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China
As the Party tightens its grip on foreign affairs, a new guard emerges

Reading time 3 min

The Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs headquarters in Beijing.
The Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs headquarters in Beijing. © Li Weijie/Best View Stock/Alamy

Li Qian's appointment to the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs is the latest sign that the Chinese Communist Party apparatus is tightening its grip on diplomatic affairs. A generation of leaders born in the 1960s is gradually taking up diplomatic leadership positions, ahead of the expected reshuffle between the 5th plenum, at the end of 2026, and the 21st Congress, at the end of 2027.

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