The act of feigning a withdrawal or rout to lure an enemy away from a defended position or into a prepared ambush is an ancient tactic, which has been used throughout the history of warfare. Three famous examples are: •
William the Conqueror used a feigned retreat at the
Battle of Hastings to lure much of Harold's infantry from their advantageous defenses on higher ground, leading to its annihilation by a charge of William's Norman cavalry. • Medieval
Mongols were famed for, among other things, their extensive use of feigned retreats during their conquests, as their fast light
cavalry made successful pursuit by an enemy almost impossible. In the heat and muddle of a battle, the
Mongol Army would pretend to be defeated, exhausted and confused, and would suddenly retreat from the battlefield. The opposing force, thinking that it had routed the Mongols, would give chase. The Mongol cavalry would, while retreating, fire upon its pursuers and dishearten them (see
Parthian shot). When the pursuing forces stopped chasing the (significantly faster) Mongol cavalry, the Mongols would then turn and charge the pursuers and generally succeed. That was used partly as a
defeat in detail tactic to allow the Mongols to defeat larger armies by breaking them into smaller groups. • Early on during the
Battle of Kasserine Pass in 1943, tanks of the US
1st Armored Division followed what appeared to be a headlong retreat by elements of the
21st Panzer Division. The advancing US forces then met a screen of German anti-tank guns, who opened fire and destroyed nearly all the American tanks. A US forward artillery observer, whose radio and landlines had been cut by shellfire, recalled: : ==References==