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China's military ordered to pledge total loyalty to President Xi Jinping

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https://www.dawn.com/news/1368744/c...-pledge-total-loyalty-to-president-xi-jinping

China's military has been ordered to pledge absolute loyalty to President Xi Jinping while a paramilitary police force now literally sings his praises, further cementing his place as the country's most powerful leader in decades.

The world's largest armed forces should be “absolutely loyal, honest and reliable to Xi”, said a new guideline issued by the Central Military Commission and reported by state news agency Xinhua late Sunday.

China's military personnel of around 2 million is technically the armed force of the ruling Communist Party rather than the state.

The commission's calls for fidelity to Xi shows the extent to which he has consolidated power since having his eponymous philosophy written into the party constitution last month.

Xi's political philosophy ─ Xi Jinping Thought ─ should also guide the strengthening of the military, Xinhua said of the new guideline.

“The army should follow Xi's command, answer to his order, and never worry him,” Xinhua quoted the guideline as saying.

For decades China has been governed in an ostensibly collective fashion by the party's elite Politburo Standing Committee.

But Xi has increasingly centralised power and looks to be following in the footsteps of revolutionary leader Mao Zedong.

On Sunday, a song titled “Be a good soldier for Chairman Xi” was released by the People's Armed Police, a paramilitary force under the Military Commission.

Nearly a half-century ago, the army sang “Be a good soldier for Chairman Mao”.

Xi became chairman of the military commission when he came to power in 2012 and last year acquired the new title of commander-in-chief of the joint forces battle command centre.

He has also presided over a corruption crackdown that felled some of the country's highest-ranking military officers.

Looks like Xi is turning dictatorial.
 
Is it not called "People's Liberation Army" or is its "Xi's Personal Army". Armies are responsible to nation not to a single person, unless you are a dictator.
 
Is it not called "People's Liberation Army" or is its "Xi's Personal Army". Armies are responsible to nation not to a single person, unless you are a dictator.

Here we run up against the stark reality that the People's Republic of China is the Chinese Communist Party's Republic of China. The party rules, and the armed forces are the armed cadres of the party.
 
Is it not called "People's Liberation Army" or is its "Xi's Personal Army". Armies are responsible to nation not to a single person, unless you are a dictator.

Who is that supreme commander in China, one who orders its army to indulge in war?
Who has the last word on this in China?
 
Who is that supreme commander in China, one who orders its army to indulge in war?
Who has the last word on this in China?
Are you saying that those are the criteria for any leader to expect loyalty from the military ?
 
Are you saying that those are the criteria for any leader to expect loyalty from the military ?

Its the top of the line reason everywhere and in each country.

If you made the national tree illustration, the PM or the President would always be on the top of MOD/force command under which the forces work.
 
https://www.dawn.com/news/1368744/c...-pledge-total-loyalty-to-president-xi-jinping

China's military has been ordered to pledge absolute loyalty to President Xi Jinping while a paramilitary police force now literally sings his praises, further cementing his place as the country's most powerful leader in decades.

The world's largest armed forces should be “absolutely loyal, honest and reliable to Xi”, said a new guideline issued by the Central Military Commission and reported by state news agency Xinhua late Sunday.

China's military personnel of around 2 million is technically the armed force of the ruling Communist Party rather than the state.

The commission's calls for fidelity to Xi shows the extent to which he has consolidated power since having his eponymous philosophy written into the party constitution last month.

Xi's political philosophy ─ Xi Jinping Thought ─ should also guide the strengthening of the military, Xinhua said of the new guideline.

“The army should follow Xi's command, answer to his order, and never worry him,” Xinhua quoted the guideline as saying.

For decades China has been governed in an ostensibly collective fashion by the party's elite Politburo Standing Committee.

But Xi has increasingly centralised power and looks to be following in the footsteps of revolutionary leader Mao Zedong.

On Sunday, a song titled “Be a good soldier for Chairman Xi” was released by the People's Armed Police, a paramilitary force under the Military Commission.

Nearly a half-century ago, the army sang “Be a good soldier for Chairman Mao”.

Xi became chairman of the military commission when he came to power in 2012 and last year acquired the new title of commander-in-chief of the joint forces battle command centre.

He has also presided over a corruption crackdown that felled some of the country's highest-ranking military officers.

Looks like Xi is turning dictatorial.
Now that is a revelation, he had to turn into a dictator? surely cant be?
 
Can anyone legally translate that in what this actually means?

I am just going to ignore this until a Chinese poster comes up here
 
Its the top of the line reason everywhere and in each country.

If you made the national tree illustration, the PM or the President would always be on the top of MOD/force command under which the forces work.
You are avoiding my question.

Of course the president or the prime minister or the king is leader of the country, but the question is if that is enough to require the allegiance and loyalty of the armed forces to that person.

Did any US president required the allegiance and loyalty of the US military ?
 
You are avoiding my question.

Of course the president or the prime minister or the king is leader of the country, but the question is if that is enough to require the allegiance and loyalty of the armed forces to that person.

Did any US president required the allegiance and loyalty of the US military ?


China is no USA.
And you know it.
Similarly, the US is not China either.
Look at the governing system of both the nations first.
 
Can anyone legally translate that in what this actually means?

I am just going to ignore this until a Chinese poster comes up here
It's just Chairman Xi urging the PLA to study his philosophy, which has been enshrined in the CCP's constitution. Chairman Xi is about as much a dictator as Russia's Putin or Syria's Assad, which is to say he is a dominant leader who is also highly respected at all levels, but his authority is not literally above the law.
 

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