MacArthur: “Rule 1, on page 1 of the book of war, is: ‘Do not march on Moscow'” - [PEACE]
A reasonable mashup comparison of Napoleon's march on Moscow (courtesy the memoirs of Caulaincourt) and today's USA "Empire of Mug Values"^BMuh Values, & with a link to "the famous graph" which is new to some (speaking for a friend ;) https://proxy.duckduckgo.com/iu/?u=http://iaincarstairs.files.wordpress.com/... ** The West and Russia: C’est Toujours La même Chose https://patrickarmstrong.ca/2019/01/05/cest-toujours-la-meme-chose/?mc_cid=f... … His account begins with a long conversation with Napoleon. Just before he left St Petersburg, Alexander called him in for what was, unmistakeably, a message and warning to be passed on. De Caulaincourt really tries hard – but unsuccessfully – to make Napoleon get the point. He tells him that Alexander said he had learned something from the Spanish resistance to France and that was that Napoleon’s other opponents had given up too early; they should have kept fighting. Napoleon is unimpressed: his generals in Spain are incompetent and and his brother (to whom he had given the Spanish throne) is an idiot; he sees no larger lessons and believes that Spain is not important in the great scheme. De Caulaincourt reiterates that Alexander kept returning to that point, giving other illustrations of giving up too soon and emphasised that, if Napoleon invaded, he would persevere: he would keep fighting from Kamchatka if need be; Russia was very large and the weather very severe. One good battle and they’ll give up insists Napoleon. Napoleon then mentions how angry the Poles are getting with Russia. De Caulaincourt retorts that the Poles he knows, while they would certainly prefer a free and independent Poland, have learned that living under Russia is not as bad as they thought it would be and that real freedom might cost more than it would be worth. De Caulaincourt then, no doubt repeating what Alexander has told him, describes the compromise that would settle the problems between him and Russia; but Napoleon’s not interested. After five hours of this, Napoleon dismisses him but de Caulaincourt asks leave to say one more thing: if you are thinking of invading (now de Caulaincourt realises that he’s set on it) please think of France’s best interests. Oh says Napoleon, now you’re talking like a Russian. …
participants (1)
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Zenaan Harkness