The Eternal War's Psychological Warfare tactics are designed to cause disunity, tribalism, societal fracturing and the violent end of The Infinite Game versus unity through the Game's improvement, evolution and expansion.
The Eternal War | Doctrine | Tactics
As projected by Bertrand and his team in The Order, prior. The Watcher’s organization, shortly after the event, now three months prior, had cleared all trace. No police were ever called in, not a body nor even a single drop of blood was ever found. Excuses were made for the technology failures, hacks to cover hacks. The guards were also excused, traces of an organic toxin, heavy narcotic, having been found in the food delivered earlier in the evening. And Peter – Mikel – was away for some months on travel with his fiancé. Or so the story was told.
Immediately after exiting the underground tunnels, unseen, entering the service van waiting for them. They’d moved His Royal Highness to the Singaporean Sanctuary of The Order where he would stay for mere hours, before being ushered quietly onto Tiara, the sailing yacht sister to the Aquitaine, to be sailed to Brunei. In Brunei a private jet met them and flew them to a private airstrip in the north central part of the Northern Territory of Australia. One of the ranches The Order keeps as remote self-sufficient sanctuary, around the world.
Through all the movement Olivia had been with him, continuity, answering questions she could answer, reassuring Mikel, now Prince Peter once more, in those rare moments he needed reassurance. That had been months ago. Olivia having returned to Singapore within days of their arriving in Australia, to her family and her job as Mikel’s executive assistant. To keep up appearances, to be a human sensor and to deflect questions and outright mislead where necessary, such the ruse of Mikel’s sudden disappearance as travels with a fiancé might be sustained.
A dialogue began the moment he’d arrived at sanctuary in Singapore, a dialogue and a more structured thought process. He’d had all the pieces, or most of the pieces, prior. The attempted hit on his life, this second one conducted by the Watcher’s organization and people, and time with The Order since. All of these had forced him to formalize his thinking. At its very most basic, to sustain and expand itself, the global regime is going to unleash hell in their own countries, surrendering land and people to forever wars, to 5th Generation Warfare waged against any and all with assets or a voice of any kind.
“Wealthy families believe they own the Regime, believe they’re safe and secure.” Peter, seated in an old rocking chair on the wrap around porch of the ranch house almost in the very center of the three hundred-thousand-acre cattle ranch. Bertrand seated in another ancient rocking chair on the other side of the small worn table their cold drinks are on. The cold of the drinks in the Australian heat sweating into the old wood. “But they’re not. Not even remotely.”
“Why are they not.” Bertrand asks with that tone of voice only a true teacher and mentor possesses. Mentor motivated not to impart knowledge, to impose, but to listen and shape.
“It’s the mercenary problem.” Peter, looking to Bertrand for recognition. Receiving the merest of nod to continue. “These families don’t own their security. Their security, and the institutions their security personnel come from, own them.”
“In your estimation, what is the mercenary problem? At its most fundamental level?” Bertrand asks.
“There’s no loyalty in a mercenary, ever. Those in it for the money, can be bought off. Those in it for their appetites can be blackmailed or will simply burn out, their appetites no longer fulfillable. Those in it for power will shift loyalty the moment they believe power dynamics are changing. Those who are driven by ideology are blinded and leave vectors of attack open. To say nothing of being susceptible to being convinced their ward doesn’t actually ideologically align.”
“Good. What about those who are under threat?”
“Ah, yes. These will never stop seeking to be free, free to then punish. These mercenaries will work in all they are capable of to remove the threat, then to move against those who posed the threat to them and their family. Or they’ll allow, so as to break free, the threat to play out, ruin or kill their family. Then they’ll be free to do whatever they must and will to punish those involved.”
“Is the mercenary problem merely physical security, or does it extend far broader and go far deeper?” There hadn’t been a single day in the past three months in which Peter had not been going through this internal reorientation, this preparation. Reorientation and preparation shaped and guided by Bertrand and The Order. But not directed by. His Royal Highness having to come to his true self, all on his own.
“No. Physical security is the lowest level threat. The real threat is information and reputation warfare, intelligence collection, innuendos and lies, medical threats. Sowing discord and dissention in a family so as to be in control of it, to keep it angry and afraid. Making family members sick. This too is part of the mercenary problem. Rely on intelligence from the regime, directly or indirectly, as filtered and provided by current or former intelligence and enforcer elements of the regime. Or on their medical care. Allow these to do your due diligence, your vetting of any and all, internal and external. And the regime is in total and absolute control. Not you. No matter your wealth.”
“Yes. The Gweneviere and Lancelot ploy.”
