A German major locked inside an unbreakable fortress laughed when he saw 60 Girka soldiers appear behind his walls at dawn, then went silent when he saw what they held in their hands. The position had killed thousands and held for 23 days without a single enemy soldier getting close. What did those Girka warriors do when the German major refused to surrender? that made 17 other enemy strong points give up without a fight within three days.

The guns had stopped firing, but only for a moment. In the ruins of an old monastery on top of a hill, one German position kept shooting. This was not just any hill. This was a fortress that had already killed 55,000 Allied soldiers. The whole Italian campaign had slowed to a crawl because of this one spot.

Every road to Rome passed through the shadow of this cursed mountain. Inside reinforced concrete bunkers. 150 German troops controlled everything they could see. Their leader was Major Gustaf Kleinmidt, a man who had survived 3 years fighting in Russia. He knew how to hold ground. He knew how to make attackers pay in blood for every foot of dirt. His bunkers had walls 3 ft thick.

His machine guns pointed down every path up the hill. He had enough food for 2 months. He had enough bullets to kill 10,000 men. And he had something else. He had watched the British try to take his hill three times already. Each time they failed. The British had tried everything they knew.

In the first attack, 200 infantry soldiers charged straight up the main path. German machine guns cut them down like grass under a blade. 80 men died in the first 5 minutes. The rest crawled back down the hill, dragging their wounded friends. In the second attack, the British brought tanks. The German soldiers just waited.

They had buried mines in the road. Three tanks exploded. The rest turned around. In the third attack, British commanders called in artillery. They fired 1,200 shells at the German bunkers. The noise shook the ground for 6 hours. When the smoke cleared, the German flag still flew. The concrete bunkers had not even cracked.

After three failed attacks, 340 British soldiers were dead or wounded. Not one single German bunker had been captured. The position had held for 23 days. Every day it held, more Allied soldiers died on other parts of the mountain. Every day it held, the road to Rome stayed closed.

And British commanders sat in their tents and looked at maps. They could not figure it out. How do you break a fortress when bullets bounce off the walls and shells cannot reach inside? The answer was not going to come from British commanders. It was going to come from 60 men that most British officers did not take seriously.

These men were girkas from the second battalion, fifth royal girker rifles. They came from tiny villages high in the Himalayan mountains of Nepal. Most of them were 22 years old. Most of them had been farmers and shepherds before the war. They had grown up climbing cliffs to reach their goats.

They had grown up carrying heavy loads up mountain paths. They had grown up in a place where one wrong step meant falling a thousand ft to your death. Their leader was Subar Lahadur Tapa. In the British army, a subadar was like a sergeant. But the gurkas trusted him like a father. Lalbahadur had joined the army when he was 18. He was now 26.

He did not talk much. He did not need to. When he gave an order, his men obeyed without question. They had seen him lead charges in North Africa. They had seen him carry wounded soldiers off battlefields while bullets flew past his head. They knew he would never ask them to do something he would not do himself. When British commanders told La Bahadur to look at the German position, he did not see it the way they did.

British officers saw concrete walls and machine gun nests. They saw open ground where men would die. They saw a problem that needed tanks and bombs and more soldiers. Lalahadur saw something different. He walked around the base of the hill for 2 days. He looked at it from every angle. On the second day, he stopped and stared up at the backside of the German position.

There was a cliff there. It went straight up for 400 ft. The rock was almost smooth. There were very few places to put your hands. There were even fewer places to put your feet. No British soldier had even thought about climbing it. No German soldier had bothered to guard it. Why would they? Everyone knew it was impossible to climb. Everyone except Lahaor.

He went to his British battalion commander, Colonel Harrison. He explained his idea. The Girkas would climb the cliff at night. They would climb in complete darkness without making any sound. They would reach the top and appear behind the German bunkers at dawn. Colonel Harrison stared at him like he had lost his mind.

“That cliff cannot be climbed,” Harrison said. “Even if your men could climb it, they would be carrying 40 lb of equipment each. Their rifles alone weigh 10 lb. It is suicide. Even if they somehow made it to the top, they would be trapped up there when the sun came up. German soldiers would shoot them off that cliff like ducks in a pond. Lbahadur did not argue.

