In the Allied Command, Archduke Albrecht frowned as he looked at the troop deployment map sent from the front line.
"General Desmet, isn't the troop deployment in the coastal area a bit too weak?"
There was no other way, the Anti-French Alliance had advantages in all aspects, but they were at a naval disadvantage.
In the Mediterranean frontline, the France-Austrian Navy had similar strength, and both countries were afraid of the British playing the fisherman, so they did not dare to take risks in a naval battle.
It was different in the North Sea Area, where the Belgian Navy and the German Federal Navy were like a flimsy wall against the French Navy.
Even after Victorio Emanuele II left London, neither of the two navies dispatched warships to meet him.
For no other reason than fear. The French Navy had blockaded the harbor, and any warship leaving port would not return.