FracturedPrincess t1_iub99hs wrote
Reply to comment by BillWoods6 in Eli5: Anyone who knows their military history. Why was ‘going over the top’ used in WW1? by [deleted]
In a way, the basic military logic that it's better to flank the enemy than attack head on is WHY the trenches extended from the North Sea to Switzerland. Commanders from each side kept attempting to flank one another in the traditional way but innovations in logistics meant that WWI was the first war fought where the armies numbered in the millions of men, so when they tried to maneuver around the side of an army like they'd been trained they just found more army.
They both kept going further and further with attempted flank after attempted flank until they both hit the metaphorical walls and then nobody really knew what do to next because they found themselves in a completely unprecedented military situation. Military theorists eventually figured out how to punch through a line with narrow concentration of force and flank that way, but it took bloody trial and error.
BillWoods6 t1_iueelu4 wrote
Basically, they found themselves in a siege on a continental scale.
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