After the split with the Kuomintang, the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) began to build its own army. However in this process, the Central Committee of CCP provided neither financial support nor human resources; it would be fair to argue that the Red Army established its power almost entirely by itself. The Central Committee of CCP did not shift their focus onto the base areas, re-examine the power of its military forces, or try to strengthen their control of the Red Army until the latter had grown into a formidable force around 1930. In the ensuing process of gaining control of the Red Army, the Central Committee of the CCP had to deal with power struggle and issues such as organizational system, ideology and etc. However, in comparison to the difficulty in controlling the military force since the Beiyang period, the Chinese Communist Party's control of the military forces was quite effective.