Yes. They had done it in World War I and it didn't work out so well (even though they tried to prepare for it in advance). So, before they invaded Poland, Germany made a treaty with the Soviet Union where they agreed not to attack each other, and also secretly agreed to split Poland, and let the Soviets conquer the Baltics. Germany was then free to attack Poland and eventually fight, and defeat, France.
Russians .
Enlist them to fight on the side of Germany?
Germany was able to fight a 2-front war in Western and Eastern Europe.
In this case, "front" means "frontier" or "border". A two front war means fighting a war against two or more enemies on different borders of your country.
The Normandy landings were to establish a beachhead in northern France and open a second European front to fight against Germany.
Russians .
Enlist them to fight on the side of Germany?
They fought Germany on the Western Front, as they were allied with Belgium.
Germany on the western front and turkey on the eastern front
Germany was able to fight a 2-front war in Western and Eastern Europe.
Germany was able to fight a 2-front war in Western and Eastern Europe.
Germany was forced to divide her military assets to fight in two separate theaters of the war : Eastern and Western Fronts .
During a war, a "front" is a place where armies are fighting battles. In World War I, most of the major battles were in Europe. So in World War I, "Western Front" refers to the front in the western portion of Europe- it was mainly in northern France, where Germany had invaded. The "Eastern Front" was in Eastern Europe, primarily around the borders between Russia and Germany/Austria-Hungary.
In this case, "front" means "frontier" or "border". A two front war means fighting a war against two or more enemies on different borders of your country.
The Normandy landings were to establish a beachhead in northern France and open a second European front to fight against Germany.
The "Eastern Front" in WWII parlance is the battle lines between Germany and Russia, from the Black Sea to the south (at one time) to as far north as Latvia. The German name for the assault on Russia was Operation Barbarossa. The battle lines were not always (or ever) associated with political borders.
The three different fronts typically refer to the Eastern Front, Western Front, and Southern Front during World War II. The Eastern Front was primarily between Germany and the Soviet Union, the Western Front was between Germany and the Allied forces, and the Southern Front involved conflicts in areas like Italy and North Africa.