You can only reply to the country above if you defeated it in a war.
You can only reply to the country above if you defeated it in a war
Do WW1 and WW2 count? If so, Hi.
kys Ikiturk
here to collect my (you)s
hello southern brother, sorry for burning down your cities
my tank :)
Blitzkrieg'd you
fugg. This is just going to be us rehashing the civil war again, isn't it, unless some super rare posters show up.
Paraguay pls
waiting for israel to post so i can reply
There were two Australian officers in the Falklands
Has Germany won a war in the last 200 years
1870/71
franco-prussian and napoleonic lmao
...
Germany wasn't a country during the Napoleonic Wars
only (major) wars Germany fought united were against France 1870/71, WW1 and WW2
> Russian Federation
lol
...
Oh nononono
Actually we defeated you in the war over Schleswig-Holstein
Prussia was a major german state since Friedrich the great, it counts as germany for us
In the second one, not the first one.
Hi
Prussia only included a part of Germany
equating it with Germany before 1867 is stupid (and even then, it's inaccurate)
>NYOOOOOOOOUUUUU ITS DIFFERENT ITS DIFFERENT NOT THE SAME AHHHHH UHHHHH AAAAAA
Germany brought your army to collapse in WW1
>inb4 Lenin
The Brusilov Offensive depleted your last forces.
There was a really good tv series about one of those wars. I remember seeing one episode. Do you know the title?
Most of german states except prussia, austria, hannover and bavaria were irrelevant
1864
:)
You count. Last time you lost to America you were an Ottoman slave.
Tak
The Brusilov Offensive was successful, what are you talking about?
ending this thread now
yeah but Prussia still wasn't Germany
historically the only territory that was in Prussian (Hohenzollern) hand since the middle ages was Brandenburg
other parts of what's now Germany were only part of Prussia since 1815 and 1866
Shut up Bitch!
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>The Brusilov offensive commanded by Brusilov himself went very well, but the overall campaign, for which Brusilov's part was only supposed to be a distraction, because of Evert's failures, became tremendously costly for the Imperial army, and after the offensive, it was no longer able to launch another on the same scale. Many historians contend that the casualties that the Russian army suffered in this campaign contributed significantly to its collapse the following year.[20]
>Afterward, the Austro-Hungarian army increasingly had to rely on the support of the German army for its military successes. On the other hand, the German army did not suffer much from the operation and retained most of its offensive power afterward.
It was a pyrrhic victory
wrong and wrong