Yang Kuo-chiang

Yang Kuo-chiang or John K. Young (Chinese: 楊國強; pinyin: Yáng Guóqiáng; born 5 March 1950) is a military personal of the Republic of China. He was the Director-General of the National Security Bureau in 2015–2016.[1]

Yang Kuo-chiang
楊國強
Director-General of National Security Bureau of the Republic of China
In office
24 July 2015  19 October 2016
Preceded byLee Shying-jow
Succeeded byPeng Sheng-chu
Personal details
Born5 March 1950 (1950-03-05) (age 70)
NationalityRepublic of China
Alma materRepublic of China Military Academy
National Defense University

Early life

Yang graduated from Republic of China Military Academy in 1972. He then took the Armor Captain's Career Course from ROC Army School in 1975, Tank Gun Turret Maintenance Class from US Army Engineer School in 1980, Army Command and Staff College of National Defense University in 1983, Army Command and Staff College from the Republic of South Africa in 1985, War College of National Defense University in 1989, US Army War College in 1995 and Research Course of Harvard University Kennedy School of Government in 2004.[2]

Military careers

Yang was the Division Commander of the 109th Mechanized Division of the ROC Army, Inspector-General of the Military Discipline Division of the Ministry of National Defense General Political Warfare Department, Commander of Armor Training Command of the ROC Army Commandant of Armor School. He was also the superintendent for Republic of China Military Academy on 1 March 2002 - 30 June 2005.[2]

National Security Bureau

Yang was appointed as the Director-General of the National Security Bureau by President Ma Ying-jeou in July 2015 when his predecessor Lee Shying-jow resigned from the position citing personal and health reason.[3] On 19 October 2016, Yang tendered his resignation to President Tsai Ing-wen citing that he believed that he has completed his mission during the government transitional period after Presiden Tsai was sworn in on 20 May 2016.[4]

gollark: What? I wasn't DOING that.
gollark: All pocket calculators are the same, *if* you use your definition of pocket calculator, which requires them to be the same.
gollark: I think I will just go for storing old stuff compressed and hope it doesn't cause problems.
gollark: git would really not be a good choice:- the flat-hierarchy thing would probably be problematic, I hear filesystems do not like directories with tons of files in them- would have to deal with git's bad CLI- would have to incur the significant overhead of running an external process to do stuff- no easy way to do on-disk encryption (for SQLite, I can swap in SQLCipher easily)- external state (in git) means more complex code still
gollark: Now, I *could* overhaul it to use text files and git, but that would be extremely annoying.

See also

References

  1. Chao, Stephanie (20 October 2016). "2 top government officials step down". The China Post. Retrieved 20 October 2016.
  2. "Curriculum Vitae". National Security Bureau, R.O.C. Retrieved 20 October 2016.
  3. Tang, Pei-chun; Kao, Evelyn (21 July 2015). "New NSB director-general, NSC deputy secretary-general named". Focus Taiwan. Retrieved 20 October 2016.
  4. Lu, Hsin-hui; Hou, Elaine (19 October 2016). "NSB head, Presidential Office secretary-general resign". Focus Taiwan. Retrieved 20 October 2016.
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