BPaulsen wrote on 12/11/10 at 12:17:41:
However, this is part of solving black's problems in 1. Nf3, which if this line holds up, black can equalize by force against the Khalifman repertoire by using yet another move order nuance [1. Nf3 Nf6 2. c4 b6 3. g3 Bb7 4. Bg2 e6 5. 0-0 (5. d4 c5 leads to the thread topic, 5. Nc3 Ne4! is the same super-accurate move order, Bb4 also equalizes) Be7 6. Nc3 Ne4! is the super-accurate move order, now 7. Nxe4 Bxe4 8. d3 Bb7 9. e4 c5! 10. Re1 Nc6! 11. d4 cxd4 12. Nxd4 Nxd4 13. Qxd4 0-0 14. Rd1 Bc6 15. Bf4 Bc5 is completely equal]. Note: the solution to the Khalifman repertoire does not work if black plays 6...Be7 7. Re1 Ne4, or if he tries to approach via a Hedgehog, where the ...c5 allows white the comfortable Qxd4 variation described in Amentanoitos' analysis.
Basically white's last bastion in the 1. Nf3 repertoire would be transposing to a normal Queen's Indian via 6. d4, but those positions are considered satisfactory for black theoretically, and have been for a long time now.
It seems white can practically force black into an inferior hedgehog with the 1.Nf3 move order vs. your "super accurate" Ne4. Warning: rank amateur analysis to follow... and no Brian this idea didnt come from an engine
1. Nf3 Nf6 2. c4 b6 3. g3 Bb7 4. Bg2 e6 5. 0-0 Be7 6. Nc3 Ne4 7. Nxe4 Bxe4 8. d3 Bb7
9. Qc2!? This move does 3 things:
The queen covers e4, hence renewing the threat to push d3-d4 and a later e2-e4. Black should probably therefore prevent this plan with
9...c5. White's queen is also targeting the h7 square. This lingering threat makes it dangerous for black to castle too early. White threatens to push d4 when Ng5 threatens mate on h7 and frees the g2 monster on the unopposed long diagonal.
Hence, white simply plays a good waiting move. Fortunatenly his queen move to c2 gave him the opportunity to play an excellent waiting move...
10. Rd1!. Again d4 is threatened. How does black respond? Castling is met by d4, when black won't have time to prevent both d5 and Ng5. Pawn moves seem too slow since d4 now threatens to open a file with white's rook opposite black's queen.
It seems black's best is
10...Nc6 to prevent d4. But now black has a hedgehog with a less than ideal knight (on c6 instead of d7). White can prepare d4 with a queenside fianchetto, where his Qc2 looks reasonably placed:
11.b3 0-0 12.Bb2. This seems like a reasonable edge for white to me. Black can't prevent d4 and doesn't have any obvious counterplay.