The Development of a Stalemate on the Western Front

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The Development of a Stalemate on the Western Front

A stalemate is when two forces meet and neither side can advance any

further, all they can do is dig in and hold their ground. In the

context of world war 1 it was when the French and German sides dug in

extremely well designed trenches stretching over 400 miles from

English channel all the across to the Swiss border, creating a very

much defence based war.

There are four main reasons why a stalemate occurred on the western

front. The first being the failure of the 'Schlieffen plan', when the

Schlieffen plan failed as a result of a few wrong turns from the

German troops, Germany were faced with a war on two opposite fronts,

this weakened their forces and put a massive strain on their resources

meaning it was harder for the Germans to push and making the failure

of the plan a major role in the development of the stalemate on the

western front.

Another reason for the progress in the stalemate was the occurrence of

'The battle of the River Marne', during the Schlieffen plan the German

troops, on the outside of the advance delayed their advance and headed

south through fear of isolation from the rest of the attack, this took

them toward the River Marne where a huge battle took place resulting

in the Germans being pushed back to the rine where they dug in. the

battle also produced many casualties and the final part of the failure

of the Schlieffen plan.

The third reason for the development of the deadlock on the western

front is hat's historically known as 'the race to the sea', this was

when both sides dug in trenches but whilst doing so tried going around

each others defences (they both tried to outflank each other) the

problem with this was that both armies anticipated each others

movements and quickly moved across where they would dig in even more

trenches, this resulted in a huge line of trenches stretching from the

sea all the way across to the Swiss border.

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