The two most important Union victories were not battles as such, but sieges. When Grant captured Vicksburg, it choked off the South from Mississippi River traffic. They could not receive reinforcements or supplies from Texas and Arkansas. When Sherman captured Atlanta and conducted his March to the Sea, that prevented food, ammunition, clothing, and medicine from reaching the Army of Northern Virginia from the Deep South. From then on, the fate of the South was sealed.
The Union won Ft. Henry, Ft. Donelson, Shiloh, and Perryville, among others.
D-day definatly helped the allies win the war. It was one of the most important battles of WW2 D-day definatly helped the allies win the war. It was one of the most important battles of WW2
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The Soviet forces won many, many battles. Some of the best known are: * Moscow * Stalingrad (widely seen as the key turning point in the war in Europe) * Kursk * Berlin
you win 1 or 2 battles in wi-fi
false
you win or lose 20 wi fi battles
YES. They DID.! :P
YES. They DID.! :P
Yes; the Pearl Harbor "sneak attack" was not their only "win".
According to the British they won all of their aerial battles in Europe; but obviously lost all of their battles in the Pacific and Asia, as their bases fell to the enemy there (Singapore, etc.).
Confederates won both Battles of Manassas/Bull Run, Chickamauga, Kenesaw Mountain, Fredericksburg, Chancellorsville, plus a number of pyrrhic victories: the Wilderness Campaign, Spotsylvania, Cold Harbor, and many others.