China’s Top General Zhang Youxia Under Anti‑Corruption Probe Amid Wider PLA Purge
China’s Defense Ministry says Gen. Zhang Youxia, the senior vice chair of the powerful Central Military Commission (CMC), is under investigation for “serious violations of discipline and law,” making the country’s top uniformed officer the latest target in a sweeping military purge under Xi Jinping. Another CMC member, Joint Staff Department chief Liu Zhenli, has also been placed under party investigation, following last year’s expulsion of fellow vice chair He Weidong and two former defense ministers on corruption charges. Analysts see the campaign as both an effort to clean up graft and a loyalty drive that tightens Xi’s personal grip on the People’s Liberation Army command that would oversee any conflict with the United States or its allies. The shake‑up comes one day after the Trump administration released a new National Defense Strategy that explicitly defines China as a military power to be deterred from dominating the U.S. or its partners, even as it says a "decent peace" is possible without regime change. For U.S. defense planners and markets, the investigation into Zhang — a 75‑year‑old career ground‑forces general long seen as close to Xi — raises fresh questions about stability, morale and succession inside the PLA at a time of rising U.S.–China tensions over Taiwan, the South China Sea and global influence.
📌 Key Facts
- China’s Defense Ministry announced Jan. 24, 2026 that Gen. Zhang Youxia, senior vice chair of the Central Military Commission, is under investigation for “serious violations of discipline and law.”
- CMC member Liu Zhenli, chief of staff of the Joint Staff Department, has also been placed under Communist Party investigation, with no details released on alleged wrongdoing.
- The move follows the October expulsion of former CMC vice chair He Weidong and 2024 expulsions of two former defense ministers, part of an anti‑corruption drive that has punished more than 200,000 officials since Xi Jinping took power in 2012.
- The announcement coincides with the Trump administration’s new National Defense Strategy, which casts China as a major military power requiring deterrence to prevent it from dominating the U.S. or its allies.
📰 Source Timeline (1)
Follow how coverage of this story developed over time