Austira, Czechoslovakia, France, Russia, poland and Norway
Romania, Bulgaria, Serbia, Turkey, Russia, Italy.
The Arab countries (Egypt, Jordan, and Syria) against Israel were the groups in the Six Day War.
There were only four countries allied as the Central Powers in World War 1. They were:The German empireThe Austro-Hungarian EmpireThe Ottoman EmpireThe Kingdom of Bulgaria
The six countries in the world are: 1. Russia 2. Canada 3. United States 4. China 5. Brazil 6. Australia
There were no French cities destroy, but there were nine villages destroyed. Three of which have been rebuilt and the other six have been preserved. Germany also didn't have any real cities destroyed from fighting.There were no real countries destroyed,instead they were separated into individual ruling countries.For more specific information on World War I, see: world-war-i
ChristianityIslamHinduismBudismJudaismTribal Religion
The six main countries involved in World War I were divided into two major alliances: the Allies and the Central Powers. The Allies primarily included France, the United Kingdom, Russia, Italy, and the United States, while the Central Powers were mainly Germany, Austria-Hungary, the Ottoman Empire, and Bulgaria. These nations engaged in extensive military conflict from 1914 to 1918, leading to significant geopolitical changes worldwide.
Israel started the war on a legitimate causus belli that Egypt caused.
World War 2 lasted longer, six years compared to the four years of World War 1.
The war affected all the six main players of world war one (UK, France, Russia, Germany and Austria-Hungary) by affecting them socially, politically, economically and militarily. As a matter of fact, Germany suffered the greatest loss.
Six causes of World War I include militarism, where nations built up large military forces; alliances that created a web of obligations among countries; imperialism, which intensified competition for overseas colonies; nationalism, leading to tensions and desires for independence among ethnic groups; the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand, which triggered the war; and the failure of diplomacy, as countries were unable to resolve conflicts peacefully. These factors combined to create a volatile environment that ultimately led to the outbreak of the war in 1914.