He simply asked for permission to look at the cliff more closely. Harrison agreed, thinking nothing would come of it. That night, Laahaur and two of his best climbers went to the base of the cliff. They climbed for 3 hours in the dark. At 280 ft up, they found a ledge. It was only 15 feet wide, but it was flat.

It was just big enough for 60 men to stand on. More importantly, it was hidden from German view. If they could reach that ledge before sunrise, they could wait there. The Germans would never see them. Lbahador climbed back down and reported what he found. He asked for permission to try the mission.

Colonel Harrison said no. He took the idea to brigade headquarters. The generals said no. They wanted a proper attack with armor support and air strikes. They said hill farmers with knives could not crack fortress positions. They said modern war required modern weapons. Twice Lbahadur asked. Twice he was refused.

The British high command had decided. This problem needed big guns and more men. It did not need crazy climbers in the dark. But there was one man who disagreed. Major James Mallister was an artillery observer. His job was to watch attacks and call in cannon fire. He had watched all three British attacks fail.

He had watched good men die trying to charge machine gun nests. He had watched shells bounce off concrete like pebbles off a castle wall. He knew the truth that the generals did not want to hear. Nothing they had tried was working. Nothing they planned to try would work either. Sometimes you needed to stop doing what everyone expected and try what no one thought possible.

Mallister went around the chain of command. He spoke directly to a friend who had the ear of the division commander. He made his case. Give the girkers one night. If anyone could do the impossible, it was these mountain men with their curved knives and their quiet courage. On June 13th, permission finally came through.

Lalahadur gathered his 60 men and told them the plan. Not one man hesitated. Not one man asked if it was possible. They had climbed harder cliffs back home just to bring their herds to summer grass. They had done it in snow and ice. They could do it here in warm Italian summer air. They spent three nights practicing on a similar cliff 2 mi south of the German position.

They climbed in complete darkness. They learned to move without sound. They learned to find holes in rock they could not see. By the third night, all 60 men could make the climb without a single rope and without making a sound louder than a whisper. Now they just had to do it for real.

They had to do it while German soldiers sat 300 ft above them with machine guns. They had to do it knowing that one falling rock, one cough, one rifle clanging against stone would bring bullets raining down. uh they had to do it knowing that if the sun came up before they reached that ledge, they would all die on that cliff face.

The mission was set for the night of June 13th. If they succeeded, they would change how the whole British army thought about what was possible. If they failed, 60 families back in Nepal would receive letters saying their sons had died attempting the impossible. Lbahador checked his kukri one more time.

The 18in curved blade was sharp enough to split a hair. In a few hours, the Germans would see it up close. The only question was whether they would see it before they died or before they surrendered. The sun went down over Monty Casino on June 13th at 9:23 in the evening. Lala and his 60 girkas waited in a drainage ditch at the bottom of the cliff.

They had blackened their faces with mud. They had wrapped cloth around their rifle straps so the metal would not clink. They had checked every button and buckle to make sure nothing would rattle. Each man carried his rifle, 40 lb of equipment, two cantens of water, extra ammunition, and his kukri. The total weight was close to 60 lb for some of the smaller men.

They would carry all of this up a 400 ft cliff in total darkness. At 11:47, Lbahador gave the signal. The first man stepped up to the rock face and began to climb. The second man waited 30 seconds, then followed. One by one, all 60 gawkers began moving up the cliff. They climbed the way cats climb trees, testing each hold before putting weight on it.

They moved their hands slowly to avoid scraping rock on. They moved their feet carefully to avoid kicking loose stones. Above them, 200 yd away, German soldiers sat in their bunkers. Some were sleeping, some were playing cards, some were eating dinner. None of them were watching the cliff behind them because everyone knew that cliff could not be climbed.

The rock was cold under their fingers. The night air smelled like dust and wild time that grew between the rocks. Far below they could hear water running in a stream. Far above they could see stars. They could not see each other. Each man climbed alone in the dark, trusting that the man above him knew the way.

Every few minutes, Leil Bahador would stop and listen. He could hear breathing. He could hear cloth sliding against stone, but he could not hear boots scraping or equipment clanging. His men were moving like ghosts. At 100 ft up, the angle of the cliff changed. It got steeper. holds became harder to find. One man’s foot slipped.

