27 October 2023

China Dismisses Defense Minister Amid Swirl of Speculation

Chris Buckley

Just four months ago, China’s defense minister, Gen. Li Shangfu, was at a forum for regional officials in Singapore, serving as the face of his country’s bold vision for reshaping Asia’s balance of power. He cast China as a force for stability and accused the United States of stirring trouble in the region, suggesting that its leaders should “mind your own business.”

Now, General Li has been dismissed after nearly two months out of public view — the latest example of the opacity of high-level politics in China under Xi Jinping, the country’s top leader.

General Li, who had been appointed defense minister in March, is the second senior official to be purged this year without explanation and under a cloud of suspicion.

The foreign minister, Qin Gang, was dismissed in July, amid speculation about a potentially compromising affair while he was an ambassador in the United States. The removal of the defense minister also followed an abrupt shake-up in August in the leadership of China’s nuclear force, the highest-level upheaval in China’s military in recent years.

The announcement on Tuesday ended some uncertainty about General Li’s professional fate but leaves open questions about whether he is being investigated over any offenses. Officials in the United States said last month that the Chinese authorities had placed him under investigation over corruption.

By dismissing General Li, Mr. Xi is seeking to “send a message to everyone that he is strictly in control of the military,” said Andrew Yang, a former defense minister of Taiwan and now a scholar of the Chinese military. “He also wants to stress that he has zero tolerance for corruption.”

Mr. Xi is still regarded by experts as politically unassailable, with his authority buttressed by the loyalists he has packed into the Communist Party’s leadership, the military’s top brass and the security services. But the abrupt downfall of such high-ranking officials has raised questions about Mr. Xi’s judgment, especially because the officials under scrutiny had been promoted by him.


The foreign minister, Qin Gang, was dismissed in July.Credit...Noel Celis/Agence France-Presse.

General Li and Mr. Qin were both picked by Mr. Xi for promotion less than a year ago, making their removal politically awkward, and damaging, for Mr. Xi, said Dennis Wilder, a former director for China at the White House’s National Security Council who now teaches at Georgetown University.

“The way in which this has been done looks dysfunctional — the Chinese Communist Party usually comes up with a line, an explanation, for removing someone. Not this time,” said Mr. Wilder. This year, Mr. Xi’s government has also been buffeted by China’s painful economic slowdown, the aftermath of ending his strict “Zero Covid” policy, and the diplomatic fallout from Russia’s continued war in Ukraine, Mr. Wilder added.

“For the Chinese Communist Party elite, all this will raise real concerns and worries,” he said. “But there is no successor to Xi on the horizon.”

General Li’s ouster was announced by Chinese state media in brief reports that noted other official appointments and dismissals. The reports said the decision was made on Tuesday at the end of a meeting of the Standing Committee of China’s National People’s Congress — a council in the country’s Communist Party-controlled legislature that formally appoints senior government officials. Mr. Xi, as state president, signed off on the decisions.

There was no word on who would replace General Li as defense minister, a position that serves as the military’s chief diplomat. Unlike the United States’ defense secretary, the Chinese minister of defense does not have a major say over the military. The party controls the military through the Central Military Commission, which is headed by is Mr. Xi.

Formally, at least, General Li still appeared on the Chinese defense ministry’s website on Tuesday as a member of the Central Military Commission. A separate Communist Party meeting due before the end of this year may remove him from that post.

The next defense minister will likely play a major role in talks with the United States, if the two sides resume high-level military contacts. U.S. officials have pushed to restart lines of military communication with China, a topic that may be discussed when the country’s top foreign policy official, Wang Yi, visits Washington later this week. Mr. Wang is expected to meet with Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken and other officials.

Pentagon officials have argued the two militaries need to communicate often and promptly to avoid or defuse potential crises, especially as the two countries’ militaries regularly patrol disputed areas including the South China Sea, heightening the risk of an unintended conflict.

But for years, U.S. military officials have found it difficult to arrange substantive talks with their Chinese counterparts, and China officially halted the high-level contacts in August 2022, after Nancy Pelosi, who was speaker of the House of Representatives at the time, visited Taiwan, which Beijing claims is its territory.


Mr. Li, far right in the first row, applauding China’s leader, Xi Jinping, at the National People’s Congress in March.

This year, China rebuffed invitations from the United States for talks between General Li and Defense Secretary Lloyd J. Austin III, including at the regional security forum in Singapore in June.

Beijing had said that the Biden administration should first lift sanctions imposed on General Li in 2018, for purchases of Russian fighter jets and surface-to-air missiles, before the two defense officials could meet.

News of General Li’s dismissal came just before China holds the Xiangshan Forum, an annual gathering in Beijing of Chinese and foreign military officials and experts, which is set to open on Sunday. China’s defense minister usually gives a keynote speech at the event.

General Li was last seen in public in late August, when he spoke at a forum in Beijing attended by officials from African nations. That month, he had also traveled to Russia, where, speaking at a Moscow security conference, he warned against “playing with fire” when it came to Taiwan, the island democracy that China claims as its own and that the United States has expressed support for.

He added that any effort to “use Taiwan to contain China” would “surely end in failure.” In July, he met with Henry Kissinger during a visit to Beijing by the 100-year-old former secretary of state.

For much of his career, General Li was involved in China’s space and rocket programs, developing missiles and other advanced weapons — a part of his résumé that has been the subject of scrutiny since the reports emerged about the potential corruption inquiry.

In late July, Mr. Xi abruptly replaced the two top commanders of the Rocket Force, the arm of the Chinese military that oversees its nuclear missiles and much larger array of conventional missiles. The Chinese government gave no explanation for their ousting, but news reports in Hong Kong have linked the upheaval to an inquiry into corruption or other misconduct in the Rocket Force, which Mr. Xi created in late 2015.

“It looks like there’s a great deal of attention being paid to the military procurement side,” Mr. Wilder from Georgetown University said of the downfall of the Chinese generals. “There must be some real humdingers of issues to have brought on all this.”


A picture of Mr. Xi at the museum of the Communist Party of China in Beijing. Mr. Xi is still regarded by experts as politically unassailable.

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