Due to the Industrial Revolution, the Germans were almost able to seize a victory in the World Wars. The Industrial Revolution was a time period in the 1800 that brought about a widespread conversion to industrialism and adoption of industrialism ideas like mass production in Europe. In this report I will be focusing on Germany and how as a result of their investment and adoption of industrial age ideas and systems, they were almost able to seize a victory in the World Wars. I will be looking at the First and Second World Wars and why the Germans lost anyway.
The industrial revolution almost lead to the Germans winning World War One. World War One was the first major war after the industrial revolution and the first pan european war since
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The Germans lost for a variety of reasons. In regards to World War One, it was a combination of the strain they faced waging a war on two fronts, the inability of their allies (Austria-Hungary and The Ottoman Empire) in being effective against their enemies, and the strains the Germans had in terms of resources. The later was a particularly big issue as trench warfare on the western front ment the war was primarily about wearing the enemy down (“WW1 - Oversimplified” Part 2). Germany did not have the ability to wait as much as the allies did because of their expansive overseas dominions (“WW1 - Oversimplified” Part 2). However Germany also did not have the resources to start an effective offensive, so ultimately they were worn down. As for World War Two, many factors are responsible for the Germans facing defeat. A large part of the reason the Germans lost was military incompetence, on the part of their allies and within Germany itself. The Japanese Empire made a flawed decision in their attempt to bomb Pearl Harbor, and additionally didn't even adequately bomb the harbour, leaving fuel storage tanks, naval repair yards, the submarine base untouched; making it fairly easy for the Americans to recover from the attack (“WW1 - Oversimplified” Part 2). The Germans only worsened that situation by declaring war on the United States, which they didn’t need to do at all. Additionally, due to the fairly incompetent command of many of Germany's allies, particularly Italy, the Germans had to move many of their own troops to North Africa and the Balkans to aid their allies. This further delayed a planned invasion of the U.S.S.R, additionally leading to the failure of that invasion (Real Engineering, “How Russia Stopped The Blitzkrieg”). However, ultimately the biggest factor in Germany’s loss was the Soviet Union's ability to deduce a method to beat the blitzkrieg, ironically with industrial