Military Wiki
Military Wiki
Yen Ming
嚴明
Yen Ming
30th Minister of National Defense of the Republic of China

In office
8 August 2013 – 30 January 2015
President Ma Ying-jeou
Deputy Yen Teh-fa, Lee Hsiang-chou, Chiu Kuo-cheng, Andrew Hsia
Preceded by Andrew Yang
Kao Kuang-chi (acting)
Succeeded by Kao Kuang-chi
22nd Chief of the General Staff of the Republic of China Armed Forces

In office
16 January 2013 – 7 August 2013
Preceded by Lin Chen-yi
Succeeded by Kao Kuang-chi
4th Commander of the Republic of China Air Force

In office
June 2011 – 15 January 2013
Preceded by Lei Yu-chi
Succeeded by Liu Chen-wu
Personal details
Born 14 November 1949(1949-11-14) (age 75)
Yunlin, Taiwan[1]
Nationality Republic of China
Alma mater Republic of China Air Force Academy
National Defense University
Military service
Allegiance Flag of the Republic of China Republic of China
Service/branch Flag of the Republic of China Air Force Republic of China Air Force
Years of service 1971–2013
Rank ROCAF General's Flag General
Battles/wars Third Taiwan Strait Crisis
Yen Ming on Legislative Yuan (2)

Yen Ming (left) and Hsiao Wei-min (right) in Legislative Yuan

Yen Ming (Chinese: 嚴明; pinyin: Yán Míng) was the Minister of National Defense of the Republic of China (Taiwan) from 8 August 2013 to 30 January 2015.[2]

Education[]

Yen graduated from the Republic of China Air Force Academy in Kaohsiung.[3]

Early career[]

Upon graduation, Yen worked his way through the Republic of China Air Force, serving as a wing commander, president of Air Force Academy, Air Force chief of staff and Air Force deputy commanding general.

ROC Air Force General[]

ROCAF General Yen Ming Opening Speech in Chiayi Air Force Base Open Day 20120811a

Yen Ming as the Commander of the ROC Air Force

General position appointment[]

In October 2008, Yen was promoted as the General of the Air Force.

ROC Armed Forces Chief of the General Staff[]

Chief of the General Staff position appointment[]

On 3 January 2013, the Ministry of the Interior announced that President Ma Ying-jeou had approved the appointment of Yen to the position of Chief of the General Staff of the Republic of China Armed Forces. He would replace Lin Chen-yi who was appointed as the military strategy adviser to the President.[4]

ROC Minister of National Defense[]

Ministry position appointment[]

Yen replaces acting Defense Minister Kao Kuang-chi after the sudden resignation of Defense Minister Andrew Yang, just 6 days after taking his office after the previous Defense Minister Kao Hua-chu's resignation due to the death scandal of Corporal Hung Chung-chiu.

The Executive Yuan officially appointed him on 8 August 2013 from his previous post as ROC Chief of the General Staff. Acting Defense Minister Kao Kuang-chi replaces his position as the ROC Chief of the General Staff.[5]

Taiwanese woman abduction in Malaysia[]

Commenting on the recent abduction incident over a Taiwanese female in Sabah, Malaysia, Yen said that although the ROC Ministry of National Defense (MND) has the capability of special forces to save the woman, but then those armed forces are reserved for the use of armed conflict between nation, and MND should not step into an international incident which is the ROC Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MOFA) should do. Overseas special forces deployment will only be possible if there is a mutual treaty between the ROC and the host country.[6]

Criticism[]

Disagreement with ROC Army General Lee Hsiang-chou[]

Disarmaments of the ROC Marine Corps cause Veterans' protests[]

In mid January 2014, Yen announced that the government plan to cut the number of military to below 200,000 personnel by the end of 2019 to adjust the organization and restructure the armed forces, in which the goal is to make ROC military to be small but elite, small but skillful and small but strong.[7]

References[]

All or a portion of this article consists of text from Wikipedia, and is therefore Creative Commons Licensed under GFDL.
The original article can be found at Yen Ming and the edit history here.