CN China’s Xi goes full Stalin with purge - In a sign of instability in Beijing’s top ranks, foreign policy and defense officials are vanishing as Xi roots out perceived enemies.

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Since his reign began in 2012, Xi’s endless purges have removed millions of officials | Andy Wong-Pool/Getty Images

Something is rotten in the imperial court of Chairman Xi Jinping.

While the world is distracted by war in the Middle East and Ukraine, a Stalin-like purge is sweeping through China’s ultra-secretive political system, with profound implications for the global economy and even the prospects for peace in the region.

The signals emanating from Beijing are unmistakable, even as China’s security services have ramped up repression to totalitarian levels, making it almost impossible to know what is really happening inside the country.

The unexplained disappearance and removal of China’s foreign and defense ministers — both Xi loyalists who were handpicked and elevated mere months before they went missing earlier this year — are just two examples.

Other high-profile victims include the generals in charge of China’s nuclear weapons program and some of the most senior officials overseeing the Chinese financial sector. Several of these former Xi acolytes have apparently died in custody.

Another ominous sign is the untimely death of Li Keqiang, China’s recently retired prime minister — No. 2 in the Communist hierarchy — who supposedly died of a heart attack in a swimming pool in Shanghai in late October, despite enjoying some of the world’s best medical care. Following his death, Xi ordered public mourning for his former rival be heavily curtailed.

In the minds of many in China, “heart attack in a swimming pool” has the same connotation that “falling out of a window” does for Russian apparatchiks who anger or offend Vladimir Putin.

Since his reign began in 2012, Xi Jinping’s endless purges have removed millions of officials — from top-ranked Communist Party “tigers” down to lowly bureaucratic “flies,” to use Xi’s evocative terminology.

What’s different today is that the officials being neutralized are not members of hostile political factions but loyalists from the inner ring of Xi’s own clique, leading to serious questions over the regime’s stability.

With such a febrile atmosphere in the celestial capital of Beijing, there are fears that an isolated and paranoid Chairman Xi could miscalculate, provoke armed conflict with one of its weaker neighbors or even launch a full-scale invasion of democratic Taiwan in order to distract from his domestic troubles.

Enemies everywhere​

The political earthquakes rippling out from the old imperial leadership compound of Zhongnanhai are exacerbating the already dire state of the Chinese economy.

“We see a China domestically that is challenged; an aging society, demography, a severe housing crisis, slowing down growth, unexpected unemployment because the young generation leaving university does not find adequate jobs in the private sector anymore,” European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, who heads to Beijing this week with her European Council counterpart Charles Michel for the first face-to-face EU-China meeting in nearly five years, told POLITICO last week. “So quite some challenges domestically.”

Chinese financiers and businesspeople (quietly) complain they are required to spend countless hours studying “Xi Jinping Thought on Socialism with Chinese Characteristics for a New Era” — a painfully turgid governing mantra that boils down to ideology-free totalitarian rule and the return of a personality cult to China.

In recent weeks, the country’s leading investment bank banned negative macroeconomic or market commentary, as well as any behavior that could suggest its bankers lead “hedonistic lifestyles.”

Not long after he ascended to chairmanship of the Communist Party in 2012, Xi began purging his real and perceived enemies in an “anti-corruption” campaign that never really ended.

Hundreds of senior officers in the People’s Liberation Army (PLA), as well as thousands of top Party officials, have been arrested, disappeared or “suicided” (driven to commit suicide or killed in circumstances made to look like suicide).

The beneficiaries of this perennial purge have been provincial bureaucrats who worked with Xi earlier in his career and whose main qualification is unquestioning loyalty to the “people’s leader.”

Small town boys​

These former small-town officials now make up the majority of the Standing Committee of the Politburo, which wields ultimate power in China.

One such loyal figure was Qin Gang, a former spokesman for the Chinese foreign ministry whose career went stratospheric after he became China’s chief protocol officer, overseeing most of Chairman Xi’s interactions with foreign dignitaries between 2014 and 2018.

After a brief stint as a vice foreign minister, Qin was named ambassador to Washington in July 2021 and foreign minister barely 18 months later — a uniquely rapid rise that Chinese officialdom attributed to his proximity and personal favor with the “core leader.”

