2. Yang Zhicheng, a native of Sansui, Guizhou Province, was the only founding general in Guizhou Province. China people's liberation army logistics work pioneer and important. He used to be the first deputy chief of staff of the Central South Military Region and the vice president of the Military Academy.
3. Yang Dezhi, a general, was born in Liling, Hunan Province. He was once the Chief of General Staff of the People's Liberation Army and the Deputy Minister of National Defense. Together with Xu, he commanded the famous counterattack against Vietnam.
4. Deng Hua, a general, is from Chen County, Hunan Province. He used to be the acting commander and political commissar of the Volunteers, the deputy chief of staff of the People's Liberation Army, and the vice president of the Academy of Military Sciences.
5. General Zhu, a native of Rucheng, Hunan Province, was a political commissar of the Beijing Military Region.
6. General Zhao Erlu was born in Luanxian County, Shanxi Province (now Yuanping). He used to be deputy director of the State Planning Commission and minister of machinery industry, executive deputy director of the State Council National Defense Industry Office, and director of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China National Defense Industry Political Department.
7. Geng Biao, a native of Liling, Hunan Province, is the only defense minister who has not been entrusted with an important task. According to the specifications, he should be a general. He used to be deputy brigade commander and deputy political commissar and chief of staff of the 385th Brigade of the Eighth Route Army, chief of staff of the Shanxi-Chahar-Hebei Field Army, and deputy commander and chief of staff of the 2nd Corps of the North China Field Army.
8. Wu Yunfu, a native of Leiyang, Hunan Province, is the only Secretary-General of the Central Military Commission without a title. According to the specifications, he should be a general.
9. Zhao Rong, Lieutenant General, from Binchuan, Yunnan, once served as the Deputy Minister of Logistics Department of North China Military Region.
10, Wang Zifeng, Lieutenant General, Leiyang, Hunan, once served as political commissar of the 66th Army, commander of the Shanxi Military Region and deputy political commissar of the Beijing Military Region.
1 1, Lieutenant General Tan Guansan, a native of Leiyang, Hunan Province, was once the political commissar of 18 Army, the political commissar of Tibet Military Region and the first vice president of the Supreme People's Court.
12, Lieutenant General, from Tang Tianji, Anren, Hunan, once served as commander of the Hunan Military Region and deputy director of the General Logistics Department of the Central Military Commission.
13, Ouyang Yi, Lieutenant General, from Yizhang, Hunan Province, once served as director of the political department of the public security forces and deputy political commissar of the artillery of the China People's Liberation Army.
14, Lieutenant General, Cao Lihuai, Zixing, Hunan, once served as deputy political commissar of the Air Force.
15, Xiao Xinhuai, Lieutenant General, from Yizhang, Hunan Province, once served as commander of the military region and Shaanxi Military Region.
16, Wang Yunlin, Major General, from Hengyang, Hunan Province, once served as the second deputy minister of the Logistics Department of North China Air Force and the Minister of Health.
17, Zheng Xiaofeng, Major General, Leiyang, Hunan, once served as vice president of the Engineering Institute, political commissar of Hunan Military Region, and political commissar of Shanxi Military Region. 18, Liu, a native of Leiyang, Hunan Province, was once the deputy director of the Transportation Department of the General Logistics Department of the Central Military Commission.
19, Major General Zifeng, a native of Leiyang, Hunan Province, was a political commissar of the Logistics Department of East China Military Region.
20. Xiong, a native of Leiyang, Hunan Province, was the deputy chief of staff of the China People's Liberation Army signal corps.
2 1, Chen Guang, a native of Yizhang, Hunan Province, was the acting teacher of the Eighth Route Army 1 15 Division. After being persecuted, he died in 1954, and he could have been awarded the rank of general.