中国、軍上将を全人代代表資格から剝奪 ── 汚職摘発の一環か
● Analysis · China / People’s Liberation Army
The Silent
Reckoning
In a single late-night notice, Beijing erased thirteen lawmakers. Six of them full generals from its top legislature. No charges. No explanation. Just absence.
On the night of 26 June 2026, the National People’s Congress Standing Committee delivered a quiet, devastating blow: it terminated the lawmaker credentials of six PLA full generals and two senior civilian officials at once. In the grammar of Chinese politics, the silence is the announcement.
The Files
Each name in the notice carried a portfolio at the heart of Xi Jinping’s military and economic machine. Open a file to read what was lost. Branch bars: red — military, gold — civilian.
The Cadence
June’s purge is not a moment — it is a metronome. For three years the strokes have fallen with grim regularity, climbing from the Rocket Force to the very top of the Central Military Commission. The story isn’t any single removal; it’s that the rhythm never breaks.
Why Them, Why Now
No charge sheet was published, so motive is read from portfolios and timing. Four pressures overlap.
Procurement money
Xu Xueqiang’s department sat where vast defence budgets meet state-owned suppliers — the same fault line that swallowed the Rocket Force and former defence minister Li Shangfu. Inflated contracts and kickbacks have been the campaign’s most recurring theme.
Loyalty in uniform
Li Fengbiao and Guo Puxiao were political commissars — the Party’s enforcers of ideology inside the ranks. Removing the watchmen suggests doubts about the watchmen themselves: patronage ties, or a perceived failure of discipline.
Pre-emptive clearing
With the Two Sessions concluded and leadership transitions on the horizon, sidelining potential obstacles now signals, again, that rank confers no shelter — not even at theatre-command level.
Stripping the shield
An NPC seat carries status and a measure of legal protection. Revoking it first is the procedural prelude that makes formal prosecution cleaner — a pattern seen with He Weidong and Miao Hua before.
The Reckoning’s Ledger
Two readings of the same facts. Both can be partly true at once.
Necessary surgery
Rapid expansion and opaque budgets bred genuine, large-scale graft. Cutting it out — however senior the target — is the price of a modern, trustworthy force that obeys the Party, full stop.
Each removal proves the rules bind everyone, deterring the next round of corruption and tightening Xi’s command over “the gun.” Loyalty, not tenure, becomes the currency of advancement.
Hollowing the bench
Repeated decapitations strip decades of expertise in acquisition, joint operations and frontline politics — exactly as Beijing seeks to project strength. Vacancies breed caution, risk-aversion and quiet paralysis.
The sheer reach — to CMC vice-chairs and across every service — hints not at a few bad actors but at entrenched networks, resistance to reform, or a cycle of purges that scars institutions more than it cleans them.
The road ahead
It is the most sustained military purge since the founding of the People’s Republic — proof of Xi’s command, or a symptom of how much remains to be cleaned. Whether the PLA emerges sharper or more brittle is, for now, the most consequential question Beijing will not answer.















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