On the Western Front it tended towards stalemate. However, a German general named von Mudra also won some pretty impressive victories on a "stalemated" front.
Further, from 1914 on, Germany knocked out at least one combatant per year out of the war (Belgium, Serbia, Romania, Russia, and Italy was on the way out as well).
The Germans inflicted insanely higher casualties on the French/BEF than the French and BEF did on them, and while they stayed on the defensive - with only local counterattacks - this was even more pronounced. The French and British were intentionally reporting significantly distorted casualty figures from the battlefield to the politicians.
Even Verdun probably could have been won if the Germans had kept at it, and as late as 1918, the only reason the BEF was able to advance was because the German army in Flanders (the British sector) was voluntarily falling back - anytime they stood and fought the BEF, the BEF took a bit of an ass-whipping in terms of casualties vs. rate/amount of advance, particularly as compared to the American advance.
Further, from 1914 on, Germany knocked out at least one combatant per year out of the war (Belgium, Serbia, Romania, Russia, and Italy was on the way out as well).
The Germans inflicted insanely higher casualties on the French/BEF than the French and BEF did on them, and while they stayed on the defensive - with only local counterattacks - this was even more pronounced. The French and British were intentionally reporting significantly distorted casualty figures from the battlefield to the politicians.
Even Verdun probably could have been won if the Germans had kept at it, and as late as 1918, the only reason the BEF was able to advance was because the German army in Flanders (the British sector) was voluntarily falling back - anytime they stood and fought the BEF, the BEF took a bit of an ass-whipping in terms of casualties vs. rate/amount of advance, particularly as compared to the American advance.
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