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War Tactics In The First World War

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The Technologies and War Tactics in the First World War The First World War encompassed more than four years of battles in Europe, Asia, Africa and the Americas, costing nearly two hundred billion US dollars in total. More than thirty belligerents mobilised sixty-five million troops across the globe. Among them, twenty million were wounded and nine million were killed. Additionally, there was a civilian casualty of nine million as well. A primary factor in the war’s high casualty and fatality rate was the advanced technologies and war tactics employed by the militaries. As products of the industrial and chemical advancements during the century proceeding the war, some were developed to directly aid combat, such as the machine gun, while others …show more content…

A variety of weapons that could reach into the trenches by hurling projectiles were consequently developed, contributing, along with machine guns, to the high death toll of the war. In the 18th century, Europeans have already created entrenchments in battles as the by-product of ramparts and outworks to defend citadels. The war tactic continued into the century that comes after, spreading to other continents, employed in the American Civil War for example. Entrenchments later became a common practice before battles in the First World War, in response to the enhanced firepower of machine guns. At the same time, mobilising troops in trenches allowed opportunities for flanking and ambushes. For example, during the Race to the Sea, Allied and German forces employed such flanking attacks on each other on the Western Front. However, because troops could not risk leaving their trenches to advance or retreat, successful attacks did not result in any significant progress on neither side, creating prolonged stalemates. In order to inflict damage to enemies in entrenchment, weapons that could be projected into trenches were developed and employed regularly. These weapons include hand grenades, rifle grenades, the Stokes mortar and one-pounder cannons, which all accomplished the goal …show more content…

When poison gasses were introduced to the First World War, aptly named the chemists’ war, they immediately resulted in heavy casualty rates. Militaries soon developed protective protocols, dropping chemical warfare’s potency mostly among the troops, contributing to the war’s high civilian fatality rate. As early as the fifth century BCE, there have been recorded uses of chemical warfare in Greece, China and India. The toxic gasses employed were mainly carbon monoxide, produced from burning wood. Soldiers exposed to carbon monoxide were described to have flu-like symptoms, and they could not combat with strength. Other chemicals were eventually discovered and employed in war throughout the modern era, such as sulphur dioxide and calcium oxide, which achieved similar results by blinding and choking enemies. The chemical revolution in late 18th century brought forth means to study these chemicals, previously discovered without understanding their chemical composition. In the succeeding century, the industrial revolution then introduced methods to widely refine and produce chemical compounds. With growing international tensions leading to the First World War, countries have already begun the production of chemical weapons in preparation, despite previous prohibitions at the Hague Conventions of 1899 and 1907. In

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