With the French invasion of Russia many groups were affected; as well as the French nad the Russians there was the Prussians and the Austrians. Because of the 'scortched earth' tactics employed by the Russians the peasants were greatly affected.
After the Nazi invasion of Russia failed,the Russians launched a massive counterattack. While the German Army was being pushed back to Germany the Americans and British launched the D-Day Invasion crossing the English Channel from Britain and landing on the beaches of the French coast. As these forces fought their way inland across France, the Russians were coming from the East,so Germany found itself being closed-in on from both sides. The Russians were the only Army which actually captured and occupied Berlin. The American and British Armies were ordered to stop their advance at a certain point and allow the Russians to take Berlin alone (politics at work even in wartime).
In world War 1 the British, and the French among others, were fighting against the so called "Central Powers" - German Empire, Austro-Hungarian Empire, Bulgaria and the Ottoman Empire.
The French have more croissants.
they were not struggling.
Triple Entente.
Gremans, Russians, British and Spanish... These are just large nations they have fought
The French, British, Americans, and Russians all had occupation zones in Germany after World War 2. The French, British, and Americans united their zones to prevent the spread of Communism.
Benjamin Franklin
The Crimea. The French and British were at war with the Russians in the Crimea, and the train held gold to pay the troops.
The British, French, Germans Portuguese Russians, and Japanese gained control over parts of china
by the french by the french by the french
The British, French, Germans Portuguese Russians, and Japanese gained control over parts of china
the Russians and french
The British & French were too far removed to defend Poland from the Germans, however... the Russians (Soviet Union) actually helped Hitler attack Poland not defend it. The Russians then annexed the eastern portion of Poland. At no point in World War 2, even when the Russians became Allies, did they defend Poland.
There were quite a few, the British and Russians were the biggest allies but there was also the Canadians, Austrailians, and what was left of the French, to name a few.
Generally when speaking of "the trenches" during WWI its understood that this means "the western front", which was in France and Belgium. There the British, French, Belgians and Americans fought the Germans. Both world wars were, for Germany, "two front wars", because, in the west, they had the British, French and Americans, and, in the east, on the other front, the Russians. There were no Russians on the western front. I am sure there were times and places during WWI where the Russians did dig in, and perhaps even create trench systems, though nothing as elaborate as what the trench systems grew into on the western front. There were also "trenches" on what amounts to the southern extension of the western front, to the southeast of Switzerland, where the Allied Italians faced the Austro-Hungarian armies of the Central Powers.