What Argentine Soldiers Did the Night They Heard the Gurkhas Were Coming D

May 1982, Southampton docks. 650 men walked up a gang way in the gray morning light and disappeared into the hull of the Queen Elizabeth 2. They carried rifles, co-okes, and kit bags. They wore British Army uniforms. Most of them had been born in villages that did not appear on any map that most British soldiers had ever seen. The youngest were 19.

The oldest were in their mid30s. They spoke napahi among themselves and English when required. They were quiet in the way that men are quiet when they are concentrating. Rifleman Dan Gurong was 22 years old. He came from Miyagd district in the western hills of Nepal in a cluster of houses 5 days walk from the nearest road.

He had grown up carrying loads up stone paths, sleeping in thin air, eating what the season gave. And before the army had found him, [music] he had been studying to become a school teacher. He had sat with younger children in a one- room school and helped them trace letters into exercise [music] books.

And he had thought that might be his life. Then he walked [music] 4 days to the recruitment depot at Para on his first attempt and was sent home. He walked 4 days back. He waited a year. He walked to Pocarra again and was selected [music] on his second try at 17. The recruiter looked at his hands and told him he had [music] good hands.

Dan did not know what that meant. 6 weeks into training, when he had stripped [music] and reassembled a rifle in the dark for the 43rd time without dropping a single part, he understood. He had been with First Battalion, 7th Duke of Edinburgh’s own Girka Rifles, 17GR, was for 5 years when the ship left Southampton.

He had never fired a weapon at a human being. The battalion’s commanding officer, Lieutenant Colonel David Morgan, was 41. He came from a market town in Shropshire, the kind of place where the high street closes early on Sunday and people say good morning to strangers. He had been a soldier for 20 years. He was not a man who gave speeches.

He was a man who prepared. He had spent the two weeks before departure reading everything he could find about the Falkland Islands, about the Argentine military, about the terrain, about the weather. He had filled [music] three notebooks. He had asked his officers to do the same.

He was not worried about whether his men could fight. That was not the question. The question, as it always was, was where and when and against what. The ship moved south. The South Atlantic in May is not a friendly ocean. The swells come long and gray and they do not stop. The wind carries cold that gets into clothing and stays there.

The QE2 was a luxury liner requisitioned in a hurry. Its carpeted corridors and chandeliers [music] and dining rooms full of white linen sat alongside the battalion running [music] drills on the deck, cleaning weapons in the corridors, doing push-ups in spaces not designed for push-ups. Dan Gurong slept in a bunk that had been a firstass cabin 3 weeks earlier.

He did not know that. He would not have cared if he had. He was thinking about something his section commander had told [music] him the day before departure, that the Argentines had been in position for 7 weeks, that they had dug in, that they knew the ground, the ship moved south and the cold deepened some and nobody talked about what was waiting.

The British Girka connection was not new. in 1982. It was 166 years old. It had started in 1815 in the hills of Nepal when British forces and Girka fighters spent several months trying to kill each other in a war that neither side was entirely certain how to win. When it ended, the British did something unusual.

They recruited the men they had just been fighting. The first formal agreements came in 1816. The logic was simple and remained simple for the next century and a half. These were soldiers worth having. Not because of any romance about mountain warriors or any colonial mythology, though both of those things accumulated over time, but because they were disciplined, reliable, and effective, and because they volunteered for service in very large numbers.

By 1982, 26 Girka soldiers had earned the Victoria Cross. That number needs a frame. The Victoria Cross is the highest award for bravery in the British military. It is not given lightly. 26 of them spread across 150 years of service in Burma. Gal Lipo Lee, Italy, Malaya, Borneo, and 100 smaller fights that never made the papers.

The Kokri, the curved forward-wer soldier carries, became one of the most known military symbols in the world. It is a working tool first, heavy toward the tip, good for chopping and digging and cutting. It has been a weapon when needed. There is a [music] widely told story that Girka soldiers must draw blood from the kukree before they can put it away.

that if the blade comes out in anger [music] and no blood is shed, the soldier must cut himself. This story is told with great care in many places. It is not true. The Girka Museum says clearly that this is a myth. The co-ree does not need blood. It needs a sharp edge and a dry cloth. That is all. The myth, however, had a life of its own.

In Bweenos Iris on the 28th of May 1982, the Argentine tabloid Chronica ran a headline about the Girkas. The article described the coupree, described its uses, and described the blood custom as fact. The tone of the article was intended to be defiant. Argentina was fighting Britain.

Britain had sent the Girkas. Chronica was letting its readers know that Argentina was not afraid. The article was read in Babui knows I was also read in Argentine trenches on the Falkland Islands passed from section to section in translated summaries. The men reading it were not journalists. They were 19 and 20-year-old soldiers lying in wet holes in the ground.

They were on an island most of them had never heard of before that winter. 500 m from home, roughly the distance from London to Edinburgh, in the middle of an ocean that wanted nothing from them. Corporal Eduardo VR Gas was 19. He came from a suburb of Core Dobar, the second city of Argentina, where the streets are wide and the air smells of exhaust fumes and baking bread in the early morning.

He had been 8 months into a 2-year mechanics apprenticeship when the draft notice arrived. He had not chosen to come. Most of them had not chosen to come. He was the one who read the chronica article aloud to his section in the trench. He read the part about the kree. He read the part about the blood. He did not editorialize.

