[17] The 2004 reform included changes in doctrine, equipment, training, education, organizational structure, and strategic thinking.[17]

By 2005, PLAAF was in the process of modernizing force composition by retiring obsolete aircraft. The antiquated Shenyang J-6 fighters were completely phased out of the service, and the more competent Chengdu J-7 and Shenyang J-8 platforms were partially retired with the remaining fleet upgraded with improved technologies. The number of second and third-generation aircraft was reduced to about 1,000 planes.[27] Fighters of foreign and domestic origin with modern avionics and missiles began to enter the service more rapidly. From 2000 to 2004, PLAAF incorporated 95 home-built Shenyang J-11A with license,[29] acquired 76 Sukhoi Su-30MKK and 24 Su-30MK2 from Russia with improved composite material, weapons, and avionics akin to Sukhoi Su-35,[30] and negotiated the purchase of 38 Ilyushin Il-76 and Ilyushin Il-78 transport/tanker aircraft.[31] To replace the antiquated Nanchang Q-5 attacker, PLAAF introduced fighter-bomber Xi'an JH-7A with precision strike capabilities.[27] The homegrown Chengdu J-10 platform also matured into a highly capable, multirole fighter as PLAAF continued to accumulate experience in operating modern aircraft since the 1990s.[27] By the mid-2000s, PLAAF had grown familiar with precision-guided munitions, aerial refueling, AEW&C aircraft, and networked command&control systems.[27]

Several uncertainties troubled the PLAAF leadership, including China's inability to produce advanced jet engines, the lack of bombers to conduct long-range strike missions, and the dilemma between procuring foreign designs or supporting the homegrown defense industry that could only produce less capable ones.[27] Thus, generous resources were devoted to research and development, with every possible approach, including purchase, license, technology transfer, reverse-engineering, and intelligence gathering to absorb foreign technology and build up the domestic defense industry.[27][29] New home-built airframes emerged in the late 2000s, including CAIC Z-10 attack helicopter and KJ-2000 airborne early warning & control aircraft in 2003,[32][33] Shenyang J-11B air superiority fighter in 2006, Shaanxi Y-9 medium airlifter[34] and Shenyang J-15 carrier-born fighter in 2009, and Chengdu J-20 fifth-generation stealth fighter in 2010.[29] Other crucial aviation technologies that support the airframes, such as turbofan engines, advanced aerospace materials, full authority digital engine control (FADEC), integrated avionics, missile technologies, active electronically scanned array (AESA) radar, saw substantial progress in this decade.[35]

2010s

 
PLAAF pilots in 2018

In the 2010s, PLAAF began to transform expeditiously and emerged as one of the significant competitors in airpower. According to the US Air Force's National Air and Space Intelligence Center, PLAAF was projected to become one of the most capable air forces in 2020. PLAAF improved capabilities in several areas, including fighters, advanced missiles, early warning systems, and air defense systems; the force also started major reforms in training and doctrines.[36] PLAAF leadership realized the force was insufficient to counter US intervene in the Taiwan strait confrontations, thus invested heavily in a wider range of conventional capabilities to transition the PLAAF from a large, technologically inferior force to hold advantageous positions in both quality and quantity at its own geopolitical theater.[36]

In 2013, it was estimated that China had 400 modern fighters in the fourth-generation class, and the number of fourth-generation aircraft was projected to increase further with improvements in training and force compositions.[36] According to a 2015 Pentagon report, PLAAF had approximately 600 modern aircraft and phased out more outdated platforms.[37] The percentage of fourth-generation fighters raised from 30 percent in 2010 to 50 percent in 2015,[38] projecting a majority fourth-generation force structure in the near future.[39] The PLAAF also focused on developing long-range strike options with improved bomber platforms based on Xian H-6K,[39] long-range cruise missiles, as well as fielding more multirole aircraft such as Shenyang J-16.[37] In 2014, the Pentagon noted PLAAF was rapidly closing the gap in its training, equipment, and power projection capabilities with the United States.[40]

From 2014 to 2016, PLAAF intensified its joint operation effort with the PLA Navy, building up power projection and expeditionary strike capabilities with other service branches, and engaged in joint patrol missions with PLA Navy in East and South China Sea.[41] In 2015, PLA separated PLA Ground Force headquarters from the senior position, putting all service branches in the same echelon, thus ending the tradition of Army domination in PLA's command structure. A joint command structure under the newly reformed theater commands was established, improving inter-service support, command and control efficiency, and cross-service warfighting capability.[42] In 2016, PLA established People's Liberation Army Strategic Support Force, which stripped PLAAF's responsibilities in space and information domain, leaving the air force focused on air operations, air defense, electronic warfare, airborne early warning, and air-to-ground surface strike missions.[43] At the same time, PLAAF actively developed one of the most sophisticated integrated air defense systems, capable of providing air defense coverage beyond the coastline and borders.[43] In the same year, PLAAF general Ma Xiaotian announced that China was developing a new type of long-range bomber on the air force's open day,[44] which is later coined as the Xian H-20 stealth bomber.[45]

After the reform, analysts noted PLAAF's joint operation and integrated fighting capabilities were considerably improved.[46] In March 2017, PLAAF incorporated Chengdu J-20 stealth fighter into service[47] and formed the first combat unit in February 2018,[47] making China the second country in the world and the first in Asia to field an operational stealth aircraft.[48] Around the same time, PLAAF introduced PL-10 and PL-15 missiles to noticeably improved the PLAAF's air combat capability.[49] By 2019, aviation researchers believed that Chinese weapon platforms have reached approximate parity with Western equivalents,[50] and surpassed Russia in most aspects of aviation technology development and implementation.[51][52][53] In 2019 and 2020, PLAAF began to reform its pilot curriculum and transitional training programs, inducting advanced jet trainers and active-service fighters at dedicated training academies, ending the traditional practice of training pilot at operational units. The measure improved training efficiency and prevented distraction to the defense responsibilities of the active units.[54]

According to International Institute for Strategic Studies, PLAAF had an unprecedented military build-up between 2016 and 2022. The force successfully closed the gap with the West due to improved domestic production, introducing indigenously developed airframes, composite materials, turbofan engines, advanced avionics, and weapon systems. In six years, PLAAF incorporated over 600 fourth- and fifth-generation aircraft in more than 19 frontline combat brigades.[55] The modern Chengdu J-10C, Shenyang J-16, and Chengdu J-20 are all equipped with AESA radar systems, domestic WS-10 engines, standoff weapons, and long-range air-to-air missiles. PLAAF also made substantial progress with larger aircraft design and production in the form of Xian Y-20 and WS-20 engines.[55] In 2021, PLAAF announced the force had achieved the status of "Strategic Air Force". Though the self-claimed designation wasn't universally agreed upon, many analysts acknowledged the rapid modernization progress.[56] According to the Air University assessment in 2022, PLAAF was adjudged a strategic air force with the capabilities of long-distance power protection, maintaining combat readiness, and conducting global operations to protect Chinese interests.[57] In 2023, PLAAF planned to decommission all older Chengdu J-7 and Shenyang J-8 platforms, which completed the PLAAF's transition to an air fleet composed of only fourth-generation and fifth-generation combat aircraft.[58][59]

Personnel

Ranks and insignia

The ranks in the Chinese People's Liberation Army Air Force are similar to those of the Chinese Army, formally known as the People's Liberation Army Ground Force, except that those of the PLA Air Force are prefixed by 空军; Kōngjūn; 'Air Force'. See Ranks of the People's Liberation Army or the article on an individual rank for details on the evolution of rank and insignia in the PLAAF. This article primarily covers the existing ranks and insignia.

The markings of the PLAAF are a red star in front of a red band, very similar to the insignia of the Russian Air Force. The Red star contains the Chinese characters for eight and one,[60][61] representing August 1, 1927, the date of the formation of the PLA. PLAAF aircraft carry these markings on the fins as well.

