Napoleon has not stayed still. The French…
November 1805 CE
The French Emperor has decided to set a psychological trap in order to lure the Allies out.
Days before any fighting, Napoleon had been giving the impression that his army was weak and that he desired a negotiated peace.
About fifty-three thousand French troops—including Soult, Lannes and Murat's forces—have been assigned to take Austerlitz and the Olmutz road, occupying the enemy's attention.
The Allied forces, numbering about eighty-nine thousand, seem far superior and will be tempted to attack the outnumbered French army.
However, the Allies do not know that Bernadotte, Mortier and Davout are already within the supported distance, and can be called in by forced marches from Iglau and Vienna respectively, raising the French number to seventy-five thousand troops.
Napoleon's lure does not stop at that.
On November 25, General Savary is sent to the Allied headquarters at Olmütz to deliver Napoleon's message expressing his desire to avoid a battle, while secretly examining the Allied forces' situation.
As expected, the overture is seen as a sign of weakness.
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