- Sun Tzu said: Raising a host of a hundred thousand men and
marching them great distances entails heavy loss on the people
and a drain on the resources of the State. The daily expenditure
will amount to a thousand ounces of silver. [Cf. II. ss. ss.
1, 13, 14.] There will be commotion at home and abroad, and
men will drop down exhausted on the highways. [Cf. TAO TE
CHING, ch. 30: "Where troops have been quartered, brambles
and thorns spring up. Chang Yu has the note: "We may be
reminded of the saying: 'On serious ground, gather in plunder.'
Why then should carriage and transportation cause exhaustion
on the highways?-The answer is, that not victuals alone, but
all sorts of munitions of war have to be conveyed to the army.
Besides, the injunction to 'forage on the enemy' only means that
when an army is deeply engaged in hostile territory, scarcity
of food must be provided against. Hence, without being solely
dependent on the enemy for corn, we must forage in order that
there may be an uninterrupted flow of supplies. Then, again,
there are places like salt deserts where provisions being unobtainable,
supplies from home cannot be dispensed with."]
As many as seven hundred thousand families will be impeded in
their labor.
[Mei Yao-ch`en says: "Men will be lacking at the plough-tail."
The allusion is to the system of dividing land into nine parts,
each consisting of about 15 acres, the plot in the center being
cultivated on behalf of the State by the tenants of the other
eight. It was here also, so Tu Mu tells us, that their cottages
were built and a well sunk, to be used by all in common. (See
II. ss. 12, note.) In time of war, one of the families had to
serve in the army, while the other seven contributed to its support.
Thus, by a levy of 100,000 men (reckoning one able-bodied soldier
to each family) the husbandry of 700,000 families would be affected.]
- Hostile armies may face each other for years, striving for
the victory which is decided in a single day. This being so,
to remain in ignorance of the enemy's condition simply because
one grudges the outlay of a hundred ounces of silver in honors
and emoluments, ["For spies" is of course the meaning,
though it would spoil the effect of this curiously elaborate exordium
if spies were actually mentioned at this point.] is the height
of inhumanity.
[Sun Tzu's agreement is certainly ingenious. He begins by
adverting to the frightful misery and vast expenditure of blood
and treasure which war always brings in its train. Now, unless
you are kept informed of the enemy's condition, and are ready
to strike at the right moment, a war may drag on for years. The
only way to get this information is to employ spies, and it is
impossible to obtain trustworthy spies unless they are properly
paid for their services. But it is surely false economy to grudge
a comparatively trifling amount for this purpose, when every day
that the war lasts eats up an incalculably greater sum. This
grievous burden falls on the shoulders of the poor, and hence
Sun Tzu concludes that to neglect the use of spies is nothing
less than a crime against humanity.]
- One who acts thus is no leader of men, no present help to his
sovereign, no master of victory.
[This idea, that the true object of war is peace, has its
root in the national temperament of the Chinese. Even so far
back as 597 B.C., these memorable words were uttered by Prince
Chuang of the Ch`u State: "The [Chinese] character for 'prowess'
is made up of [the characters for] 'to stay' and 'a spear' (cessation
of hostilities). Military prowess is seen in the repression of
cruelty, the calling in of weapons, the preservation of the appointment
of Heaven, the firm establishment of merit, the bestowal of happiness
on the people, putting harmony between the princes, the diffusion
of wealth."]
- Thus, what enables the wise sovereign and the good general
to strike and conquer, and achieve things beyond the reach of
ordinary men, is FOREKNOWLEDGE.
[That is, knowledge of the enemy's dispositions, and what
he means to do.]
- Now this foreknowledge cannot be elicited from spirits; it
cannot be obtained inductively from experience, [Tu Mu's note
is: "[knowledge of the enemy] cannot be gained by reasoning
from other analogous cases."] nor by any deductive calculation.
[Li Ch`uan says: "Quantities like length, breadth, distance
and magnitude, are susceptible of exact mathematical determination;
human actions cannot be so calculated."]
- Knowledge of the enemy's dispositions can only be obtained
from other men.
[Mei Yao-ch`en has rather an interesting note: "Knowledge
of the spirit-world is to be obtained by divination; information
in natural science may be sought by inductive reasoning; the laws
of the universe can be verified by mathematical calculation:
but the dispositions of an enemy are ascertainable through spies
and spies alone."]
- Hence the use of spies, of whom there are five classes: (1)
Local spies; (2) inward spies; (3) converted spies; (4) doomed
spies; (5) surviving spies.
- When these five kinds of spy are all at work, none can discover
the secret system. This is called "divine manipulation of
the threads." It is the sovereign's most precious faculty.