Commanders

Structure

Headquarters

The highest leadership organization is PLAAF Headquarters (PLAAF HQ). PLAAF HQ's peacetime responsibilities are force generation, modernization, and operational control of some units like the Airborne Corps and the 34th Air Transport Division.[62] PLAAF HQ contains four first-level departments: the Staff (formerly Headquarters), Political Work (formerly Political), Logistics, and Equipment Department.[63][5]

The Staff Department (空军参谋部) manages the PLAAF organizational structure, personnel management, intelligence, communications, air traffic control, weather support, development of air force military theory, and air force education and safety. The Staff Department is lead by the chief of staff who is the "principal organizer and coordinator of military operations." The Staff Department's chief of staff has a number of deputy chiefs of staff. Previously known as the Headquarters Department, the post-2016 Staff Department maintains a number of subordinate bureaus () including the Operations Bureau, Information and Communications Bureau, Training Bureau, Ground-based Air Defense Bureau, Air Traffic Control Bureau, Pilot Recruitment Bureau, Flight Safety Bureau, Test Flight Bureau, Aviation Bureau, Confidential Bureau, Unit Management Bureau, and Planning and Organization Bureau.[5]

The Political Work Department (空军政治工作部), sometimes abbreviated PWD, is responsible for managing propaganda, security, political education, personnel records, civil-military relations, party discipline, party organizations within the PLAAF, and cultural activities to include song and dance troupes or public events. The Political Work Department is led by a director (主任) and at least two deputy directors (副主任). Subordinate to the department include bureaus such as a Cadre Bureau, Propaganda Bureau, and a Soldier and Civilian Personnel Bureau.[5]

The Logistics Department (空军后勤部), led by a director and political commissar, oversee the PLAAF's logistics to include transportation, materials, supplies, finance, medical care, and petroleum, oil and lubricants (POL). Since the 2016 reform, subordinate bureaus include a Finance Bureau, Transport and Delivery Bureau, Procurement and Supply Bureau, Air Force National Defense Engineering Development Command Bureau, Real Estate Management Bureau, Ordnance General-use Equipment Bureau, Military Facilities Construction Bureau, Combat Service Planning Bureau, Materials Bureau, and Audit Bureau.[5]

The Equipment Department (空军装备部), originally the Air Force Engineering Department, manages the PLAAF's cradle-to-death lifecycle including repair and maintenance of the branch's weapons systems and instruments. Led by a director and political commissar, the department leads bureaus to include the Comprehensive Planning Bureau, Airfield Support Bureau, Scientific Research and Procurement Bureau, Major Type/Model Bureau, Project Management Bureau, Equipment Purchasing Bureau, Testing and Inspection Bureau, Armament General-use Equipment Bureau, Flight Safety Bureau, and Aviation Equipment Bureau.[5]

Commands

Below PLAAF HQ are five Theater Command Air Forces (TCAF), successors of Military Region Air Forces (MRAFs) prior to 2016.[64]

Before 2003, MRAF had subordinate air corps and Bases which exercised direct control over units in their area of responsibility (AOR); MRAF only directly controlled fighter and ground attack divisions in the same province as MRAF headquarters (MRAF HQ). From 2004, leadership of units was consolidated in MRAF HQ, with air corps and Bases downgraded to command posts that acted on behalf of MRAF HQ.[65] From 2012 onwards, the command posts were mostly replaced by Bases that exercised command and control over units (brigades) in their AOR and conducted joint exercises.[66]

Below TCAF/MRAF and the air corps/command posts/Bases are corps, division, brigade, and regimental level units (部队).[65]

The first divisions in the 1950s was organized into a HQ and two or three regiments. In 1953, this was standardized to three regiments per division,[28] including one training regiment.[8] Regiments had three or four flight groups, each in turn made of three or four squadrons. Between 1964 and 1970, regiments were called groups.[28] In the late 1980s, operational squadrons lost their training regiments.[20] By 2010, many divisions had only two regiments.[19] In 2019, the bomber, transport, and specialized divisions had not been reorganized into brigades and remained under the control of PLAAF HQ and TCAF headquarters.[67]

Beginning in 2011, and in a similar process as the PLAGF, the PLAAF dissolved the majority of its air division headquarters changing previously subordinate air regiments to brigades and subordinating them directly under military region (now theater command) air forces. Brigades contain several subordinate flight groups; a flight group has one type of aircraft.[19] All fighter and ground attack divisions and regiments were reorganized into air force brigades, organized into a brigade HQ and the flight groups organized under it.[67]

Everything from battalions to squads are considered subunits (分队).[68]

Order of battle

Airbases

The PLAAF has over 150 air bases distributed across each theater command.[69]

Aerobatic display team

The August 1st (aerobatic team) is the first PLAAF aerobatics team. It was formed in 1962. Aircraft inventory of PLAAF August 1st Aerobatic Team includes the J-10 and it has previously flown the JJ-5 and J-7. The Sky Wing and Red Falcon air demonstration teams, which operate Nanchang CJ-6 and Hongdu JL-8 respectively, were established in 2011.


Equipment

The People's Liberation Army Air Force operates a large and varied fleet of some 4,000 aircraft, of which around 2,566 are combat aircraft (fighter, attack, and bombers).[70] According to FlightGlobal, China has the second-largest active combat aircraft fleet and the third-largest total aircraft fleet in the world.[71][72]

According to the International Institute for Strategic Studies, PLAAF combat pilots acquire an average of 100-150 flying hours annually.[73][74] For a list of aircraft no longer flown by the People's Liberation Army Air Force, see; List of historic aircraft of the People's Liberation Army Air Force. For aircraft and equipment of the Airborne Corps, see People's Liberation Army Air Force Airborne Corps#Equipment.

Current inventory

 
A Hongdu L-15 taxiing
 
An KJ-200 AEW aircraft in flight
 
A Sukhoi Su-30 over Lipetsk
 
A PLAAF Xian H-6K strategic bomber
Aircraft Origin Type Variant In service Notes
Combat Aircraft
Xian H-6 China strategic bomber 176[70] licensed variant of the Tupolev Tu-16
Xian JH-7 China fighter bomber 120[70]
Chengdu J-7 China fighter 489[70] 200 JJ-7’s provide conversion training
Sukhoi Su-27 Russia air superiority Su-27UBK 32[70]
Sukhoi Su-30 Russia multirole Su-30MKK 73[70]
Sukhoi Su-35 Russia air superiority Su-35S 24[70]
Shenyang J-8 China Interceptor J-8F/H 78[70] 48 JZ-8’s are used for reconnaissance
Chengdu J-10 China multirole J-10A/B/C/S 565[70]
Shenyang J-11 China air superiority J-11/B/BS 225[70]
Shenyang J-16 China strike fighter 250[70] 12 D variants provide radar jamming
Chengdu J-20 China stealth multirole 140[70]
AEW&C
Ilyushin Il-76 China AEW&C KJ-2000 4[70] Chinese radar installed on a Ilyushin Il-76 airframe
Shaanxi Y-8 China AEW&C KJ-200 4[70]
Shaanxi Y-9 China AEW&C KJ-500 20[70]
Reconnaissance
Challenger 850 Canada SIGINT 5[72]
Shaanxi Y-8 China surveillance 1[72]
Electronic Warfare
Shaanxi Y-8 China electronic warfare Y-8CB/DZ/G/XZ 14[70]
Shaanxi Y-9 China electronic warfare Y-9G/XZ 5[70]
Antonov An-30 Ukraine electronic warfare 3[72]
Tupolev Tu-154 Russia SIGINT / ELINT Tu-154M/D 4[70]
Maritime patrol
Boeing 737 United States patrol 2[70]
Shaanxi Y-8 China patrol 3[70]
Tanker
Ilyushin Il-78 Russia aerial refueling 3[70]
Xian H-6 China aerial refueling H-6U 10[70]
Transport
Shijiazhuang Y-5 China transport 70[70]
Xian Y-7 China transport Y-7H 41[70]
Shaanxi Y-8 China transport Y-8C 30[70]
Shaanxi Y-9 China transport 30[70]
Xian Y-20 China strategic airlifter / tanker 58[70]
Xian MA60 China transport 16[72]
Harbin Y-12 China transport 11[72]
Ilyushin Il-76 Russia strategic airlifter 20[70]
Tupolev Tu-154 Russia transport Tu-154M 8[70]
Helicopter
Mil Mi-8 Russia utility / transport Mi-17/171 6[70]
Harbin Z-9 China utility 20[70] licensed built variant of the AS365 Dauphin
Changhe Z-8 China transport 18[70]
Eurocopter AS332 France transport 6[70]
Eurocopter EC225 Multinational VIP transport 3[70]
Trainer aircraft
Hongdu JL-8 China / Pakistan jet trainer 350[70]
Guizhou JL-9 China jet trainer 30[70]
Hongdu JL-10 China jet trainer 50+[70]

Air defense

The People's Liberation Army Air Force operates a multi-layered, integrated air defense system combining radar stations, electronic warfare systems, early warning and surveillance zones, and air-missile defense systems of various ranges.[75]

Chinese air defense systems are highly distributed and mobile, in order to improve survivability against SEAD missions.[75][76]

Name Origin Type Variant In service Notes
SAM
HQ-9 China Long-range SAM HQ-9/9B 260[70] derivative of the S-300 missile system[77]
HQ-22 China Long-range SAM 130+[70]
S-300 Russia Long-range SAM S-300PMU/U1/U2 216[70]
S-400 Russia Long-range SAM 32[70]
HQ-12 China Medium-range SAM 150[70]
HQ-6 China Short-range SAM HQ-6A/6D 74[70]
HQ-7 China Short-range SAM 30[76]
Anti-aircraft gun
LD-2000[76] China Anti-aircraft gun
Oerlikon GDF Switzerland Anti-aircraft gun PG-99 1000[76]
AZP S-60 Soviet Union Anti-aircraft autocannon PG-59 1000

