CONDUCT UNDER FIRE
The psychopolitical agent must learn to withstand attacks of the enemy without breaking in discipline.
He must learn to answer criticism with an attack, and to take advantage of the chaos brought about by his actions.
He must no more credit any enemy than he must entertain any thought of personal danger.
His continued work brings about the degradation of the enemy to a point where the enemy is no longer in control of himself.
His work must be continued at all times. Interruption of his work must be avoided, and he must learn the lessons of the operative thoroughly.
If his own activities are exposed, he should attribute these to carelessness and forgetfulness to his own dupes, and should continue unabated in his efforts.
If at any time he should be charged with corruption, perversion, or in some manner, held responsible for a grievance against the people, he should attribute such to the capitalistic enemies of the people, and through raising the specter of the madness of the capitalistic forces, destroy the reputation of such accusers.
Under fire he should learn to defend himself fully, insisting in his own mental and spiritual health and preventing any attack upon him personally so that he can continue his mission.
In a chaos brought about by the activities of psychopolitical operatives, one can expect a state of thorough confusion or interrogation. The psychopolitical operative must learn to cooperate only so long as no self incrimination is admitted, and at all times he must refuse to cooperate when the objectives of the interrogation are against the goals of the People and the State.
At such times he must be wholly uncowed and must learn to answer only in statements and assertions against the Enemy. His whole deportment must be such as to bring about the total despair of his investigators.
At no moment should he permit himself to be brought under flow by the enemy or his institutions. He should remain solid and unbroken, refusing to give in to demands which would take him from the mission of the People.
Under prison, or in an imprisonment, he should at all times insist upon his separate and personal welfare such as food and beds to which he is not necessarily entitled. Where possible he should bring about the corruption of such institutions and should bring about the complete derangement of a mental hospital or prison.
Throughout his mission he must learn to take advantage of every crisis, and to avoid taking any responsibility himself for an accident, without bringing his mission to collapse. He should learn to appear at least half insane and to yet be wholly competent, thus confusing others.
Under charges made by his enemies, he must learn to pass out the charges to the authorities and thus to create confusion, which in its turn, will invalidate them and their witnesses.
The only psychopolitical operative who survives will be one who treats his enemies to total derision and contempt and who knows his own mission with certainty and moves forward, window with the certainty of the victory of the People at all times.
Therefore, the psychopolitical operative must be schooled thoroughly in the arts of harassing, holding the enemy at bay, and of bringing about the continual defeat of the enemy.
He should learn to attack his enemies under the banner of the State and the People, and to insist that such psychopolitical activities are the activities of science under the banner of health.