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Rumors of Senior CCP Defection Fuel Fears of a Major Political Storm Brewing in China

Published: January 30, 2026
Zhang Youxia attends the opening session of the National People’s Congress at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, China on March 5, 2025. (Image: Kevin Frayer via Getty Images)

By Li Deyan, Vision Times

Reports that a former deputy head of the Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP) powerful Organization Department has successfully fled overseas are fueling speculation that a major political storm may be unfolding inside China following the high level purges of military generals Zhang Youxia and Liu Zhenli on Jan. 24. The claims come amid heightened security in Beijing and a surge of online videos showing military vehicles and armored units moving through multiple regions.

On Jan. 28, U.S.-based former Shanghai entrepreneur Hu Liren revealed on his self-media program that a former deputy minister of the CCP Central Organization Department had “just successfully escaped abroad.” Hu described the current period as “extremely unusual,” predicting that the alleged defection could trigger a wave of classified information leaks exposing internal CCP secrets.

RELATED: Zhang Youxia’s Downfall Tests Xi Jinping’s Grip on the Armed Forces as Purges Backfire

Top dogs defecting?

“Those who manage to flee carry with them first-hand evidence of the Party’s crimes,” Hu said, adding that “the time of the Communist Party’s collapse is approaching.”

Hu suggested that the recent detention of Central Military Commission Vice Chairman Zhang Youxia may act as a catalyst for a broader internal rupture, potentially unleashing a flood of insider revelations that could reverberate back into China and significantly weaken Xi Jinping’s position.

RELATED: Zhang Youxia Accused of Leaking China’s Nuclear Secrets to the United States

According to Hu, Xi Jinping may have underestimated the fallout of his recent purge. “Once fear spreads within the system, officials act to protect themselves,” he said, describing the current power struggle as “you die, I live.”

Hu claimed that many officials at the bureau-level and above are now unable to return to their posts due to investigations, while political tension is intensifying across China’s major municipalities. He emphasized that Zhang Youxia’s influence extended beyond the military and that any instability linked to his removal could trigger chain reactions within the Party.

“If unrest breaks out in any region,” Hu warned, “it may be impossible to contain. China right now is a massive powder keg.”

Hu added that while everyday life appears superficially normal, internal CCP structures are already shaking. He attributed the panic to the pervasive reach of the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection (CCDI), which he likened to the Soviet-era KGB.

RELATED: China ‘Outsources’ Transnational Repression, Triggering Calls for Action

“From provinces to townships, there are discipline inspectors everywhere,” Hu said. “They collect dirt on everyone. Even those who enforce discipline are deeply corrupt themselves.” He claimed that tens of thousands of discipline officials are detained each year, further deepening internal fear. “Xi is like an ant on a hot pan,” Hu concluded. “Something big may happen very soon.”

Heightened security measures

Since the detention of Zhang Youxia and fellow CMC member Liu Zhenli, China’s military has remained conspicuously silent. Official channels from the Central Military Commission, theater commands, and service branches have largely avoided issuing statements pledging loyalty or support, an absence that observers say is highly unusual.

On official CCP websites, Zhang Youxia’s name still appears on the Politburo member list, and both Zhang and Liu remain listed as Central Military Commission members, further deepening uncertainty.

Meanwhile, security levels in Beijing have visibly escalated. Residents told overseas Chinese-language media that areas from Dongdan to Beijing Railway Station are now guarded with “three steps to a post, five steps to a sentry.”

Former Chinese diplomat Han Lianchao shared images on X showing joint patrols by military, police, armed police, and security units along Chang’an Avenue. Videos circulating online depict heavily armed personnel stationed near Zhongnanhai and Xinhuamen, with rows of men in black believed to belong to the Central Guard Bureau.

Reports of military deployments nationwide

Multiple drivers reported that beginning Jan. 24, electronic highway signs on major routes into Beijing, such as the Beijing–Shanghai and Beijing–Tibet expressways, flashed warnings reading: “All vehicles must exit the highway immediately.”

More curiously, navigation systems reportedly lost traffic data, speed warnings vanished, and some drivers found their maps blank, suggesting widespread signal suppression around the capital. At the same time, witnesses reported covered military trucks moving continuously toward Beijing along sealed highways.

Additional videos posted online show military convoys in Beijing’s Changping District, Jiangsu (Yixing and Taizhou), Shandong, Tianjin, Guangdong (Maoming), and Zhejiang, including armored vehicles, troop carriers, engineering trucks, and vehicles carrying weapons.

In one Shandong video, commenters speculated the convoy belonged to the 80th Group Army. Another viewer wrote somberly: “When the royal army retakes the north, do not forget to tell the children at the family altar.”

While the authenticity of these videos cannot be independently verified, the sheer volume and geographic spread have intensified public anxiety.

Growing internal turmoil

Sheng Xue, vice chair of the Democratic Front of China, said the military movements point to real internal dissatisfaction. “Based on information from insiders, there is coordination and discontent within the armed forces,” she said.

U.S.-based dissident Tang Boqiao wrote on X that Zhang Youxia’s case remains unresolved, with disputes ongoing over the legality of his detention. “Xi’s absolute authority has been challenged for the first time,” Tang warned. “The risk of an accidental clash is rising.”

The Wall Street Journal previously reported that authorities have confiscated mobile devices from officers promoted alongside Zhang and Liu, with thousands of officers potentially under investigation.

Analysts increasingly view the detentions of Zhang Youxia and Liu Zhenli not merely as a personal power struggle, but as a possible trigger for a larger systemic crisis within the CCP, one that could mark the beginning of a profound political realignment.

Editorial note: This article is based on publicly circulating reports and commentary from independent analysts. The claims described have not been independently verified by Vision Times, and relevant authorities have not publicly confirmed the allegations.