ChatGPT says: Xi Jinping is not mainly a tyrant or an ideologue. He is a coalition manager who concluded that the ruling alliance was rotting from the inside.
China is governed by a single ruling coalition. Chinese Communist Party. Inside it sit rival factions. Princelings. Youth League technocrats. Provincial barons. Military patrons. Security services. Business linked cadres. No elections decide power. Alliances do.
Why the purges.
Alliance consolidation
Xi entered power without a dominant personal coalition. His first task was to break rival networks that could veto him. Purges remove alternative centers of loyalty. The anti corruption banner is the public story. The alliance logic is the real one.
Loyalty enforcement
In a system without open competition, loyalty replaces competence as the key signal. Purges teach a lesson. Advancement flows through Xi. Survival depends on visible alignment. Ambiguity is punished.
Preemptive threat removal
Xi watched the Soviet collapse. His lesson was not repression failed. His lesson was repression came too late. Purges are forward looking. They target people who might become threats, not just those who already are.
Elite fear management
Corruption charges are vague by design. Anyone can be guilty. This creates ambient fear. Fear reduces coordination among rivals. People stop trusting each other. Alliance formation becomes harder.
Military control
Several major purges hit the PLA and the Rocket Force. This is not incidental. Guns decide coups. Xi ensures that command chains run personally to him. Military elites rotate. Patronage networks are smashed.
Narrative discipline
Xi links loyalty to the party with loyalty to China itself. Dissent becomes treason. Purges reinforce the idea that the alliance is sacred and indivisible. That framing deters elite defection during crises.
What Xi is optimizing for.
Regime durability, not popularity. Control, not innovation. Predictability, not growth. Alliance Theory predicts this tradeoff. Strong purge cycles stabilize the top coalition while slowly degrading performance below.
Why purges keep happening.
Because they work in the short and medium term. Each purge weakens rivals. Each round raises the cost of dissent. But they also hollow out trust and initiative. Officials freeze. Bad news is hidden. Mistakes compound.
Bottom line.
Xi is not paranoid by accident. He is responding rationally to a system where elite betrayal is the only real threat. The purges are not excesses. They are the mechanism by which the ruling alliance is kept intact.
The risk is long term. A coalition held together by fear eventually loses the ability to self correct. Alliance Theory says that is when sudden collapse becomes possible.
Xi does not get overthrown by mass protest, elections, or ideology. He only falls if the ruling coalition fractures at the top.
Xi Jinping survives because he controls elite coordination. Remove that and he is finished.
The realistic pathways.
Elite coordination failure
Xi’s system works by preventing rivals from trusting each other. Overthrow requires the opposite. A small number of senior actors must quietly conclude that keeping Xi is riskier than removing him. This only happens when fear of Xi is outweighed by fear of catastrophe.
Trigger events include a disastrous war outcome, a financial collapse that threatens elite wealth, or a succession crisis with no clear exit.
Military defection at the apex
Street protests do nothing without guns. Xi has purged deeply inside the PLA to prevent this. Overthrow requires coordinated defection by senior commanders who control real forces, not symbolic titles.
This is most plausible after a humiliation involving Taiwan or a severe internal security breakdown where the military is blamed.
Successor ambiguity plus shock
Xi has deliberately avoided naming a successor. That creates stability now but danger later. If Xi becomes incapacitated suddenly, elites must improvise. Improvisation is where coups happen.
Alliance Theory predicts this is the single biggest structural risk in his system.
Coalition exhaustion
Purges create fear but also paralysis. Officials stop taking risks. Bad information flows upward. Policy failures compound. If enough elites believe the system cannot correct itself under Xi, they may accept the danger of removal.
This is slow burn, not dramatic revolt.
What will not overthrow Xi.
Popular uprisings.
Moral condemnation.
Western pressure.
Economic slowdown by itself.
Social media dissent.
Those scare elites only if they threaten elite interests.
Bottom line.
Xi falls only if insiders decide he endangers the survival of the ruling alliance itself. Until then, purges, fear, and loyalty rituals keep him safe.
Alliance Theory verdict.
Xi is overthrown not by enemies, but by former allies who stop believing he protects them.