heir
apparent,
was
poisoned
aswell.Thenext—eldest
son———illegil:'ma.te,
but
nowthecrown
prince——was
exiledalittlelateron
trumped—upcharges.
Andwhenthe
emperor
died,
in
683,
Wu
managed
tohavethesonafter
thatdeclaredunfitforthethrone.Allflris
meant
thatitwasher
youngest,
mostineffectual
sonwho
finally
‘became
emperor.
Inthis
way
shecontin-
uedtorule.
Overthenextfive
years
therewereinnumerable
palacecoups.
Allof
them
failed,
andallofthe
conspirators
wereexecuted.
By
688 therewasno
oneleftto
challenge
Wu.She
proclaimed
herselfadivinedescendantof
Buddha,
andin 690
herwisheswere
finallygranted:
Shewasnamed
Holy
andDivine
“Emperor”
ofChina.
Wubecame
emperor
becausetherewas
literallynobody
le-Rfromthe
previous
"Pang
dynasty.
Andsosheruled
unchallenged,
foroveradecade
ofrelative
peace.
In
705,
atthe
age
of
eighty,
shewasforcedtoabdicate.
Interpretation
Allwho
knew
Empress
Wuremarkedonher
energy
and
intelligence.
At
the
time,
therewasno
glory
availableforanambitiouswoman
beyond
a
few
years
inthe
imperial
harem,
thenalifetimewalled
up
inaconvent.In
Wu’s
gradual
butremarkablerisetothe
top,
shewasnevernaive.She
knewthat
any
hesitation,
anymomentary
weakness,
would
spell
herand.
If,
every
timeshe
got
ridofarivalanewone
appeared,
thesolutionwas
simple:
Shehadtocrushthemallorbekilledherself.Other
emperors
be
foreherhadfollowedthesame
path
tothe
top,
but
Wu-«who,
asa
woman,
hadnexttonochanceto
gainpower———had
tobemoreruthlessstill.
Empress
Wu’s
forly—yearreign
wasoneofthe
longest
in
Chinese
his-
tory.Although
the
story
ofher
bloody
rise
to
power
iswell
known,
in
Chinasheisconsideredoneofthe
period’s
mostableandeffectiverulers.
A
priest
askedthe
dying
Spanish
statesmanand
general
RamonMariaNarvdez
(1800-1868),
“Does
yourExcellencyforgive
all
your
enemies?”“Idonot
have
to
forgivemy
ene1nies,"anrwmedNarmiez,
“I
havehadthemallshat.
”
KEYSTOPOWER
It
isnoaccident
thatthe
twostories
illustrating
thislawcomefromChina:
Chinese
history
aboundswith
examples
ofenemies
who
wereleftaliveand
returnedtohauntthelenient.“Crushthe
enemy”
isa
keystrategic
tenetof
Surrtzu,
the
fourth—century—B.C.
authorofTheArt
ofl/Wzr.
Theideais
simple:
Yourenemieswish
you
ill.Thereis
nothingthey
wantmorethantoelimi-
nate
you.
If,
in
yourstruggles
with
them,
you
stop
halfway
oreventhree
quarters
ofthe
way,
outof
mercy
or
hope
ofreconciliation,
youonly
make
themmore
determined,
more
embittered,
and
they
will
someday
takere-
venge.Theymay
act
friendly
forthetime
being,
butthisis
only
because
you
havedefeatedthem.
They
havenochoicebuttobidetheirtime.
Thesolution:Haveno
mercy.
Crush
your
enemiesas
totally
as
they
LAW 15 I71