Submitted by AutoModerator t3_121l60d in history
quantdave t1_jecn80b wrote
Reply to comment by ZXCChort in Weekly History Questions Thread. by AutoModerator
The Austrian campaign of 1809 may also have convinced him that victory on the battlefield counted for more than a capital: then it took eight more weeks to settle the issue, but Russia's huge distances might drag that out into the winter and beyond. In the event, even Moscow didn't deliver the decisive win, but that couldn't readily be foreseen in the summer.
ZXCChort t1_jecqq3q wrote
I mean that an attack on the capital would force the Russians into battle.
quantdave t1_jecv2td wrote
I don't think it necessarily would, though: the Austrians hadn't fought a last-ditch battle at the city gates, so it couldn't be assumed in Russia either with the assets of its space and its weather, especially given the capital's peripheral location. A calculation that the enemy might leave him to plod around an abandoned palace as his troops froze or starved wouldn't have been unreasonable.
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