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GeniusThinking
@GeniusGTX
Napoleon discovered how to win wars before they start.

Every military academy still teaches this 200-year-old strategy:

West Point. Sandhurst. Saint-Cyr.

They all study his plabook.

Here's the principle that changed warfare forever: 🧡
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GeniusThinking
@GeniusGTX
Napoleon wasn't born a conqueror.

He was a nobody from Corsica who spoke French with an accent.

But he discovered something other generals missed:

Wars aren't won on battlefields.

They're won before the first shot is fired.
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GeniusThinking
@GeniusGTX
His secret?

"Divide your enemies before you fight them."

While other generals prepared for battle, Napoleon was busy turning allies against each other.

Austria, Russia, and Prussia were ready to fight EACH OTHER instead of France.

Genius move.
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GeniusThinking
@GeniusGTX
Take the Ottoman Empire deal in 1803.

Napoleon spent 3 YEARS secretly negotiating with them.

When Russia realized their southern ally was now Napoleon's partner...

It was already too late.

The chess game was over before it began.
GeniusThinking
@GeniusGTX
But here's what made Napoleon truly dangerous:

He revolutionized military logistics 200 years before Amazon.

"Render the enemy helpless by cutting their supply lines FIRST."

No supplies = No fight.

Modern militaries still use this exact playbook.
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GeniusThinking
@GeniusGTX
Napoleon's confession reveals his true genius:

"When planning a campaign, I purposely exaggerate all dangers. I am like an unmarried girl laboring with child."

His paranoia wasn't weakness.

It was his superpower.

He prepared for EVERYTHING.
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GeniusThinking
@GeniusGTX
While enemies were still planning, Napoleon was already moving.

His principle: "The strength of an army is mass multiplied by speed."

He'd hit you before you knew war had started.

Speed kills.

And Napoleon was lightning.
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GeniusThinking
@GeniusGTX
The Central Position Strategy was his masterpiece.

Outnumbered? No problem.

Split the enemy army in half.
Destroy each part separately.
Use speed to maintain local superiority.

He turned being outnumbered into an ADVANTAGE.
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GeniusThinking
@GeniusGTX
But his most brilliant tactic? The Indirect Approach.

Show massive force at the enemy's front (distraction).

Meanwhile, secretly march your REAL army around their flank.

Cut off retreat. Isolate. Destroy.

This won him Jena, Ulm, and Friedland.
GeniusThinking
@GeniusGTX
Napoleon had 5 unbreakable principles:

1. Destroy enemies on sight
2. Concentrate ALL forces on one objective
3. Scheme operations in advance
4. Interrupt enemy logistics
5. Real-time battlefield surveillance

Simple. Devastating. Timeless.
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GeniusThinking
@GeniusGTX
"Good generals see too many things at once. I see only ONE thing: the enemy's main force. Crush it. Everything else settles itself."

This laser focus made him different.

Other generals played checkers.

Napoleon played assassination chess.
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GeniusThinking
@GeniusGTX
His Battalion Square formation was revolutionary:

- Advance guard (scouts)
- Left & right wings (support)
- Reserve force (backup)

Each unit could rescue the others instantly.

Like a moving fortress that could strike from any angle.
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GeniusThinking
@GeniusGTX
Even in defeat, Napoleon showed genius.

When Russia finally beat him in 1812, he'd already killed MORE of their soldiers than he lost.

His strategies were so effective that losing required:
- Massive numbers
- Brutal winter
- Scorched earth tactics
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GeniusThinking
@GeniusGTX
200 years later, every military academy studies Napoleon.

West Point, Sandhurst, Saint-Cyr - they all teach his methods.

Because his core insight remains true:

Victory belongs to whoever controls the battlefield BEFORE the battle begins.
GeniusThinking
@GeniusGTX
If this story grabbed you, join my mission:

"Schools hide the best history stories. I dig up the wild, forgotten moments that shaped our world."

Follow @GeniusGTX for the genius moments history class never taught you.

Written by @ToanTruongGTX.
GeniusThinking
@GeniusGTX
Thank you for reading this thread.

What’s your ONE big takeaway from this story?

Follow me @GeniusGTX for more threads about the hidden brilliance of ancient civilizations.
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