So ya, the Austrians weren't just sitting on their hands for most of the war, despite what it may seem. However, the Austrians were worn out and by 1918 the Austrians were routed and were forced to capitulate. The Austrians in 1917 would then, with German support, fight the decisive Battle of Caporetto which Drove the Italians back several hundred miles and would break the Italian's moral. The Italians would launch a grand total of 11 attacks against the Austrians here (All called "The Battle of the Isonzo River", trying and differentiate between them all is a lot of fun) and the Austrians won each on. Here, the front line ran along the Isonzo River. However, it was in Italy, that the Austrians had the most success. By 1917 when the war in the east ended, the Austrian were low on moral and were almost totally subservient to the Germans. in 1915, the Austrians had helped the Germans in the repelling of Russian forces from Poland and in 1916 in repelling the Russian Brusilov Offensive. In Russia, the Austrians had also been defeated by the Russian in 1914, and had lost much of their province of Galica to the Russians. This front too would remain static with trenches until 1918. However, the allies quickly rushed troops into neutral Greece to prevent the complete occupation of the Balkans. In 1915, the Austrians, with German and Bulgarian support, finally overran the country. In 1914, the Austrians had invaded Serbian (three time precisely) had had been repelled each time. During 19, the Austrians were fighting on three major fronts, in the East against the Russians, in the Balkans against a combined allied army in Greece, and with the Italians along the Austro-Italian Border. The battle at Verdun continued to December – ironically after the Somme conflict was considered to have ended.Good Question Adam, I've noticed the same thing myself :). By the end of October 1916, the French had re-captured the two forts at Vaux and Douaumont but the surrounding land where the battle had been fought since February was a wasteland. On June 24th, the bombardment on the Somme could be heard at Verdun and with days, the battle at the Somme was to dominate military planners on the Western Front. By June 23rd, they got within 2.5 miles from Verdun itself – but this attack faltered as the German army itself had given all that it had and it could give no more. On June 1st, Germany launched a massive attack at Verdun. The rumblings of discontent in the French army could be heard in the summer of 1916 – in 1917 it was to mutiny. A French factory worker earned sixty times the pay of a French soldier over the course of a week. French soldiers found their pay did not go far in Paris. Theatres were open and few – due to a government clampdown on the truth – talked knowingly about what was really going on just 150 miles away. Food was plentiful and the one day in the week that was meant to be meat-free was not kept by the majority. Here, those French soldiers lucky enough to get leave from Verdun found an alien world. Just 150 miles away, life in the French capital went on as ‘normal’. “To die from a bullet seems to be nothing parts of our being remain intact but to be dismembered, torn to pieces, reduced to pulp, this is the fear that flesh cannot support and which is fundamentally the great suffering of the bombardment.” “I saw a man drinking avidly from a green scum-covered marsh, where lay, his black face downward in the water, a dead man lying on his stomach and swollen as if he had not stopped filling himself with water for days.” Humanity is mad it must be mad to do what it is doing.” “An artery of French blood was spilt on February 21st and it flows incessantly in large spurts.” Senior officers at the fort complex around Verdun complained to Joffre about the state of the defences in the area. Also the trenches dug for defence had not been completed. In fact, all the forts around the area had been weakened as the French High Command had moved ammunition out of the forts to other areas on the Western Front. However, Falkenhayn’s plan also had one major weakness – it assumed that the French would be an easy opponent and that it would be the French who would take massive casualties – and not the Germans. The forts were very much part of the French psyche and they would fight ferociously to keep the Germans out of the area. If they do so the forces of France will bleed to death.” Falkenhayn to Kaiser William IIįalkenhayn’s plan had credibility. Within our reach there are objectives for the retention of which the French General Staff would be compelled to throw in every man they have. A mass break-through – which in any case is beyond our means – is unnecessary. “The string in France has reached breaking point.
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