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Peng Dehuai
Peng DehuaiPeng Dehuai, painting at the Historic Park of Geoje, POW Camp, in South Korea.

Peng Dehuai

Chinese military leader
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Also known as: P’eng Te-huai, Peng Dehua
Quick Facts
Wade-Giles romanization:
P’eng Te-huai
Original name:
Peng Dehua
Born:
Oct. 24, 1898,Xiangtan, Hunan province,China
Died:
Nov. 29, 1974,Beijing (aged 76)
Political Affiliation:
Chinese Communist Party

Peng Dehuai (born Oct. 24, 1898,Xiangtan,Hunan province, China—died Nov. 29, 1974, Beijing) was amilitary leader, one of the greatest in Chinese communist history, and minister of national defense ofChina from 1954 until 1959, when he was removed for criticizing the military and economic policies of the party.

Peng was a military commander under a local warlord and later underChiang Kai-shek (Jiang Jieshi) but broke with him in 1927 when Chiang attempted to rid theNationalist Party (Kuomintang) of leftist elements. In 1928 Peng became a communist and soon afterward became involved in guerrilla activity, leading a series of peasant uprisings. He became a senior military commander underMao Zedong and participated in theLong March (1934–35).

Peng was the second-ranking man in the communists’ militaryhierarchy from the outbreak of the Sino-Japanese War in 1937 to 1954 and was a member of thePolitical Bureau (Politburo) of theChinese Communist Party (CCP) from 1936. He led Chinese forces in theKorean War and signed the armistice atP’anmunjŏm on July 27, 1953. In 1954 he became minister of national defense. In 1959, however, he criticized as impractical the policies of theGreat Leap Forward, which emphasized ideological purity over professional expertise in both the military forces and the economy. Peng was deprived of office for a while and in 1965 was sent to the CCP’s Southwest Bureau inSichuan province. Peng was posthumously “rehabilitated” in December 1978 under the post-Maoregime.

This article was most recently revised and updated byEncyclopaedia Britannica.

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