In the Battle of Jinglong, the key to Han Xin's victory is to give full play to his subjective initiative and make use of Zhao's mistakes in a planned way. Mastery? Soldiers are afraid when they are sleepy, sleepy when they are fine, restrained when they are deep, and can fight? Psychological state, including using strange tricks, positive tricks, sailing against the current, flexible tactics, amazing victory and quick decision.
As a result, Zhao Jun was wiped out in one fell swoop and wrote a wonderful chapter in the history of China's ancient war. Zhao's failure was that the commander-in-chief was pedantic and arrogant, did not adopt the correct operational plan of the strategist Li Zuocai, and ignored the understanding of the operational intention of the Han army. Finally, Zhao Jun lost his advantage and initiative, and was eliminated passively in various places.
From this aspect, we can see that in fact, the war in Jingxing was more a psychological war than a blind cat meeting a dead mouse. It is not a fight on the battlefield, but a macro exploration outside the battlefield. In fact, in a real war, everyone will explore the inside of the war, and few people will jump out of it to explore the planning of the war. So whoever can jump out first will not be a vulnerable group in the war. Of course, there is no such thing as the old, the weak, the sick and the disabled defeating the powerful countries in history, and many histories have been infinitely exaggerated.