“Exactly.” Peter nearly leaps out of his seat at this reminder. “There was never any betrayal there. There was only the lie of, carefully crafted, whispered and supported. To break the King from his Queen, the Queen from her champion, her defender, and the King from his greatest friend and most trusted knight. All to rob and steal and enslave the people.”
“And Judas?” Bertrand carefully prods.
“Ummm. That one’s always bothered me as well. As much as I’ve been able to read and think through. Judas was not only no traitor, he was Jesus of Nazareth’s most trusted friend and ally in the entire group.” Peter takes his drink from the stand between them. Downs a long pull of the mineral balanced alkaline drink. “I believe Judas did what he did on Jesus’ explicit instruction. Knowing full well how he would be perceived.”
“An ancient problem.” Bertrand looking his mentee directly in the eyes. “With ancient solutions.”
“A prince must provide for all of these things himself. He must bind to himself those individuals, men and women, who are capable of such things. Truly exceptional individuals. Bind them across more than a couple generations. Bind them in ways go far deeper than anything a mercenary could be bought for.” Peter, eyes closed, reaching deep inside, to memories of royal ancestors, to memories of his own father and mother’s teachings, of his grandmothers and their matriarchal guidance. All so long ago.
“How does a prince do so?” It had taken several months to get to this conversation. Into this thinking.
“Loyalty. A prince binds those to him through his loyalty to they and their families, for generations to come. Binds in obligations, shared interests and supports his descendants will continue, if they are equal to their ancestor, raised properly, continuing with the genuine respect and loyalty between these families.”
“How does a prince demonstrate his loyalty. This shared obligation and commitment across generations?” Bertrand, calmly, quietly, seeking to induce as little of his own energy as possible. His Royal Highness must come to all of this all on his own. It must awaken within him as an awareness sparks every cell in his body into alignment, into action.
“A prince constantly prepares for the worst, to ensure continuity. Detailed planning and resource allocations updated regularly so as to remain current with current and emerging threats. Plans which include not only self and immediate family, but the individuals and families of those essential to the prince and his family’s success and survival.”
“Trust. Earned and sustained.” Bertrand furthers.
“Bi-directional trust. Not only the trust of the prince that his people will do what he requires, while not being or becoming a threat. But far more, trust that the prince recognizes, sees and cares for his people. That the prince expends parts of his immensely limited time and energy, his resources, watching, paying attention to and understanding his people, who they are, what motivates them, what their needs are, for them and their families.” Peter, an intense look on his face. “This alone is what sustains old families. It isn’t their wealth, power and influence. The families which fail to understand and embrace this, fall.”
“If a prince fails to come to the defense of his people. Then he’s no prince. And if he’s no prince, there is not and cannot be inviolable loyalty.” Peter slips back into the rocking chair. Eyes closed. The wind forcibly rushing from him in a single exhalation. As he hears and absorbs this from the tall Belgian nobleman, senior knight in The Order. Lesson taken; rewiring finished. the fullness of it all will take more time. But that most ancient of neural circuitry within him. All those many memories trapped within his royal genes, going back a thousand years. All these are now active.
“This is what angers me the most. That the Watcher and his people sought to buy me off with comforts and wealth, with recognition, all the petty things so many fall for. And when I decide to stand for the people my death is sought.”
“Most elite families are not free, they’re owned by their own security. As you say.” Bertrand looking at the stern young man. This tall, muscular, blond headed and blue green eyed Prince Royal. A young man who may well yet be far more in this life.
“I want to burn them all to the ground. Whatever this organization is. The one killed my family, sought me out and tried to kill me again.” There is actual rage in Peter’s voice. Near to all-consuming rage. A thing must be blunted, channeled, shaped, refined and honed into a weapon for the people.
“One cannot stand to power, real power, until one is prepared. Fully prepared.” Bertrand states. Not looking at Peter, looking instead out across the plains of the sanctuary ranch in northern Australia.
“You’re right. No prince can stand alone. He must have his knights, their families, and all those many others who support the fight in whatever manner they are able, whatever their role and purpose.” Peter too looks out across the plains of northern Australia. A calm has returned. That calm he remembers. The type of total and absolute focus just prior to a fight, a real fight. That dropping away of rage and anger, of fear and doubt. Total calm arises only from a total and absolute commitment to the fight ahead.
“What is it your people need most?”
“To start having kids. To start out populating the enemies of humanity.” Peter states the first thing that comes to mind. “This means we have to start building bonds in the old ways, anchoring men and family to land, productive land is theirs and their descendants for as long as they continue to serve.”
“Trust and loyalty. How does a prince earn these, in the time afforded us?”
