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.
You know, you know, the power, where the power comes from. And didn’t say it’s a CCP Central. Well, CCP Central is a very, you know, confused name. Usually it would mean CCP Central Committee or CCP Central Committee Political Bureau or the, you know, Standing Committee of the Political Bureau. So three levels, they all can be called the CCP Central.
But the CCP Central is very abnormal. You cannot say that. You have to have a meeting. You know, procedure, have a meeting. If you don’t have the meeting, you don’t have the decision. That’s illegal. So if it’s illegal, that’s a coup. And this is one reason.
Another reason is, you know, the chairman or vice chairman of CCP Central Military Commission should be decided by the CCP Central Committee. And the Central Committee didn’t have a meeting. So they didn’t authorize the purge. They must authorize the promotion and the purge. But there’s no such procedure.
And second is in the Central Military Commission, CMC, they have to have a meeting to decide who is in what position. And they also need to make the decision to purge somebody inside the Military Commission. The problem is they already purged three of the members of the Military Commission, so only four left. And this time, two were purged. That means if they have a meeting to vote, and then it should be two to two, right? So two agreed to purge another two. That was impossible. None of the procedure, you know, written in the, you know, rules also carried out. That’s why I said this is a coup. It’s very illegal.
Breaking the Core Rules
JAN JEKIELEK: I mean, this is absolutely fascinating, right? Because, you know, this is in every system, right? Like say in the Mafia, right? There’s certain rules that have to be followed, right? And when you don’t typically break those, when people break them, they get in big, they get in huge trouble. Why? Because otherwise you have utter chaos.
So this is, you’re saying that these core rules, the core basics of what’s been happening in the Chinese Communist Party, of how it’s worked in the upper echelons, have been completely compromised now. And Xi just kind of went in and said, here’s how it’s going to be.
HENG HE: Yeah. You remember several months ago, they confirmed nine top military leaders were purged, right? But now two top leaders were purged. So this will be the big issue.
I think the first thing is the chain of command in the military is totally broken. It’s totally broken. It’s not like partially or half. This never happened in history of the Communist rule. Even during the Stalinist time, you know, in Soviet Union, of course they purged a lot of military personnel officials. But I think in the top leader, five of the top military leaders, only purged three, you know, two left. But now they have seven in the Central Military Commission and only two left, five purged. So this is like more serious than in Stalinist time.
I would say that was the big influence of the whole Chinese Communist rule because it’s not in the military. The purges also happened in the civilian, in the government system, even though it’s not so dramatic. And everybody will think this is not right. Why? Because usually the rule will tell people who is in charge and what to do.
In China, you have to follow the right person. If you follow the wrong person in the government system or in the bureaucracy, then you will be purged, right? But now people don’t know what is the right person to follow. Because even if you follow Xi Jinping, you still will be purged. So the hidden rule is broken. I think that will be the end of the whole system. Because the system needs to put people together, you know, the officials together, you should be able to make the system work. But now nobody knows who to trust and who is the one you should follow. That’s a big problem.
The Military Chain of Command Is Broken
And also chain of command of the military has been broken. That means the military cannot fight. Another thing is Chinese military is different from the rest of the world. They belong to the party, not belong to the people or the state or the government or any, you know, state. So they belong to the party. It’s a party-ruled military.
So the military designed way is totally different. It’s designed to protect the CCP’s rule, you know, protect the regime, not fight overseas wars. So the military is basically designed that way. They don’t even have the soldiers and the guns have no bullet in it. Because they are afraid that they will turn to the wrong side, you know, turn back their guns. So that’s the design.
But you know, people always are afraid that Xi Jinping would, you know, take over Taiwan. But once they decided to have a foreign war against Taiwan, they have to put the generals in full control. Xi Jinping cannot fight himself, right? He has to give the power, you know, the command to the military leaders. You know, that means the military has the power to turn the, you know, gun backwards again.
For now, it’s impossible against him. I mean, but you know, since everybody is afraid of their position and their safety, even in the military, that’s never happened before. Because even during the Cultural Revolution, Mao Zedong didn’t really purge the high-rank officials in the military. You know, military is relatively stable, but now military is in a mess.
JAN JEKIELEK: Heng He, just one moment. We’re going to take a break and folks, we’re going to be right back.
