This is a summary of a letter that Gen. Zhang drafted in December of 2025, in the event he was sacked. It was posted on a Twitter feed.
He sees a war over Taiwan, managed by President Xi. Though not mentioned here, Xi has picked 2027 as the decisive year to settle the Taiwan question. Keep in mind that this may not have been written by Ge. Zhang.
Gen. Zhang makes several bold predictions:
If I am arrested this time, there is a very high chance that Jinping will turn China into North Korea, and be single-mindedly focused on the military unification of Taiwan. He will also use the military to impose martial law in the country at any time....
More seriously, I've discovered that he's been constantly seeking opportunities, genuinely wanting to launch a war. He particularly desires to personally command a large-scale conflict. The conflict in the South China Sea, especially the one on the Sino-Indian border, is completely unnecessary. I am a veteran of war. When leaders launch wars, countless soldiers sacrifice their lives....
Fighting Taiwan, followed by war with the US and Japan, wouldn't be as simple as Deng Xiaoping's war in Vietnam and the suppression of students. His family and our country would face endless disasters; tens or even hundreds of thousands of soldiers would sacrifice their lives—I can't even imagine the consequences....
The army is meant to protect the country and the people; to think the army is only for fighting is, of course, a seriously flawed view. As a member of the Central Military Commission, I can still advise him, or at least restrain him from making serious mistakes. If I were arrested, Liu Zhenli and many other comrades would also be arrested....
The issues were personnel matters and the need to use the military to put the entire country on a state of war preparedness, aiming to seize Taiwan while Russia was fighting Ukraine. Comrade Liu Zhenli and I disagreed, while Zhang Shengmin remained silent. I believed the Central Military Commission should adhere to democratic centralism, but Comrade Jinping accused me of violating the Chairman's responsibility system. As a result, he became ill from anger and was hospitalized, almost causing the Third Plenary Session to collapse. ...
I originally wanted to liberate Taiwan and complete the great cause of national reunification. However, after listening to Liu Yazhou's analysis, I broke out in a cold sweat. Even if hundreds of thousands of soldiers were thrown into the sea, they wouldn't be able to get close to Taiwan. If war broke out, Japan would get involved, followed by the United States. Military facilities, bridges, and oil depots along the southern coast of China would be destroyed by the US-Japan coalition within hours. We could also destroy some buildings in Taiwan, but in the end, we would still have to pay war reparations, and all of the country's overseas assets would be frozen. The nation would cease to exist, and the party and the country would perish.