Qiu Yanpeng

Qiu Yanpeng
邱延鹏
Chief of Staff of the PLA Navy
Assumed office
July 2014
Commander Wu Shengli
Preceded by Du Jingchen
Commander of the North Sea Fleet
In office
December 2013  July 2014
Preceded by Tian Zhong
Succeeded by Yuan Yubai
Personal details
Born 1956 (age 5960)
Wudi, Shandong, China
Political party Communist Party of China
Alma mater Dalian Naval Academy
Military service
Allegiance  China
Service/branch People's Liberation Army Navy
Years of service ? − present
Rank Vice-Admiral
This is a Chinese name; the family name is Qiu.

Qiu Yanpeng (Chinese: 邱延鹏; born 1956) is a vice-admiral (zhong jiang) of the People's Liberation Army Navy (PLAN) of China. He has been Chief of Staff of the PLAN since 2014, and formerly served as Commander of the North Sea Fleet.

Biography

Qiu Yanpeng was born in 1956 in Wudi County, Shandong Province. He graduated from Dalian Naval Academy.[1]

Qiu was appointed deputy chief of staff of the East Sea Fleet in 2009, and attained the rank of rear admiral a year later. In December 2013, he succeeded Tian Zhong as commander of the North Sea Fleet as well as Deputy Commander of the Jinan Military Region. Less than a year later, Qiu was appointed chief of staff of the PLAN, succeeding Du Jingchen. Yuan Yubai replaced him as commander of the North Sea Fleet.[1] In July 2015, Qiu was promoted to the rank of vice-admiral, together with Yuan Yubai.[2]

Although Qiu began his career when the Chinese navy was still a small coastal force, he has accumulated extensive experience commanding blue-water operations and engaging with foreign militaries.[3] In 2007, he commanded the Aman-07 naval exercise. It was the first time the Chinese navy joined an international naval exercise, and the first time for a Chinese officer to command foreign naval forces.[1] In the same year, he also led a destroyer formation to Indonesia, on the Chinese navy's first visit to the country in more than a decade.[3]

Qiu also led the PLAN's fourth Gulf of Aden anti-piracy task force in 2009 and 2010, sailing into the Persian Gulf for the first time in the history of the Chinese Navy. The ships paid a port visit to Abu Dhabi, and visited Manila, the Philippines on their way home.[3][1] In 2011, Qiu commanded the Chinese Peace Ark hospital ship in the 105-day-long "Harmonious-Mission 2011". The ship sailed for more than 24,600 nautical miles, and provided medical care in several Caribbean countries including Cuba, Jamaica, Costa Rica, and Trinidad and Tobago.[3]

References

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