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JAN JEKIELEK: And we’re back with senior China analyst Heng He. I mean, this is an astonishing development, right? And I mean, as you said, right, we’ve got five out of seven of the, you know, top military leadership gone. And, and you know, obviously it had to do with the fact that Xi felt threatened. He was consolidating his power from what I understand you’re saying.
But at the moment, I mean, there are all these questions about what the strength of the Chinese military is, right? It’s been, they’ve been building a huge navy, they’ve been building in space, they’ve been expanding their nuclear capabilities dramatically. I mean, way beyond anything that’s official. From what we know, this is a potent military force in the world, right? And you’re saying it’s without leadership right now? I mean, this sounds concerning.
Good News for the World, Bad News for Xi
HENG HE: Well, maybe it’s good news for the world, not good news for Xi Jinping, because Xi Jinping is different. I think his conflict with the military, part of the reason is Xi Jinping wants to be a great leader, you know, can be the same as Mao Zedong and Deng Xiaoping. As we talked the last time, you know, he wants to be—he said Mao Zedong is the one to make China stand up. And you know, Deng Xiaoping makes China rich and he will make China strong, you know, but that “strong” has no standard. You cannot say this is strong, right?
So he has to do something to make his claim, you know, convincing. Taiwan is the, I think it’s the best target for him. But the military has, the whole military has a different idea. Two major points.
One is the military is totally corrupted. I’m not saying Zhang Youxia is not corrupted, you know, he is corrupted. But the reason to purge him is not corruption. The reason to purge him is one, Zhang Youxia helped, you know, the others to, you know, take some of the power from him.
Another reason is Zhang Youxia has a totally different idea about taking over Taiwan. I think these two military leaders who were purged, they were the only ones who had real battle, you know, field battle experience. Others didn’t have one. And they are very professional. Those two purged, Zhang Youxia and Liu Zhenli, they are very professional. Even American military recognize they are very good professional military persons. And they are very good at communication. Communicate with Americans. Maybe that’s one of the reasons to purge them.
So they have a different idea. They thought this is a bad idea because Chinese military is not ready to fight the war in the Taiwan Strait. So I think that means Xi Jinping’s ambition is in conflict with the professional opinion about the war. I think that’s another reason, you know, Xi Jinping cannot get along with those two purged military personnel.
# What’s Really Going on Behind the Military Purge in China w/ Heng He
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)
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JAN JEKIELEK: You know, I want to jump into that in a moment where, you know, basically this idea that, you know, if in a way this could be creating a more dangerous situation because Xi, who doesn’t—I mean, I’ll get you to qualify this for me. But from what I understand, Xi has no military experience and now is kind of, I guess through this coup as you describe it, is kind of trying to take control of the military. And he may make decisions that his professional leadership would never have made because of the cost perhaps.
Before we jump into that, I just have one quick question. So you don’t think that Zhang Youxia actually did something with nuclear secrets and the Americans?
The Nuclear Secrets Allegation: Political Framing, Not Reality
HENG HE: No, no, no, not at all. The Wall Street Journal published an article, got some internal source. But you have to know that in the PLA Daily—the military newspaper, official newspaper—they accused Zhang Youxia of like five crimes. And the five crimes, the most serious one is broken the system of the CMC Central Military Commission chairman’s sole responsibility. That means the chairman, that means Xi Jinping. Xi Jinping is in full charge of the military. Nobody else should have the power, share the power.
So that means broken the rule means challenges Xi Jinping’s authority in the military. That’s a political crime. It’s not, you know, corruption, you know, acquisition the official. This is a, you know, half official statement has nothing to do with the nuclear secret, nothing to do with the corruption. It’s all political. It’s fully power struggle.
And in the last two days, there was a lot of Western media ask a question in the military press conference and the answer is no. They denied any accusation about the nuclear secret. So I think somebody on Xi Jinping’s side tried to make the coup looks legal. So they release intentionally to Western media. And I don’t think Western media can create this story. You know, the story is from inside, but the leaking has the purpose. The purpose is frame Zhang Youxia, you know, make him look like a traitor. That’s why.
But officially they won’t be able to prove that. So they don’t do it officially, but do it by leaking the information to Western media.
JAN JEKIELEK: So you think they’re basically just using the Western media to create narratives.