See also

References

Citations

  1. ^ "空军司令部的组建". January 23, 2015. from the original on July 11, 2016. Retrieved September 16, 2018. 中国空军网_蓝天回眸_空军简史
  2. ^ International Institute for Strategic Studies 2020, p. 264.
  3. ^ International Institute for Strategic Studies 2020, p. 265.
  4. ^ Rupprecht, Andreas (29 October 2018). Modern Chinese Warplanes:Chinese Air Force - Aircraft and Units. Harpia Publishing. p. 139. ISBN 978-09973092-6-3.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Allen, Kenneth W. (12 April 2021). "70 Years of the PLA Air Force" (PDF). China Aerospace Studies Institute.
  6. ^ a b Ken Allen, Chapter 9, "PLA Air Force Organization" 2007-09-29 at the Wayback Machine, The PLA as Organization, ed. James C. Mulvenon and Andrew N.D. Yang (Santa Monica, CA: RAND, 2002), 349.
  7. ^ Guo, Leo (1 August 2018). "North American P-51 Mustang in Communist Chinese Service". Plane Encyclopedia.
  8. ^ a b c d Trevethan (2019): pg. 8
  9. ^ Xiang (2012): pg. 73
  10. ^ a b c Allen, Kenneth W.; Krumel, Glenn; D. Pollack, Jonathan (1995). "China's Air Force Enters the 21st Century". RAND Corporation.
  11. ^ a b "A Country Study: China". Country Studies. Library of Congress: 584. from the original on 16 February 2017. Retrieved 5 August 2017.
  12. ^ Xiang (2012): pg. 73-74
  13. ^ Xiang (2012): pg. 74
  14. ^ Xiang (2012): pg. 76-77
  15. ^ Lumbering Forward: pg. 23
  16. ^ a b c d e f Kenneth W., Allen; D. Pollack, Jonathan; Krumel, Glenn. "China's Air Force: The Long March to Modernization". RAND Corporation.
  17. ^ a b c d Garafola, Cristina (25 May 2021). "Assessing 70 Years of China's PLA Air Force". The Diplomat.
  18. ^ a b "A Country Study: China". Country Studies. Library of Congress: 583. from the original on 16 February 2017. Retrieved 5 August 2017.
  19. ^ a b c Allen (2012): pg 104
  20. ^ a b Trevethan (2019): pg. 16
  21. ^ China: A Country Study, 585
  22. ^ a b "Final Gift From the Soviets: How China Received Three of the USSR's Top Fighters Weeks Before the Superpower Collapsed". military watch magazine. 14 August 2022.
  23. ^ a b Bräuner, Oliver (2015). "Western Arms Exports to China" (PDF). SIPRI.
  24. ^ Evron, Yoram (2013). "Between Beijing and Washington: Israel's Technology Transfers to China". Journal of East Asian Studies. pp. 503–28.
  25. ^ a b "CAC FC-1 Xiaolong". Jane's All the World's Aircraft. Jane's Information Group. 10 March 2009.
  26. ^ a b Wood, Peter; Stewart, Robert (26 September 2019). China's Aviation Industry: Lumbering Forward (PDF). United States Air Force Air University China Aerospace Studies Institute. ISBN 9781082740404.
  27. ^ a b c d e f g Saunders, Phillip C.; Quam, Erik (2007). "The Future Force Structure of the Chinese Air Force" (PDF). Asia Policy. 4.
  28. ^ a b c Trevethan (2019): pg. 9
  29. ^ a b c Saunders, Phillip C.; Wiseman, Joshua K. (December 2011). "Buy, Build, or Steal: China's Quest for Advanced Military Aviation Technologies" (PDF). Chinese Strategic Perspectives. Institute for National Strategic Studies, National Defense University (4).
  30. ^ "Su-30MKK fighter jet in Chinese PLAAF". AirForceWorld.com. 5 June 2013. from the original on 1 May 2013. Retrieved 6 June 2013.
  31. ^ "Il-76 transports and Il-78 tankers top $1.5bn Russia-China arms deal". FlightGlobal. 13 September 2005.
  32. ^ "Z-10". Army Recongniation.
  33. ^ Kopp, Carlo (June 2011). "PLA-AF Airborne Early Warning & Control Programs". Air Power Australia.
  34. ^ Fisher, Richard D., Jr. (2008). China's Military Modernization: Building for Regional and Global Reach. Greenwood. pp. 180–81. ISBN 978-0-275-99486-0.
  35. ^ Cliff, Roger (21 May 2021). China’s Development of Advanced Fighter Technology (PDF) (Report). International Security Industry Council Japan.
  36. ^ a b c Grant, Rebecca (1 January 2013). "Meet the New PLAAF". Air & Space Forces Magazine. Retrieved 17 October 2022.
  37. ^ a b (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 14 May 2015.
  38. ^ Urchick, Daniel (26 July 2016). "A 2016 Assessment of the Growth in PLAAF Capabilities". Small Wars Journal.
  39. ^ a b Keck, Zachary (6 July 2014). "China's Air Force Modernization: 'Unprecedented in History'". The Diplomat.
  40. ^ Anthony H, Cordesman; Kendall, Joseph (2016). "Chinese Strategy and Military Modernization in 2016: A Comparative Analysis". Center for Strategic and International Studies.
  41. ^ Cozad, Mark; Beauchamp-Mustafaga, Nathan (2017). "People's Liberation Army Air Force Operations over Water". RAND Corporation.
  42. ^ L. Garafola, Cristina (23 September 2016). "People's Liberation Army Reforms and Their Ramifications". Rand Corporation.
  43. ^ a b "CSAF Announces CASI Toolkit for China". China Aerospace Studies Institute. Air University.
  44. ^ "China says developing new type of long-range bomber". Reuters. Reuters. 2 September 2016.
  45. ^ Trevithick, Joseph (15 October 2018). "China Reportedly Plans To Unveil H-20 Stealth Bomber At Air Force Anniversary Parade In 2019". The Drive.
  46. ^ Lin, Ying Yu (13 January 2018). "The Early Returns of China's Military Reforms". The Diplomat.
  47. ^ a b Dominguez, Gabriel (2 February 2018). . Jane's 360. Archived from the original on 2 December 2018.
  48. ^ Seidel, Jamie (20 October 2017). "With the J20 stealth fighter in fully operation service, China leaps ahead in Asian arms race". Australian News. from the original on 26 February 2018.
  49. ^ "Chinese and Russian air-launched weapons: a test for Western air dominance". International Institute for Strategic Studies. February 2018.
  50. ^ Bronk, Justin (October 2020). Russian and Chinese Combat Air Trends: Current Capabilities and Future Threat Outlook (PDF) (Report). Whitehall Report. Vol. 3–20. London: Royal United Services Institute for Defence and Security Studies. ISSN 1750-9432.
  51. ^ Roblin, Sebastien (10 November 2020). "Why China's Latest Jets Are Surpassing Russia's Top Fighters". Forbes. from the original on 26 October 2021. Retrieved 26 October 2021.
  52. ^ Ait, Abraham (5 April 2019). "Does Russian Military Aviation Have Anything Left to Offer China?". The Diplomat. from the original on 26 October 2021. Retrieved 26 October 2021.
  53. ^ Waldron, Greg (10 November 2020). "China surpassing Russia in airpower technology: RUSI". FlightGlobal. from the original on 23 September 2021. Retrieved 26 October 2021.
  54. ^ Solen, Derek (3 November 2021). "PLA Air Force Shifts Transition Training to the Schoolhouse". China Aerospace Studies Institute.
  55. ^ a b Barrie, Douglas (21 February 2023). "China's air force modernisation: gaining pace". International Institute for Strategic Studies.
  56. ^ Huang, Kristin (3 September 2021). "Chinese military says it has a strategic air force – experts disagree". South China Morning Post.
  57. ^ Li, Xiaobing (1 August 2022). "The Dragon's Wing: The People's Liberation Army Air Force's Strategy". United States Air Force Air University.
  58. ^ Peck, Michael (20 February 2023). "China is getting rid of its 'grandpa' fighter jets, but they may make a comeback for a one-way mission against Taiwan". Insider.
  59. ^ Chan, Minnie (11 July 2021). "Why has China's PLA started sending 'grandpa fighter jets' to test Taiwan's air defences?". South China Morning Post.
  60. ^ . Archived from the original on 27 October 2018. Retrieved 25 December 2014.
  61. ^ "Roundels of China". from the original on 14 September 2015. Retrieved 25 December 2014.
  62. ^ Allen (2012): pg 109
  63. ^ Allen (2012): pg 99
  64. ^ Trevethan (2019): pg. 6
  65. ^ a b Trevethan (2019): pg. 11
  66. ^ Trevethan (2019): pg. 11-12
  67. ^ a b Trevethan (2019): pg. 1
  68. ^ Allen (2012): pg 109-110
  69. ^ "Meet the New PLAAF". Air & Space Forces Magazine. Retrieved 17 October 2022.
  70. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq "6 Asia". The Military Balance 2023. The International Institute for Strategic Studies. London: Routledge. 15 February 2023. doi:10.4324/9781003400226. ISBN 9781003400226.
  71. ^ Embraer, In association with. "2023 World Air Forces directory". Flight Global. Retrieved 3 December 2022.
  72. ^ a b c d e f "World Air Forces 2023". Flight Global. Flightglobal Insight. 2022. Retrieved 8 March 2023.
  73. ^ International Institute for Strategic Studies 2014, p. 236.
  74. ^ International Institute for Strategic Studies: The Military Balance 2022, p.261
  75. ^ a b Bronk, Justin (15 January 2020). "Modern Russian and Chinese Integrated Air Defence Systems: The Nature of the Threat, Growth Trajectory and Western Options". Royal United Services Institute.
  76. ^ a b c d International Institute for Strategic Studies 2021, p. 255.
  77. ^ Bronk, Justin (January 2020). Modern Russian and Chinese Integrated Air Defence Systems: The Nature of the Threat, Growth Trajectory and Western Options (Report). Royal United Services Institute. p. 20. Retrieved 11 December 2021.

