26 June 2026

The Minister who Understands Sun Zi's Art of War Well

Modern national victory means "winning without fighting" by earning global respect and emulation. However, this soft power requires a robust military backbone. As Sun Zi noted, invincibility is a self-directed responsibility; a strong defense is the non-negotiable foundation that deters aggression and secures the sovereignty needed for soft power to work.
CNA June 23,2026 at 3:09 PM 

What does victory look like for nations today? 

Singapore's Defence Minister Chan Chun Sing says it's less about beating others militarily or economically, but about "winning the world" and having other nations aspire to be like yours. Speaking at at the Middle East Institute's annual conference on Tuesday (Jun 23), he said such an ideal is a matter of political leadership. "The question is the issue of political leadership, whether we really want to transcend history, uplift our people rather than just focus on beating the other guy," he said.

My comment
What he said is very Sun Zi.
Sun Zi said "hundred battles with hundred victories is not the best. The best is to win without a war."
How to do that? It is to gain the respect and following of others.
But sheer power to overcome others is just for a short time ... until they become stronger then they will fight back. 

Gemini expanded my comment to give a better story.

You’ve hit the nail on the head. There is a profound, timeless connection between Minister Chan Chun Sing’s remarks and Sun Zi’s The Art of War.

When Sun Zi wrote, "To win a hundred victories in a hundred battles is not the highest excellence; the highest excellence is to subdue the enemy without fighting," he was advocating for strategy over brute force. In modern political theory, what Minister Chan is describing is the ultimate realization of Soft Power—the ability to get what you want through attraction rather than coercion or payment.

Here is a breakdown of how a nation achieves this "Sun Zi-style" modern victory:

1. Winning the Mindshare (The "Aspiration" Factor)

True victory today isn't about redrawing borders; it’s about becoming a proof of concept. When a nation successfully solves complex human problems—like poverty, healthcare, education, or racial harmony—it becomes a beacon.

The Sun Zi Connection: You don't need to conquer a neighbor if that neighbor actively wants to adopt your systems, trade with you, and send their brightest minds to learn from you. You win by becoming indispensable and admirable.

2. Transcending History vs. Trapped by It

Minister Chan pointed out that leadership must "transcend history" rather than just focus on beating a rival.

The Trap of Raw Power: As you rightly noted, relying on sheer military or economic dominance creates a zero-sum game. It breeds resentment. The moment the dominant power stumbles, oppressed or envious rivals will seize the opportunity to strike back.
 
The Sustainable Way: Leadership that focuses on uplifting its own people and contributing to global stability builds a legacy. It creates a network of allies, not a ledger of enemies.

3. The Power of Moral Authority

In the ancient text, Sun Zi speaks of the "Dao" (The Way) as the first and most important factor in war. It represents the moral righteousness and unity between the leaders and the people.

In the 21st century, a nation’s "Dao" is its political integrity and governance. A country that acts predictably, honors its treaties, and treats its citizens well commands global respect. That respect acts as a shield far more durable than any missile defense system.

The Bottom Line: Brute force is temporary and expensive. True strategic victory is cultural and systemic. When a nation wins the world's respect, it doesn't just survive; it shapes the rules of the game.

Do you think it is realistic for small nations like Singapore to rely primarily on this kind of "soft power" victory, or do they always need a strong military backbone just in case?

My ANSWER: 
A strong military backbone is the requisite foundation for the soft power to work well. Sun Zi tells us "not to be defeated is our responsibility. Winning depends on our enemy making mistakes".

Gemini

You are spot on. It is a common misconception that Sun Zi was a pure pacifist just because he preferred winning without fighting. In reality, he was a deeply grounded realist.

Your quote cuts right to the core of this realism:

Invincibility lies within oneself; vulnerability lies within the enemy.

In the original text, this is the opening of Chapter 4 (Tactical Dispositions): "The ancients who were skilled in combat first made themselves invincible, and then waited for the enemy to become vulnerable. Invincibility depends on oneself; vulnerability depends on the enemy."

Here is exactly why that military backbone is the non-negotiable anchor for soft power to actually work:

1. Hard Power Earns the Right to Speak

Without a credible defense, "soft power" isn't a strategic choice—it is just vulnerability wrapped in good intentions.

