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The invention and use of tanks. Before tanks were introduced, much of the action on the western front was bogged down in trench warfare where progress over months was measured in yards. Tanks allowed armies to make real progress and break the stalemate of trench warfare.
The Ludendorff Offensive used new strategies and tactics based on rapid advancement and surprise to help break the stalemate. It was only effective up to the Fifth.
because they had many allies nicca
The stalemate was already firmly established before poison gas was ever used. The leaders turned to using gas in an effort to break the stalemate. They hoped to wipe out all defenders of a section of the enemy lines, allowing them to break through over the gassed area and possibly begin to roll up the enemy lines to either side of the gassed area, and ultimately to break out of the trenches and resume a war of movement.
They used poisoned gasses.
Tanks were meant to break the stalemate of trench warfare
tanks helped to break the stalemate that trench warfare created. They were also good at attacking trenches because bullets just bounced off the armour
Trench warfare happened due to a stalemate in the technological capabilities of the opposing forces at the time. With no mobile artillery, armour or aircraft there was no easy way to break the stalemate. This was a very nasty war to fight in, if you didn't get shot you would succumb to the natural forces, namely frost bite or trench foot, a condition caused by constant exposure to tepid water which caused gangrene of the soldiers limbs.
We'll break for a week, as our bargaining has come to a stalemate.
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No.
The invention and use of tanks. Before tanks were introduced, much of the action on the western front was bogged down in trench warfare where progress over months was measured in yards. Tanks allowed armies to make real progress and break the stalemate of trench warfare.
The Ludendorff Offensive used new strategies and tactics based on rapid advancement and surprise to help break the stalemate. It was only effective up to the Fifth.
Trench warfare was mainly promoted, where soldiers on both sides would dig trench lines hundreds of miles long, and make bayonet charges, generally a war of attrition. Numerous weapons were introduced to help break the stalemate, like the tank, chemical weapons, etc.
Simply, one side could assault and break through the enemy's trenches, but they were so expended in doing so that they could not resist the enemy's counterattack. As a result, the stalemate of "No Man's Land" on the Western Front was created.
They did help break the stalemate.
To break the stalemate of the First World War.