Sources

Further reading

  • Andreas Rupprecht and Tom Cooper: Modern Chinese Warplanes, Combat Aircraft and Units of the Chinese Air Force and Naval Aviation, Harpia Publishing (2012), ISBN 0985455403, ISBN 978-0985455408
  • Gordon, Yefim and Komissarov, Dmitry. Chinese Aircraft. Hikoki Publications. Manchester. 2008. ISBN 978-1-902109-04-6

External links

  • Articles on the Chinese military, from Sinodefence.com
  • Regional Capability Growth on APA
  • PLA Airbase Page on APA
  • (Swedish)
  • USAF Air University, The PLAAF in 2010

people, liberation, army, force, chinese, force, redirects, here, force, republic, china, republic, china, force, other, forces, associated, with, that, name, chinese, force, disambiguation, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, thes. Chinese Air Force redirects here For the air force of the Republic of China see Republic of China Air Force For other air forces associated with that name see Chinese Air Force disambiguation This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages Some of this article s listed sources may not be reliable Please help this article by looking for better more reliable sources Unreliable citations may be challenged or deleted January 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article s lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points Please consider expanding the lead to provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article August 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message The People s Liberation Army Air Force PLAAF Chinese 中国人民解放军空军 pinyin Zhōngguo Renmin Jiefangjun Kōngjun also referred to as the Chinese Air Force 中国空军 or the People s Air Force 人民空军 is an aerial service branch of the People s Liberation Army the regular armed forces of the People s Republic of China The PLAAF was officially established on 11 November 1949 and it is composed of five branches aviation ground based air defense radar Airborne Corps and other support elements 4 People s Liberation Army Air ForceEmblem of the People s Liberation Army Air ForceFounded11 November 1949 73 years ago 1949 11 11 1 Country People s Republic of ChinaTypeAir forceRoleAerial warfareAirborne warfareAir defenseSize400 000 active personnel 2023 2 4 000 aircraft 2023 3 HeadquartersBeijingMotto s 为人民服务 serve the people Colors Red and BlueMarchMarch of the Chinese Air ForceEngagementsKorean WarSino Vietnamese WarWebsiteOfficial websiteCommandersCommanderAir Force General Chang DingqiuPolitical CommissarAir Force General Guo PuxiaoInsigniaRoundelFlagAircraft flownBomberJH 7 H 6ElectronicwarfareTu 154 Shaanxi Y 8 Shaanxi Y 9 J 16DFighterChengdu J 7 Shenyang J 8 Chengdu J 10 Shenyang J 11 Shenyang J 16 Chengdu J 20 Su 27 Su 30MKK Su 35SHelicopterHarbin Z 8 Harbin Z 9Attack helicopterHarbin Z 19 CAIC Z 10Utility helicopterHarbin Z 20InterceptorShenyang J 8TrainerHongdu L 15 Hongdu JL 8 JL 9TransportXian Y 20 Shaanxi Y 9 Shaanxi Y 8 Xian Y 7 Il 76TankerH 6U Il 78Chinese nameSimplified Chinese中国人民解放军空军Traditional Chinese中國人民解放軍空軍Literal meaningChina People Liberation Army Air ArmyTranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinZhōngguo Renmin Jiefangjun Kōngjun The PLAAF first faced combat in the Korean War against the United States using primarily the Mikoyan Gurevich MiG 15 fighter aircraft aircraft provided by the Soviet Union which also assisted with the expansion of the Chinese aerospace industry Changes in the organization of the PLAAF followed by modernization programs in the 1990s and increased technology development in the 21st century has created the J 20 stealth multirole fighter the first of its kind for China Contents 1 History 1 1 Origins 1 2 Founding 1 3 Korean War to the Sino Soviet Split 1 4 1970s to 1980s 1 5 1990s to 2000s 1 6 2010s 2 Personnel 2 1 Ranks and insignia 2 2 Commanders 3 Structure 3 1 Headquarters 3 2 Commands 3 3 Order of battle 3 4 Airbases 3 5 Aerobatic display team 4 Equipment 4 1 Current inventory 4 2 Air defense 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Citations 6 2 Sources 7 Further reading 8 External linksHistory EditFurther information History of the People s Liberation Army and Republic of China Air Force Origins Edit Today s People s Liberation Army Air Force PLAAF traces its roots back to September 1924 when a small group of nine cadets from the still young Chinese Communist Party graduated from Sun Yat sen s military flight school in Guangzhou Having only been founded three years prior in July 1921 the Chinese Communist Party CCP formed a united front with the nationalist Kuomintang KMT party against competing warlords in a bid to reunite a fractionalized China The eighteen graduate pilots of the military flight school under Sun s Guangzhou Revolutionary Government Aviation Bureau included nine nationalist and nine communist pilots who were sent to the Soviet Union for two years of advanced flight training under the tutelage of the more experienced Soviet Air Force Two of the CCP s graduates Chang Qiankun and Wang Bi continued to serve in the Soviet Air Force for fourteen years until in September 1938 they returned to Dihua now Urumqi as instructors Chang and Wang would play instrumental roles in the founding of the PLAAF 5 In January 1941 as intensifying clashes between CCP and KMT forces ended the united front against invading Japanese forces and despite having neither aircraft nor airfields the CCP s Central Military Commission CMC established the Air Force Engineering School with Wang as commandant and Chang as head instructor In May 1944 just over a year before the Japanese surrender to Allied forces the CMC established an Aviation Section in Yan an with Wang as its director and Chang as deputy director Two years later in May 1946 and after the withdrawal of Japanese troops the CMC established the Northeast Old Aviation School in Jilin By 1949 the Aviation Section of the CMC had 560 trained personnel 125 pilots and 435 ground support specialists purchased 435 aircraft from the Soviet Union acquired 115 Nationalist aircraft and operated seven military flight schools 5 Founding Edit The first organized air unit of the People s Liberation Army was formed in July 1949 at Beijing Nanyuan Airport built and first operated under the Qing Dynasty and operated American P 51 Mustangs PT 19s and British DH 98 Mosquitos 6 The squadron had acquired the Western made aircraft once donated to the KMT for use against the Japanese through a series of airfield captures and nationalist defections 7 In March 1949 the CMC elevated its Aviation Section to the shortly lived Aviation Bureau with Chang and Wang appointed as the bureau s director and political commissar respectively On 1 October 1949 the victorious communist forces established the People s Republic of China and on 11 November 1949 the CMC dissolved its Aviation Section founding instead the People s Liberation Army Air Force Initially manned by a variety of units from ground forces the new PLAAF organized its headquarters PLAAF HQ in Beijing and organized administrative aviation divisions for each of the PLA s six military regions later to each be named a Military Region Air Force MRAF The new organization which was not yet seen as a service separate from the army was headed by ground force commander Li Yalou with Xiao Hua former ground force commander and political commissar as the PLAAF s first political commissar 5 6 Chang was appointed as a PLAAF deputy commander and as director of the PLAAF s Training Department while Wang was named deputy political commissar and director of the Aeronautical Engineering Department 5 In June 1950 the first PLAAF aviation unit the 4th Composite Air Brigade 混成旅 was established in Nanjing based on the 30th Army s 90th Division and commanding the 10th 11th and 12th Air Regiments In the same year the PLAAF created the 2nd and 3rd Composite Air Brigades Although the 4th Composite Air Brigade would be renamed in 1950 to the PLAAF 4th Air Division it would become the 1st Air Division in 1956 with the 2nd and 3rd Composite Air Brigades becoming the 2nd and 3rd Air Divisions respectively 5 Korean War to the Sino Soviet Split Edit PLAAF female pilots in 1952 PLAAF fighter pilots in 1967 The PLAAF expanded rapidly during the Korean War Two brigades were created in 1950 but disbanded in the early 1950s and replaced by division both had subordinate regiments 8 During the war 26 divisions and a smaller number of independent regiments and schools were created by personnel transfers from the army the air force inherited the army s organization and was commanded by army officers 9 By early 1954 there were 28 divisions with 70 regiments and five independent regiments operating 3000 aircraft 8 The Soviets provided Mikoyan Gurevich MiG 15 aircraft J 2 in Chinese service training and support for developing the domestic aviation industry Shenyang Aircraft Corporation built the two seat MiG 15UTI trainer as the JJ 2 citation needed and during the war manufactured various components to maintain the Soviet built fighters By 1956 the People s Republic was assembling licensed copies 10 of MiG 15s and eight years later was producing both the Shenyang J 5 MiG 17 and the Shenyang J 6 MiG 19 under license 11 The PLAAF emerged from the war as an air defense force The main role was to support the army by achieving air superiority using fighters radar and ground based weapons 12 This was reinforced through the 1950s and 1960s when the PLAAF s main activities were skirmishing with the Republic of China Air Force near the Taiwan Strait and intercepting American aircraft The PLAAF was passive in applying offensive airpower due to the limited range of capabilities and political considerations 13 PLAAF