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by ekianjo
929 days ago
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> he assumed that his enemies were idiots. Where do you get that notion? Hindsight much? Not every enemy burns their own capital out of spite because they can't fight back. Actually, this almost never happens, so if you were following the typical scenario based on prior history, this would be very unlikely to happen. |
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Scorched earth is what Russia does. Peter the Great had used it to repel the Swedish invasion during the Great Northern War. Napoleon himself had studied that invasion and tried to learn from it. Instead, he repeated the failure of Charles XII on a larger scale.
Napoleon himself had faced scorched earth in Portugal during the Peninsular War a couple of years earlier. It was effective.
In other words, Napoleon knew that Russia had a habit of using scorched earth, and he knew that it was effective against his forces. The reasonable assumption was that Russia would use it again.
Also, Moscow was not the capital, and Napoleon had already lost the majority of his army before reaching it.