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Sun Tzu's 2,500-Year-Old 'Art of War' Guides China's Strategy Today
newsmax.com ^ | Friday, Sept. 8, 2006 | Lev Navrozov

Posted on 09/10/2006 9:20:42 AM PDT by Korvac

Sun Tzu's 2,500-Year-Old 'Art of War' Guides China's Strategy Today

Lev Navrozov

Friday, Sept. 8, 2006

On June 19, the Daily of the Chinese People's Liberation Army reported that "in the past few days" the Seventh (!) Symposium on Sun Tzu's "Art of War" was held.

The report said: "Sun Tzu's ‘Art of War' advocates winning ‘without fighting.'"

Hitler, the last major Western European conqueror, and his top officers, some of whom had fought World War I for four years without winning, had possibly never read Sun Tzu's "Art of War." Many Westerners still regard themselves as supermen (the word coined by Nietzsche) because the Industrial Revolution mass-produced machines that mass-produced machine weapons like machine-guns, and that made the West for a while militarily (and hence, in many Western eyes, universally) superior to comical natives outside the West, such as Chinese, who valued individual artisanship and hated mass production.

It never occurred to Western supermen that when their ancestors pillaged the Roman Empire, "the Center of the World" (as China called itself) had existed for 4,000 years, and book printing had been invented in the Center of the World centuries before it appeared in Europe. Gunpowder, which initiated the era of firearms, was originally invented in China, not in any Western country.

In World War II, Hitler also fought, without winning, for more than four years. Sun Tzu's key word 25 centuries ago was strategy. In post-Roman Europe, the word was borrowed (from Greek) in 1810, and so Hitler knew it. But his fighting of World War II shows no trace of grand strategy and hence could end in nothing but his suicide.

To invade Russia, Hitler invaded Poland and thus ensured the Anglo-American bombing of Germany from England and then the invasion. In Russia, his troops just pushed eastward (Drung nach Osten) until they reached Moscow, which was undefended, since Stalin had been waiting for his Siberian and Far Eastern troops. Every Muscovite knew that even food store managers had fled from Moscow; Hitler and his top command did not.

Why?

Once, it had been reported to Hitler that a member of the British Embassy wanted to spy for Germany. "Then he is a traitor!" shrilled Hitler in disgust. Hitler, who exterminated 12 million civilians, regarded himself as a noble Western warrior, a knight, representing the best of Western ("Aryan") chivalry.

From the online bookstore China Books (www.chinabooks.com), I bought a recent study entitled "The Strategic Advantage: Sun Zi and Western Approaches to War." I bought it because the study was written by five Chinese in China, edited by a Chinese, and published by New World Press in Beijing. I wanted to see how the Chinese press today treats Sun Tzu.

The Chinese authors, officially published in China, regard Sun Tzu as the founder of war strategy and the teacher of the Chinese military. Sun Tzu's "Art of War" contains a special chapter, "Value of Spies." It says that no one in the armed forces deserves higher rewards than spies. Still higher rewards are given to double spies.

The Western noble knight Hitler would have been scandalized by Sun Tzu's evaluation of spies. As a result of his ignorance of what was going on in Moscow, Hitler marked time in October and November of 1941 around undefended Moscow until Stalin's Siberian and Far Eastern troops arrived in December 1941 and routed Hitler's troops. He barely managed to turn their panicky flight into a retreat.

In 1942, Hitler continued his Drung nach Osten, but the Soviet troops secretly concentrated in superior numbers (owing again to Hitler's scorn for spies) and encircled Hitler's army, which surrendered with its commander in chief at the head. To show to all the foreign correspondents in Moscow the scope of Hitler's debacle, Hitler's captive army was marched through Moscow.

The rest was Hitler's Drung nach Westen, which was as devoid of any grand strategy as had been his Drung nach Osten and which ended in his suicide.

How was Sun Tzu's precept of winning "without fighting" to be complied with? What the Chinese dictators call "assassin's mace," and some Western scholars call "superweapons" (provided they even notice them), Sun Tzu named QI, the "extraordinary force."

