Military unit cover designator

A military unit cover designator (MUCD, MUCK-dee, Chinese: 部队代号; pinyin: bùduì dàihào) is a unique five-digit number used by the People's Liberation Army of the People's Republic of China to externally identify military units. MUCDs are used externally to protect the identity of units, while a true unit designator (TUD, Chinese: 部队番号; pinyin: bùduì fānhào) is used internally as they plainly identify the unit and its function.

An example, a bomber aircraft regiment in the People's Liberation Army Air Force (PLAAF) 8th Air Division may be known by its TUD, '22nd Air Regiment', or by its MUCD, 'Unit 95183'. The unit's TUD is used by members of the regiment, in common discourse, and among defense analysts, while the MUCD is used on stationery letterheads, newspapers, banners, magazine articles, and signs at the entrance to military facilities.[1]

Some units, namely those conducting sensitive and secretive operations like those of the Third Department (Operations) of the Joint Staff Department, may only be known by their MUCD as their TUD has not been discovered. Popular examples include Unit 61398 and Unit 61486.[2]

History

First seeing use in the early 1950s, the MUCD system has been changed at least five times since the early 1950s with the most recent change in 2016.[1][3]

Begun shortly after the 1949 communist victory in the Chinese Civil War, MUCDs were originally four-digit numbers until 1975 when, as part of Deng Xiaoping's counter-Maoist military reforms, the five-digit system presently used was introduced.[1] Changing under further military reforms in 1987, the PLA saw the reconsolidation of eleven military regions down to seven.[citation needed] MUCD's changed again in 2000 and once more in 2016 following the massive reorganization of the PLA under Xi Jinping that included the transition from military regions to theater commands, the Second Artillery Corps to the People's Liberation Army Rocket Force (PLARF), and the establishment of the Strategic Support Force (PLASSF) which incorporated various functional units of the General Staff Department (which became the Joint Staff Department).[4][5][6]

Blocks

While blocks of MUCDs are apportioned to commands, those commands decide how MUCDs are internally assigned without regulation from the Central Military Commission leading to variance in numbering patterns below the command.

Organization1975–19851985–20002000–20162016–present
Joint staff Department (General staff Department)57XXX, 58XXX, 88XXX61XXX
General Logistics Department59XXX62XXXDisbanded
General Armament Department89XXX63XXXDisbanded
People's Liberation Army Air Force39XXX (aviation), 86XXX, 87XXX93XXX, 94XXX, 95XXX
People's Liberation Army Navy37XXX, 38XXX91XXX, 92XXX
People's Liberation Army Rocket Force (Second Artillery Corps)80XXX96XXX
People's Liberation Army Strategic Support ForceNot established320XX–320XX
Nanjing Military Region83XXX32XXX, 83XXX73XXXUnknown (Eastern Theater Command)
Fuzhou Military Region32XXXNanjing Military Region
Guangzhou Military Region53XXX, 54XXX34XXX, 53XXX, 54XXX75XXX, 76XXXUnknown (Southern Theater Command)
Wuhan Military Region33XXX, 34XXXGuangzhou Military Region
Chengdu Military Region356XX–359XX35XXX, 56XXX77XXX, 78XXXUnknown (Western Theater Command)
Kunming Military Region351XX–355XXChengdu Military Region
Lanzhou Military Region36XXX, 84XXX68XXX, 69XXX
Shenyang Military Region81XXX, 82XXX65XXXUnknown (Northern Theater Command)
Beijing Military Region32XXX, 83XXX66XXXUnknown (Central Theater Command)
Jinan Military Region546XX, 55XXX71XXX, 72XXXUnknown (Northern, Central Theater Commands)
Sources: The PLA as an Organization v2.0,[1] China's Strategic Support Force: A Force for a New Era[4]

See also

References