“We start to properly use the fortunes created over the past forty years, the vast unaccountable and untouchable offshore wealth, massive non-profits and networks of non-profits, to fight for specific people and their families. The right people and their families, those capable of trust and loyalty, those who provide something to and who represent the best of us.” Peter, now getting excited as the path he’d lived has prepared him well for this very line of reasoning and action.
“To earn trust and loyalty, the prince must first give. Give something his people require most. Their freedom and security.” Bertrand smiles out into the hot Australian sun, from the protections of the covered porch.
These men, these knights, The Order, they are preparing him for something. Something will change him forever. He can feel it, sense it. There’s a task ahead of him only he of the Romanov blood, the legitimate crown prince, can achieve. Yes, but there’s something more here. Every interaction with this strange and enigmatic group, is preparing him for something more immediate. An organization like this, this ancient, this nature. The only thing they can be preparing him for is an ordeal. Something will shape and vet him forever after.
“Which grandmother is it?” Peter, phishing but with confidence.
“Your father’s mother.” Bertrand replies. A smile on his face. Of course, Peter would recognize a matriarch of his lineage is involved, somewhere, somehow, in all of this.
“She still alive?” He’d not tried once to seek out, search out or connect with the family of his birth. Something the Watcher and his people had supported, out of fear of. Now he recognizes not out of fear for his safety.
“No. She passed three years ago. But it was her set us searching for you the day your parents died.” Bertrand, looking Peter in the eyes. Letting him know the truth and strength of the obligation and commitment from The Order and those of The Order. “She was one of the matriarchs we are bound to.”
Peter sits back once more in his rocking chair. The pain of this news ripping through every part of him. He’d loved his grandmother, both of them. They’d been strong Russian women, elders, royals, always teaching. But they’d loved him and his siblings, with a fierce kind of hard northern love.
“You’re preparing me for an ordeal.” Peter asks, in the form of a statement.
“Yes.”
“It will not be pleasant.”
“No.”
“But it is necessary.”
“Yes. There is no other way.”
“Soon?”
“Yes. Though it is up to the Lord Commander to decide.” Bertrand, looking once more across the plains of the ranch that extends out beyond where the eye can see in all directions.
“He’s on his way here?”
“Not yet. Perhaps not here.”
Peter remains for a time pushed back in the aged rocking chair. His eyes closed. Focusing on his breathing. On the racing of his heart. Calming it down, regaining control.
“There’s a woman, isn’t there?”
“Yes.”
“Is she beautiful?”
“I’ve been told she is. Brilliant and strong, as well.” Bertrand, knowing absolutely everything he says from here on must be direct and honest, the truth.
“Russian royalty. I take it.”
“Yes.”
“And I’m not worthy of her yet. Am I?” Statement made with utter calm, complete resolve. A statement known. Recognition that a woman of this caliber would be unlike any he’s ever known before. Recognition he’ll have to pass through the ordeal, whatever it is, and perhaps more to come.
“No, you are not.”
“For a woman of this stature to want to bind me to her, even though I’m a crown prince, requires I’m first a man. A man tested, proven and inducted fully into the world of man.”
“Yes. This is the only way.”
“How exciting!” Peter sits back up in his rocking chair. Energy pouring into his entire body. There had always been the sense in him that she, her, the one, was out there somewhere. It’s why he’d never been one to sleep around. Though there had been women since he was a teen. So, she’s real. It’s one thing to sense and feel. Quite another, however, to know!
“A prince cannot achieve his task, cannot protect his people, if he himself is alone, if his back is uncovered in his least guarded moments.” Peter had studied the great houses of the past, the royal families. The rise and fall of both. The fall always coming when the bond between prince and princess, king and queen was not that of equals, was not that sufficient to stand in constant full-spectrum warfare every moment of their lives together.
“If he doesn’t have something at home to fight for, something to be that more for, then what chance do his people have in believing their prince will sacrifice all in the Eternal War for those he does not know? How will they know he is constantly improving?” Bertrand posits.
“Even if they trust he will sacrifice all in the fight. What confidence can they have in his ability to do so if he isn’t paired and secured by the world of women, the matriarchs, through his not only his mother, but through his wife and the women in her lineage? Not only the prince, but his children after him.” This is something he and his professor, all those years ago now in Greece, had discussed specifically.
“Just so.” Bertrand cannot but be impressed with this young man, this crown prince of a throne he may or may not ever sit upon. A throne not sat upon for more than a century.
“How exciting!” Peter states once again, before standing up, stepping off the porch and heading out into the lands of the ranch. Two knights peeling away from their duties to shadow him, while giving him the space to think and feel his way through this revelation.