 
“The side that knows when to fight and when not will  take the victory. There are roadways not to be traveled, armies not to be attacked,  walled cities not to be assaulted.”              —Sun-Tzu
 We live in dangerous  times, when a new kind of leadership is required. Visionary and ruthlessly strategic,  Warrior Politics extracts the best of the wisdom of the ages for modern leaders who  are faced with the complex life-and-death challenges of today’s world—and determined  to win.
 Sun-Tzu urges leaders to “plan and calculate like a hungry man.” Machiavelli  defines a policy not by its excellence but by its outcome. Churchill derives his  greatness from his imagination of history. Livy shows that the vigor to face down  adversaries must ultimately come from pride in our own past achievements. “Never  mind if they call your caution timidity, your wisdom sloth, your generosity weakness,”  he writes. “It is better that a wise enemy should fear you than that foolish friends  should praise.” “Men often oppose a thing merely because they have no agency in planning  it,” Alexander Hamilton says, “or because it may have been planned by those whom  they dislike.”
 Replete with maxims, warnings, examples from history, and shrewd  recommendations, Warrior Politics wrests from the past the lessons we need to arm  ourselves for the present. It offers an invaluable template for any decision-maker—in  foreign policy or in business—faced with high stakes and inadequate knowledge of  a mine-filled terrain. As we gear ourselves up for a new kind of war, no book is  more prescient, more shrewd, or more essential.