China’s defence minister Li Shangfu ousted after missing for weeks

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China’s defence minister Li Shangfu ousted after missing for weeks

By Evelyn Yu and Yujing Liu

Li Shangfu has become the China’s shortest-serving defence minister ever, ending months of speculation over his status.

The nation’s top legislative body removed the US-sanctioned general from his role without explanation, state media reported. Li had been in the post just seven months.

The latest victim of President Xi Jinping’s high-profile purges, Li was also stripped of his state councillor title and membership of the government’s highest national defence body. No replacement for his role was announced.

Li Shangfu had not been seen in public for a long time before he was officially ousted.

Li Shangfu had not been seen in public for a long time before he was officially ousted.Credit: AP

Xi has now abruptly removed two newly appointed ministers since embarking on his precedent-defying third term in office last year. In July, Xi stunned the world by removing his handpicked foreign minister Qin Gang without explanation. On Tuesday, Qin was also ousted from his remaining title of state councillor, which entitled him to a seat on the nation’s cabinet.

“Stripping Li and Qin of their state titles all but confirms they are being investigated for corruption or other violations of party discipline,” said Neil Thomas, a fellow for Chinese politics at the Asia Society Policy Institute’s Centre for China Analysis.

While there is no suggestion that Xi – China’s most-powerful leader since Mao Zedong – is facing any threat to his authority, the abrupt personnel moves have tainted his government’s image of stability. That turmoil comes as the world’s second-largest economy tries to woo investors to combat a grinding post-pandemic slowdown.

Defence Minister Richard Marles met his Chinese counterpart, Li Shangfu, during the Shangri-La Dialogue in Singapore.

Defence Minister Richard Marles met his Chinese counterpart, Li Shangfu, during the Shangri-La Dialogue in Singapore.Credit: .

Li’s removal could allow for high-level military talks with the US to resume after a suspension of more than a year. China has refused US overtures for Li to speak with American military leaders because of sanctions imposed on him during the Trump administration.

The Chinese defence minister usually opens the Beijing Xiangshan Forum, the nation’s answer to Singapore’s multilateral Shangri-la Dialogue. The forum will be held from October 29 to 31, potentially providing clues as to who will replace Li.

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Reuters has reported that General Liu Zhenli is the top contender to replace Li, citing people it didn’t identify, adding that the change could come before the forum. Liu is chief of the Joint Staff Department, effectively making him the counterpart of General Charles Q. Brown jnr, the US chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

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Corruption probe

Li, whose role made him the Chinese military’s top diplomat, last appeared in public on August 29, when he delivered a speech at a forum in Beijing. He was under investigation over procurement of military equipment, Reuters reported earlier.

In July, the Chinese military announced a corruption probe into the hardware procurement department Li once led for roughly the time frame of his stewardship. That investigation coincided with Xi’s decision over the northern summer to remove two generals leading the secretive rocket force, which manages the country’s nuclear arsenal, without explanation.

Li, 65, lacks a personal history with Xi but as an aerospace engineer, he was part of the so-called Cosmos Club that the Chinese leader elevated in an attempt to catch the US in technological prowess.

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The son of a veteran Red Army soldier, Li became a member of the Central Military Commission at the Communist Party’s congress in October. He was the first soldier to join the top military body from the army’s Strategic Support Force, the branch created in 2015 to focus on space and electronic warfare in Xi’s push to modernise the military.

Li’s climb to the senior defence post appeared to signal Beijing’s growing emphasis on aerospace technology. After graduating from the National University of Defence Technology, Li held posts at the Xichang Satellite Launch Centre, where he oversaw China’s first lunar probe. As director of the centre, Li presided over the launch of the country’s first anti-satellite missile.

Bloomberg

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