Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Black-haired stepchild

Since its conversion from an army unit, the 2nd PLAN Marine Brigade, has been looked down upon  as the black-haired step child of the China Navy with hand-me-downs of ZTS63A.    That is no more -- recent news releases from several outlets, including the PLA Daily, suggesting that the 2nd Marine is now aligned with the 1st in terms of equipments.   The 2nd now boast a fully TOE of ZTD05s, just like the 1st.


ZTD-5 of the 2nd Marine








Old blog entry from 2010



Monday, May 10, 2010


2nd PLAN Marine Brigade.

The PLA Marine celebrates its 30th anniversary with its very own "PLA Style" parade this week – lockstep marching phalanxes, well rehearsed fire demo, and of course, go-go boot girls (here). Perhaps it is time to review the PLAN Marine’s “step child:” the 2nd brigade.

The 1st PLA Marine Brigade has been playing the role of a show-case unit for the PLA. As such, it has received a great deal of media coverage and played host to many foreign port calls. Some of its drills were open to foreign observers, including a joint training exercise with the USMC's 31st Marine Expeditionary Unit in Dec 2006. During the aftermath of the 2008 Sichuan earthquake, 2000 members of the 1st Marine were dispatched to the quake zone and subsequently won praise for its professionalism. In contrast, the 2nd Marine brigade has been out of the spot light since it was transferred from the ground force to the navy in 1998. After 10 years of prolonged reorganization, only recently has the Chinese media covered the 2nd's drills and activities. Judging from the media report, most of the 2nd Marine’s equipment are “hand-me-downs” from the 1st.

Before the transfer, the 2nd marine brigade was under the command of the 41st Group Army, Guangzhou MR as the 164th "training" Division. The 164th was commissioned in April 1952 by combining the 655th regiment from the decommissioned 219th division and the 434th regiment from the 145th division. The 434th regiment was renamed the 657th regiment in due course.

In March 1957 the 164th was deployed to Zhanjiang to guard the newly created South Sea Fleet HQ while the 655th regiment was in Zhiman, the 656th regiment in Suixi and the artillery regiment at Su Ling. The 657th regiment rejoined the 164th in November 1960.

In September 1964, the 164th was promoted to “Southern China Category A Unit” with improved combat readiness in response to the Indochina Crisis heating up. As part of China’s possible intervention force into Indochina, the 164th was reformed to take on additional artillery and engineering assets and its three regiments were renamed to the 490th, 491st, and 492nd regiments in 1970. It remained a Category A unit until January 1976 after the “Vietnamese civil war” ended.

During the Sino-Vietnam war of 1979, the 164th was augmented with the 2nd Engineering regiment, Nanjing MR, and took place in some of the heaviest fights. After 24 days, including the final battle of Lang Shan, the 164th suffered 229 KIAs (12 officers and 217 enlisted) and 663 WIA's, while claiming 2195 enemy causalities.

During the PLA’s one million troop cut in 1984, the 164th was ordered to transfer its 490th into a police unit thus leaving it with only two line infantry regiments. The 490th would later become the 8th People’s Armed Police Zhi-du, Guangdong Province.

The 164th’s military role continued to diminish. In 1986 it was converted into a training unit and disbanded one of its hollowed–out regiments in 1989. After injecting cadets from the 1st marine brigade, the 164th was transferred to the command of the PLAN in 1998. If the 164th had not transferred it would have become an historical footnote.




First Marine Showing off.

1st Marine is now equipped with the ZTS04 Amphibious family AFV .

1st Marine's H816 Vs 2nd Marine's

2nd's Marine's "hand-me-downs" -- Type 86B IFV, Type63A AALT, and Type63C AAPC.
















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