Skip to content
Home » What’s Really Going on Behind the Military Purge in China w/ Heng He (Transcript)

What’s Really Going on Behind the Military Purge in China w/ Heng He (Transcript)

Editor’s Notes: Xi Jinping’s unprecedented purge of China’s top generals has shattered long‑standing Communist Party rules and left the military’s chain of command “totally broken,” with five of seven Central Military Commission members now removed and only Xi and one other official remaining. On American Thought Leaders Podcast, veteran China analyst Heng He argues this is a historic turning point for CCP rule, likening it to past internal earthquakes such as the fall of the “Gang of Four,” and describing the move as effectively a coup carried out outside even the regime’s own formal and hidden procedures.

He explains how this chaos weakens the People’s Liberation Army, complicates any plan to invade Taiwan, and forces Xi to rely on politically loyal but militarily inexperienced commissars. The discussion also explores how destroying the Party’s internal rules and trust networks could ultimately destabilize the entire CCP system, even as Xi tries to cement himself as China’s unchallenged strongman. (Feb 1, 2026)

TRANSCRIPT:

JAN JEKIELEK: This is American Thought Leaders and I’m Jan Jekielek. Heng He, such a pleasure to have you back on American Thought Leaders.

HENG HE: Yeah, the pleasure is mine. Thanks for having me.

A Historic Turning Point for the CCP

JAN JEKIELEK: So there is something absolutely astonishing happening among the top leadership of the Chinese Communist Party with profound implications for the country, perhaps for the world. What’s going on?

HENG HE: Yeah, I think what happened last week is very rare to find such a thing. So I would say we are witnessing the turning point of the Chinese Communist Party rule. There are three, you know, at most three events that can be compared in Chinese Communist Party history after they took over China.

One is in 1962, you know, when the Great Leap Forward failed and tens of millions of people died. And then there’s a power switch and Liu Shaoqi, the second hand of Mao Zedong, who took over the power but kept Mao Zedong in a symbolic figure. That’s in 1962.

And the second event that can be compared is during the Cultural Revolution. Lin Biao, the second hand of Mao Zedong, was purged and escaped to Mongolia and died there. That was, I would say, the turning point of Mao Zedong’s legacy. You know, from that day, Mao Zedong’s legacy is almost gone. Yeah. The Chinese people rethink about what is the real nature of Cultural Revolution and that leads to the end of the Cultural Revolution.

And the third one is, I think, the end of Cultural Revolution. They purged the Gang of Four. The Gang of Four is Mao Zedong’s wife and three others promoted by Mao Zedong’s Cultural Revolution. So it’s kind of like the Gang of Cultural Revolution. They arrested the four of them and that marked the end of the Cultural Revolution.

So I think the fourth one is the purge of Zhao Ziyang in 1989. You know, during the Tiananmen Square massacre, they got rid of the head of the Communist Party, you know, General Secretary. I think this event can, you know, deserve to compare with those big events. It’s like once in decades.

JAN JEKIELEK: So what exactly happened? I mean, we’re seeing basically a profound shift in the power structure. This is something we talked a while ago, perhaps a year ago about—big shifts within the Communist Party, big power changes. But here we see another shift. And so just kind of lay out exactly what happened for me just shortly and then we’ll kind of dig into it a little bit.

The Power Switch and Xi’s Fightback

HENG HE: Yeah, basically last time we talked about the power switch. It’s basically somebody in the party top leadership, all that retired old leaders work with the military, pretty much took over the power from Xi Jinping, especially in the military and some economic field. But not totally. It’s a little bit similar to in 1962, you know, Liu Shaoqi took some of the power from Mao Zedong.

And this time it was probably retired, you know, old leaders with this Zhang Youxia, who was purged at this time, you know, took over part of the power, not full power. And this time I think after some preparation, Xi Jinping fought back, I think, and you know, purged this head of the military. Basically it’s like the power switched back. I would say this is what happened.

JAN JEKIELEK: So now, okay, let’s get the dimensions of this exactly. Now you’re talking about the vice chairman Zhang Youxia. You’re saying he was the head of basically the military and now this is Xi Jinping purging. This is Xi Jinping reasserting power.

HENG HE: Yes, and I believe because Xi Jinping is not a military person, so the head of the military was this person, you know, purged Zhang Youxia. And I’m pretty sure I can consider what Xi Jinping did is a coup.

Why This Qualifies as a Coup

JAN JEKIELEK: Okay, explain that to me because, you know, coup is a very strong word and there’s, you know, been kind of accusations of coups over the years happening with different leaders. But why would you, why does this reach the level of being called a coup?

HENG HE: We can see from the public information that Xi Jinping purged Zhang Youxia has not followed a procedure. It’s totally against CCP’s rules and even hidden rules. You know, they have open rules and they have hidden rules. But what Xi Jinping did was against every single rule, even the hidden rule.

For example, when they announced the purge, this statement is the CCP Central. CCP Central didn’t say Central. What CCP Central, you know, like investigate this person. Actually, two generals in the military—the top one and the top two. Top one and the second one. So purged two. I would say the top leaders of the military.

Usually they will say who purged them.