He caught himself with his hands and froze. A small rock broke loose and tumbled down. Everyone stopped climbing. They held their breath and listened. The rock bounced twice, then landed in soft dirt at the bottom with a quiet thud. No shouts came from above. No lights came on. The Germans had not heard.

The man who slipped found a new foothold and kept climbing. Behind him, 59 other men did the same. At 200 f feet, hands started to cramp. Fingers started to ache. The weight of their equipment pulled at their shoulders. Sweat ran down faces despite the cool night air. But no one stopped. No one asked to rest. They had trained for this.

Their bodies knew what to do even when their minds got tired. One hand up. Find the hold. Test it. Pull. One foot up. Find the ledge. Test it. Push. Breathe slowly. Do not think about how far down the ground is. Do not think about what happens if you fall. Just find the next hold. At 280 ft, the first climber reached the ledge.

It was exactly where Lal Bahador said it would be. 15 ft wide, flat as a table, hidden from view above. The first man pulled himself up and lay flat, gasping for air. The second man arrived 30 seconds later. Then the third, then the fourth. One by one, all 60 girkers pulled themselves onto that tiny shelf of rock.

The last man reached the ledge at 2:23 in the morning. The climb had taken 2 hours and 36 minutes. Not one man had fallen. Not one piece of equipment had been dropped. Not one sound had reached German ears. Now came the hard part. They had to wait. They could not move forward because German bunkers were right above them.

They could not climb back down because they needed to be in position when the sun came up. So they sat on that narrow ledge and waited for dawn. Some men took small sips of water. Some men checked their rifles one more time. Some men closed their eyes and rested. Laha did not rest. He stared up at the rim of the ledge above them where German soldiers sat 50 yard away eating breakfast and drinking coffee completely unaware that 60 enemy soldiers were sitting directly below them.

At 4:15 the sky started to change. Black turned to dark blue. Dark blue turned to gray. Stars began to fade. Lal Bahadur could now see the faces of his men. They looked tired but ready. Every man had his rifle loaded. Every man had his kukri loose in its sheath. They knew what came next. As soon as there was enough light for the Germans to see them, this would either end in surrender or slaughter.

There would be no middle ground. At 4:47, a German soldier on morning patrol walked to the edge of the cliff to relieve himself. He was yawning. He was thinking about going back to his bunk and sleeping for two more hours. He looked down and froze. 60 men in British uniforms sat on a ledge 50 ft below him, looking right back up at him. For 3 seconds, nobody moved.

The German soldier opened his mouth to shout. Before sound came out, Lal Bahador stood up and held his kukri high above his head where the German could see it. The blade caught the first rays of morning sun. It flashed like a mirror. The German soldier closed his mouth. He did not shout. He turned and ran back to the bunkers.

Within 2 minutes, every German soldier in the position knew what had happened. Within 5 minutes, Major Clansmid himself came to look. He stood at the edge and stared down at the Girkas. He had fought in Russia. He had seen tank battles and artillery strikes. He had seen whole villages burned and whole armies destroyed.

But he had never seen anything like this. 60 men had climbed an unclimbable cliff at night. They now sat behind his fortress, behind his concrete walls, behind his machine guns. Everything he had built to protect his men was now useless. The walls pointed the wrong way. Clean Schmidt was not a fool. He was not going to charge down that cliff and fight hand-tohand with Girkus.

Everyone in the German army had heard the stories from North Africa. They had heard what happened when Gorkas got close with their knives. They had heard that Gorkas never stopped coming, that they would crawl forward with bullets in their bodies just to get one more cut with their blades. Clansmid had read the intelligence reports.

One report said that in a night raid in Tunisia, 12 girkers had killed 40 German soldiers in their sleep without firing a single shot. Another report said that a Gawker unit had been surrounded and ordered to surrender. Instead, they charged with kukre and broke through 300 men. But Kleinmitt was also not ready to surrender.

He had held this position for 23 days. He had beaten back three British attacks. He had 150 men with machine guns and grenades. The Gurkas had rifles and knives. They were trapped on that ledge. If they tried to climb up, his men would shoot them. If they tried to climb down, they would have to retreat.

Klein Schmidt made his decision. He walked to the edge of the cliff and shouted down in his broken English, “You have climbed well, but you are trapped. You cannot come up. You cannot stay there. Surrender now, and you will be treated fairly under the rules of war.” Lalahadur stood up. He did not shout back.