[Cromwell, one of the greatest and most practical of all
cavalry leaders, had officers styled 'scout masters,' whose
business it was to collect all possible information regarding
the enemy, through scouts and spies, etc., and much of his success
in war was traceable to the previous knowledge of the enemy's
moves thus gained." "Aids to Scouting," p. 2.]
- Having LOCAL SPIES means employing the services of the inhabitants
of a district.
[Tu Mu says: "In the enemy's country, win people over
by kind treatment, and use them as spies."]
- Having INWARD SPIES, making use of officials of the enemy.
[Tu Mu enumerates the following classes as likely to do good
service in this respect: "Worthy men who have been degraded
from office, criminals who have undergone punishment; also,
favorite concubines who are greedy for gold, men who are aggrieved
at being in subordinate positions, or who have been passed over
in the distribution of posts, others who are anxious that their
side should be defeated in order that they may have a chance of
displaying their ability and talents, fickle turncoats who always
want to have a foot in each boat. Officials of these several
kinds," he continues, "should be secretly approached
and bound to one's interests by means of rich presents. In this
way you will be able to find out the state of affairs in the enemy's
country, ascertain the plans that are being formed against you,
and moreover disturb the harmony and create a breach between
the sovereign and his ministers." The necessity for extreme
caution, however, in dealing with "inward spies," appears
from an historical incident related by Ho Shih: "Lo Shang,
Governor of I-Chou, sent his general Wei Po to attack the rebel
Li Hsiung of Shu in his stronghold at P`i. After each side had
experienced a number of victories and defeats, Li Hsiung had recourse
to the services of a certain P`o-t`ai, a native of Wu-tu. He
began to have him whipped until the blood came, and then sent
him off to Lo Shang, whom he was to delude by offering to cooperate
with him from inside the city, and to give a fire signal at the
right moment for making a general assault. Lo Shang, confiding
in these promises, march out all his best troops, and placed Wei
Po and others at their head with orders to attack at P`o-t`ai's
bidding. Meanwhile, Li Hsiung's general, Li Hsiang, had prepared
an ambuscade on their line of march; and P`o-t`ai, having reared
long scaling-ladders against the city walls, now lighted the
beacon-fire. Wei Po's men raced up on seeing the signal and began
climbing the ladders as fast as they could, while others were
drawn up by ropes lowered from above. More than a hundred of
Lo Shang's soldiers entered the city in this way, every one of
whom was forthwith beheaded. Li Hsiung then charged with all
his forces, both inside and outside the city, and routed the enemy
completely." [This happened in 303 A.D. I do not know where
Ho Shih got the story from. It is not given in the biography
of Li Hsiung or that of his father Li T`e, CHIN SHU, ch. 120,
121.]
- Having CONVERTED SPIES, getting hold of the enemy's spies
and using them for our own purposes.
[By means of heavy bribes and liberal promises detaching them
from the enemy's service, and inducing them to carry back false
information as well as to spy in turn on their own countrymen.
On the other hand, Hsiao Shih-hsien says that we pretend not
to have detected him, but contrive to let him carry away a false
impression of what is going on. Several of the commentators accept
this as an alternative definition; but that it is not what Sun
Tzu meant is conclusively proved by his subsequent remarks about
treating the converted spy generously (ss. 21 sqq.). Ho Shih
notes three occasions on which converted spies were used with
conspicuous success: (1) by T`ien Tan in his defense of Chi-mo
(see supra, p. 90); (2) by Chao She on his march to O-yu (see
p. 57); and by the wily Fan Chu in 260 B.C., when Lien P`o was
conducting a defensive campaign against Ch`in. The King of Chao
strongly disapproved of Lien P`o's cautious and dilatory methods,
which had been unable to avert a series of minor disasters, and
therefore lent a ready ear to the reports of his spies, who had
secretly gone over to the enemy and were already in Fan Chu's
pay. They said: "The only thing which causes Ch`in anxiety
is lest Chao Kua should be made general. Lien P`o they consider
an easy opponent, who is sure to be vanquished in the long run."
Now this Chao Kua was a sun of the famous Chao She. From his
boyhood, he had been wholly engrossed in the study of war and
military matters, until at last he came to believe that there
was no commander in the whole Empire who could stand against him.
His father was much disquieted by this overweening conceit,
and the flippancy with which he spoke of such a serious thing
as war, and solemnly declared that if ever Kua was appointed general,
he would bring ruin on the armies of Chao. This was the man who,
in spite of earnest protests from his own mother and the veteran
statesman Lin Hsiang-ju, was now sent to succeed Lien P`o. Needless
to say, he proved no match for the redoubtable Po Ch`i and the
great military power of Ch`in. He fell into a trap by which his
army was divided into two and his communications cut; and after
a desperate resistance lasting 46 days, during which the famished
soldiers devoured one another, he was himself killed by an arrow,
and his whole force, amounting, it is said, to 400,000 men, ruthlessly
put to the sword.]
