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In Xi's China, even the mightiest general can fallThat image of Zhang's invulnerability, and closeness to Xi, shattered over the weekend, when China's defense ministry announced that he was under investigation for unspecified breaches of laws and political discipline.
International New York Times
Last Updated IST
<div class="paragraphs"><p>Zhang Youxia (L) and Xi Jinping.</p></div>

Zhang Youxia (L) and Xi Jinping.

Credit: Reuters Photos

When Gen. Zhang Youxia met with U.S. officials in Beijing in 2024, he exuded the confidence of a man who was seen as the most trusted deputy in the military of China's top leader, Xi Jinping.

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Zhang did not appear worried that he had to look over his shoulder to make sure he was pleasing the leader, said Jake Sullivan, who was the U.S. national security adviser attending the meeting, which lasted at least an hour. "He spoke in an unvarnished way that was typical of a military guy, but also reflective of someone who didn't feel like he had to be cautious."

That image of Zhang's invulnerability, and closeness to Xi, shattered over the weekend, when China's defense ministry announced that he was under investigation for unspecified breaches of laws and political discipline.

Zhang's downfall is of a different magnitude from the dozens of other generals who have been toppled in Xi's unrelenting campaign against perceived corruption and disloyalty over the past three years. His fate has astonished even longtime experts who thought that they had taken full measure of Xi, China's most powerful and imperious leader in generations.

"It's fair to say this is a seismic event," Sullivan said. For Xi to "take out somebody who he had such a long history with is striking and raises a lot of questions," he said.

At 75, Zhang was old enough that Xi could in theory have ushered him into retirement. Instead, Xi made a public pariah of him. An editorial about Zhang in the Liberation Army Daily on Sunday hinted that he was being accused of corruption, and, perhaps more important, of disloyalty to Xi.

Zhang and another commander who fell with him, Gen. Liu Zhenli, had "trampled on" the authority of the military chair -- that is, Xi -- and had "severely undermined the party's absolute leadership over the military," the editorial said. Their actions had "rendered massive damage" on the military's political soundness and combat readiness, it said.

"It reads more to suggest that they really were challenging Xi Jinping, that it was really a personal betrayal," said Shanshan Mei, a political scientist at Rand Corp., a research organization, who studies China's military. "Corruption is mentioned, but to me this gist of what they are accused of is very political, betraying Xi."

What prompted Xi to finally turn against Zhang is now a topic of fevered speculation in Beijing and beyond. Some experts believe that Xi may have come to see Zhang as too powerful after the general's own rivals were toppled in previous purges. Others believe Xi concluded that systemic corruption was so deep that he needed drastic surgery to clear the way for a new generation of commanders.

Other allegations have emerged. The Wall Street Journal reported on Sunday, citing anonymous sources, that Zhang has been accused of leaking nuclear secrets to the United States.

The timing of the investigation has drawn attention to Zhang's recent high-level engagements. Sullivan said their discussions of nuclear issues in 2024 -- in the presence of about 20 other Chinese military officers -- were strictly general. He said that he brought up nuclear weapons in the context of China's overall military buildup, but said that Zhang said nothing sensitive or even substantive on the topic.

"That was not one of the main topics of the discussion," Sullivan said.

A 'Princeling' Like Xi

Xi and Zhang are both "princelings," the sons of revolutionaries who served under Mao Zedong. Zhang's father was a general who served alongside Xi's father, Xi Zhongxun, in northwest China. There is no evidence that Zhang and Xi were close as children, but their shared background might have helped to cement their bond at some point, said Joseph Torigian, the author of a biography of the older Xi.

Zhang was a celebrated war veteran in a nation where few active commanders have endured real combat. Xi kept him in office past retirement, and made him his top vice chair of the Central Military Commission -- Xi's eyes and ears in running the People's Liberation Army's forces day to day.

Now, if formal charges are leveled against Zhang, he may face a secret trial in the military justice system. If so, he is almost certain to be convicted and imprisoned.

Zhang's downfall "will ultimately have a big effect on the power elite in Beijing because it removes one of their safety boundaries," said Deng Yuwen, a former editor of a Chinese Communist Party newspaper in Beijing who now lives in the United States. "Even Zhang Youxia's personal relationship with Xi Jinping was no guarantee of his safety, so nobody can feel safe."

Zhang joined the army in late 1968 and later distinguished himself as a frontline officer during China's grinding, yearslong border war with Vietnam from 1979. Accounts from troops described him as an audacious and wily unit leader who urged soldiers to use more artillery during a series of battles for Longshan, a disputed area on the border.

"We must first grab him by his throat so that he can't escape, advance or move, and then we strike," Zhang told a junior officer, Li Zhongping, according to a Chinese oral history of the war published in 1989.

After Xi became China's leader in 2012, he quickly moved to shake up the military, which was rife with corruption and organizationally stuck in the past, ill equipped to deal with the country's expanding naval, air and nuclear weapons ambitions. Zhang was one of the commanders tapped by Xi to help lead his overhaul of the People's Liberation Army, or PLA, culminating in a major reorganization from 2015.

"Zhang was a key enabler of Xi's military reform agenda prior to late-2015 -- before Xi became powerful enough to impose himself on the PLA," said James Char, an assistant professor at Nanyang Technological University in Singapore who studies the Chinese military.

In 2012, Zhang, who was then the head of a military region in northeast China, joined a delegation of senior Chinese military officers who visited the United States. Drew Thompson, then a Pentagon official helping to organize the visit, said the general was strikingly confident and inquisitive.

Other Chinese officers "stood up faster and straighter when he entered a room," Thompson in a post on Substack on Monday. He added: "He wasn't afraid to talk to foreigners, unlike some other senior officers who were often afraid or unable to engage."

Later that year, he was promoted to head the Chinese military's armaments department, an office that bought weapons, a post he held until 2017.

The department had the makings of "a petri dish of corruption for all the obvious reasons: Developing and procuring expensive weapons systems makes it a nice place to collect bribes and kickbacks," said Daniel Mattingly, a professor at Yale University who is studying Chinese military politics.

Other senior officers who worked in the department were later felled in anti-corruption investigations. Yet Zhang had long seemed to be spared scrutiny.

Now, the purge of Zhang could raise questions about China's strategy toward Taiwan and the risks of war. Thompson, the former Pentagon official, saw the general as someone who "had seen combat and been humbled by it."

"I think he could assess U.S. and Taiwan military capabilities objectively and explain to Xi Jinping what the military risks and costs of an operation to take Taiwan would be," Thompson wrote of Zhang. "I worry about the consequences of someone other than Zhang Youxia providing Xi Jinping with military advice."

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(Published 28 January 2026, 01:49 IST)