On June 25 this year, barely six months after becoming minister, Qin held meetings in Beijing with the foreign ministers of Sri Lanka and Vietnam, as well as Deputy Russian Foreign Minister Andrey Rudenko.

Then he vanished.

According to several people with access to high-level Chinese officials, Rudenko’s real mission in Beijing was to inform Xi that his foreign minister and several top officers in the PLA had been compromised by western intelligence agencies.

Following his disappearance, lurid tales emerged of Qin’s affair with a reporter for Chinese broadcaster Phoenix TV called Fu Xiaotian, with whom he allegedly fathered a son who is a U.S. citizen. The stories circulated widely online with the apparent consent of Chinese cyber censors.

Fu attended Cambridge University, a traditional recruiting ground for Britain’s intelligence agencies, and first met Qin more than a decade ago when he was posted to the Chinese Embassy in London.

In 2016, Churchill College, Fu’s alma mater at Cambridge, named a garden after her in gratitude for her “very rare … series of generous gifts,” reportedly adding up to at least £250,000, an enormous sum for most journalists.

Before the foreign minister disappeared, Fu all but named Qin as the father of her child on social media.

Then, in April, she flew back to Beijing on what appears to have been a government-chartered private jet and has not been heard from since.

China’s propaganda system is strongly hinting that the affair and illegitimate American child are the reasons for Qin’s purge.

Rocket men​

According to several people with access to top officials, the real reason for his abrupt disappearance was Qin’s involvement in a much more serious scandal, involving the defense minister and the generals who commanded China’s “rocket force,” which oversees the country’s nuclear weapons program.

At almost the same time Qin went missing, the top commander of the rocket force, Li Yuchao, along with his deputy Liu Guangbin and former deputy Zhang Zhenzhong, all also disappeared.

Several other senior serving and former officers from the force were likewise detained and at least one former deputy commander died of unspecified illness, according to state media reports.

The missing commanders were eventually formally fired and replaced by officers from the navy and airforce, a very rare development since top commanders of the rocket force have almost always been promoted from within the service.

Not long after the rocket force purge was officially acknowledged, Li Shangfu, the man Xi picked as China’s defense minister in March this year, also vanished. His formal dismissal was announced in late October.

Further adding to the intrigue was a terse state media report on the day before Qin was formally removed as foreign minister in July. It said Wang Shaojun, commander since 2015 of the Central Guard unit that protects China’s top leaders and oversees Chairman Xi’s personal bodyguard, had died three months earlier due to “ineffective medical treatment.”

China’s nuclear weapons program has massively expanded in recent years and, according to people with access to top Chinese officials, Russian Deputy Minister Rudenko’s message to Xi included allegations that Qin and relatives of top rocket force officers had helped pass Chinese nuclear secrets to Western intelligence agencies.

Two of these people claim that Qin died, either from suicide or torture, in late July in the military hospital in Beijing that treats China’s top leaders.

Hostile forces​

Given the opacity of the Chinese system, it is impossible to confirm these accounts definitively and the Chinese government does not comment on the inner workings of the Communist Party.

Senior Western intelligence officials declined to comment or discuss the matter when asked about the purges in China.

But the sensational nature of the claims themselves make clear the feverish paranoia permeating Beijing.

Whether by accident or design, that mood was exacerbated over the summer when Director of the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency Bill Burns said the CIA had “made progress” rebuilding its network within China and had a “strong human intelligence capability” in the country.

That paranoia extends into all parts of the bureaucracy and economy and seems to have tarnished anyone seen as too Westernized or too close to “hostile Western forces.”

One senior Chinese finance official who speaks fluent English and is a regular fixture on the international conference circuit told POLITICO by email that he could no longer attend an upcoming event outside China and was unable to speak on the phone.

He joins dozens of senior finance officials who have been removed in recent months, often after being accused of corruption.

An associate of this official said he was currently being investigated for being “too close to America” and “possibly a spy.”

This seems to be the inevitable fate of anyone who engages too eagerly with foreigners and should serve as a warning to those who still believe China is open for business with the West.

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Kill enough people and the rest will get so scared that they will end you, one way or another. That or they just won’t work.

