Iron crusade Hundred Days Offensive

Hundred Days Offensive

Military action

1920
11/3
1920
23/6

Entente forces, bolstered by the United States, push the Germans back from their position near Paris.


Entente forces were bolstered - just as they were about to collapse - with armies from the United States. This, together with the increased ammount of society stabilizing radio transmissions prevented it from collapse entirely, and instead allowed it to mount a relatively succesful offensive known as Hundred Days, that began (almost) simultaneously with the Second Kerensky Offensive.   The Entente managed to push Imperial German forces away from Paris, but the situation changed after the complete collapse of Russian Republic following the disastrous defeat during their offensive and the subsequent May Revolution. German resistance got tenser, and soon the offensive was stopped completely.   The on-going Hundred Days Offensive was the main reason that the Russian Republic didn't collapse entirely, as the forces of the Central Powers on the Eastern Front were rapidly redeployed west to stop the Entente from pushing the Germans out of France entirely.