HENG HE: Yeah, but not official narrative. Because there’s no way Zhang Youxia would leak the nuclear secret to United States. The reason is he is already in the top position. You know, there’s no way American can offer better position. Right. And for the money side, as long as he is willing to take the money, he must be already rich and sometimes richer than a small country. Very rich. American cannot bribe him. He cannot pay more than he already have.
If he is not so corrupted, that means he doesn’t really need money, then you cannot buy him. So there’s no reason. By the way, he is not a nuclear expert. I don’t think he knows a lot of CCP in China’s nuclear weapon secret. I don’t think so. In his position, he doesn’t need to know the detail. If you don’t know the detail, then you don’t have the secret.
Amateurs Replacing Professionals: A More Dangerous Military
JAN JEKIELEK: I mean, that’s absolutely fascinating. Let’s just jump back to this idea that Xi Jinping may have consolidated his actual power over the military. He has this interest, you’re saying, in Taiwan as a way to show that he has made China strong. His generals, you’ve been saying, have been saying, wait a sec, this isn’t going to go well for us, so let’s hold off. Does this mean that we might have created a more dangerous situation because of his ambition?
HENG HE: It could be. But since the military is not willing to fight, that’s how do you know that? So it will be. There’s no winning issue for Xi Jinping but of course it’s more dangerous. You know the whole story from the beginning. You know, like in 2023 started with purging the rocket army, right? And the military Equipment and Development Department. That’s Zhang Youxia’s territory.
So purge those is because Xi Jinping want to take over Taiwan. And he wants to the military, you know, designed. He designed in 2015, you know, to switch the military from the inside to the outside fight. But looks like it’s failed because the corruption the military cannot fulfill his needs. That’s why he started to purge and purged Zhang Youxia’s territory. That’s why Zhang Youxia tried to fight back.
And last year all the military top leaders purged were all belongs to the Xi Jinping faction. So there’s another reason. We believe that the power switch last year happened and now Xi Jinping took over the power and got rid of only two reasonable military top leaders. Another one left. We said two left in the Military Central Committee. Xi Jinping is the one. Another was promoted last October, you know, last year, October, it’s Zhang Youxia.
But Zhang Youxia is a political leader of the military. He doesn’t know anything about the military doesn’t know anything about, you know, war. So he was commissar person. You know, people call commissar person and that means now amateur replaced professional. So it’s more dangerous. I believe it’s more dangerous.
But also the military power, you know, the power for the war is much, much weak than before. So they have no way to win a war. The control the conflict is less possible with a professional. They can control the conflict, but without the professionals now it’s amateurs in charge. There will be more chance to have uncontrolled conflict. But not necessarily they have a strong military power to win the war. No, I don’t think so.
JAN JEKIELEK: You’re saying that the military power is dramatically reduced because of the lack of professional leadership. What about kind of overall for Xi? So Xi has consolidated power. He’s had this coup as you’ve described it. What does this kind of mean for the CCP’s power on the external stage, on the world stage?
HENG HE: So far they claim, you know, the military claim that the communication with the foreign military will be continued and won’t stop. That was one way, you know, they tried to make things like nothing happened or nothing serious happened. But actually there will be a lot of changes in CCP’s, you know, the international policies, but I don’t think they were because, you know, CCP doesn’t really have a good strategy. International, global strategy.
Basically their strategy is against the United States, you know, even since 1949 when CCP took over China. And their strategy is against the United States because CCP has the basic theory of Marxism, you know, communism, and their theory is overtaken the whole world. They have never changed. You know, the reform and openness is just one exception, you know, during Deng Xiaoping time. And I think Xi Jinping is back to the CCP basic ideology and they won’t change.
So I don’t think in the international level I would see, I don’t expect to see many changes. That’s my thought.
The System Destroyed: Xi’s Path Mirrors Soviet Collapse
JAN JEKIELEK: I know that it’s very difficult to predict what will happen, but this is a profound shift. And you say there’s a kind of a more chaotic situation and there’s some kind of, I mean, would it be fair to say there’s sort of an overall reduction in power for the system?
HENG HE: Yeah. The thing is actually we can predict some of the future in CCP’s rule because, you know, for the past one or several years there was saying that the officials in the government, in the party system, in the government system had a trend to “tang ping” is lay down, you know, don’t do anything because they don’t know what to do as a right can be promoted or keep their position or even keep them safe. They don’t know what to do. So doing nothing is the safest choice they have.