He did not say anything. He simply drew his kukri from its sheath and held it high above his head again. Then, without any order being given, all 59 other girkas stood up and did the same. 60 curved blades came out of 60 leather sheath with a sound like silk being torn. The sound echoed off the cliff face.

It was quiet enough that birds kept singing. It was loud enough that every German soldier heard it clearly. Kleinmid stared down at those 60 blades. He knew what that sound meant. It meant these men were not going to surrender. It meant they were going to come up that cliff with their knives.

It meant his machine guns would kill many of them, maybe even all of them. But it also meant that some would make it to the top. It meant that before this was over, Girkus would be inside his bunkers. It meant close combat with men who had trained their whole lives to fight with blades. It meant his soldiers would have to look into the eyes of men they were trying to kill.

It meant blood on concrete floors and screaming in the dark corners of bunkers where machine guns could not aim. Klene looked at his own men. They were good soldiers. They had held this position for weeks, but he could see their faces. They did not want to fight Girkus handto hand. Nobody wanted to fight Girkus hand to hand.

He looked back down at the ledge. Lbahador still stood there. Kukri raised not moving. The message was clear. You can surrender or you can fight. But if you fight, we are coming. Nothing you have will stop us. Your walls mean nothing now. Your guns mean nothing now. This ends one way or another in the next hour.

You choose how. Major Kleinmid stood at the edge of the cliff and made the hardest choice a soldier ever has to make. He had to decide if his pride was worth the lives of his men. He had held this position for 23 days against everything the British could throw at him. He had earned medals in Russia.

His commanders expected him to fight to the last bullet. But he also knew the truth. His fortress had become his trap. The walls that protected him from the British now blocked his own escape. If the Girkas climbed up, his machine guns would kill some of them. Maybe they would kill most of them, but not all.

Some would make it to the top. And once Girkus with Kucrus got inside bunkers meant to keep enemies outside, what happened next would not be war. It would be butchery. At 7:12 in the morning, 3 hours and 25 minutes after the first German soldier spotted the Girkas, Klein Schmidt gave the order.

White flags appeared from the bunkers. German soldiers came out with their hands up. 150 men who had held an unbreakable position for nearly a month surrendered without a single shot being fired. Lbahador and his 60 girkers climbed the last 50 ft and accepted their surrender. The position that had cost 340 British casualties in previous attacks fell with zero Allied losses.

Not one Girker had even been wounded. The numbers told a story that changed everything British commanders thought they knew about mountain warfare. In the first British attack, 200 men charging with rifles had gained 0 feet of ground and lost 80 men dead or wounded. In the second attack, tanks and heavy weapons, had captured zero bunkers, and lost three tanks.

In the third attack, 1,200 artillery shells had destroyed zero German positions. Together, those three attacks over 8 days had caused 340 casualties and accomplished nothing. The Girka climb took 7 hours and 25 minutes from start to finish. It cost zero casualties and won the entire position.

Word spread through the German lines faster than official reports. Soldiers talk to each other. Prisoners talk to guards. Stories grow with each telling. Within 72 hours, 17 other German positions along the mountain surrendered when they saw Gurka units approaching. Some surrendered before the Girkas even asked.

A position at the north end of the mountain held by 60 Germans sent out white flags when they saw Girkas forming up at the bottom of their hill. The German officer in charge sent a message that said, “We will not wait for you to climb our walls. We prefer to live.” Another position that British intelligence said held 200 men and supplies for 6 weeks gave up on the second day after Kleinmid’s surrender.

When British officers asked the German commander why he quit so easily, he said, “But I saw what happened at Kleenmidt’s fortress. I saw the cliff. I know we have cliffs, too. I am not a fool. The German army responded to the Girka climb, the way all armies respond when they see a new threat.

They updated their manuals. A captured German tactical guide from late June 1944 had a new section added. It was titled Girka infiltration methods prevention and response. The section told German soldiers to post guards on all approaches to their positions, including cliffs and rock faces that seemed impossible to climb.

It’s said to assume that any vertical surface under 500 ft tall could be climbed by Gawkers at night. It said that if Gawkus were spotted behind German lines, commanders should consider immediate surrender rather than close combat because these troops fight with blades in close quarters and German casualties in such combat are unacceptable.

