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Frontlines

Frontlines, in military usage, refer to the most forward positions occupied by opposing forces where direct combat occurs. They mark the boundary between zones of control and are the focus of reconnaissance, maneuver, artillery, and fire support. The composition of a frontline depends on terrain and doctrine; it may be a trench line, a road-centered line in mobile warfare, a fortified perimeter, or an urban front.

Frontlines are dynamic and often fragile. Advances and retreats, breakthroughs, ambushes, and casualties can alter the

Historically, frontlines shaped warfare: the trench-dominated Western Front of World War I defined a long, relatively

The term is also used in civilian and non-military contexts to describe the most active or exposed

See also: Demilitarized zone, ceasefire line, trench warfare, frontline workers.

line,
sometimes
rapidly.
Logistics,
communications,
and
air
or
naval
superiority
influence
stability
at
the
front.
The
line
is
protected
by
a
layer
of
rear
areas
that
handle
supply,
medical
evacuation,
and
command
nodes.
static
boundary;
World
War
II
introduced
more
fluid
frontlines
during
mobile
campaigns;
in
contemporary
conflicts,
frontlines
can
be
irregular,
with
ceasefire
lines,
de
facto
control
lines,
or
negotiated
boundaries
that
change
over
time.
areas,
and
to
designate
frontline
workers
such
as
health
care,
emergency
responders,
and
service
professionals
who
directly
deal
with
urgent
needs.
In
journalism,
the
frontline
refers
to
reporting
from
the
area
of
ongoing
conflict
or
risk.