Daekanese People's Army: Difference between revisions

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When Seung Do-jin, an ex-Army officer himself, became General-Secretary of the CPD in early 1949, he started using his connections within the military to establish a CPD network. Pro-communist officers started defecting to the Guards or even providing weapons and trainning in secret. Emboldened, the Guards carried out guerilla attacks against government targets and took active part in agitation and propaganda efforts in the countryside and workings class neighborhoods in the cities, while CPD agents within the armed forces made sure any military response would be delayed. Of particular note is the sabotage of the Seomhan river viaduct, where the entirity of the Army Company guarding the bridge stepped aside and allowed the People's Guard guerillas to demolish it.
When Seung Do-jin, an ex-Army officer himself, became General-Secretary of the CPD in early 1949, he started using his connections within the military to establish a CPD network. Pro-communist officers started defecting to the Guards or even providing weapons and trainning in secret. Emboldened, the Guards carried out guerilla attacks against government targets and took active part in agitation and propaganda efforts in the countryside and workings class neighborhoods in the cities, while CPD agents within the armed forces made sure any military response would be delayed. Of particular note is the sabotage of the Seomhan river viaduct, where the entirity of the Army Company guarding the bridge stepped aside and allowed the People's Guard guerillas to demolish it.
[[File:Chinese PLA occupied Lanzhou Zhongshan bridge on August 26th, 1949.jpg|300px|thumb|left|Troops of the DPA 16th Division entering Tayeong]]
The Guards were further bolstered by experienced officers defecting from the military as a result of Prime Minister Chon Min-Gyu's purges in early 1950. The People's Guards became a semi-conventional force at the start of the Revolution, joinning mutineering army units such as the famed 2nd Infantry Division, and fighting against government troops. On the September the 4th, the People's Guards and the rebel military units combined to form the Daekanese People's Army. September 4th is celebrated annually as DPA Day. With the creation of the DPA, the Revolutionary Military Council was formed to coordinate the war effort, with Seung appointed as its Chairman and Kyong Sang-Chol (overall commander of the DPA) as its Vice Chairman.
By the 12th of December, when Seung declares the formation of the People's Socialist Republic of Daekan and the end of the victory of the Revolution, the DPA had become a force of almost 500,000 troops, and included maratime and air units. December 28th, the Revolutionary Military Council is reformed into the National Defence Council, but its composition remains largely the same.


===War of the masses (1950-1966)===
===War of the masses (1950-1966)===

Revision as of 22:37, 14 August 2020

Daekanese People's Army
대칸 인민군
Daekan Inmingun
DPA flag.png
Flag of the DPA
Founded4th of September, 1950
Service branchesDPAGF.png Daekanese People's Army Ground Forces

DPAN .png Daekanese People's Army Navy

DPAAF.png Daekanese People's Army Air Force
HeadquartersTayeong, Daekan
Leadership
(Chairman of the National Defense Council/Premier)Gyeon Ji-Hae
Commissar of DefenceKim Sunghyon
Chief of the General StaffHu Chong-Ho
Personnel
Military age18-30
Conscription2 Years
Active personnel1,200,000
Reserve personnel400,000
Expenditure
Budget$133 billion (2020)
Percent of GDP3.7%
Industry
Domestic suppliersSeveral
Foreign suppliersVanquaria, Greak Kingdom
Related articles
HistoryMilitary history of Daekan
RanksMilitary ranks of Daekan


The Daekanese People's Army (DPA) is the armed forces of the People's Socialist Republic of Daekan, established by the Communist Party of Daekan (CPD) on September 4 1950, during the Daekanese Revolution. The DPA consists of three main service branches: the Ground Forces, the Navy and the Air Force. The DPA is deployed in four military regions called "Theatre Commands", and is under the command of the National Defence Council (NDC) of the Communist Party of Daekan. The NDC is headed by its Chairmain, who is usually the Premier of the PSRD, with current Premier Gyeon Ji-Hae occupying that position. While the DPA nomimally follows the principle of the civillian control of the military (in this case by the Ministry of Defence), it firmly remains under the control of the Communist Party.

The DPA is a conscript-based force, with the vast majority of its troops being made up of conscripts serving 2-year terms. This has begun to slowly change since 2010, however, with professionalisation being part of the overall modernisation efforts of the DPA, particularly in the NCO corps. The DPA currently consists of 1.2 milion active and 400,000 reserve personnel, making it one of the largest armed forces in Alitheia. In times of national emergency of war, the DPA may be augmented by personnel from the People's Public Security Forces of the People's Police, to be used in reserve and support roles.

History

This is a summary of the DPA's history split according to the adoption of the "National Defence Guidlines"

People's Guards and the Revolution (1948-1950)

The DPA's origins lie in the People's Guards, the armed wing of the then-underground Communist Party of Daekan. It was formed on June 3rd 1948 by Seung Do-jin (then Party Secretary of the Propaganda and Agitation Department) in response to the govenrment's brutal crackdown of the February Uprising, in an effort to unite the decentralised CPD guerilla groups that had taken part in the uprising under a single command. The People's Guards started as small cells and protection details as the CPD was diminished by the defeat of the uprising. However, with the influx of more supporters, by 1949 the Guards were transformed from rebels with pistols and rifles to an underground guerilla army with an efficient command structure and equipped with machine guns, mortars and in cases even small anti-tank guns.

When Seung Do-jin, an ex-Army officer himself, became General-Secretary of the CPD in early 1949, he started using his connections within the military to establish a CPD network. Pro-communist officers started defecting to the Guards or even providing weapons and trainning in secret. Emboldened, the Guards carried out guerilla attacks against government targets and took active part in agitation and propaganda efforts in the countryside and workings class neighborhoods in the cities, while CPD agents within the armed forces made sure any military response would be delayed. Of particular note is the sabotage of the Seomhan river viaduct, where the entirity of the Army Company guarding the bridge stepped aside and allowed the People's Guard guerillas to demolish it.

Troops of the DPA 16th Division entering Tayeong

The Guards were further bolstered by experienced officers defecting from the military as a result of Prime Minister Chon Min-Gyu's purges in early 1950. The People's Guards became a semi-conventional force at the start of the Revolution, joinning mutineering army units such as the famed 2nd Infantry Division, and fighting against government troops. On the September the 4th, the People's Guards and the rebel military units combined to form the Daekanese People's Army. September 4th is celebrated annually as DPA Day. With the creation of the DPA, the Revolutionary Military Council was formed to coordinate the war effort, with Seung appointed as its Chairman and Kyong Sang-Chol (overall commander of the DPA) as its Vice Chairman.

By the 12th of December, when Seung declares the formation of the People's Socialist Republic of Daekan and the end of the victory of the Revolution, the DPA had become a force of almost 500,000 troops, and included maratime and air units. December 28th, the Revolutionary Military Council is reformed into the National Defence Council, but its composition remains largely the same.

War of the masses (1950-1966)

Active defence (1966-1995)

Modern warfare (1995-present)

Structure

National Defence Council

Ministry of Defence

Theatre Commands

Branches

Ground Forces

Navy

Air Force

Sub-branches

Personnel

Equipment

Budget