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Trench Warfare - Strong Defence and Poor Offence

Trench warfare led to very strong defences, but poor options for attacks.

Strong military defences

Strong military defences

  • In trench warfare, soldiers essentially sheltered in their trenches, using machine guns and rifles to shoot any advancing soldiers.
  • Barbed wire was laid out in front of trenches and put in No Man’s Land (the area between the two sides’ trenches) to create traps.
  • A soldier going “over the top” would leave their side’s trenches and travel across No Man’s Land towards the enemy.
Weak attacks

Weak attacks

  • During an attack, the enemy would fire machine guns and shells at the soldiers. Many were shot in seconds.
  • Barbed wire protected the trenches. Barbed wire was also used to force the enemy down particular paths into 'kill zones'.
    • These zones were covered by machine guns or artillery.
Increasing stalemate

Increasing stalemate

  • It was very hard to make advances and win territory in this trench warfare.
  • Because it was so hard to gain ground, it became a war of attrition, where each side tried to exhaust (run down) the enemy’s resources.
Inadequate offensive weapons

Inadequate offensive weapons

  • Artillery guns, tanks and aircraft (planes) were not particularly effective at this time.
  • Tanks were useless in some conditions.
    • For example, the mud was so thick at the Battle of Passchendaele that they could not be used.
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