In decades past, QI was created by science and technology. If the United States had had atom bombs already in 1941 and dropped them on Japan right after Pearl Harbor, that would have been Sun Tzu's classical winning "without fighting" –except for one detail.

Sun Tzu lived under Absolutism, a word that appeared in the English language only in 1830. But Absolutism, or whatever else it maybe called, existed in China for 25 centuries before Sun Tzu, and about as long after him, as well as from 1949 up to now. To wait for Japan's attack on Pearl Harbor or Germany's invasion of Poland would have seemed to Sun Tzu absurd or insane. Top-paid and greatly respected spies were to inform the United States about Japan's forthcoming attack on Pearl Harbor and Germany's invasion of Poland, and the United States was to QI Japan and Germany with atom bombs.

In the second half of the 19th century all kinds of Western conventions established the concept of "aggression" versus "defense" against it. The United States defended itself against Japan's aggression at Pearl Harbor, and "the democratic West" defended itself against Hitler's aggression.

What is known today as "democracy" would have horrified Sun Tzu as strategically absurd or insane, while Chinese Absolutism would have seemed to him absolutely necessary, in combination with QI, for "winning without fighting."

Therefore, when official Chinese authors of today write about Sun Tzu, they describe the Absolutism of the China of his times AND that of their China today. Surely Absolutism is the best form of government for war, with its secret development of QI, its deception, which Sun Tzu considered the essence of winning without fighting, and, last but not least, its espionage.

Incidentally, the scope of Chinese espionage in the United States today is unprecedented, for in the United States today there seem to be no spies, so despised by Hitler, but there are only millions of legal and illegal aliens, and if some of them are spies, the problem is to enable them to make a living in the United States, complete with social benefits.

As for American spies in China, there is a problem. Russian studies began to grow in the United States in the 1940s and the 1950s, and so in the 1970s enough Americans knew enough Russian (after all, an Indo-European language) to read Soviet propaganda publications and pass them to the U.S. government and U.S. Congress for espionage data.

Fewer "CIA analysts" know Chinese, and hence the CIA has not been testifying in Congress about the peacefulness of China, as it did about that of Russia (and thus gave me enough material for my satirical Commentary article, reprinted in more than 500 periodicals all over the West to their readers' bitter laughter).

I am told that in contrast to European countries, China was never engaged in conquests such as the conquest of America, mistaken for India by Columbus. This is true. Columbus was after gold and slaves, while China had paper money, and there was nothing she wanted to buy from other countries, which were perceived by China, with its silks and porcelains, as populated by paupers and savages. It was ridiculous to suppose that anyone wanted to topple the sophisticated Center of the World in order to establish a Western savage pauperland.

China's navy surpassed the pathetic flotilla of Columbus by hundreds of times, but it was used to protect China against Western adventurers like Columbus, out to conquer "India" in search of gold and slaves.

In the past two centuries, the correlation has changed. The West has invented – no, not silk or porcelain, but protection against Absolutism, and the Tiananmen Square movement demonstrated that for many Chinese this invention is more precious than that of silk or porcelain.

On the other hand, today's globalism is useful to the "sovereigns" (Sun Tzu's word) for the creation of QI. Western private enterprise, science and technology help the "sovereigns" of China to create QI, necessary for winning (globally) without fighting, or to use the phrase that appeared in China over ten centuries ago and is used by today's "sovereigns" of China, to create the "assassin's mace."

You can e-mail me at navlev@cloud9.net


TOPICS: Editorial; Foreign Affairs
KEYWORDS: china; godsgravesglyphs; india; longerperspectives; suntzu
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To: Cringing Negativism Network

Bump! Wake up America!


21 posted on 09/10/2006 10:55:00 AM PDT by 1ofmanyfree ((No jobs, licenses,mortgages,bank accounts or amnesty for any illegal alien criminals ! ))
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To: Cringing Negativism Network

Yes I have met stupid Chinese people. Quite a few, in fact.