The Shield for the Beacon: A small nation can have the most admirable governance, the best education system, and a thriving economy, but if it looks like an easy target, it invites aggression from predatory actors.
The Reality: A strong military creates the psychological space of security. It signals to the world that you cannot be easily bullied, coerced, or absorbed. Only when your survival is guaranteed do other nations look at your governance model with respect rather than pity.

 2. "Not to be Defeated is Our Responsibility"

Sun Zi places the burden of defense squarely on your own shoulders. You cannot outsource your security to the goodwill of others or rely on international treaties alone.

Securing the Base: Building a formidable defense force is the ultimate exercise of fulfilling your own responsibility. It is about closing all operational and strategic gaps so that an adversary looks at you and concludes, "The cost of attacking them is far too high."

 3. Exploiting the Enemy's Flaws

When you have made yourself mathematically and strategically unassailable, you have taken control of your destiny. At that point, you wait.

If an adversary makes a strategic blunder, overextends themselves, or suffers internal decay, your strength allows you to capitalize on that moment.
Conversely, if you are weak, you cannot even exploit an enemy's mistake because you are too busy fighting for your own survival.
 

The Modern Synthesis:

Hard power and soft power are not opposites; they are two sides of the same coin (often called Smart Power). Hard power deters the enemy from trying to defeat you; soft power convinces the world that they want you to succeed.

This creates a fascinating paradox for small states: they must build a military so advanced and ready that they never actually have to use it.

25 June 2026

III Building the Invisible Leadership Organization: The Three Layers of Strategic Ascent

Building the Invisible Leadership Organization: The Three Layers of Strategic Ascent 

Many organizational crises—from internal cultural warfare to external threats—are driven by a fundamental strategic failure: chasing short-term metrics while losing the institutional capacity for generational survival. True strategic management, modeled after the ironclad survival philosophies of giants like Huawei, requires moving beyond opportunistic firefighting. It demands guiding the enterprise through a profound Three-Layer Journey of Strategic Ascent:

Layer 0: The Ethical Buffer (The Moral Compass). Before any performance metric is set, the organization anchors itself in a non-negotiable ethical framework — creating a secure environment where everyone can be fully committed to giving their best for the whole. This guarantees every employee the right to halt a process if it endangers integrity, safety, or customer trust, without fear of reprisal or automated penalty.

Layer 1: The Performance Base (The Kinetic Engine). Stripping away internal politics to build an objective, high-stakes meritocracy that drives immediate tactical firepower.

Layer 2: The Long-Term Base (The Survival Anchor). Grounding the organization in the baseline of perpetual survival by binding individual destiny to the institutionalized, repetitive creation of customer value.

Layer 3: The Invisible Leading (The Self-Running Ecosystem). The ultimate destination of governance — constructing an unspoken infrastructure of culture, process, and branding where management becomes invisible because the system itself automatically drives human behavior toward customer success.

By executing across these four layers (with Layer 0 as the foundation), an enterprise balances immediate execution with infinite viability. Here is the updated 6-Pillar Tactical Blueprint to build the Invisible Leadership Organization:


Pillar 1. Culture & Brand: Customer-Centricity as the Ultimate Filter
[Layer 3: Invisible Leading & Layer 0: Ethical Buffer]

Culture and branding are not marketing exercises; they are an organization's primary behavioral filters. By defining the corporate identity solely around creating customer value, you naturally attract aligned talent and repel high-friction, toxic elements.

Defeating the Vocal Minority, Intelligently: When high-performance incentive structures are introduced, disengaged elements frequently attempt to hijack the narrative, labeling outperformance as "induced anxiety." However, leadership must remain intellectually honest: not all dissent is sabotage. A resilient culture actively distinguishes between performative resistance (to be filtered) and constructive friction (to be elevated as a canary in the coal mine).

The Foundation of Full Commitment: This security is not softness — it is the precondition for peak performance. People give their best not when they fear punishment, but when they trust that the system is fair, that their contributions matter, and that the whole organization moves forward together.

The Strategic Filter: A resilient culture makes it clear that the customer's pocket is the only source of the company's food. The system rejects the tyranny of mediocrity: you can choose comfort, but you cannot stop others from choosing excellence in serving the customer.


