The main method of warfare for both wars was trench warfare. Trenches that were dug on both sides would extend for miles and the troops would shelter while firing at the opposing army. With both sides using the same tactics new technology was invented to create an inconvenience for rival armies. Another used warfare method was submarine warfare. Submarine warfare was a major part in both wars, but especially in WWI. German submarine warfare was saw to have been ruling the seas with their ships. “Toward the end of 1916 German submarines were destroying monthly about 300,000 tons of British and Allied shipping in the North Atlantic; in April 1917 the figure was 875,000 tons”(“World War I”,2016). They used this to their advantage as much as they could. The Blitzkrieg method was another method used by Germany in both wars but primarily in world war two. They used planes, artillery, and tanks in a rapid succession take over one town/city/country at a time. “Germany successfully used the Blitzkrieg tactic against Poland (attacked in September 1939), Denmark (April 1940), Norway (April 1940), Belgium (May 1940), the Netherlands (May 1940), Luxembourg (May 1940), France (May 1940), Yugoslavia (April 1941), and Greece (April 1941)” (“Blitzkrieg”,2016). What set apart WWII from WWI was not the military tactics, but the advancements in military weapons. Special operations became more …show more content…
Focusing on the similarities and differences between World War One and World War Two explain just a few of the hardships the world has overcome in the past. War shows power as well as knowledge, but it also leaves economic issues and most importantly death. Both wars improved military strategies and advancement for future wars to come as well as created and strengthened many alliances, but also ended some as well. The outcome of both wars showed the impact that strategies and advancements can make. The numbers from WWI to WWII more than doubled in the 24 year break between the two. Although war has not ended and remains a vital problem still today, the great effects of WWI and WWII will always be stepping stone in