22 posted on 09/10/2006 11:08:53 AM PDT by packrat35 (guest worker/day worker=SlaveMart)
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To: Korvac

Napoleon had a translation of Sun Tzu's writings. Clauswitz wrote his remarks (which were put into book form by his wife) based on Napoleon's campaigns (seen by an opponent).

Jomni and Dennis Hart Mahan are my favorite military authors. The latter promulgated simple Principles of war, to make correct actions accessable to a wide spectrum of people in a republic, and the former used geometry and quantitative aspects to permit analysis by professionals.


23 posted on 09/10/2006 11:40:19 AM PDT by donmeaker (If the sky don't say "Surrender Dorothy!" then my ex wife is out of town.)
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To: Korvac

I think it is rather funny that the article asserts that Stalin first didn't defend Moscow, and then asserts that he was in a Siberian hideaway.

The Soviets built three defensive rings around the city. An aquaintence of mind got a severe case of frostbite in Tula, a city just east of Moscow, where they tried to bypass the defensive rings, and were subject to counter attack.


24 posted on 09/10/2006 11:44:15 AM PDT by donmeaker (If the sky don't say "Surrender Dorothy!" then my ex wife is out of town.)
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To: Korvac

"I am told that in contrast to European countries, China was never engaged in conquests such as the conquest of America, mistaken for India by Columbus. This is true. Columbus was after gold and slaves, while China had paper money, and there was nothing she wanted to buy from other countries, which were perceived by China, with its silks and porcelains, as populated by paupers and savages. It was ridiculous to suppose that anyone wanted to topple the sophisticated Center of the World in order to establish a Western savage pauperland."

The Mongols did in fact topple China. Columbus was not trying to capture gold or slaves, rather, he was seeking a route (not controled by Muslims) to get spices, and thought, using references in the Bible, that the earth was 3/5th its actual size.


25 posted on 09/10/2006 11:49:18 AM PDT by donmeaker (If the sky don't say "Surrender Dorothy!" then my ex wife is out of town.)
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To: Korvac

"In World War II, Hitler also fought, without winning, for more than four years. Sun Tzu's key word 25 centuries ago was strategy. In post-Roman Europe, the word was borrowed (from Greek) in 1810, and so Hitler knew it. But his fighting of World War II shows no trace of grand strategy and hence could end in nothing but his suicide."

Hitler became chancellor in 1933. He uses strategy remilitarize the Rheinland, to support Franco in Spain, to take Austria, to take Czechoslovakia. All this happened without fighting.

Hitler coordinated with the Soviet Union in dismemberment of Poland. He took over France, Belgium, Netherlands, Denmark, Norway. After Dunkirk, Britain (with Churchill as PM!) did some serious teasing and appeasing, to convince Hitler to leave Britain alone and head east. That is when the Strategos stopped.

He came darn near to winning. Alas that FDR didn't send over one Marine regiment to counter his remilitarization of the Rhineland. Alas, we weren't so clever to do "preemptive" war back then. Some still oppose it, and want to go back to the good old days of 400,000 US deaths in war.


26 posted on 09/10/2006 11:57:52 AM PDT by donmeaker (If the sky don't say "Surrender Dorothy!" then my ex wife is out of town.)
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To: CarrotAndStick

Thanks for that post. Moving forward with a strong alliance with India is very important to balance against China in the long term. People say that China has never been an "expansionist" power, but that may just be because they never had enough power to really be expansionist. We should guard against the possibility.


27 posted on 09/10/2006 12:12:37 PM PDT by Zack Nguyen
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To: Korvac

The Art of War should be required reading for every HS student.


28 posted on 09/10/2006 12:15:13 PM PDT by mysterio
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To: Korvac

Thanks For The Thread,,,Psalm 144:1


29 posted on 09/10/2006 12:53:08 PM PDT by 1COUNTER-MORTER-68 (THROWING ANOTHER BULLET-RIDDLED TV IN THE PILE OUT BACK~~~~~)
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To: Korvac

In my experience, the only business people who take The Art or War or Machiavelli's The Prince seriously are half-wits.


