Although Nicholas II's large orders made Russia stand out among the Allies, it was clear that the focus of the war was no longer on the Eastern Front but on the long-quiet Western Front battlefield.
After the failure of the German-Austrian Alliance Army's plan to annihilate the Russian Army's main force, the main force of the Austro-Hungarian Empire had to head south to resist the severe pressure that the Balkan army brought to the empire.
Meanwhile, Germany's attention had also been temporarily redirected to the Western Front because Britain and France, in order to alleviate the pressure on the Russian Army in the East, decided to launch a new large-scale offensive to find a chance to break through the German defense line.
Currently, the European War had entered a long phase of attrition, and the situation had gradually become clearer.