,
Kim Il, and
Kang Kon receiving the first domestically produced
Type 49 submachine guns from President
Kim Il Sung, 1949.
Liu Shaoqi during his official visit to
Beijing, 5 June 1963. Choe's first military deployment was to fight the Chinese
Northern Expedition of 1927. He also took part in the
Canton Communist riots in December later that year. He moved to Manchuria to form a guerrilla organization and military academy school to train the anti-Japanese guerrilla army. Choe joined the
Chinese Communist Party and the
Northeast Anti-Japanese United Army in 1936. He led a guerrilla unit against the
Japanese after they occupied
Manchuria (
Manchukuo) in September 1931. In 1940, Choe and his troops had fled to the Soviet-Manchurian border in the
Soviet Union and participated with the
88th Independent Brigade of the
Soviet Army. In 1945, he returned to Korea after Japan was defeated in
World War II. In 1946, he became the chairman of the
Korean Democratic Party (KDP) and led this organization to a pro-
communist course. He was, however, concurrently secretly a member of the ruling
Workers' Party of Korea and tasked with keeping the KDP from becoming an independent political force. Afterwards, he came into more promotions and by February 1948, he was appointed the
Chief Commander of the Korean People's Army. When
Kim Il Sung was appointed as premier on September 9, 1948, he was appointed the Minister of National Security. He was in fact the senior field commander for all the North Korean armies during the
Korean War, from the
first invasion of South Korea in June 1950 till the
Korean Armistice Agreement was signed in July 1953. In 1953, Choe was
promoted to
Vice Marshal and was made the
Minister of Defence. He died in Pyongyang in 1976. Following his death he was given a state funeral. == Personal life ==