was used as a deterrence due to the political culture at the time The Chinese leadership in many instances would cancel offensive bombing missions to prevent escalation affecting the decision making autonomy of the PLAAF 14 In 1960 Soviet engineers and advisors left China due to the Sino Soviet split although the Soviet Union granted licensed rights to MiG 15 MiG 17 MiG 19 MiG 21 Il 28 and Tu 16 China didn t retain the technical material or machinery as the Soviet advisory withdrew China had to reverse engineer aircraft and missile systems to set up production lines 10 Internal political and economic chaos from the Cultural Revolution the Great Leap Forward severely impacted the modernization and development of the PLAAF 15 The prioritization of the missile and nuclear weapon programs also removed necessary resources from the aviation industry which markedly declined through 1963 11 PLAAAF as a whole stagnated in metrics such as flight safety pilot education training and strategic planning However flight hours recovered around 1965 as China started to support North Vietnam and was involved in the Vietnam War Due to difficult conditions the accident rates raised from 0 249 to 0 6 per 10 000 sorties in 1965 10 Between January 1954 and 1971 22 divisions were created for a total of 50 8 1970s to 1980s Edit In the 1970s the Culture Revolution 1966 1976 continued to damage the PLAAF readiness leading to devastating impacts on pilot training maintenance operation and logistics All PLAAF technical and maintenance schools were closed for a prolonged time halting nearly every activity besides pilot flights Moreover the Chinese aviation industrial base was vandalized heavily due to the political turmoil with many aircraft development programs stretched out and the quality control in factories wasn t sustained due to disruptions caused by Red Guards Political fallouts from the Culture Revolution could still be felt by the leadership and recovery only began in the 1980s 16 PLAAF leadership recognized the importance of modern airpower and the existing weakness of the force in the late 1980s 17 After critical assessments the 1985 reform led to force reduction reorganization and streamlining Before the 1985 reorganization the Air Force reportedly had four branches air defense ground attack bombing and independent air regiments 18 In peacetime the Air Force Directorate under the supervision of the PLA General Staff Department controlled the Air Force through headquarters located with or in communication with each of the seven military region headquarters In war control of the Air Force probably reverted to the regional commanders In 1987 it was not clear how the reorganization and the incorporation of air support elements into the group armies affected air force organization The largest Air Force organizational unit was the division which consisted of 17 000 personnel in three regiments A typical air defense regiment had three squadrons of three flights each flight had three or four aircraft The Air Force also had 220 000 air defense personnel who controlled about 100 surface to air missile sites and over 16 000 AA guns In addition it had a large number of early warning ground control intercept and air base radars operated by specialized troops organized into at least twenty two independent regiments citation needed In the 1980s the Air Force made serious efforts to raise the educational level and improve the training of its pilots 18 Superannuated pilots were retired or assigned to other duties All new pilots were at least middle school graduates The time it took to train a qualified pilot capable of performing combat missions reportedly was reduced from four or five years to two years The training emphasized raising technical and tactical skills in individual pilots and participation in combined arms operations Flight safety also increased citation needed From 1986 to 1988 each military region converted a division into a division level transition training base 改装训练基地 19 which replaced training regiments in operational divisions 20 In 1987 the Air Force had serious technological deficiencies especially when compared with its principal threat the Soviet Armed Forces and had many needs that it could not satisfy 21 It needed more advanced aircraft better avionics electronic countermeasures equipment more powerful aircraft weaponry a low altitude surface to air missile and better controlled antiaircraft artillery guns Some progress was made in aircraft design with the incorporation of Western avionics into the Chengdu J 7 and Shenyang J 8 the development of refueling capabilities for the B 6D bomber and the A 5 attack fighter increased aircraft all weather capabilities and the production of the HQ 2J high altitude surface to air missile and the C 601 air to ship missile citation needed Although the PLAAF received significant support from Western nations in the 1980s when China was seen as a counterweight to Soviet power this support ended in 1989 as a result of the Chinese crackdown on the Tiananmen protests of 1989 and the later collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 After the fall of the USSR the Russian Federation became China s principal arms supplier to the extent that Chinese economic growth allowed Russia to sustain its aerospace industry citation needed 1990s to 2000s Edit PLAAF airmen on parade during a full honors arrival ceremony in 2000 In the late 1980s and early 1990s PLAAF still remained a large yet antiqued force As of 1995 the air force consisted of approximately 4 500 combat aircraft based on the 1950s and 1960s technologies which were approaching the end of their service life The overall force strategy is defensive with the primary objectives limited to protecting cities airbases economic and industrial centers and important institutions and facilities The air fleet continued to shrink with RAND Corporation predicting PLAAF being halved by the early 2000s 16 PLAAF leadership also lacked strategic options given the severe constraints in China s budgets manpower and technology at the time The force lacked joint operation capabilities had no combat experience since 1979 and lacked command and control infrastructure to support offensive operations beyond the Chinese borders The Chinese aviation industrial base was inadequate and weak and China lacked the capacity to produce modern avionics composites turbofan engines and integrated systems 16 Despite the difficulties PLAAF was determined to introduce modern airpower and secure technological self sufficiency 16 The air force inducted Sukhoi Su 27 the most sophisticated fighter Soviets had at the time The sales were approved in December 1990 with three fighters delivered to China before the disintegration of the Soviet Union in 1991 22 Contract with Soviet Union and later Russia also included manufacture license for China to build the Su 27 domestically which helped Chinese aviation industry to accumulate know how and experience 22 Other technology transfer and license agreements were also signed between China and countries such as Russia France 23 Israel 24 which allowed Chinese access to many state of the art technologies 16 China and Western countries also made several attempted to modernize the aging Chinese fleet in the form of Peace Pearl program and Chengdu Super 7 However the political fallout from the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests terminated some of these efforts 25 26 23 In the early 1990s PLAAF continued to invest in domestic aircraft programs including the J 10 16 the Project Sabre II and the Sino Pakistani FC 1 25 26 However the concerns over the US possible intervention during Taiwan independence scenario in 1992 to 1993 pressurized PLAAF to build near term combat capability by prioritizing procurement of foreign platforms which led to the further induction of platforms such as Sukhoi Su 30 and S 300 PMU 1 27 At the same time PLAAF leadership advocated for more active roles in the Chinese military but was sidelined by the PLA headquarters due to concerns over political reliability and a general lack of capabilities PLAAF continued persuasive efforts and their plans were eventually endorsed by the PLA leadership in the late 1990s and early 2000s 17 In 1999 PLAAF set up a combined arms training base to conduct multi force joint operations In 2003 PLAAF began structural reforms and reduced the number of personnel by 200 000 85 were officials freeing up resources for the force overhaul The leadership was consolidated to become more operationally efficient Three dedicated training bases were established to provide research testing training and combat support 28 In 2004 PLAAF released the force reform concept Strategic Air Force aiming to reconstruct the PLAAF into an integrated fighting force capable of both offensive and defensive operations in air and space 17 The 2004 reform included changes in doctrine equipment training education organizational structure and strategic thinking 17 By 2005 PLAAF was in the process of modernizing force composition by retiring obsolete aircraft The antiquated Shenyang J 6 fighters were completely phased out of the service and the more competent Chengdu J 7 and Shenyang J 8 platforms were partially retired with the remaining fleet upgraded with improved technologies The number of second and third generation aircraft was reduced to about 1 000 planes 27 Fighters of foreign and domestic origin with modern avionics and missiles began to enter the service more rapidly From 2000 to 2004 PLAAF incorporated 95 home built Shenyang J 11A with license 29 acquired 76 Sukhoi Su 30MKK and 24 Su 30MK2 from Russia with improved composite material weapons and avionics akin