
General Zhang Youxia, once China’s highest-ranking uniformed military officer and a longtime confidant of President Xi Jinping, was dramatically removed from power in January 2026. His investigation for “serious violations of discipline and law”—a standard Chinese Communist Party euphemism for corruption and related offenses—marked one of the most shocking developments in the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) in decades. As the senior vice chairman of the Central Military Commission (CMC), Zhang stood second only to Xi in the military hierarchy, making his purge a pivotal moment in Xi’s relentless campaign to consolidate absolute control over China’s armed forces.
Born in July 1950, Zhang Youxia was a “princeling,” the son of revolutionary General Zhang Zongxun, who had fought alongside Xi’s father during the Chinese Civil War. This shared revolutionary heritage fostered a deep personal bond between Zhang and Xi, positioning him as one of Xi’s most trusted military allies.
Zhang joined the PLA in 1968 at age 18 and rose through the ranks with genuine combat experience rare among modern Chinese generals. He participated in the 1979 Sino-Vietnamese War and the 1984 Battle of Laoshan, earning a reputation as a battle-hardened leader. His career included key command positions, such as leading units in the Shenyang Military Region (near North Korea and Russia) by 2007. He entered the CPC Central Committee that year and joined the CMC in 2012.
Under Xi’s leadership, Zhang’s ascent accelerated. In 2017, he became a Politburo member and second-ranked CMC vice chairman. Following Xi’s unprecedented third term in 2022, Zhang was elevated to first-ranked vice chairman, serving as Xi’s chief military adviser and helping drive PLA modernization, joint operations capabilities, and readiness targets—including preparations potentially tied to contingencies around Taiwan by 2027.
Despite waves of anti-corruption purges that felled former defense ministers Li Shangfu and Wei Fenghe, Rocket Force commanders, and numerous other high-ranking officers, Zhang appeared untouchable due to his battlefield credentials, princeling status, and perceived unwavering loyalty to Xi.
That illusion shattered on January 24, 2026, when China’s Ministry of National Defense announced that Zhang, then 75 and past typical retirement age (a sign of Xi’s earlier trust), was under investigation alongside CMC Chief of Staff General Liu Zhenli. Official statements accused them of grave breaches that undermined the CMC chairman responsibility system—Xi’s mechanism for direct command over the PLA—and fostered political and corruption issues that betrayed party trust.
Unconfirmed reports from Western media, including allegations of leaking nuclear secrets to the United States, accepting bribes (possibly linked to promotions like that of a former defense minister), and forming cliques, circulated widely but remained unverified by official channels. Some analysts suggested the core issue was political rather than purely financial: potential disagreements over PLA timelines, with Zhang reportedly favoring a more cautious approach to joint operations readiness amid Xi’s aggressive directives.
The purge left the CMC—a body typically comprising seven members—severely depleted. Of the seven appointed in 2022, nearly all except political commissar Zhang Shengmin (promoted after earlier removals) have now been targeted under Xi’s anti-graft drive. This “total annihilation” of the high command, as one analyst described it, has hollowed out experienced leadership, with no remaining top officers possessing combat experience.
Observers view the move as a double-edged sword for Xi. It reinforces his unchallenged authority and eliminates any perceived disloyalty or independent power centers, even among longtime allies. Yet it risks military cohesion, morale, and operational effectiveness at a sensitive time, raising questions about PLA preparedness for high-stakes scenarios and the long-term stability of Xi’s command structure.
As of late January 2026, Zhang’s investigation continues amid broader PLA turmoil. Such probes rarely end without expulsion from the party, removal from positions, and severe punishment. The fall of a figure once seen as Xi’s indispensable military pillar underscores the precariousness of elite status in contemporary China: in a system demanding absolute loyalty, even the closest allies can become liabilities when paranoia or power dynamics shift. This episode may prove one of the most consequential in the post-Mao era for the PLA and Xi’s grip on power.