"Guo Huaruo"@en . . "Guo Huaruo () was a military strategist from China. Alastair Iain Johnston, author of \"Cultural Realism and Strategy in Maoist China,\" said that until the mid-1980s Guo was \"the CCP's most authoritative interpreter and annotator\" of the book The Art of War by Sun Tzu. Samuel B. Griffith, a translator of The Art of War, wrote in the introduction of his edition that Guo was \"practically unknown in the West\". Johnson said 'Guo stressed that from a Marxist-Leninist perspective the notion of \"not fighting and subduing the enemy\"'\u2014the core of the conventional interpretation of Sun Zi\u2014was un-Marxist, since class enemies could not be credibly defeated without the application of violence.' Around June 4, 1937, Guo was the dean of studies of Qingyang Infantry School."@en . . "Gu\u014D Hu\u00E0ru\u00F2"@en . "\u90ED\u5316\u82E5"@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Guo Huaruo () was a military strategist from China. Alastair Iain Johnston, author of \"Cultural Realism and Strategy in Maoist China,\" said that until the mid-1980s Guo was \"the CCP's most authoritative interpreter and annotator\" of the book The Art of War by Sun Tzu. Samuel B. Griffith, a translator of The Art of War, wrote in the introduction of his edition that Guo was \"practically unknown in the West\". Around June 4, 1937, Guo was the dean of studies of Qingyang Infantry School."@en . . .