Murder of a political upstart is often an insanely bad idea. Just look at Russia and men doing the bare minimum or going yolo and doing full corruption living each day like it’s the last, lol.
They also won't be honest with what the state of things is with you, which is why he's getting blindsided with utter catastrophies all the time now, once things can no longer be covered up.
Literally the exact path Stalin went down. I just want to know what Xi's version of American western movies is, the litmus test all toadies in his inner circle have to pass in order to stay part of the clique.
 
Literally the exact path Stalin went down. I just want to know what Xi's version of American western movies is, the litmus test all toadies in his inner circle have to pass in order to stay part of the clique.
"Who wants to watch some capeshit?"

At least Stalin had a country on the rise and not one so unbelievably fucked and facing long-term decline as China. Really makes you miss Hu Jintao.

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Take it with a grain of salt, but all of those channels that cover the negative aspects of China have been showing desolate stores, losses of orders on mass, and companies pulling out of China. It amazes me that with all of its riches China never figured out how to build an industry for its own homeland that didn't depend on luring in other countries.

I guess that's just communism, everything's great until you can't steal as easily from others.
The worst part for China is that it could have worked out if they're just been only slightly looser on the reigns in some regards - Their extremely top heavy tax structure with the state just taking everything then maybe allocating down a budget for you, but letting you raise funds in other ways encouraged mass expansionism, but not sustainment. It worked right up until they hit critical mass and had 'enough' industry to make the services economy transition. Then it turns out a services economy is basically completely uninterested in buying and developing land, and extremely depending on strong, reliable infrastructure. Throw atop of that the fact the populace of a services economy expects more political freedoms (An information economy has to by definition move and manipulate information, which isn't viable with too many government boots on the necks) and it was doomed to fail from day one without something giving.

Instead, they're trying to undo the start of the services transition (Technically succeeding, look at Shanghai and its collapsing statistics) and return to being an industrial powerhouse, but the ships sailed. Wage expectations are up in the services economy level, significant portions of your youth spent a lot of time and money developing services economy skills and see factory work as a suicidal downgrade, and the people willing to provide factory jobs saw the writing on the wall and left to other southeast asian nations.

And this purge will end up harming China at least as much as my namesake's purges hurt the USSR. 'Red' doesn't count for more than 'expert' in real life. Xi just keeps fucking himself.
Worse, even. Stalin's Purges laid the foundation for an extremely bloody and rapid industrialization, whether that was his intent or not. Xi's purges are reactionary, tearing down everything that was built in an ignorant and desperate effort to grasp opportunity that left a decade ago. All the while silencing the people who can tell him how bad various aspects are going.
 
Unlike Putin or any of the other enemies of the US, I have zero idea what Xi is like as a person, every video I've seen of the guy has him sitting around stone faced barely moving, at least with a guy like Putin there is a hobby and sports activities he is involved in, even gimmick stuff like his stilted singing of Blueberry Hill in English. Assad, Saddam, and Gaddafi acted like humans, even if megalomaniacal assholes, I've never seen any sort of activities from Xi aside from a quick biography of the guy.
 
I love that one winnie the pooh looking retard has effectively derailed the "great plan" for China to quietly become a super power that was 30+ years in the making by being such an aggressive Mao wannabe.

It would be hilarious if it didn't cause so much death and pain.
Purges are not necessarily a bad thing or a sign of weakness. They are a sign of strength as purges are really difficult to pull off. They function as a sort of long term political investment. You take a hit to military effectiveness, even the economy goes down but after the purge you have complete and total political power with no one who can oppose you. This is a problem if the leader is a complete and total retard who has no idea what they are doing. I'd say Mao in the later periods of his life was quite retarded but he was extremely effective early in his life. He basically built an entire political apparatus and industrialized China. He took a backwards country and turned it into a world power that managed to beat one of the World's superpowers in a land war.
If the Leader is competent then Purges are fantastic.

Before anyone get all worked up about Purges you should also consider that you probably are aware of them in the past and you didn't really care about them
For example the Patriots purged all of the Loyalists by stealing their property and basically forced them to move to Canada. This is also the reason the US was able to quietly get rid of the Articles of Confederation without massive strife. All the people that would have caused strife were gone.

That being said I don't know if what Xi is doing is actually what would constitute a purge. He could have a treason problem especially after his crackdown on corruption.