- Having DOOMED SPIES, doing certain things openly for purposes
of deception, and allowing our spies to know of them and report
them to the enemy.
[Tu Yu gives the best exposition of the meaning: "We
ostentatiously do thing calculated to deceive our own spies,
who must be led to believe that they have been unwittingly disclosed.
Then, when these spies are captured in the enemy's lines, they
will make an entirely false report, and the enemy will take measures
accordingly, only to find that we do something quite different.
The spies will thereupon be put to death." As an example
of doomed spies, Ho Shih mentions the prisoners released by Pan
Ch`ao in his campaign against Yarkand. (See p. 132.) He also
refers to T`ang Chien, who in 630 A.D. was sent by T`ai Tsung
to lull the Turkish Kahn Chieh-li into fancied security, until
Li Ching was able to deliver a crushing blow against him. Chang
Yu says that the Turks revenged themselves by killing T`ang Chien,
but this is a mistake, for we read in both the old and the New
T`ang History (ch. 58, fol. 2 and ch. 89, fol. 8 respectively)
that he escaped and lived on until 656. Li I-chi played a somewhat
similar part in 203 B.C., when sent by the King of Han to open
peaceful negotiations with Ch`i. He has certainly more claim
to be described a "doomed spy", for the king of Ch`i,
being subsequently attacked without warning by Han Hsin, and infuriated
by what he considered the treachery of Li I-chi, ordered the unfortunate
envoy to be boiled alive.]
- SURVIVING SPIES, finally, are those who bring back news from
the enemy's camp.
[This is the ordinary class of spies, properly so called,
forming a regular part of the army. Tu Mu says: "Your surviving
spy must be a man of keen intellect, though in outward appearance
a fool; of shabby exterior, but with a will of iron. He must
be active, robust, endowed with physical strength and courage;
thoroughly accustomed to all sorts of dirty work, able to endure
hunger and cold, and to put up with shame and ignominy."
Ho Shih tells the following story of Ta`hsi Wu of the Sui dynasty:
"When he was governor of Eastern Ch`in, Shen-wu of Ch`i
made a hostile movement upon Sha-yuan. The Emperor T`ai Tsu (?
Kao Tsu) sent Ta-hsi Wu to spy upon the enemy. He was accompanied
by two other men. All three were on horseback and wore the enemy's
uniform. When it was dark, they dismounted a few hundred feet
away from the enemy's camp and stealthily crept up to listen,
until they succeeded in catching the passwords used in the army.
Then they got on their horses again and boldly passed through
the camp under the guise of night-watchmen; and more than once,
happening to come across a soldier who was committing some breach
of discipline, they actually stopped to give the culprit a sound
cudgeling! Thus they managed to return with the fullest possible
information about the enemy's dispositions, and received warm
commendation from the Emperor, who in consequence of their report
was able to inflict a severe defeat on his adversary."]
- Hence it is that which none in the whole army are more intimate
relations to be maintained than with spies. [Tu Mu and Mei
Yao-ch`en point out that the spy is privileged to enter even the
general's private sleeping-tent.]
None should be more liberally rewarded. In no other business
should greater secrecy be preserved.
[Tu Mu gives a graphic touch: all communication with spies
should be carried "mouth-to-ear." The following remarks
on spies may be quoted from Turenne, who made perhaps larger use
of them than any previous commander: "Spies are attached
to those who give them most, he who pays them ill is never served.
They should never be known to anybody; nor should they know one
another. When they propose anything very material, secure their
persons, or have in your possession their wives and children
as hostages for their fidelity. Never communicate anything to
them but what is absolutely necessary that they should know.
"Marshal Turenne," p. 311.]
- Spies cannot be usefully employed without a certain intuitive
sagacity.
[Mei Yao-ch`en says: "In order to use them, one must
know fact from falsehood, and be able to discriminate between
honesty and double-dealing." Wang Hsi in a different interpretation
thinks more along the lines of "intuitive perception"
and "practical intelligence." Tu Mu strangely refers
these attributes to the spies themselves: "Before using
spies we must assure ourselves as to their integrity of character
and the extent of their experience and skill." But he continues:
"A brazen face and a crafty disposition are more dangerous
than mountains or rivers; it takes a man of genius to penetrate
such." So that we are left in some doubt as to his real
opinion on the passage."]
- They cannot be properly managed without benevolence and straightforwardness.
[Chang Yu says: "When you have attracted them by substantial
offers, you must treat them with absolute sincerity; then they
will work for you with all their might."]
- Without subtle ingenuity of mind, one cannot make certain
of the truth of their reports.
[Mei Yao-ch`en says: "Be on your guard against the possibility
of spies going over to the service of the enemy."]