American commanders who heard the story wanted to see the cliff for themselves. Three US Army colonels drove to Monte Casino 2 weeks after the surrender. They stood at the bottom of the cliff and looked up. One colonel said it out loud what all three were thinking. Nobody can climb that.

An old British sergeant who had been at the base of the cliff on the night of June 13th heard him and laughed. That’s what we all said, too, sir. Then we watched them do it. The American colonels asked if they could try the climb themselves in daylight with ropes and help. 6 hours later, with full climbing gear and three rest stops, but two of them made it to the ledge.

The third gave up at 200 ft. All three agreed that doing it at night with no ropes and 60 lb of equipment was beyond what normal soldiers could do. But the Americans learned from it. Within 6 months, the US Army created special mountain warfare training that included night climbing.

By 1945, American Ranger units were practicing the same kind of vertical infiltration that the Girkas had used. The techniques spread even further after the war. NATO mountain warfare schools in the 1950s taught the Monte Casino climb as a case study in thinking beyond what the enemy expects. The cliff itself got a new name on military maps.

Everyone started calling it Girka’s ladder. In 1960, when NATO built a mountain warfare training center in northern Italy, the Italian government insisted it be built where students could see Monte Casino in the distance. Every NATO officer who went through that school had to make one night climb on a cliff near the old battlefield as part of their training.

Back at Monte Casino, something else was happening that nobody had planned. The spot where the Girkas climbed became almost sacred to the soldiers who fought in Italy. British soldiers would hike up to see the cliff. American soldiers would stop their jeeps and take pictures of it. Even some German prisoners asked to see it before they were sent to camps.

An Italian farmer whose family had lived near the mountain for 200 years said he had never seen so many people interested in a cliff face. Before the war, he said, “This was just a rock. Now it is history.” The battle that the Girkas won without fighting taught lessons that went far beyond mountain climbing. British commanders realized they had been so focused on what they thought was possible that they never asked their Gawker soldiers what they knew was possible.

A report written by a British major 3 months after the battle said it clearly. We assumed modern warfare required modern solutions. We forgot that the oldest weapon, the knife, combined with the oldest skill, climbing, could defeat the newest fortifications. We planned to break walls with bombs. The Girkas simply went around the walls.

In doing so, they reminded us that the purpose of war is not to destroy the enemy, but to make him quit. German commanders learned a different lesson. Before Monte Casino, German defensive doctrine said that any position with concrete bunkers, machine guns, and clear fields of fire was nearly impossible to take without massive casualties.

After Monte Casino, that doctrine changed. A German general named Vilhelm Schulz wrote a paper for Vermacharked officers in August 1944. He said that fortress thinking had made German soldiers feel safe when they were actually vulnerable. We built walls to keep the enemy out. He wrote, “We did not think about what happens when the enemy appears inside our walls.

We thought position was everything. The Girkas showed us that position means nothing if the enemy can change his position to somewhere you do not expect.” Perhaps the most important change happened in how British and American forces thought about soldiers from their colonies and allied nations. Before the war, many European officers thought of Girkas, Sikhs, African troops and others as good fighters but not good thinkers.

They were supposed to follow orders not come up with plans. Monte Casino changed that view. LBAore had not just been brave. He had been smart. He had seen something British officers missed. He had thought of a solution they never considered. After Monte Casino, more colonial officers were asked for their ideas. More native soldiers were promoted to leadership roles.

The British army had learned that good ideas can come from anywhere, even from a shepherd from a village most British people could not find on a map. The most unexpected result of the Girka climb was how it affected German morale. British intelligence officers noticed something strange in the weeks after Kleinmid’s surrender.

German soldiers were abandoning positions that should have been easy to defend. They were retreating from hills and bunkers that the British had not even attacked yet. When intelligence officers interviewed prisoners, they heard the same thing over and over. The German soldiers said they did not know where the Girkas would appear next.

They said they could not sleep knowing that enemy soldiers might climb up behind them in the dark. One German private said something that intelligence officers put in their report because it explained so much. You British have tanks and planes and bombs. He said, “We can see those coming. We can hide from those.

