High-ranking military official in China suspended and placed under investigation

In this image from video, Wu Qian, Chinese Defense Ministry spokesperson, speaks during a Defense Ministry press conference held in Beijing, Thursday, Nov. 28, 2024. (AP Photo/Borg Wong) (Borg Wong, Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved)

BEIJING – A member of China's powerful Central Military Commission has been suspended and put under investigation, the country's Defense Ministry said Thursday.

Miao Hua was director of the political work department on the commission, which oversees the People’s Liberation Army, the world's largest standing military. He was one of five members of the commission in addition to its leader, Chinese President Xi Jinping.

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Defense Ministry spokesperson Wu Qian said Miao is under investigation for “serious violations of discipline,” which usually alludes to corruption.

It is the third recent major shakeup for China’s defense establishment. In June, China announced that former Defense Minister Li Shangfu and his predecessor Wei Fenghe were expelled from the ruling Communist Party and accused of corruption.

Yet, the high-level investigation is not likely to have any significant consequences, given Xi's tight grip on power.

“Most countries would incur at least some reputational cost to their international reputation were such frequent, high-profile personnel purges to have happened in their own armed forces – but the PRC is no ordinary country,” James Char, a research fellow at the Institute of Defence and Strategic Studies at Nanyang Technological University, in Singapore, said in an email. “These purges can go on so long as its commander-in-chief approves of them.”

In Xi's first term as party secretary, he was known for a multiyear campaign against corruption that has brought down numerous high-profile political rivals and thousands of officials. This has led some to allege a widespread purge of officers suspected of conspiring with outside forces or simply being insufficiently loyal to Xi.

Xi's dedication to his anti-corruption campaign has continued throughout his rule. High-ranking officers occupy an elevated position in Chinese politics and can command extensive privileges, official and unofficial.

Miao being placed under investigation comes after the Financial Times reported that Defense Minister Dong Jun was under investigation for corruption.

Miao's position on the commission, which is a Communist Party committee, outranks Dong and anyone who holds the position of defense minister, as Communist Party positions are more powerful than government institutions in China.

Experts say a possible corruption investigation would not be a surprise, given the PLA’s history.

In the 1990’s, the PLA was allowed to run businesses as the country opened up during the “reform and opening up” period, when the country stopped many of its planned economic policies and transitioned to a more market-based economy.

Miao has come up through the political department in the military and had served as the political commissar of the PLA’s Navy. He was already fairly senior before Xi came to power in 2012.

“If the investigation is about corruption, it’s not out of line with people’s expectations,” said Tiehlin Yan, deputy director at the Taiwan Center for Security Studies, who studied the PLA. “It’s very difficult for anyone not to have have blemishes if you were a midlevel or senior cadre in the 1990s.”

Meanwhile, the Defense Ministry spokesperson Wu, said Dong was not under any investigation and called the newspaper report a “sheer fabrication.”

In response to a question about who China’s defense minister was, Wu smiled and raised his hands in a shrug.

“Why do you ask this nonsensical question? I just said this many times: Minister Dong Jun.”

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This version has corrected the official's name to Hua not Li.


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