30 posted on 09/10/2006 12:56:07 PM PDT by durasell (!)
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To: durasell
In my experience, the only business people who take The Art or War or Machiavelli's The Prince seriously are half-wits.

Who do you think Machiavelli was writing to?

31 posted on 09/10/2006 1:38:36 PM PDT by LoneRangerMassachusetts (The only good Mullah is a dead Mullah. The only good Mosque is the one that used to be there.)
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To: LoneRangerMassachusetts

Who do you think Machiavelli was writing to?



Ha!

The thing people don't realize is that ole Machie was writing to curry favor after making some political blunders and finding himself outside the charmed circle.


32 posted on 09/10/2006 1:49:54 PM PDT by durasell (!)
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To: Korvac

Sun Tzu knows the drill. More people ought to look into him because he knows the drill.


33 posted on 09/10/2006 4:06:08 PM PDT by JOE43270 (JOE43270, God Bless America and All Who Have and Will Defend Her.)
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To: voletti

China will not be a democracy. For their culture, it would make no sense.

Hopefully, they either see us as not a threat to them (which is doubtful) or to strong to take on (which is what they see now, but for not much longer).

The next world war will be in Asia. China needs the resources of its neighbors to advance, and as long as they give her that all is fine. But one day someone will say no, and troops will be sent in.


34 posted on 09/10/2006 4:51:09 PM PDT by redgolum ("God is dead" -- Nietzsche. "Nietzsche is dead" -- God.)
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To: norraad
So, why are we fighting like drunken retards?

Because we are drunk with "free trade" while our enemy builds up its industrial base at the expense of ours. We won WWII because we could self supply. We can't even come close to that now. Heck, we don't even make our own ammo for the rifles anymore.

35 posted on 09/10/2006 4:52:38 PM PDT by redgolum ("God is dead" -- Nietzsche. "Nietzsche is dead" -- God.)
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To: redgolum

Mark Steyn predicts China will creep in and take over the vast expanse of northern Asia (Eastern Siberia) as depopulating Russia vacates and retreats west of the Urals.

Another expansionist opportunity for BEijing would be central Asia and there the pickings again would be ripe indeed.

Places like Indo-China etc are too much trouble militarily speaking for the resources they offer.

My 2 cents.


36 posted on 09/10/2006 5:01:07 PM PDT by voletti (Awareness and Equanimity.)
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To: Korvac

The Chinese had better hold onto their butts. They're reading Sun Tzu, our guys are reading John Boyd.


37 posted on 09/10/2006 6:42:43 PM PDT by Mr. Silverback (We didn’t lose 3,000 people that day. We lost one wonderful person at a time, 3,000 times.)
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To: CJ Wolf
They were allied with the taliban

Citation?

38 posted on 09/10/2006 6:48:35 PM PDT by Mr. Silverback (We didn’t lose 3,000 people that day. We lost one wonderful person at a time, 3,000 times.)
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To: LoneRangerMassachusetts

Excellent post. Although I consider China a major threat, it gets tiresome to see so many on FR treating them as some sort of supermen. They're just another bunch of commies, and we'll clean their clocks too if they don't do it to themselves first.


39 posted on 09/10/2006 6:54:27 PM PDT by Mr. Silverback (We didn’t lose 3,000 people that day. We lost one wonderful person at a time, 3,000 times.)
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To: donmeaker
Alas that FDR didn't send over one Marine regiment to counter his remilitarization of the Rhineland.

Alas even more that the Brits or French didn't take care of it. IIRC, Hitler remarked later that a French brigade could have stopped the rein of his Reich before it started.

40 posted on 09/10/2006 6:58:08 PM PDT by Mr. Silverback (We didn’t lose 3,000 people that day. We lost one wonderful person at a time, 3,000 times.)
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