So that’s a very popular trend that the officials in the government system lay down doing nothing. Now this extended to the military now. So it means Xi Jinping has the superpower. You know, all the power came to himself. But the whole bureaucracy becomes less power and less efficiency. And everybody knows Xi Jinping are the sole dictator cannot do everything right. You have to depend on the system. Now the system was destroyed by Xi Jinping and that will be the big problem.
You know, Soviet Union collapse is not because they don’t have strong military, it because the system collapsed. Now Xi Jinping faced the same situation. He wants to have a full power, but you know, in the same time, you know, by doing, you know, destroying the system. Of course I think this is maybe it’s not a bad thing because you know, the Chinese Communist Party is the one who creates all the, you know, the trouble in the world or in China.
And, you know, Xi Jinping is in another way to destroy the party, destroy the system. It’s a little bit like Mao Zedong in the early stage of the Cultural Revolution, you know, destroy the whole system he built. But of course, in several months in early 1967, Mao Zedong rebuilt the system. That’s his system. But Xi Jinping, I don’t think he had the chance or the ability to rebuild anything he destroyed.
Economic Contradictions: The Crippled Reform
JAN JEKIELEK: Hmm. Well, so it’s very interesting, the analogy now to the Soviet Union, because there were kind of a few things happening. One was, like you said, right? The sort of the system of power sharing and kind of being able to affect policy, kind of make things happen was kind of crumbled internally. Right. The other side was the economic difficulty. I mean, this is part of the, you know, American plan was to kind of, you know, outspend and get them to basically, you know, kind of economically hurt themselves.
And the CCP is indeed in a very difficult economic situation right now, you know, especially with these, you know, tariff regimes that are coming from the US. Can I get you to comment on that a little bit?
HENG HE: I think the basic problem is inside China, you know, because even if, you know, even there’s no help of United States, if they have a policy, they have the biggest market in the world, right? So when United States to do some thing like tariff, something like that, it shouldn’t be damaged. You know, it totally destroys China’s economy.
The problem is when Chinese Communist Party during Deng Xiaoping time to start the free market or some reform, it was crippled reform, you know, it has only economic reform without the political system reform. So it’s so you cannot, like, everything is listen. You have to follow the party. You have to listen to the party. You have to have socialist planned economy. And the same time, you have full free market. That’s impossible.
So that’s why the conflict is already there. But, you know, with the Western investment, you know, lots of money pour in. That problem is not so obviously it was covered, you know, by the Western investment. But the problem is still there. You know, after years of accumulation, the problem becomes worse and worse.
Of course, CCP is afraid of the economy, freedom, you know, we’ll have those, you know, who get rich from the free market and demand more political power, you know, share political power. So that’s why, you know, Xi Jinping is the resolution. When Xi Jinping took over the power, he tried to promote the, you know, state economy, you know, plan the economy and suppress the private section of the economy. And that’s what Xi Jinping, you know, this is the Communist Party’s reaction to the, you know, free market.
That’s, I think the problem is there. Deng Xiaoping knew that, but he doesn’t want to, you know, destroy Communist Party. So that’s why he said, we leave the problem to the next generation. So now it’s next generation’s problem. That’s current generation.
Navigating the New Reality: Recommendations for the West
JAN JEKIELEK: Well, so what would be your recommendations in terms of how, for example, U.S. administration might kind of approach this, I guess, somewhat new reality? Let me kind of summarize what I’m seeing. Right, you’re saying basically Xi has once again consolidated power among himself, but his bureaucracy is not as eager to follow anymore because he’s sort of torn apart some of the fabric of the system that kind of kept everything functioning well.
At the same time, he has these Taiwan ambitions. Right. Of course, the US has reiterated its support to protect Taiwan, has its own challenges. But there is this aspect of instability and ambition, perhaps beyond the ability of the military to affect. Okay, and here we are, we have American and other Western leaders wondering, okay, well, how do we deal with this? What do you say to them?
HENG HE: I would say the current American policy towards China is on the correct track. Because, you know, no matter what you say, the important thing is what you do. I think it’s on the correct track. So I don’t have many suggestions, but I think the most important thing is realize that Communist Party won’t change. This is a major point.
