You guys are beginning to become my outboard memory.
Thank you.
At any rate, I'm trying to remember the name for a military tactic. And I emphasize tactic here.
It was famously used by Napoleon in the Battle of Austerlitz. When faced with a larger foe, particularly one which is made up of seperate elements, you attack in force (and, if I remember correctly, as one unit) one of the seperate elements, then move onto the next element until you have won the field.
I believe the tactic ends with the word "line" or "lines." Like "turning line" or "bending lines." Something to that effect.
A similar idea, taken to the strategic level, was behind the Schlieffen Plan, in which German forces would invade France through Belgium in order to bypass the larger elements of the French Army and defeat the smaller units to the side.
-Murmur
Thank you.
At any rate, I'm trying to remember the name for a military tactic. And I emphasize tactic here.
It was famously used by Napoleon in the Battle of Austerlitz. When faced with a larger foe, particularly one which is made up of seperate elements, you attack in force (and, if I remember correctly, as one unit) one of the seperate elements, then move onto the next element until you have won the field.
I believe the tactic ends with the word "line" or "lines." Like "turning line" or "bending lines." Something to that effect.
A similar idea, taken to the strategic level, was behind the Schlieffen Plan, in which German forces would invade France through Belgium in order to bypass the larger elements of the French Army and defeat the smaller units to the side.
-Murmur