Background
Lee Hsiang-chou was born in a Military dependents" village of the Republic of China Air Force called the Republican New Village (共和新村) at Donggang, Pingtung, Taiwan, there was his home.
李翔宙
Lee Hsiang-chou was born in a Military dependents" village of the Republic of China Air Force called the Republican New Village (共和新村) at Donggang, Pingtung, Taiwan, there was his home.
He then later graduated from the Republic of China Military Academy in 1974 as a Missile Officer.
He was the 4th Commander of the Republic of China Army (ROCA), 8th Deputy Minister of National Defense (MND) and the 15th Director-General of the National Security Bureau (NSB). During his years of service, he focused on the value of royalty, and paid close attentions to training and readiness. General Lee was also called as the "best Army Commander within these 10 years" among the Republic of China Army itself and the Taiwanese civic and netizens.
Lee later entered the Republic of China Army Preparatory School right after his completion of junior high school at age 15.
Lee also obtained his master"s degree from the National Taiwan University, National Chung Hsing University of Taiwan and Georgetown University of the United States of America.
Lee was promoted to General of the Republic of China Army on 16 May 2011 and appointed as the Vice Chief of the General Staff under Admiral Lin Chen-yi, the then Chief of the General Staff. Army commander appointment
General Lee was appointed to success General Yang Tien-hsiao as the Commander of the Republic of China Army on 16 August 2011.
Army commander resignation tender
On 16 July and 8 August 2013, General Lee tendered his resignation from his chief position and from the Ministry of National Defense due to the poor handling of the minister on the death scandal of Corporal Hung Chung-chiu, but was rejected by Defense MinisterKao Hua-chu and Yen Ming. Both Kao and Yen asked him to stay in his post.
Republic of China early warning defense
In early April 2014, speaking to the Foreign Affairs and National Defense Committee of the Legislative Yuan, Lee said that if the People"s Liberation Army (PLA) were to invade Taiwan, they need at least four months for assault preparation, thus translated to the amount of advance warning Taiwan needs in such scenario.
In the event of cross-strait war, the command has to come from Zhongnanhai, the headquarter of the Communist Party of China, by the task force formation at the Central Military Commission. The next step would be recalling all of the Chinese envoys in Taiwan, execute economic preparations and tighten control of Taiwanese business people in Mainland China. He added that Taiwan has already prepared relevant measures with other countries and military reserve would be called in such attack scenario.
The Republic of China Ministry of National Defense however would always remain neutral in any cross-strait issues, he added.