You cannot expect Communist Party, CCP or Xi Jinping is a normal leader or a normal regime. Even regime is not normal. It’s not a normal government. So you cannot take it as a normal opponent or another party of the negotiation or anything. So I think this is important to realize that CCP is. It cannot cooperate with United States. It cannot use the international organizations like United Nations or something like that.
So I think now the current US Government realize that. That’s why they quit some international organizations because those international organizations are not fully controlled by CCP. So I think just don’t expect they are normal. That’s most important. Once you know they are the troublemaker of the world, you know, you see all the terrorists or all the troublemaking countries, always the CCP, the Chinese Communist Party is behind. So I think that once you recognize, I think the politicians have their, you know, they know what to do. So I don’t have any suggestion. It’s just, you just know exactly who you are dealing with.
JAN JEKIELEK: I’ve written about in my upcoming book, Kill to Order, about the forced organ harvesting industry in China and how that system works is something that’s not necessarily very obvious to people in the West. Because in the communist system, the supremacy of the Communist party is really the absolute top priority of the system. Even beyond the basics of human life and dignity and things of this nature. We kind of assume that it’s a normal system, but it’s not, right.
The Communist Party’s Unchanging Nature
HENG HE: The Chinese Communist Party when established it was the branch of the international communist movement until in 1930s or 1940s, you know, when Stalin dissolved this organization. And they still part of the movement of the international communist movement. And they never changed their course, you know, since the communist is not fit with the human nature.
See, we all know that all the communist experiment in every countries failed except in China. But in China, the economic development is against all the odds, right? So because they give up a little bit communist ideology, you know, give some space to the free market. That’s why they look successful. But it’s not a communist movement successful, it’s the free market.
So CCP never give up their power. It’s always in the society. It’s the number one power and never give up. Now it’s more concentrate. Even though Xi Jinping destroyed the system, you know, broke the system, but still he is in the name of the Communist Party, you know, to protection.
So I think that’s exactly what happened in China is you expect every time, you know, when the history end up turning point, every time it turns to the worst, you know, there’s nothing turns to the better. It always turns to the worst. Except Deng Xiaoping’s reform. But Deng Xiaoping’s reform is the whole system. The whole country is in the lowest point. And you go any direction will be up. So that’s the only exception. And now we can see the things turned worse and worse.
So all because the CCP’s ideology is against human nature, is against any, you know, international rules and against any normal country normal rule. So I think that means in China there’s no other power so far can be considered as the balance. You know, even the purged military leaders, they are not balance of the, you know, two side. You know, it’s like one side who is more extreme. That’s the party nature. I think you are absolutely right.
JAN JEKIELEK: Yeah, I mean it’s this zero sum thinking. It’s always sort of a battle to the death, right? Like some who can comes out on top. Heng He, this has been an absolutely fascinating conversation. I mean, we’re living in profound times and I myself have no idea how it’s all going to play out. Exactly. Do you have a final thought as we finish today?
A Historic Turning Point
HENG HE: Yeah. When Lin Biao was purged by Mao Zedong actually it hit Mao Zedong so hard and he becomes. His health becomes a big problem and you know, four years later Mao Zedong died and the revolution ends.
I think this is not the success of Xi Jinping. You know, when he purged the most important, you know, considered as his partner. Of course he doesn’t consider their partner but, you know, the outside was surprised to see that, you know, he purged Zhang Youxia and Liu Chengli. And this is not successful of Xi Jinping. Not at all. It’s a failure. Because if you cannot, you know, you purge everybody you promoted, that means it’s your failure.
And I think he realized that just like Mao Zedong realized, you know, purging Lin Biao was a mistake or was his own failure. And Xi Jinping also recognized that it should be. I think we are witness the turning point of the history. Maybe not immediately, but you know, consider in a couple of years probably.
So I think the somebody in America mentioned 10 years ago that we should prepare for China without communist rule. So I think this is the better way for the preparation to ready for the big change in China.
JAN JEKIELEK: Well, Heng He, it’s such a pleasure to have had you on.
HENG HE: Thank you for having me.
JAN JEKIELEK: Thank you all for joining Heng He and me on this episode of American Thought Leaders. I’m your host, Jan Jekielek.
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