मृदु-तीक्ष्ण-नीति तथा दुष्टलक्षण-विज्ञानम्
Measured Policy and the Recognition of Malicious Disposition
भेदेनोपप्रदानेन संसृजेदौषधैस्तथा | न त्वेवं खलु संसर्ग रोचयेदरिभि: सह
bhedenopapradānena saṁsṛjed auṣadhaistathā | na tv evaṁ khalu saṁsargaṁ rocayed aribhiḥ saha ||
Bhishma said: A king should, while keeping his distance, create dissension in the enemy’s ranks—by sowing divisions, by discreet gifts and inducements, and even by the strategic use of medicines or substances. Yet he should not desire an open, face-to-face association with his enemies, for such overt intimacy with foes is not to be approved in statecraft.
भीष्म उवाच
Bhishma teaches that a ruler may use indirect means—creating internal divisions, inducements, and other covert measures—to weaken an enemy, but should avoid overt, public intimacy or direct association with foes, since it risks security and undermines prudent kingship.
In the Shanti Parva’s instruction on rājadharma, Bhishma advises Yudhishthira on practical governance and wartime policy: how to destabilize hostile forces through covert tactics while maintaining strategic distance and avoiding openly visible ties with enemies.