But how do you hide from men who climb walls at night? How do you prepare for an enemy who appears where no enemy should be? We are soldiers, not magicians.” Clansmidt himself sitting in a British prisoner camp in southern Italy gave an interview to a British officer 6 months after his surrender. The officer asked him why he gave up when he had more men and more guns than the Girkus.

Klein Schmidt thought for a long time before he answered. I was not defeated by superior force, he said. I was defeated by superior spirit. My men had weapons. The Girkas had will. In war, will beats weapons every time. The war in Italy continued for 11 more months after the Girkas climbed the cliff at Monte Casino.

In that time, Girka battalions got new orders. Whenever British forces faced a position that seemed too strong to attack directly, commanders started asking if there was a cliff nearby. If there was, they sent the Girkas. By the end of 1944, every Gorka battalion in Italy had a special climbing section.

These were men who trained specifically to do what Lalbah had and his 60 soldiers had done. They practiced at night. They practiced in rain. They practiced carrying even more weight than before. British commanders gave them a nickname that stuck. They called them the phantoms because they appeared where no one expected.

The technique spread beyond Italy. When the British army fought in Burma against the Japanese, Girka climbing units used the same methods. Japanese soldiers had built positions on steep hillsides, thinking the jungle and the angle of the slope would keep them safe. The Gawkers proved them wrong. In March 1945, a Gawka unit climbed a 600 ft cliff in Burma at night and captured a Japanese radio station that British commanders had been planning to bomb.

The bombing would have destroyed the radio equipment. The climb saved it. British code breakers used the captured radio to read Japanese messages for the next 2 months. After the war ended, the climbing technique became standard training. In 1947, the British Army created a mountain warfare school in Wales.

Every officer who went through the school had to learn the basics of night climbing. They studied the Monte Casino operation as the first lesson. By 1950, even soldiers who were never going to fight in mountains learned about Lal Bahadur and his climb. It appeared in training manuals as an example of creative thinking in combat.

The lesson the British army wanted soldiers to learn was simple. When everyone says something is impossible, that might mean it is really hard or it might mean no one has tried the right way yet. The Americans took the lesson even further. In 1952, the US Army created the Ranger School at Fort Benning, Georgia.

Part of ranger training was mountain phase where soldiers learned to climb and fight in steep terrain. The instructors at Ranger school told every class about Monte Casino. They made students climb at night with heavy packs. They taught them that surprise is worth more than size. A small force in an unexpected place can be a large force in a predictable place.

Thousands of American officers went through Ranger School over the next 70 years. All of them heard the story of the Girkas and the cliff. But the most lasting tribute to what the Gorkas did happened at Monte Casino itself. In 1950, the Italian government worked with British veterans to put up markers on the battlefield.

They put plaques at places where important events happened during the 4-month battle for the mountain. The plaque at the bottom of the cliff where the Girkas climbed was written in three languages, Italian, English, and Nepali. It said here on the night of June 13th, 1944, 60 soldiers of the second battalion, fifth Royal Girka rifles climbed this cliff and accepted the surrender of the German position above.

They achieved through courage and skill what force could not accomplish. Every year since 1955 on June 13th, a small ceremony happens at that plaque. British veterans come if they are still alive and able to travel. Italian villagers come because the battle happened in their home and Gorka soldiers from the British army come to remember what their brothers did.

In 2004, on the 60th anniversary of the climb, 12 Girkas, who were still alive from La Bahador’s original 60 men, made the journey back to Italy. They were all over 80 years old by then. One of them, a man named Beia Bahador, climbed the cliff again at age 83. It took him 8 hours with two rest stops and help from younger soldiers, but he made it.

at the top. Reporters asked him why he did it. He said, “To prove I still could.” Laahador himself never saw the plaque. He had gone home to Nepal in 1946 after the war ended. The British army gave him the Victoria Cross, which is the highest medal for bravery that Britain awards. Only 13 Girkas have ever received it.

Lbahador carried the metal home in his pack and put it in a drawer. He did not talk about the war. He went back to farming in his village in the mountains. He raised goats and grew barley. He married and had four children. His neighbors knew he had been a soldier, but he never told war stories. His oldest son said that when people asked his father about the war, he would say, “I did my duty.” Many others did more.