to Sukhoi Su 35 30 and negotiated the purchase of 38 Ilyushin Il 76 and Ilyushin Il 78 transport tanker aircraft 31 To replace the antiquated Nanchang Q 5 attacker PLAAF introduced fighter bomber Xi an JH 7A with precision strike capabilities 27 The homegrown Chengdu J 10 platform also matured into a highly capable multirole fighter as PLAAF continued to accumulate experience in operating modern aircraft since the 1990s 27 By the mid 2000s PLAAF had grown familiar with precision guided munitions aerial refueling AEW amp C aircraft and networked command amp control systems 27 Several uncertainties troubled the PLAAF leadership including China s inability to produce advanced jet engines the lack of bombers to conduct long range strike missions and the dilemma between procuring foreign designs or supporting the homegrown defense industry that could only produce less capable ones 27 Thus generous resources were devoted to research and development with every possible approach including purchase license technology transfer reverse engineering and intelligence gathering to absorb foreign technology and build up the domestic defense industry 27 29 New home built airframes emerged in the late 2000s including CAIC Z 10 attack helicopter and KJ 2000 airborne early warning amp control aircraft in 2003 32 33 Shenyang J 11B air superiority fighter in 2006 Shaanxi Y 9 medium airlifter 34 and Shenyang J 15 carrier born fighter in 2009 and Chengdu J 20 fifth generation stealth fighter in 2010 29 Other crucial aviation technologies that support the airframes such as turbofan engines advanced aerospace materials full authority digital engine control FADEC integrated avionics missile technologies active electronically scanned array AESA radar saw substantial progress in this decade 35 2010s Edit PLAAF pilots in 2018 In the 2010s PLAAF began to transform expeditiously and emerged as one of the significant competitors in airpower According to the US Air Force s National Air and Space Intelligence Center PLAAF was projected to become one of the most capable air forces in 2020 PLAAF improved capabilities in several areas including fighters advanced missiles early warning systems and air defense systems the force also started major reforms in training and doctrines 36 PLAAF leadership realized the force was insufficient to counter US intervene in the Taiwan strait confrontations thus invested heavily in a wider range of conventional capabilities to transition the PLAAF from a large technologically inferior force to hold advantageous positions in both quality and quantity at its own geopolitical theater 36 In 2013 it was estimated that China had 400 modern fighters in the fourth generation class and the number of fourth generation aircraft was projected to increase further with improvements in training and force compositions 36 According to a 2015 Pentagon report PLAAF had approximately 600 modern aircraft and phased out more outdated platforms 37 The percentage of fourth generation fighters raised from 30 percent in 2010 to 50 percent in 2015 38 projecting a majority fourth generation force structure in the near future 39 The PLAAF also focused on developing long range strike options with improved bomber platforms based on Xian H 6K 39 long range cruise missiles as well as fielding more multirole aircraft such as Shenyang J 16 37 In 2014 the Pentagon noted PLAAF was rapidly closing the gap in its training equipment and power projection capabilities with the United States 40 From 2014 to 2016 PLAAF intensified its joint operation effort with the PLA Navy building up power projection and expeditionary strike capabilities with other service branches and engaged in joint patrol missions with PLA Navy in East and South China Sea 41 In 2015 PLA separated PLA Ground Force headquarters from the senior position putting all service branches in the same echelon thus ending the tradition of Army domination in PLA s command structure A joint command structure under the newly reformed theater commands was established improving inter service support command and control efficiency and cross service warfighting capability 42 In 2016 PLA established People s Liberation Army Strategic Support Force which stripped PLAAF s responsibilities in space and information domain leaving the air force focused on air operations air defense electronic warfare airborne early warning and air to ground surface strike missions 43 At the same time PLAAF actively developed one of the most sophisticated integrated air defense systems capable of providing air defense coverage beyond the coastline and borders 43 In the same year PLAAF general Ma Xiaotian announced that China was developing a new type of long range bomber on the air force s open day 44 which is later coined as the Xian H 20 stealth bomber 45 After the reform analysts noted PLAAF s joint operation and integrated fighting capabilities were considerably improved 46 In March 2017 PLAAF incorporated Chengdu J 20 stealth fighter into service 47 and formed the first combat unit in February 2018 47 making China the second country in the world and the first in Asia to field an operational stealth aircraft 48 Around the same time PLAAF introduced PL 10 and PL 15 missiles to noticeably improved the PLAAF s air combat capability 49 By 2019 aviation researchers believed that Chinese weapon platforms have reached approximate parity with Western equivalents 50 and surpassed Russia in most aspects of aviation technology development and implementation 51 52 53 In 2019 and 2020 PLAAF began to reform its pilot curriculum and transitional training programs inducting advanced jet trainers and active service fighters at dedicated training academies ending the traditional practice of training pilot at operational units The measure improved training efficiency and prevented distraction to the defense responsibilities of the active units 54 According to International Institute for Strategic Studies PLAAF had an unprecedented military build up between 2016 and 2022 The force successfully closed the gap with the West due to improved domestic production introducing indigenously developed airframes composite materials turbofan engines advanced avionics and weapon systems In six years PLAAF incorporated over 600 fourth and fifth generation aircraft in more than 19 frontline combat brigades 55 The modern Chengdu J 10C Shenyang J 16 and Chengdu J 20 are all equipped with AESA radar systems domestic WS 10 engines standoff weapons and long range air to air missiles PLAAF also made substantial progress with larger aircraft design and production in the form of Xian Y 20 and WS 20 engines 55 In 2021 PLAAF announced the force had achieved the status of Strategic Air Force Though the self claimed designation wasn t universally agreed upon many analysts acknowledged the rapid modernization progress 56 According to the Air University assessment in 2022 PLAAF was adjudged a strategic air force with the capabilities of long distance power protection maintaining combat readiness and conducting global operations to protect Chinese interests 57 In 2023 PLAAF planned to decommission all older Chengdu J 7 and Shenyang J 8 platforms which completed the PLAAF s transition to an air fleet composed of only fourth generation and fifth generation combat aircraft 58 59 Personnel EditRanks and insignia Edit Main article Ranks of the People s Liberation Army Air Force The ranks in the Chinese People s Liberation Army Air Force are similar to those of the Chinese Army formally known as the People s Liberation Army Ground Force except that those of the PLA Air Force are prefixed by 空军 Kōngjun Air Force See Ranks of the People s Liberation Army or the article on an individual rank for details on the evolution of rank and insignia in the PLAAF This article primarily covers the existing ranks and insignia The markings of the PLAAF are a red star in front of a red band very similar to the insignia of the Russian Air Force The Red star contains the Chinese characters for eight and one 60 61 representing August 1 1927 the date of the formation of the PLA PLAAF aircraft carry these markings on the fins as well Commanders Edit Liu Yalou October 1949 May 1965 Wu Faxian May 1965 September 1971 Ma Ning May 1973 February 1977 Zhang Tingfa April 1977 July 1985 Wang Hai July 1985 November 1992 Cao Shuangming November 1992 October 1994 Yu Zhenwu October 1994 November 1996 Liu Shunyao November 1996 May 2002 Qiao Qingchen May 2002 September 2007 Xu Qiliang September 2007 October 2012 Ma Xiaotian October 2012 August 2017 Ding Laihang August 2017 September 2021 Chang Dingqiu September 2021 present Structure EditHeadquarters Edit The highest leadership organization is PLAAF Headquarters PLAAF HQ PLAAF HQ s peacetime responsibilities are force generation modernization and operational control of some units like the Airborne Corps and the 34th Air Transport Division 62 PLAAF HQ contains four first level departments the Staff formerly Headquarters Political Work formerly Political Logistics and Equipment Department 63 5 The Staff Department 空军参谋部 manages the PLAAF organizational structure personnel management intelligence communications air traffic control weather support development of air force military theory and air force education and safety The Staff Department is lead by the chief of staff who is the principal organizer and coordinator of military operations The Staff Department s chief of staff has a number of deputy chiefs of staff Previously known as the Headquarters Department the post 2016 Staff Department maintains a number of subordinate bureaus 局 including the Operations Bureau Information and Communications Bureau Training Bureau Ground based Air