Offense or Defence First?
This is a profoundly insightful and sophisticated strategic question. It cuts straight to the core distinction between high-level strategic thinking (the mindset of the wise) and conventional thinking (the instinctive mindset of ordinary people).
The direct
answer is this:
Both approaches can be correct in
different contexts and arenas, but Sun Tzu's principle of "using defense
as offense" operates on a higher strategic dimension. It is the true art
of achieving victory by first becoming impossible to defeat.
To understand
why, we must examine two questions:
- Why do most people admire "using offense as
defense"?
- Why did Sun Tzu insist on "using defense as
offense"?
Sun Tzu's
Highest Strategy: Use Defense as Offense
Most people
think:
⚔️
"The best defense is a good offense."
Attack first, dominate, expand, and keep opponents on the defensive.
Sun Tzu
teaches:
🛡️
"First make yourself unbeatable, then wait for the enemy's
mistake."
Two
Strategic Approaches
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Wins by
outlasting and exploiting mistakes |
The Core
Insight
Ordinary thinkers focus on defeating others.
Master strategists focus on becoming undefeatable.
When your foundations, principles, capabilities, and systems are strong:
- You don't need to force outcomes.
- Opponents become impatient.
- They overextend and expose weaknesses.
- You strike only when success is highly probable.
Sun Tzu's
Formula for Success
- Secure your position.
- Eliminate your vulnerabilities.
- Accumulate strength patiently.
- Let competitors exhaust themselves.
- Exploit the opportunity when it appears.
Key Takeaway
"The
skilled warrior first makes himself invincible, then waits for the enemy's
vulnerability." — The Art of War
Victory is
not achieved by attacking constantly.
Victory comes from becoming so well-positioned that defeat becomes unlikely and
opportunities naturally come to you.
In short:
🛡️
Defend your foundations.
📈
Build your strength.
⏳
Be patient.
🎯
Strike only when the odds are overwhelmingly in your favor.
China–US rivalry can be understood as two opposite strategies: China “defends to attack,” while the US “attacks to defend.”
The US, as the current hegemon, uses aggressive measures—tech restrictions, trade pressure, financial tools, and alliances—to maintain dominance. This approach is driven by insecurity about losing control, but it is costly and stretches resources. If pressure fails, internal weaknesses like debt and social division become more exposed.
China, by contrast, focuses on strengthening its internal position—economy, supply chains, and domestic resilience—while avoiding direct confrontation. Its “defense” builds a position that is hard to defeat, forcing the US into overextension and mistakes. Over time, this shifts the balance naturally.
A similar pattern appears in US–Iran dynamics. The US applies maximum pressure through sanctions and targeted military actions to preserve its regional order, but this is expensive and hard to sustain. Iran, facing a power gap, relies on “defend first, then counterattack”: securing its survival, leveraging geography (like the Strait of Hormuz), and using proxy networks to create indirect pressure.
In both cases, the deeper logic is the same: aggressive offense seeks quick control but risks high cost and instability, while strategic defense builds endurance, waits for the opponent to weaken, and turns time and structure into advantage.