Zinegata wrote:That's actually one thing that has me wondering though - why didn't the Germans make peace with the Allies after the Russians surrendered? Getting most of Poland and Ukraine while giving back the captured French and Belgian territories sounds like a fantastic deal to me.
Because the allies would not have accepted them? They knew they were beginning to have a massive numerical and material superiority on the western front due to USA assistance (which is also why the Germans tried that desperate gamble).
No, what he is referring to is the system of Artillery refined by Georg Müller (Durchbruchmüller). This was refined to a scale the allies never reached. You can read about it here (scroll down or do a search).Simon_Jester wrote:The Allies could do this too, up to a point- what made their major campaigns so bloody was that they didn't satisfy themselves with limited campaigns, and kept pressing forward. That took them out of range of their artillery support, gave the Germans more opportunities to regroup and counterattack, and generally made the offensive bloodier.Samuel wrote:I put it badly. What he meant by breaking trenches is they could assault and take trench lines without massive casulties, more around 1 to 1 or better. It used up lots of shells so it wasn't an immediate war winner. I don't have the book on me, but I believe it was hurricane bombardments combined with just biting off a small part of enemy territory.