Pillar 2. Policies as "Hard Anchors": Guarding Benevolence with Systemic Power
[Layer 2: Long-Term Base]

In an invisible leadership structure, policies are the automated "rules of the game" running silently in the background, governed by the Hot Stove Rule (Immediate, Consistent, and Impersonal).

Guarding the Core: High compensation and premium employee benefits without clear institutional boundaries foster a culture of entitlement. Benevolence without structural power invites systemic risk.

Strategic Execution: Embed strict social media, non-disclosure, and reputation protection clauses into employment contracts. When core values are breached, the system executes rapid separation protocols, protecting the firm's ultimate bottom line: survival.


Pillar 3. Institutionalization over Entrepreneurs: Breaking the Hero Dependency
[Layer 3: Invisible Leading]

A sustainable enterprise cannot rely on the sporadic genius of lone-wolf entrepreneurs or charismatic leaders. The core mandate of invisible leadership is the institutionalization of customer value creation into repeatable, platform-driven processes.

Process-Driven Victory: Move the company's operating core from "human-dependent" to "process-driven." Build absolute infrastructure — shared knowledge pipelines, code repositories, and structural operational flows — that enables every team to deliver predictable, elite outputs.

Paying for the Steel Frame: To prevent knowledge-hoarding, 15% of each project's net profit pool is allocated exclusively toward documentation, reusable asset creation, and the mentoring of junior colleagues. You are paid not just to do the work, but to eliminate the need for heroes in the future.

Human-Calibrated Stress-Tests: Use this institutionalized infrastructure to run continuous stress-tests via simulated operational crises. If a team clears the bar under pressure, they thrive. If they fall short, the system issues a data-driven recommendation for restructuring or Performance Improvement Plans — but a human strategic leader reviews the case to differentiate between team incompetence and flawed mandates from above. This prevents the tyranny of the algorithm.

"A truly exceptional organization does not rely on individual heroes to save the day; it builds a steel-framed system where ordinary people can repetitively deliver extraordinary customer value — and it rewards those who reinforce that steel."


Pillar 4. Crisis Communication: Managing Environment with Hard Verification
[Layer 1: Performance Base]

When facing external attacks, malicious narratives, or intellectual property disputes, relying on emotional pleas or playing the victim signals profound weakness. True strategic resilience relies on objective, irrefutable data validation.

Asymmetric Proof: Bypass public rhetorical loops by publishing immutable records — version-controlled technical repositories, unalterable system logs, or verified transaction ledgers — to neutralize smear campaigns with facts rather than feelings.

Aggressive Legal Measures: Secure immediate legal injunctions to halt competitor infringement and safeguard market share, transforming defense into an offensive realignment.


Pillar 5. Short-Term Tactical Firepower: Uncapped Incremental Distribution
[Layer 1: Performance Base]

To eliminate the need for constant managerial policing, the compensation architecture must reward execution capability directly and immediately.

Dismantling Legacy Models: Aggressively replace time-based compensation with financial rewards aligned directly to captured project value.

The 30% Profit-Share Framework: Allocate a fixed, significant percentage of a project's net profit directly back to the execution team, split dynamically:

  • 85% distributed based on individual contribution metrics, so high performers ascend on merit regardless of tenure.
  • 15% reserved for those who document, build shared libraries, and mentor peers — ensuring institutional memory outlives any single project.

This dual structure rewards both execution and the building of the system that makes execution repeatable.


Pillar 6. Long-Term Survival Anchors: Transforming Mercenaries into Allies
[Layer 2: Long-Term Base]

While short-term incentives ignite rapid execution, they can foster a mercenary culture where employees harvest immediate gains at the expense of long-term survival. The invisible architecture must weave current performance with future legacy across a multi-decade horizon.

Deferred Distribution & Clawbacks: Project payouts follow a deferred timeline (e.g., a 4-3-3 split over three years). If a project later reveals severe quality defects or hidden risks, unvested bonuses are clawed back to prevent short-term opportunism.

Strategic Funding for Innovation: Fund long-term, non-profitable R&D and high-risk market exploration via corporate budget subsidies, compensating innovators based on milestone delivery rather than immediate revenue.

Long-Term Wealth Locking: Shift top-tier performers from project bonuses to long-term equity structures — phantom shares or options with extended vesting — aligning their personal wealth with the company's multi-year trajectory.