Lalba had died in 1968 at age 50. His son found the Victoria Cross in the drawer after the funeral. The metal was wrapped in cloth and had never been displayed. But next to it was something else. It was a small rock, smooth and gray. The son did not know what it was until he found a letter tucked into the cloth.

The letter was from Major Mallister, the British artillery officer who had helped convince commanders to let the Girkas try their climb. Mallister had written to Lahador in 1946 right after the war ended. In the letter and Mallister said he had gone back to Monte Casino and climbed to the ledge in daylight.

He picked up a rock from that ledge and sent it to Laahador. The letter said, “This rock was under your feet on the night you changed how the world thinks about what is possible. Keep it to remember that impossible is just a word used by people who quit too easily.” Major Gustaf Kleinmid, the German officer who surrendered, had a different life after the war.

He was held in a British prison camp until 1947. When he was released, he went back to Germany and became a teacher. He taught history and geography in a small town in Bavaria. In 1965, a British veteran who had fought at Monte Casino visited Germany on vacation. He happened to stop in Klene’s town and saw his name in the phone book. He called him.

The two men met for coffee. The British veteran asked Klene Schmidt if he regretted surrendering. Klange said no. I saved 150 lives that day, he said, including my own. That is not something to regret. Some of my fellow officers said I was a coward. But those officers were not standing on that cliff edge looking down at 60 girkers with their knives out.

Courage is knowing when to fight. Wisdom is knowing when fighting will only get your men killed for nothing. The lessons of Monte Casino spread into areas far from military planning. Business schools started teaching the story as a case study in creative problem solving. The lesson they drew was about questioning assumptions.

The British assumed the cliff could not be climbed, so they never tried. The Germans assumed the cliff did not need guards, so they never watched it. That both assumptions were based on what seemed obvious. But obvious to one person is not obvious to another. What looks impossible to someone from a flat country looks ordinary to someone who grew up in mountains.

The business school version of the lesson was hire people who see the world differently than you do. Then listen when they tell you something you think is wrong. Environmental groups used the Monte Casino story to teach about perspective. They pointed out that the Girkas succeeded because they understood the mountain better than anyone else.

They had grown up in mountains. They knew how rock holds together. They knew how temperature changes affect stone. They knew a thousand small things that British officers had never thought about because British officers grew up in cities and farms. The environmental lesson was local knowledge matters.

People who live with the land know things that experts from far away can miss. Psychologists studied the story to understand human courage. What made 60 men willing to climb a deadly cliff at night with no safety equipment? The answer was not simple. Part of it was training. Part of it was trust in their leader.

Part of it was culture. Girkas grow up hearing stories of ancestors who did brave things. They grow up believing that retreat is worse than death. They grow up in a warrior tradition that values honor above safety. But psychologists said there was something else too. The Girkas succeeded because they believed they could.

When Lalah had said, “We can climb this.” His men never doubted him. Belief became reality because they acted as if it already was. In modern times, special forces units from many countries train on the cliff at Monte Casino. The Italian government allows military teams to use it as a training site. Soldiers from the British SAS, American Navy Seals, German KSK, and many other elite units have climbed Girka’s ladder as part of their training.

They climb it in daylight first to learn the route. Then they climb it at night to understand what the original 60 gawkers faced. Most modern soldiers wear harnesses and use safety ropes. Even with modern equipment and knowing the route, many do not make it all the way up on their first try. This teaches them the final lesson of Monte Casino.

What seems impossible from the ground becomes possible when you start moving, but only if you do not quit. The current British army still has Girka regiments. So, more than 3,000 Girkas serve in the British military today. They still come from the same mountain villages where Laahador came from.

They still carry Kukris. And every Gorka recruit still hears the story of Monte Casino on their first day of training. The instructors tell them, “You come from people who do what others say cannot be done. That is your tradition. That is your duty. That is who you are.” 70 years after 60 men climbed an impossible cliff, the question is not whether it happened.

The question is what it means. Perhaps it means that walls are only as strong as the thinking that builds them. Perhaps it means that the best defense against a smart enemy is not bigger walls, but smarter thinking. Perhaps it means that when everyone says no, the right person saying yes can change everything. Or perhaps it means something simpler.

Perhaps it means that the word impossible is not a fact. It is an opinion. And opinions change when someone brave enough stops talking and starts climbing.