SS: Xi Jinping has purged Zhang Youxia, his long-trusted ally and vice chairman of the Central Military Commission (CMC), marking an unprecedented escalation in Xi’s consolidation of control over the PLA. Zhang’s fall—alongside other senior officers—goes beyond routine anti-corruption campaigns and represents a generational decapitation of China’s military leadership. Official rhetoric accuses Zhang of undermining the Party’s absolute control of the military, and leaks to the Wall Street Journal alleging he passed nuclear weapons information to the U.S. appear designed to portray him not just as corrupt but as traitorous, fully delegitimizing him and signaling that no one, not even Xi’s inner circle, is untouchable.
The purge leaves the CMC effectively hollowed out, heightens succession uncertainty, and reinforces Xi’s direct, personalized control over the armed forces in a system with no civilian oversight beyond him. Analysts interviewed argue the move reflects either Xi’s deepening suspicion or a calculated willingness to discard even close allies once they outlive their usefulness, rather than a clear policy dispute over Taiwan or deliberate espionage. While damaging to morale, the PLA’s operational capacity appears intact, and the episode suggests Xi feels strategically secure enough—especially on Taiwan—to prioritize internal control over stability, even at the cost of institutional coherence and trust within the military elite.
Firecracker048 on
Because leaders consolidating control over their military to a single point of failure to a person who has no military experience has ALWAYS worked out well
Wgh555 on
Contrary to the popular belief at the moment mostly due to trump (everyone thinks China is now some rational stable actor run by competent people) I don’t think China is particularly well run either. How can it be when there’s no accountability. It’s a dictatorship no different to Russia.
TreesRocksAndStuff on
Is it a meltdown or is it a consolidation of power in preparation of a costly operation to retake Taiwan in a few years? The US has periodic moments of indecision just before and just after national elections. Its international isolation appears to be growing due to repeated, avoidable errors, and current domestic political tensions will problemetize any response or non-response from candidates. ***2.5 years until late 2028 would give new leadership time to build confidence in their new commands and time for the gov to prepare war economy planning sufficiently for rapid implementation if the invasion becomes battle of attrition with drones. ***
Unless Taiwan surrenders or capitulates without significant US support (assumption: combined intelligence will see mobilization with enough time for deployment) the Chinese military needs to be prepared for their own version of D-Day style amphibious landings and the immense losses that entails.
A conventional military commander might say it is not worth the immense human costs to the military and potential low probability, high impact risks to over 1 billion of civilians (and high probability economic impacts on billions if much of US and China third-country trade is slowed or stopped) but a political leader might decide it is key to strategic reassertion of hegemony, especially when “playing” against an unpredictable strongman like Donald Trump who gives many unreliable signals. That will require immense diplomatic coordination as military threats escalate, in ways beyond the skills of the military, and faith that the non-military is competent in its preparions and implementation.
Although strategic nuclear exchange over Taiwan is very unlikely, the older generation of military leadership could be more sensitive to it too or becoming bogged down like in the Sino-Vietnamese war.
DaySecure7642 on
Xi is probably viewed as non legitimate even in the eyes of some Chinese officers. Scraping the terms limit is just wrong.
Also the military preparedness to invade Taiwan is probably much worse than Xi wanted, and the people under him have been over exaggerating it but in practice knows it is not ready by 2027 or even much later. The military leaders are probably doing the best for the country but Xi is old and cares more about his legacy of conquering Taiwan before he dies.
5 Comments
SS: Xi Jinping has purged Zhang Youxia, his long-trusted ally and vice chairman of the Central Military Commission (CMC), marking an unprecedented escalation in Xi’s consolidation of control over the PLA. Zhang’s fall—alongside other senior officers—goes beyond routine anti-corruption campaigns and represents a generational decapitation of China’s military leadership. Official rhetoric accuses Zhang of undermining the Party’s absolute control of the military, and leaks to the Wall Street Journal alleging he passed nuclear weapons information to the U.S. appear designed to portray him not just as corrupt but as traitorous, fully delegitimizing him and signaling that no one, not even Xi’s inner circle, is untouchable.
The purge leaves the CMC effectively hollowed out, heightens succession uncertainty, and reinforces Xi’s direct, personalized control over the armed forces in a system with no civilian oversight beyond him. Analysts interviewed argue the move reflects either Xi’s deepening suspicion or a calculated willingness to discard even close allies once they outlive their usefulness, rather than a clear policy dispute over Taiwan or deliberate espionage. While damaging to morale, the PLA’s operational capacity appears intact, and the episode suggests Xi feels strategically secure enough—especially on Taiwan—to prioritize internal control over stability, even at the cost of institutional coherence and trust within the military elite.
Because leaders consolidating control over their military to a single point of failure to a person who has no military experience has ALWAYS worked out well
Contrary to the popular belief at the moment mostly due to trump (everyone thinks China is now some rational stable actor run by competent people) I don’t think China is particularly well run either. How can it be when there’s no accountability. It’s a dictatorship no different to Russia.
Is it a meltdown or is it a consolidation of power in preparation of a costly operation to retake Taiwan in a few years? The US has periodic moments of indecision just before and just after national elections. Its international isolation appears to be growing due to repeated, avoidable errors, and current domestic political tensions will problemetize any response or non-response from candidates. ***2.5 years until late 2028 would give new leadership time to build confidence in their new commands and time for the gov to prepare war economy planning sufficiently for rapid implementation if the invasion becomes battle of attrition with drones. ***
Unless Taiwan surrenders or capitulates without significant US support (assumption: combined intelligence will see mobilization with enough time for deployment) the Chinese military needs to be prepared for their own version of D-Day style amphibious landings and the immense losses that entails.
A conventional military commander might say it is not worth the immense human costs to the military and potential low probability, high impact risks to over 1 billion of civilians (and high probability economic impacts on billions if much of US and China third-country trade is slowed or stopped) but a political leader might decide it is key to strategic reassertion of hegemony, especially when “playing” against an unpredictable strongman like Donald Trump who gives many unreliable signals. That will require immense diplomatic coordination as military threats escalate, in ways beyond the skills of the military, and faith that the non-military is competent in its preparions and implementation.
Although strategic nuclear exchange over Taiwan is very unlikely, the older generation of military leadership could be more sensitive to it too or becoming bogged down like in the Sino-Vietnamese war.
Xi is probably viewed as non legitimate even in the eyes of some Chinese officers. Scraping the terms limit is just wrong.
Also the military preparedness to invade Taiwan is probably much worse than Xi wanted, and the people under him have been over exaggerating it but in practice knows it is not ready by 2027 or even much later. The military leaders are probably doing the best for the country but Xi is old and cares more about his legacy of conquering Taiwan before he dies.