Śalya’s Consecration as Senāpati and Kṛṣṇa’s Counsel to Yudhiṣṭhira (शल्यस्य सेनापत्यभिषेकः)
द्रौणिस्वाच अयं कुलेन रूपेण तेजसा यशसा श्रिया | सर्वैर्गुणै: समुदित: शल्यो नो<स्तु चमूपति:
sañjaya uvāca | drauṇir uvāca: ayaṃ kulena rūpeṇa tejasā yaśasā śriyā | sarvair guṇaiḥ samuditaḥ śalyo no 'stu camūpatiḥ ||
Sañjaya said: Droṇa’s son Aśvatthāman said, “This Śalya is endowed with noble lineage, handsome form, prowess, fame, and prosperity; he is complete in every virtue. Therefore, let Śalya be our commander of the army.”
संजय उवाच
Even in war, authority is argued through dharmic-social credentials—lineage, personal excellence, and public reputation—showing that leadership is expected to be morally and socially defensible, not merely force-based.
Aśvatthāman proposes that King Śalya, praised for noble birth and many virtues, should be appointed as the Kaurava army’s commander; Sanjaya reports this speech.