Defense Bureau Air Traffic Control Bureau Pilot Recruitment Bureau Flight Safety Bureau Test Flight Bureau Aviation Bureau Confidential Bureau Unit Management Bureau and Planning and Organization Bureau 5 The Political Work Department 空军政治工作部 sometimes abbreviated PWD is responsible for managing propaganda security political education personnel records civil military relations party discipline party organizations within the PLAAF and cultural activities to include song and dance troupes or public events The Political Work Department is led by a director 主任 and at least two deputy directors 副主任 Subordinate to the department include bureaus such as a Cadre Bureau Propaganda Bureau and a Soldier and Civilian Personnel Bureau 5 The Logistics Department 空军后勤部 led by a director and political commissar oversee the PLAAF s logistics to include transportation materials supplies finance medical care and petroleum oil and lubricants POL Since the 2016 reform subordinate bureaus include a Finance Bureau Transport and Delivery Bureau Procurement and Supply Bureau Air Force National Defense Engineering Development Command Bureau Real Estate Management Bureau Ordnance General use Equipment Bureau Military Facilities Construction Bureau Combat Service Planning Bureau Materials Bureau and Audit Bureau 5 The Equipment Department 空军装备部 originally the Air Force Engineering Department manages the PLAAF s cradle to death lifecycle including repair and maintenance of the branch s weapons systems and instruments Led by a director and political commissar the department leads bureaus to include the Comprehensive Planning Bureau Airfield Support Bureau Scientific Research and Procurement Bureau Major Type Model Bureau Project Management Bureau Equipment Purchasing Bureau Testing and Inspection Bureau Armament General use Equipment Bureau Flight Safety Bureau and Aviation Equipment Bureau 5 Commands Edit Below PLAAF HQ are five Theater Command Air Forces TCAF successors of Military Region Air Forces MRAFs prior to 2016 64 Before 2003 MRAF had subordinate air corps and Bases which exercised direct control over units in their area of responsibility AOR MRAF only directly controlled fighter and ground attack divisions in the same province as MRAF headquarters MRAF HQ From 2004 leadership of units was consolidated in MRAF HQ with air corps and Bases downgraded to command posts that acted on behalf of MRAF HQ 65 From 2012 onwards the command posts were mostly replaced by Bases that exercised command and control over units brigades in their AOR and conducted joint exercises 66 Below TCAF MRAF and the air corps command posts Bases are corps division brigade and regimental level units 部队 65 The first divisions in the 1950s was organized into a HQ and two or three regiments In 1953 this was standardized to three regiments per division 28 including one training regiment 8 Regiments had three or four flight groups each in turn made of three or four squadrons Between 1964 and 1970 regiments were called groups 28 In the late 1980s operational squadrons lost their training regiments 20 By 2010 many divisions had only two regiments 19 In 2019 the bomber transport and specialized divisions had not been reorganized into brigades and remained under the control of PLAAF HQ and TCAF headquarters 67 Beginning in 2011 and in a similar process as the PLAGF the PLAAF dissolved the majority of its air division headquarters changing previously subordinate air regiments to brigades and subordinating them directly under military region now theater command air forces Brigades contain several subordinate flight groups a flight group has one type of aircraft 19 All fighter and ground attack divisions and regiments were reorganized into air force brigades organized into a brigade HQ and the flight groups organized under it 67 Everything from battalions to squads are considered subunits 分队 68 Order of battle Edit PLAAF Headquarters Staff Department Political Work Department Logistics Department Equipment Department Directly reporting units Experimental Training Base Flight Test Training Base Research Institute Airborne Training Base Command Academy Engineering University Aviation University Early Warning Academy Harbin Flight Academy Shijiazhuang Flight Academy Xi an Flight Academy Medical University Service Academy Communications Sergeants Academy 66th Blue Brigade Eastern Theater Command Air Force Southern Theater Command Air Force Western Theater Command Air Force Northern Theater Command Air Force Central Theater Command Air ForceAirbases Edit For a more comprehensive list see List of People s Liberation Army Air Force airbases The PLAAF has over 150 air bases distributed across each theater command 69 Aerobatic display team Edit The August 1st aerobatic team is the first PLAAF aerobatics team It was formed in 1962 Aircraft inventory of PLAAF August 1st Aerobatic Team includes the J 10 and it has previously flown the JJ 5 and J 7 The Sky Wing and Red Falcon air demonstration teams which operate Nanchang CJ 6 and Hongdu JL 8 respectively were established in 2011 Equipment EditFor a more comprehensive list see List of active People s Liberation Army Air Force aircraft and List of active People s Liberation Army aircraft The People s Liberation Army Air Force operates a large and varied fleet of some 4 000 aircraft of which around 2 566 are combat aircraft fighter attack and bombers 70 According to FlightGlobal China has the second largest active combat aircraft fleet and the third largest total aircraft fleet in the world 71 72 According to the International Institute for Strategic Studies PLAAF combat pilots acquire an average of 100 150 flying hours annually 73 74 For a list of aircraft no longer flown by the People s Liberation Army Air Force see List of historic aircraft of the People s Liberation Army Air Force For aircraft and equipment of the Airborne Corps see People s Liberation Army Air Force Airborne Corps Equipment Current inventory Edit A Chengdu J 20 A Hongdu L 15 taxiing An KJ 200 AEW aircraft in flight A Sukhoi Su 30 over Lipetsk A PLAAF Xian H 6K strategic bomber Aircraft Origin Type Variant In service NotesCombat AircraftXian H 6 China strategic bomber 176 70 licensed variant of the Tupolev Tu 16Xian JH 7 China fighter bomber 120 70 Chengdu J 7 China fighter 489 70 200 JJ 7 s provide conversion trainingSukhoi Su 27 Russia air superiority Su 27UBK 32 70 Sukhoi Su 30 Russia multirole Su 30MKK 73 70 Sukhoi Su 35 Russia air superiority Su 35S 24 70 Shenyang J 8 China Interceptor J 8F H 78 70 48 JZ 8 s are used for reconnaissanceChengdu J 10 China multirole J 10A B C S 565 70 Shenyang J 11 China air superiority J 11 B BS 225 70 Shenyang J 16 China strike fighter 250 70 12 D variants provide radar jammingChengdu J 20 China stealth multirole 140 70 AEW amp CIlyushin Il 76 China AEW amp C KJ 2000 4 70 Chinese radar installed on a Ilyushin Il 76 airframeShaanxi Y 8 China AEW amp C KJ 200 4 70 Shaanxi Y 9 China AEW amp C KJ 500 20 70 ReconnaissanceChallenger 850 Canada SIGINT 5 72 Shaanxi Y 8 China surveillance 1 72 Electronic WarfareShaanxi Y 8 China electronic warfare Y 8CB DZ G XZ 14 70 Shaanxi Y 9 China electronic warfare Y 9G XZ 5 70 Antonov An 30 Ukraine electronic warfare 3 72 Tupolev Tu 154 Russia SIGINT ELINT Tu 154M D 4 70 Maritime patrolBoeing 737 United States patrol 2 70 Shaanxi Y 8 China patrol 3 70 TankerIlyushin Il 78 Russia aerial refueling 3 70 Xian H 6 China aerial refueling H 6U 10 70 TransportShijiazhuang Y 5 China transport 70 70 Xian Y 7 China transport Y 7H 41 70 Shaanxi Y 8 China transport Y 8C 30 70 Shaanxi Y 9 China transport 30 70 Xian Y 20 China strategic airlifter tanker 58 70 Xian MA60 China transport 16 72 Harbin Y 12 China transport 11 72 Ilyushin Il 76 Russia strategic airlifter 20 70 Tupolev Tu 154 Russia transport Tu 154M 8 70 HelicopterMil Mi 8 Russia utility transport Mi 17 171 6 70 Harbin Z 9 China utility 20 70 licensed built variant of the AS365 DauphinChanghe Z 8 China transport 18 70 Eurocopter AS332 France transport 6 70 Eurocopter EC225 Multinational VIP transport 3 70 Trainer aircraftHongdu JL 8 China Pakistan jet trainer 350 70 Guizhou JL 9 China jet trainer 30 70 Hongdu JL 10 China jet trainer 50 70 Air defense Edit The People s Liberation Army Air Force operates a multi layered integrated air defense system combining radar stations electronic warfare systems early warning and surveillance zones and air missile defense systems of various ranges 75 Chinese air defense systems are highly distributed and mobile in order to improve survivability against SEAD missions 75 76 Name Origin Type Variant In service NotesSAMHQ 9 China Long range SAM HQ 9 9B 260 70 derivative of the S 300 missile system 77 HQ 22 China Long range SAM 130 70 S 300 Russia Long range SAM S 300PMU U1 U2 216 70 S 400 Russia Long range SAM 32 70 HQ 12 China Medium range SAM 150 70 HQ 6 China Short range SAM HQ 6A 6D 74 70 HQ 7 China Short range SAM 30 76 Anti aircraft gunLD 2000 76 China Anti aircraft gunOerlikon GDF Switzerland Anti aircraft gun PG 99 1000 76 AZP S 60 Soviet Union Anti aircraft autocannon PG 59 1000See also EditList of historic aircraft of the People s Liberation Army Air Force People s Liberation Army Naval Air Force People s Liberation Army Ground Force List of aircraft produced by China List of Chinese aircraft engines People s Liberation Army Air Force Airborne CorpsReferences EditCitations Edit 空军司令部的组建 January 23 2015 Archived from the original on July 11 2016 Retrieved September 16 2018 中国空军网 蓝天回眸 空军简史 International Institute for Strategic Studies 2020 p 264 International Institute for Strategic Studies 2020 p 265 Rupprecht Andreas 29 October 2018 Modern Chinese Warplanes Chinese Air Force Aircraft and