For any budding dictators out there this is why you don't make a personality cult and instead you adopt a religion. It worked out tremendously well for Cromwell Napoleon Constantine etc etc.

And this purge will end up harming China at least as much as my namesake's purges hurt the USSR. 'Red' doesn't count for more than 'expert' in real life. Xi just keeps fucking himself.
I'm not sure Stalin's purges hurt the USSR. Certainly the starvation which killed the wealthy farmers hurt the USSR but I'd classify that separately. There were poor decision in regards to who he killed that were stupid like killing Tukhachevsky, but on the whole the Purges mostly functioned to get rid of the Trotsky Internationalist people. I am definitely not a big fan of Stalin or Communism but I do appreciate Stalin killing a whole bunch of basically Gobalists.
Then it turns out a services economy is basically completely uninterested in buying and developing land, and extremely depending on strong, reliable infrastructure
I don't think the Service Economy Transition is a realistic thing in the slightest. I think it was just US Cope and application of Federal Reserve Power of the Financial system.
China has a massive problem in that Industrialization is not sustainable in an economic sense in the long term. In fact basically every country has this problem.
I don't Xi is going to be able to fix it. Though he is definitely extremely aware of it and is working very hard to fix this problem.
There is one of Xi advisors by the name of Wang Huning who basically analyzed the state the US is in and is trying to stop that from happening to China. Both Xi and Wang Huning were super liberal and pro western in their approach in their early years. But they realized the "western approach" failed miserably and are trying to fix the problem that mass industrialization and urbanization causes rather than ignoring it, importing immigrant serf labor to stop the bleeding and basically destroying your entire country slowly, like the US did. They likely will not succeed however in my opinion.
 
Unlike Putin or any of the other enemies of the US, I have zero idea what Xi is like as a person, every video I've seen of the guy has him sitting around stone faced barely moving, at least with a guy like Putin there is a hobby and sports activities he is involved in, even gimmick stuff like his stilted singing of Blueberry Hill in English. Assad, Saddam, and Gaddafi acted like humans, even if megalomaniacal assholes, I've never seen any sort of activities from Xi aside from a quick biography of the guy.
With David Cameron's return to government as Foreign Secretary, I've discovered Xi likes a pint.
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And I'm not a football fan so I can't tell you who this is:
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It does seem like Winnie the Pooh and Piglet(fucker) get on quite well.
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He basically built an entire political apparatus and industrialized China. He took a backwards country and turned it into a world power that managed to beat one of the World's superpowers in a land war.
All for the low, low price of 40 million starved to death and a 10:1 casualty ratio, while receiving massive economic and military assistance from the world's other superpower
 
never figured out how to build an industry for its own homeland that didn't depend on luring in other countries.
China built some industries, but the big dogs are hard to outcompete due to political favouritism.
The worst part for China is that it could have worked out if they're just been only slightly looser on the reigns in some regards - Their extremely top heavy tax structure with the state just taking everything then maybe allocating down a budget for you, but letting you raise funds in other ways encouraged mass expansionism, but not sustainment. It worked right up until they hit critical mass and had 'enough' industry to make the services economy transition. Then it turns out a services economy is basically completely uninterested in buying and developing land, and extremely depending on strong, reliable infrastructure. Throw atop of that the fact the populace of a services economy expects more political freedoms (An information economy has to by definition move and manipulate information, which isn't viable with too many government boots on the necks) and it was doomed to fail from day one without something giving.
Informative, I couldn't have written it better myself.
I swear, 50 years from now we'll discover the CIA put mercury in the water of the leaders of China and Russia to make them act like fucking retards at a time when they can usurp the USA
Xi was a spoilt princeling and he remained one, the idiots were the people who selected him as general secretary the first time. Putin was seriously outmanuovered by Maidan and has competently tried to unmake the damage.
 
China built some industries, but the big dogs are hard to outcompete due to political favouritism.

Informative, I couldn't have written it better myself.

Xi was a spoilt princeling and he remained one, the idiots were the people who selected him as general secretary the first time. Putin was seriously outmanuovered by Maidan and has competently tried to unmake the damage.

Does Xi have kids? I wonder who takes over once he “dies peacefully in his sleep”…
 
Purging costs.

It cost Hitler, it cost Stalin, it has cost Putin and it will cost Xi. It always does.
 
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