China Removes 3 Senior Officers as Military Purges Escalate
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China has expelled three senior military officers from its Communist Party-controlled legislature, the latest sign that turbulence continues within the upper echelon of the country’s armed forces.
Gen. Zhang Hongbin, political commissar of the armed police, was stripped of his membership at the National People’s Congress (NPC), the country’s rubber-stamp legislature, according to a Dec. 27 notice published on the body’s website. No reason was given for the commanders’ exit.
Before being transferred to the armed police in 2022, Zhang previously served as political commissar of the Eastern Theater Command, which oversees some of Beijing’s most strategically important areas, including the East China Sea and the Taiwan Strait.
Also ousted from the rubber-stamped legislature on Dec. 27 was Adm. Wang Renhua, who headed the military’s Central Political and Legal Affairs Commission, which exercises the Party’s control over the military’s courts and procurators.
The third commander to be removed was Lt. Gen. Wang Peng, who led the training department under the Central Military Commission.
The Communist Party’s top officials have pledged to continue the over a decade-long anti-corruption efforts and to strengthen measures in next year’s crackdown, according to the summary of a Politburo meeting released by state media on Dec. 25.
“The ongoing removal of senior PLA officers has caused uncertainty over organizational priorities and lack of continuity in those priorities,” the congressionally mandated report states.
“These removals have reverberated throughout the ranks of the PLA as well, as there are reports that some new recruits question the PLA’s absolute loyalty to the party.”
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