Units Harpia Publishing p 139 ISBN 978 09973092 6 3 a b c d e f g h i j Allen Kenneth W 12 April 2021 70 Years of the PLA Air Force PDF China Aerospace Studies Institute a b Ken Allen Chapter 9 PLA Air Force Organization Archived 2007 09 29 at the Wayback Machine The PLA as Organization ed James C Mulvenon and Andrew N D Yang Santa Monica CA RAND 2002 349 Guo Leo 1 August 2018 North American P 51 Mustang in Communist Chinese Service Plane Encyclopedia a b c d Trevethan 2019 pg 8 Xiang 2012 pg 73 a b c Allen Kenneth W Krumel Glenn D Pollack Jonathan 1995 China s Air Force Enters the 21st Century RAND Corporation a b A Country Study China Country Studies Library of Congress 584 Archived from the original on 16 February 2017 Retrieved 5 August 2017 Xiang 2012 pg 73 74 Xiang 2012 pg 74 Xiang 2012 pg 76 77 Lumbering Forward pg 23 a b c d e f Kenneth W Allen D Pollack Jonathan Krumel Glenn China s Air Force The Long March to Modernization RAND Corporation a b c d Garafola Cristina 25 May 2021 Assessing 70 Years of China s PLA Air Force The Diplomat a b A Country Study China Country Studies Library of Congress 583 Archived from the original on 16 February 2017 Retrieved 5 August 2017 a b c Allen 2012 pg 104 a b Trevethan 2019 pg 16 China A Country Study 585 a b Final Gift From the Soviets How China Received Three of the USSR s Top Fighters Weeks Before the Superpower Collapsed military watch magazine 14 August 2022 a b Brauner Oliver 2015 Western Arms Exports to China PDF SIPRI Evron Yoram 2013 Between Beijing and Washington Israel s Technology Transfers to China Journal of East Asian Studies pp 503 28 a b CAC FC 1 Xiaolong Jane s All the World s Aircraft Jane s Information Group 10 March 2009 a b Wood Peter Stewart Robert 26 September 2019 China s Aviation Industry Lumbering Forward PDF United States Air Force Air University China Aerospace Studies Institute ISBN 9781082740404 a b c d e f g Saunders Phillip C Quam Erik 2007 The Future Force Structure of the Chinese Air Force PDF Asia Policy 4 a b c Trevethan 2019 pg 9 a b c Saunders Phillip C Wiseman Joshua K December 2011 Buy Build or Steal China s Quest for Advanced Military Aviation Technologies PDF Chinese Strategic Perspectives Institute for National Strategic Studies National Defense University 4 Su 30MKK fighter jet in Chinese PLAAF AirForceWorld com 5 June 2013 Archived from the original on 1 May 2013 Retrieved 6 June 2013 Il 76 transports and Il 78 tankers top 1 5bn Russia China arms deal FlightGlobal 13 September 2005 Z 10 Army Recongniation Kopp Carlo June 2011 PLA AF Airborne Early Warning amp Control Programs Air Power Australia Fisher Richard D Jr 2008 China s Military Modernization Building for Regional and Global Reach Greenwood pp 180 81 ISBN 978 0 275 99486 0 Cliff Roger 21 May 2021 China s Development of Advanced Fighter Technology PDF Report International Security Industry Council Japan a b c Grant Rebecca 1 January 2013 Meet the New PLAAF Air amp Space Forces Magazine Retrieved 17 October 2022 a b Military and Security Developments Involving the People s Republic of China 2015 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 14 May 2015 Urchick Daniel 26 July 2016 A 2016 Assessment of the Growth in PLAAF Capabilities Small Wars Journal a b Keck Zachary 6 July 2014 China s Air Force Modernization Unprecedented in History The Diplomat Anthony H Cordesman Kendall Joseph 2016 Chinese Strategy and Military Modernization in 2016 A Comparative Analysis Center for Strategic and International Studies Cozad Mark Beauchamp Mustafaga Nathan 2017 People s Liberation Army Air Force Operations over Water RAND Corporation L Garafola Cristina 23 September 2016 People s Liberation Army Reforms and Their Ramifications Rand Corporation a b CSAF Announces CASI Toolkit for China China Aerospace Studies Institute Air University China says developing new type of long range bomber Reuters Reuters 2 September 2016 Trevithick Joseph 15 October 2018 China Reportedly Plans To Unveil H 20 Stealth Bomber At Air Force Anniversary Parade In 2019 The Drive Lin Ying Yu 13 January 2018 The Early Returns of China s Military Reforms The Diplomat a b Dominguez Gabriel 2 February 2018 PLAAF inducts J 20 into combat units Jane s 360 Archived from the original on 2 December 2018 Seidel Jamie 20 October 2017 With the J20 stealth fighter in fully operation service China leaps ahead in Asian arms race Australian News Archived from the original on 26 February 2018 Chinese and Russian air launched weapons a test for Western air dominance International Institute for Strategic Studies February 2018 Bronk Justin October 2020 Russian and Chinese Combat Air Trends Current Capabilities and Future Threat Outlook PDF Report Whitehall Report Vol 3 20 London Royal United Services Institute for Defence and Security Studies ISSN 1750 9432 Roblin Sebastien 10 November 2020 Why China s Latest Jets Are Surpassing Russia s Top Fighters Forbes Archived from the original on 26 October 2021 Retrieved 26 October 2021 Ait Abraham 5 April 2019 Does Russian Military Aviation Have Anything Left to Offer China The Diplomat Archived from the original on 26 October 2021 Retrieved 26 October 2021 Waldron Greg 10 November 2020 China surpassing Russia in airpower technology RUSI FlightGlobal Archived from the original on 23 September 2021 Retrieved 26 October 2021 Solen Derek 3 November 2021 PLA Air Force Shifts Transition Training to the Schoolhouse China Aerospace Studies Institute a b Barrie Douglas 21 February 2023 China s air force modernisation gaining pace International Institute for Strategic Studies Huang Kristin 3 September 2021 Chinese military says it has a strategic air force experts disagree South China Morning Post Li Xiaobing 1 August 2022 The Dragon s Wing The People s Liberation Army Air Force s Strategy United States Air Force Air University Peck Michael 20 February 2023 China is getting rid of its grandpa fighter jets but they may make a comeback for a one way mission against Taiwan Insider Chan Minnie 11 July 2021 Why has China s PLA started sending grandpa fighter jets to test Taiwan s air defences South China Morning Post Military Aircraft Insignia of the World D Archived from the original on 27 October 2018 Retrieved 25 December 2014 Roundels of China Archived from the original on 14 September 2015 Retrieved 25 December 2014 Allen 2012 pg 109 Allen 2012 pg 99 Trevethan 2019 pg 6 a b Trevethan 2019 pg 11 Trevethan 2019 pg 11 12 a b Trevethan 2019 pg 1 Allen 2012 pg 109 110 Meet the New PLAAF Air amp Space Forces Magazine Retrieved 17 October 2022 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq 6 Asia The Military Balance 2023 The International Institute for Strategic Studies London Routledge 15 February 2023 doi 10 4324 9781003400226 ISBN 9781003400226 Embraer In association with 2023 World Air Forces directory Flight Global Retrieved 3 December 2022 a b c d e f World Air Forces 2023 Flight Global Flightglobal Insight 2022 Retrieved 8 March 2023 International Institute for Strategic Studies 2014 p 236 International Institute for Strategic Studies The Military Balance 2022 p 261 a b Bronk Justin 15 January 2020 Modern Russian and Chinese Integrated Air Defence Systems The Nature of the Threat Growth Trajectory and Western Options Royal United Services Institute a b c d International Institute for Strategic Studies 2021 p 255 sfn error no target CITEREFInternational Institute for Strategic Studies2021 help Bronk Justin January 2020 Modern Russian and Chinese Integrated Air Defence Systems The Nature of the Threat Growth Trajectory and Western Options Report Royal United Services Institute p 20 Retrieved 11 December 2021 Sources Edit Allan Kenneth 2012 The Organizational Structure of the PLAAF PDF The Chinese Air Force Evolving Concepts Roles and Capabilities National Defense University Press ISBN 978 0 16 091386 0 Archived PDF from the original on 12 July 2017 Library of Congress Federal Research Division A Country Study China 1987 International Institute for Strategic Studies 2014 Hacket James ed The Military Balance 2014 Oxfordshire Routledge ISBN 978 1 85743 722 5 International Institute for Strategic Studies 15 February 2020 The Military Balance 2020 London England Routledge ISBN 9780367466398 Trevethan Lawrence 25 September 2019 Brigadization of the PLA Air Force PDF United States Air Force Air University China Aerospace Studies Institute ISBN 978 1718721159 Wood Peter Stewart Robert 26 September 2019 China s Aviation Industry Lumbering Forward PDF United States Air Force Air University China Aerospace Studies Institute ISBN 9781082740404 Xiang Xiaoming 2012 The PLAAF s Evolving Influence within the PLA and upon National Policy PDF The Chinese Air Force Evolving Concepts Roles and Capabilities National Defense University Press ISBN 978 0 16 091386 0 Archived PDF from the original on 12 July 2017 Further reading EditAndreas Rupprecht and Tom Cooper Modern Chinese Warplanes Combat Aircraft and Units of the Chinese Air Force and Naval Aviation Harpia Publishing 2012 ISBN 0985455403 ISBN 978 0985455408 Gordon Yefim and Komissarov Dmitry Chinese Aircraft Hikoki Publications Manchester 2008 ISBN 978 1 902109 04 6External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Chinese People s Liberation Army Air Force Articles on the Chinese military from Sinodefence com Chinese Air Power Regional Capability Growth on APA The Sleeping Giant Awakens Australian Aviation PLA Airbase Page on APA PLA idag PLAAF Swedish USAF Air University The PLAAF in 2010 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title People 27s Liberation Army Air Force amp oldid 1148360469, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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