Relax wrote:You are forgetting something rather important.
War, before the 20th century, only happened half of the year. And it was not until the middle(partial) to END of the 20th century that it was even contemplated otherwise.
Why? Food preservation. Disease. Shelter/warmth. And then ultimately, transportation through miles of thick deep mud. A hard to build railroad requiring hundreds of thousands of willing people is not realistic. Besides a RR will not help the above realities of war's aspects. Takes too much time, and the front moves too quickly for fixed transportation assets.
Even WWI was not a war during the winter. Pretty much everyone sat and survived. Why they could actually BUILD a RR to the front. The Front DID NOT MOVE and HAD not moved for years. No major offensives happened. Neither was WWII a war in the winter. Only on the best of days did anything happen by and large and that essentially consisted of airplanes flying. Ground troops on the eastern front did not move. In dead of winter, yes, but only short distances and very rarely due to one side being winter clothing equipped and other side NOT equipped as the ground was frozen. Do the Charis forces have winter gear and winter knowledge on how to survive? HELL NO! During WWII Spring offensives? Partially, but not really until LATE spring.
Charis and its allies have not solved the above problems making war possible outside of the normal 6months of the year time frame yet. It requires TRUCKS with BIG TIRES and and Internal Combustion Engines to make war remotely possible in non optimal months.
A railroad solves none of these basic realities of war's required logistics.
Therefore those canals are perfectly viable solutions for conquest avenues. They are the only viable solution.
Unless you are going to claim that there will be a stalemate... As if MWW is going to write the series into a stalemate like the Great War was.
Three problems, 1) we have text ev that at least elite Chisholmian troops are trained and equipped for winter fighting. 2)Winter war fare was conducted by some long before the 20th century, look up the siege of Boston and the battle of Trenton some time. The British army detested that the US was tardy to go into winter quarters and early to leave them. 3) How is building a RR slower than building a canal?
The fighting is leaving the canal network in shambles in the area where the fighting is taking place. I would expect that in any area where there is a civilian population available to repair the canals as fast as they have spare man power to do so. These people will be repairing the canal for their own reasons (crops to market, finished goods from production centers) and in doing so make the military logistics much easier. Much the same happened in France in 1944-45 with their rail network.