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Schlieffen designed the Schlieffen plan for Germany to quickly conquer France. The Germans planned to speed through Belgium to smash the French. They made it all the way across the Marne river when the French under General Joseph Joffre attacked the First German army under General von Kluck. The other two German armies were too far behind to help, so the French were able to halt Kluck's advance in the First Battle of the Marne in September, 1914. Once the Germans took Antwerp in October, they tried to break through British positions in Belgium, known as the Battle of Flanders. The Allies didn't gain much along the entire front. By the end of 1914, both sides had lines 500 miles from Switzerland to the North Sea and had entrenched. The lines hardly changed in three years. After the Battle of Flanders, the western front was no longer a war of movement or fighting in the open. From then on, it was mainly trench warfare. In 1915, the Allies began new offensives in the west. Their main attempts included a British attack at Neuve Chapelle in March. This took only the German advance line. In April, the Germans unsuccessfully attacked Ypres with chlorine gas. This was the first time the gas was used on a large scale. Basically, the lines of 1914 didn't change. The Eastern/ Russian Front The Southern/ Serbian Front The Turkish Front Verdun and Somme The Russians attacked the Lake Narocz region on the eastern front in 1916, and failed. They lost over 100,000 men. In June they were more successful, yet their army felt quite demoralized. However, they showed enough strength to induce Romania into entering the war with the Allies. By January, 1917, Romania was completely conquered, giving the Central Powers a source of wheat and oil. American Involvement Military Tactics Communication was an important part of successful battle. Telephone lines were used, then radio was developed. Without communication, defeat was imminent, such as in the Battle of Tannenberg. The big firepower of modern artillery and machine guns made World War I into a war of attrition fought from trenches. Sea Power The Grand Fleet, the main British fleet, consisted of 20 dreadnoughts and numerous other ships, including battle cruisers, cruisers, and destroyers, and was centered mainly on Scapa Flow in the Orkney Islands north of Scotland. A second British fleet, consisting of older ships, was used to guard the English Channel. The German fleet, the High Seas Fleet, consisting of 13 dreadnoughts, was based on the North Sea ports of Germany. The Treaty of Versailles made all German ships property of the Allies. One of the largest naval battles in history was the Battle of Jutland, fought between the British Grand Fleet and the German High Seas Fleet in May, 1916. Air At the beginning of the war, the Allies and the Germans had 200 aircraft each on the western front. Anthony Fokker, a Dutch man working for the Germans, enabled machine guns to be permanently mounted on planes. Before this, pilots would drop bombs by hand out of the cockpit. By: |