Talent Cultivation Metrics: Condition executive promotion not just on profitability, but on talent inheritance. Leaders must prove they have built succession pipelines and documented reusable institutional assets.


The Final Upgrade: Dynamic Customer Feedback Loops

To ensure the entire machine does not become an inward-facing bureaucracy, a permanent feedback loop operates at all layers. The organization does not assume it knows what "customer value" means — it measures it continuously via NPS scores, retention rates, and usage telemetry. If the process-driven infrastructure produces an output the customer rejects, the system triggers a Variance Review, pausing profit-share distributions until the team realigns with real-world market data. The customer remains the ultimate governor of the engine.


Conclusion: Survival as the Bottom Line, Empathy as the Lubricant

Building the Invisible Leadership Organization is the sophisticated integration of an unyielding cultural field with a robust institutional framework. It requires moving purposefully through the layers: establishing a secure ethical foundation where everyone can give their best for the whole, building a high-stakes performance base, reinforcing it with long-term anchors, and letting it culminate in invisible leadership.

When this alignment is achieved, you no longer need to force people to do their best. The ecosystem commands it, the infrastructure measures it, and the rewards justify it.

Organizations achieve infinite viability when their teams sprint toward immediate project goals with current bonuses in their pockets, while the system anchors their efforts to a permanent, institutionalized engine dedicated entirely to customer success. By adding human calibration, documentation incentives, and an ethical foundation of security and trust, we ensure that this iron framework does not become brittle. It remains sharp, fair, and remarkably enduring — because the ultimate invisible leader is not a dictator, but a system that earns the voluntary allegiance of everyone it touches.


See Also:

Modern Crisis & Transformation Management: From Firefighting to Shield-Building

II Modern Crisis & Transformation Management: Balancing Tactical Firepower with Long-Term Survival


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Invisible leadership organization

A framework for infinite viability — survival as the bottom line, empathy as the lubricant

The four layers

Layer 0

Ethical buffer — the moral compass

A secure environment where everyone can be fully committed to giving their best for the whole. Every employee has the right to halt a process that endangers integrity or customer trust — without fear of reprisal.

Layer 1

Performance base — the kinetic engine

Strip away internal politics. Build an objective, high-stakes meritocracy that drives immediate tactical execution.

Layer 2

Long-term base — the survival anchor

Bind individual destiny to the institutionalized, repetitive creation of customer value. Survival — not profit — is the bottom line.

Layer 3

Invisible leading — the self-running ecosystem

Culture, process, and brand become an unspoken infrastructure. Management becomes invisible because the system automatically drives behavior toward customer success.


Six pillars

Pillar 1 · Layer 3 + 0

Culture and brand

Customer-centricity as the ultimate filter. Distinguish performative resistance from constructive friction. Security is the precondition for full commitment — people give their best when they trust the system is fair.

Pillar 2 · Layer 2

Policies as hard anchors

Governed by the Hot Stove Rule — immediate, consistent, impersonal. Benevolence without structural power invites systemic risk. Policies run silently in the background.

Pillar 3 · Layer 3

Institutionalization over entrepreneurs

Break the hero dependency. 15% of project profit reserved for documentation and mentoring. Human-calibrated stress tests prevent the tyranny of the algorithm.

Pillar 4 · Layer 1

Crisis communication

Asymmetric proof over emotional pleas. Publish immutable records to neutralize attacks. Secure legal injunctions to transform defense into offense.

Pillar 5 · Layer 1

Short-term tactical firepower

30% profit-share framework: 85% on individual contribution, 15% on documentation and mentoring. High performers ascend on merit. Institutional memory outlives any single project.

Pillar 6 · Layer 2

Long-term survival anchors

Deferred payouts with clawbacks. Funded long-term R&D. Phantom shares with extended vesting. Promotion conditioned on building succession pipelines.


The final upgrade — customer feedback loops

The organization continuously measures customer value via NPS, retention, and usage telemetry. If the system produces output customers reject, a Variance Review is triggered — pausing profit-share until realignment. The customer is the ultimate governor of the engine.

"A truly exceptional organization does not rely on individual heroes to save the day; it builds a steel-framed system where ordinary people can repetitively deliver extraordinary customer value — and it rewards those who reinforce that steel."