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Reuters-Exclusive-Combat veteran is top contender to replace Chinas missing defence minister

October 12, 2023   5 min   972 words

这则报道揭示了中国国防部长职位的可能变动,引起了广泛的猜测和关注。刘振立将可能接替李尚福,对于中美军事互动和地区紧张局势产生潜在影响,因为刘振立未受到西方制裁。他作为中国军事高层,有丰富的军事经验,曾参与与越南的边境战斗,这使他在外交和军事方面都具备了重要的背景。 这个报道突显出中国高层政治和国防领域的不确定性,以及中国领导层内部的权力斗争。李尚福的消失和前外长秦刚的去职显示出中国领导层的一些变化,可能反映了习近平一人独大的政策。这也引发了外界对中国内部政治动态的担忧和疑虑。 最终,刘振立可能在中国国防部长职位上扮演更加重要的角色,尤其是在外交和国际安全事务方面。他的任命是否能够改善中美军事关系,还需要观察习近平的政策决策,这将影响国际关系和地区稳定。

2023-10-12T10:24:17Z

BEIJING (Reuters) - General Liu Zhenli, the head of the military body responsible for China’s combat operations and planning, has emerged as the top contender to replace the country’s defence minister, who has not been seen in public for more than six weeks, according to five people familiar with the matter.

The Chinese flag flutters on Tiananmen Square before the opening session of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC) in Beijing, China May 21, 2020. REUTERS/Carlos Garcia Rawlins/File Photo

The appointment of Liu to replace Defence Minister Li Shangfu - which one of the people said was likely to happen before Beijing holds an international security forum later this month - could boost military engagement with the United States amid regional tensions, three military analysts told Reuters.

Li was sanctioned by the U.S. in 2018 for an arms deal he secured with Russia in an earlier role. China has demanded the curbs - which include a visa ban and prohibitions on conducting U.S. financial transactions - be lifted. Liu, 59, is not under Western sanctions.

Currently the Chief of the Joint Staff Department of the Central Military Commission (CMC), Liu was described as Li’s likely replacement by a person with direct knowledge of the matter, as well as two people close to the military and two regional officials with close knowledge of Chinese politics. They spoke on condition of anonymity due to the confidential nature of the information.

China’s defence ministry and State Council information office did not respond to requests for comment. Reuters was unable to reach Liu himself for comment.

The U.S. Department of Defense did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Li’s absence has not been officially explained, though Reuters reported last month that he was under investigation for corrupt procurement of military equipment in a previous role.

If his departure is confirmed, Li will be the second senior minister to lose his job in recent months.

Qin Gang was removed as foreign minister in July, one month after he was last seen in public.

It is unclear whether Li will retain his position as one of China’s five state councillors, a post outranking a regular minister. Qin has not been officially removed from his post as state councillor.

Any decision to improve military-to-military ties - frozen by Beijing when then-U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi visited Taipei in August 2022 - would be made by President Xi Jinping, who has the ultimate say in all important policies and appointments.

Xi is also Commander-in-Chief of the armed forces and chair of the CMC, China’s top defence decision-making body, on which Liu already sits.

The person with direct knowledge of the matter said Liu’s appointment would likely be announced before foreign defence officials visit Beijing on Oct. 29-31 for the Xiangshan Forum, a major international security seminar.

Procedurally, the appointment and removal of high-level officials is announced by the National People’s Congress Standing Committee, which takes guidance from the Chinese Communist Party’s elite Politburo. The politburo is expected to meet at the end of this month.

“If Xi Jinping is indeed intent on re-engaging in top-level military engagement with the U.S., this could well present an opportunity for the Pentagon to finally reconnect with the (People’s Liberation Army) high command,” said James Char, a scholar at Singapore’s S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies.

Reuters reported Wednesday that Washington has accepted an invitation to the Xiangshan Forum, though it is unlikely that Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin will personally attend.

China’s Minister of National Defence has a largely diplomatic role with no direct command authority. The post is subordinate to a handful of other officials from the CMC, including the two vice chairmen under Xi.

Liu’s appointment could elevate the profile of the job, five analysts and military attaches told Reuters.

His recent experience leading the Joint Staff Department would allow foreign counterparts to deal with a figure at the centre of China’s military operations and war planning, rather than a mere technocrat.

U.S. defence officials have long wanted to reestablish routine communications with counterparts directly involved in command decisions.

“This could really help breathe some oxygen into China’s military diplomacy,” said Singapore-based defence analyst Alexander Neill, an adjunct fellow at the Pacific Forum, a foreign policy research institute in Honolulu.

“Finally, the U.S. might have someone they would really want to talk to,” he said.

Liu is also one of the few recent Chinese military leaders with combat experience, having been involved in intense border fights with Vietnamese troops in 1986 - part of years of skirmishes that followed Beijing’s invasion of northern Vietnam in 1979, according to Chinese media reports.

Defence diplomacy is seen by diplomats and analysts as an important part of Xi’s push for a modernized military that can support China’s growing international interests.

China’s ships and planes will need greater access to ports and bases internationally to achieve Xi’s goal of becoming the dominant world power.

The removal of two senior ministers in such quick succession “highlights the severe limitation of Xi’s one-man rule,” said Willy Lam, senior fellow at U.S. think tank Jamestown Foundation.

“He prioritised loyalty over capability and honesty when choosing who to put in power. Look how they turned out?”

Xi has made combating corruption a priority, particularly within the military, since he first became president. His defenders say the centralisaton of power is needed if China is successfully to navigate global tensions.

Qin was made foreign minister in Dec. 2022 and Li became defence minister in March. State news agency Xinhua reported in October 2022 that Xi decided on the senior appointments after personally conducting interviews with all the prospective candidates.

Air Force commander Chang Dingqiu is set to take over from Liu as Chief of the Joint Staff Department, according to three of the people familiar with the situation.