What happens when two of a country’s most powerful military figures fall from grace at the same time?
In China, the answer has been dramatic. Former defence ministers Wei Fenghe and Li Shangfu have both been handed suspended death sentences on corruption charges.
A stunning development in President Xi Jinping’s sweeping anti-graft campaign.
The punishment is severe but calculated. Under China’s legal system, a suspended death sentence is usually commuted to life imprisonment after two years.
Though in this case neither man will be eligible for parole or sentence reductions.
Investigators accused both officials of taking massive bribes and abusing their positions for personal gain.
Military Purge Intensifies
Li, whose time as defence minister lasted barely seven months, vanished from public view.
He was abruptly removed in 2023, fuelling rumours long before the official charges arrived. And this isn’t happening in isolation.
China’s military has recently seen a string of senior officials disappear, get dismissed, or come under investigation.

Li Shangfu served as the defence minister from March to October 2023.
Xi himself said the armed forces had undergone “revolutionary tempering in the fight against corruption.”
Supporters call it a necessary cleanup. Critics see something else: a powerful political purge wrapped in anti-corruption language.
Either way, the message from Beijing is unmistakable—no rank appears untouchable anymore.


