menclimbed(hetree
for
the
r-ham,
they
saw
the
swelling
hood
of
thecobra.So
they
killed(hesnakewith
«Imr
ci'uh€,
f(‘Ifi(7\/(J6!
the
golden
cimin,
and
wentbacktothe
pond.
Am!the(‘rowand
his
wife
iéved
/mppiiy
ever
after.
A'I‘A1,emomTHE
PAN('HA‘|‘AN
ma,
mx:sz'rnr
‘min.
RF mzm
Tm:(‘RAFTourrowan,
R.GHS .1979
HUWT17
|iRU.\I)(.\.\"l'Vl'.\X 5
WhenOmar.son
of
al-Khallab,
wax‘
crmvermlI0
Islam,
he
wantedthenews
of
hit
conversiontoreach
everyonequickly.
Hr-
wenttoseeJamil.ran
of
Max
'marul-Jumalu.
Thelatterwasre-
nowneci
for
the
speed
with
whichhe
passed
on,m'ret.s.
[file
was
mlrl
anyllziizg
in
confi-
dmce,he
let
everymze
knowaboutitimmedi-
ately.
Omarmil!to
him:“Ihawi!(N‘l>II'lUa
Musiirrz.Do
not
say
arivrhirzg.Keep
itdark.
[)0notmmnbnitin
fromofanyone,
"
Jamilwen:outintothe
.'x‘N'<'exand
began
simul-
ing;
atthe
topof/iis
mire.‘"Do
you
believe
that
Omar,
son
of
al-
Kiumair.hasnot
becomeaMuslim?
Well,
donotbelieve
that.’Iam
tellingyou
thathehas!"
206i LAW 26
A
queen
mustnever
dirty
herhandswith
ugly
tasks,
norcana
king
ap
pear
in
public
withbloodonhisface.Yet
power
cannotsurvivewithoutthe
constant
squashing
ofenemies-«therewill
always
be
dirty
littletasksthat
havetobe done
to
keepyou
onthethrone.
Like
Cleopatra,you
need
a
Ca.t’s-paw.
Thiswill
usually
bea
person
fromoutside
your
immediate
circle,
who
willthereforebe
unlikely
torealizehowheorsheis
being
used.Youwill
find
these
dupeseverywhere——people
who
enjoydoingyou
favors,
espe
cially
if
you
throw
them
aminimal
boneortwoin
exchange.
Butas
they
accomplish
tasksthat
may
seemtotheminnocent
enough,
oratleastcom-
pletelyjustified,they
are
actuallyclearing
thefieldfor
you,spreading
the
information
you
feed
them,
underminingpeoplethey
donotrealizeare
your
rivals,
inadvertentlyfurtheringyour
cause,
dirtying
their
handswhile
yours
remain
spotless.
DBSERVANCEOFTHELAW 11
Inthelate
1920s,
civilwarbrokeoutinChinaastheNationalistandCom
munist
parties
battledforcontrol
ofthe
country.
In
1927
Chiang
Kai—shek,
theNationalist
leader,
vowedtokill
every
last
Communist,
andoverthe
nextfew
years
he
nearly
accomplished
his
task,
pushing
hisenemieshard
until,
in
1934-1935,
heforcedthemintothe
LongMarch,
asix-thousand
mileretreatfromthesoutheasttotheremote
northwest,
through
harshter-
rain,
in
which
most
of
their
ranksweredecimated.Inlate 1936
Chiang
planned
onelastoffensiveto
wipe
them
out,
buthewas
caught
ina
mutiny:
Hisownsoldiers
captured
himandturnedhimovertotheCommunists.
Nowhecould
onlyexpect
theworst.
Meanwhile,however,
the
Japanesebegan
aninvasionof
China,
and
muchto
Chiang’ssurprise,
insteadof
killing
himtheCommunist
leader,
Mao
Tse~tung,proposed
a
deal:TheCommunistswouldlethim
go,
and
would
recognize
himascommanderoftheirforcesaswellas
his,
ifhe
would
agree
to
fight
alongside
them
against
theircommon
enemy.
Chiang
had
expected
tortureand
execution;
nowhecouldnotbelievehisluck.
HowsoittheseRedshadbecome.Without
having
to
fight
a
rearguard
ac-
tion
against
the
Communists,
heknewhecouldbeatthe
Japanese,
and
thenafew
years
downthelinehewouldturnaroundand
destroy
theReds
withease,Hehad
nothing
toloseand
everything
to
gainbyagreeing
to
theirterms.
The
Communists
proceeded
to
fight
the
Japanese
intheir
usualfash~
ion,
withhit»and-run
guerrilla
tactics,
whiletheNationalists
fought
amore
conventionalwar.
Together,
alterseveral
years,
they
succeededin
evicting
the
Japanese.
Now,however,Chiang
finally
understoodwhatMaohadre-
allyplanned.
Hisown
army
hadmetthebnmtof
the
Japaneseartillery,
was
greatly
weakened,
and
would
takeafew
years
torecover.The
Com~
munists,meanwhile,
hadnot
only
avoided
any
directhitsfromthe
japa~
nese,they
hadusedthetimeto
recoup
their
strength,
andto
spread
out