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The Western Front (in France and Belgium) where both sides were very evenly matched, and the defense proved much stronger than the offense. On other fronts in World War 1, trench warfare was not necessary.
The Imperial German Army at Bolimow, Poland (then part of the Russian Empire), January 31, 1915. Cold temperatures prevented the gas from vaporizing properly. The first very effective use was at the 2nd Battle of Ypres on the Western Front (April-May, 1915).
offered pay to soldiers along with promises of homes, education, and "insurance"
During war, there is no time for deployed soldiers to take off. However, on the Western Front there was the 1914 Christmas Truce where both sides agreed to a ceasefire on Christmas day.
The battle of Dien Bien Phu is a representative symbol of freedom from colonial rule and Western influence .
They were the western front. But the different trenches were front line trenches, communication trenches.
War of attrition
Because of the stalemate on the Western Front both sides sought to gain new allies who n=might provide a winning advantage.
It sounds like you may be having either Gall Bladder attacks or Heart burn .
The trench warfare. And the fact that both sides kept constantly sending more and more troops to the western front. So basically they go no where. If they try and advance there are machine guns and other artillary ready.
Because of the stalemate on the Western Front both sides sought to gain new allies who n=might provide a winning advantage.
Equatorial Region
I assume you mean the western front in Europe. It didn't move much because both sides were dug into trench systems and everything became bogged down.
A warm front ^wrong answer^
A warm front ^wrong answer^
Following the outbreak of World_War_Iin 1914, the German_Empirearmy opened the Western Front by first invading Luxembourgand Belgium, then gaining military control of important industrial regions in France. The tide of the advance was dramatically turned with the First_Battle_of_the_Marne. Both sides then dug in along a meandering line of fortified Trench_warfare, stretching from the North_Seato the Switzerlandfrontier with France. This line remained essentially unchanged for most of the war.
A warm front ^wrong answer^