- Be subtle! be subtle! and use your spies for every kind of
business. [Cf. VI. ss. 9.]
- If a secret piece of news is divulged by a spy before the
time is ripe, he must be put to death together with the man to
whom the secret was told.
[Word for word, the translation here is: "If spy matters
are heard before [our plans] are carried out," etc. Sun
Tzu's main point in this passage is: Whereas you kill the spy
himself "as a punishment for letting out the secret,"
the object of killing the other man is only, as Ch`en Hao puts
it, "to stop his mouth" and prevent news leaking any
further. If it had already been repeated to others, this object
would not be gained. Either way, Sun Tzu lays himself open to
the charge of inhumanity, though Tu Mu tries to defend him by
saying that the man deserves to be put to death, for the spy would
certainly not have told the secret unless the other had been at
pains to worm it out of him."]
- Whether the object be to crush an army, to storm a city,
or to assassinate an individual, it is always necessary to begin
by finding out the names of the attendants, the aides-de-camp,
[Literally "visitors", is equivalent, as Tu Yu
says, to "those whose duty it is to keep the general supplied
with information," which naturally necessitates frequent
interviews with him.] and door-keepers and sentries of the
general in command. Our spies must be commissioned to ascertain
these. [As the first step, no doubt towards finding out if
any of these important functionaries can be won over by bribery.]
- The enemy's spies who have come to spy on us must be sought
out, tempted with bribes, led away and comfortably housed. Thus
they will become converted spies and available for our service.
- It is through the information brought by the converted spy
that we are able to acquire and employ local and inward spies.
[Tu Yu says: "through conversion of the enemy's spies
we learn the enemy's condition." And Chang Yu says: "We
must tempt the converted spy into our service, because it is he
that knows which of the local inhabitants are greedy of gain,
and which of the officials are open to corruption."]
- It is owing to his information, again, that we can cause
the doomed spy to carry false tidings to the enemy. [Chang
Yu says, "because the converted spy knows how the enemy can
best be deceived."]
- Lastly, it is by his information that the surviving spy can
be used on appointed occasions.
- The end and aim of spying in all its five varieties is knowledge
of the enemy; and this knowledge can only be derived, in the first
instance, from the converted spy. [As explained in ss. 22-24.
He not only brings information himself, but makes it possible
to use the other kinds of spy to advantage.]
Hence it is essential that the converted spy be treated with
the utmost liberality.
- Of old, the rise of the Yin dynasty [Sun Tzu means the
Shang dynasty, founded in 1766 B.C. Its name was changed to Yin
by P`an Keng in 1401.] was due to I Chih [Better known
as I Yin, the famous general and statesman who took part in Ch`eng
T`ang's campaign against Chieh Kuei.] who had served under
the Hsia. Likewise, the rise of the Chou dynasty was due to Lu
Ya [Lu Shang rose to high office under the tyrant Chou Hsin,
whom he afterwards helped to overthrow. Popularly known as T`ai
Kung, a title bestowed on him by Wen Wang, he is said to have
composed a treatise on war, erroneously identified with the LIU
T`AO.] who had served under the Yin.
[There is less precision in the Chinese than I have thought
it well to introduce into my translation, and the commentaries
on the passage are by no means explicit. But, having regard to
the context, we can hardly doubt that Sun Tzu is holding up I
Chih and Lu Ya as illustrious examples of the converted spy,
or something closely analogous. His suggestion is, that the Hsia
and Yin dynasties were upset owing to the intimate knowledge of
their weaknesses and shortcoming which these former ministers
were able to impart to the other side. Mei Yao-ch`en appears
to resent any such aspersion on these historic names: "I
Yin and Lu Ya," he says, "were not rebels against the
Government. Hsia could not employ the former, hence Yin employed
him. Yin could not employ the latter, hence Hou employed him.
Their great achievements were all for the good of the people."
Ho Shih is also indignant: "How should two divinely inspired
men such as I and Lu have acted as common spies? Sun Tzu's mention
of them simply means that the proper use of the five classes of
spies is a matter which requires men of the highest mental caliber
like I and Lu, whose wisdom and capacity qualified them for the
task. The above words only emphasize this point." Ho Shih
believes then that the two heroes are mentioned on account of
their supposed skill in the use of spies. But this is very weak.]
- Hence it is only the enlightened ruler and the wise general
who will use the highest intelligence of the army for purposes
of spying and thereby they achieve great results.
[Tu Mu closes with a note of warning: "Just as water,
which carries a boat from bank to bank, may also be the means
of sinking it, so reliance on spies, while production of great
results, is oft-times the cause of utter destruction."]
Spies are a most important element in water, because on them
depends an army's ability to move.
[Chia Lin says that an army without spies is like a man with
ears or eyes.]
|