The stalemate of Western countries is the reason why Western countries have stalled for a long time. This is a common problem many people have discussed over and over. Overall, during the war years the number of deaths between Germany, the UK and France reached 4,039,871, and an additional 10,442,270 people were injured. And most of them were caused by stalemation in the western region. In fact, there are several reasons for deadlock. In my opinion, the most important reason for deadlock is the strategy used during the war.
The deadline of the Western Front brought many revolutionary and creative weapons to war. Two of them are tanks and natural gas. These two weapons were thought to end the deadlock in each country on the western front before they were used. Both weapons are flukes, and there is little effect except to cause damage to enemies and suffer. Natural gas is the first chemical war used in war. It is regarded as a weapon, it wins the war, but it is very regrettable. In 1914 the Frenchman first used natural gas at the beginning of the Western Front instead of the German. The French launched a tear gas grenade to the Germans; this failed very much, so the French ceased deployment of tear gas from that stage until further development.
When German chemist Fritz Harbor, who won the Nobel Prize, wished chlorine to break the deadline at the forefront of the west and position that gas as a quick endpoint, chemical weapons will be released during the First World War I attacked first. . Rather than squatting the war allies, the gas became gully, the two sides created a gas mask and a new way to expand each other. Germany may be the first user of poison gas, but it is used for them soon. In October 1918, Corporal Adolf Hitler of the German Army temporarily lost blindness after starting British mustard attack in Belgium.
The West Front was a German army stalemate, but the Eastern Front was a huge success. Despite the early decline of Russia's invasion of East Prussia and Austrian invasion of Galicia, the Russian troops were firmly organized and underpowered, with Germany and the Austrian-Hungarian army steadily I advanced the east. Germans benefited from their citizens' wish to end Russian political instability and war. In 1917, the German government authorized Russian communist Bolshevik leader Vladimir Lenin to travel from Switzerland to Germany to Russia. Germany believes that if Lenin again causes political turmoil, Russia can no longer continue its war with Germany and can not focus German troops on western war.