He did not need to. The men around him were very quiet when he finished. The Argentine high command took a different approach. On the 8th of June 1982, Argentina sent a formal note to Nepal’s man at the United Nations. It demanded that Nepal pull its citizens out of British forces. Nepal is a small country of 20 million people, a country with a long-standing deal with the British army.

Argentina was asking Nepal to break that deal. Nepole received the note. Nepole did not respond. Not a refusal, not a rejection. silence. The note achieved nothing except to confirm in writing that the Argentine government was worried about a battalion they had not yet met. Meanwhile, [music] on the deck of the ferry Norland, Girka soldiers sat in the cold gray light and sharpened their corokes on wet stones.

They did this because kuro crees need sharpening. They also did it because someone in British psychological operations wanted photographs. Girka soldiers sharpening curved blades on a ship’s deck. The photographs were taken. They ran in newspapers around the world. The men in the photographs were not thinking about that.

They were thinking about the angle [music] of the edge and the sound of steel on stone and the cold that was different from any cold they had known in Nepal. The cold in Nepal is dry. This cold was wet. That was the main difference. June 1st, [music] 1982. San Carlos Bay, East Falkland. The battalion came ashore in the dark.

The bay smelled of kelp and cold salt water, a flat mineral smell that sits at the back of the throat. The ground underfoot was soft and gave slightly with each step. Not mud exactly, but saturated pete that had not dried in months and would not dry for months more. The temperature was just above freezing.

The wind came off the water and found every gap in every collar. Dan Garung stepped off the landing craft and felt the ground shift under his boots. His rifle was across his chest. His kukri was on his hip where it had been everyday for 5 years. He had slept perhaps 3 hours in the last 20. He was cold in a way that was more like a condition than a sensation.

The battalion moved inland in the pre-dawn dark. So 650 men carrying everything they needed to survive [music] and fight. There was no ambient light. The stars were present but cold and offering nothing useful. Men navigated by compass and by the man in front of them and by the sound of boots in wet ground.

They moved without talking, not because they had been ordered to be silent, though they had, but because there was nothing to say that the ground and the cold had not already said. Lieutenant Colonel Morgan had studied the terrain for weeks. He knew that San Carlos Bay was a beach head, not a destination.

The destination was Stanley, the island’s capital, which sat on the far side of East Falkland, roughly 50 mi east. Between here and there were ridgeel lines, bogs, rivers, and Argentine defensive positions that had been building for 7 weeks. At Mount William was one of those positions. It stood on the approaches to Stanley.

Taking it was part of the final plan. Morgan walked with his men. He did not ride. He carried his own kit and his own weight and his own notebooks, which were now worn at the corners and expanded with extra pages. He moved through his companies quietly, looking at things, asking questions in the flat shropshire way that was less a question than an inventory.

Are you warm enough? How are your feet? Do you know your arcs? Are you warm enough? The answers were always yes or nearly, which he understood to mean something between genuinely and I would not tell you otherwise. The war had been underway for 60 days. Britain had already lost men at goose green, at sea, in the cold Atlantic.

The Falkland’s campaign had a particular brutality in its geography. It was not a jungle war or a desert war or an urban war. It was a cold, flat, treeless place where men moved in the open and were seen from far away. The wind made everything harder. The Argentine defenders had chosen their ground carefully.

The mountains around Stanley were natural strong points. You could see everything from them. You could put guns on them and make the approaches genuinely terrible. Argentina knew the Girkas were coming. It had known since the newspapers ran the photographs from the Norland. It had filed its diplomatic note to Nepal. It had let the Chronica article do its work on morale in the trenches.

The loudspeaker units attached to the British force had also by [music] this point been used vehicles that could broadcast in Spanish that could send the news of the Girka advance directly into Argentine positions. The content of those broadcasts has not been fully declassified.

What happened after them has been the conditions for what would happen on the 14th of June were already in place, already growing in the wet [music] dark of those trenches, already taking the shape of a fear that no rifle and no trench and no diplomatic note to Nepal could fix. A fear [music] fed by a tabloid article confirmed by photographs of men sharpening blades on a ship’s deck.

grown larger by two months of whispered talk in positions that smelled of cold mud and diesel and the particular dread of men who did not know when the thing was coming [music] but knew that it was. They were waiting for something they could not see. That is always the worst kind of waiting. June 8th, 1982, Fitzroy Cove, East Falkland.

The day was clear in a way that meant danger in the South Atlantic. In winter, clear days are rare. When they come, they come with cold and visibility and the particular cruelty of being seen from above. The Argentine Air Force understood this. The pilots of the fifth air brigade had been flying attack runs in conditions that would have grounded most air forces in the world, low, fast, coming in under radar, pulling out at the last possible moment. They had already sunk ships.

They had already killed men. They were good at what they did and they knew the clock was running because the British ground forces were moving east and the window for air intervention was closing. RFA Sir Galahad and RFA Sir Tristram were anchored at Fitzroy 2 mi from where 17gr were positioned.

The ships were carrying the first battalion Welsh guards men who had come ashore and were waiting to disembark fully when the Skyhawks came in. The Argentine pilots attacked in the early afternoon. They struck Seagalahhat first. The ship caught fire in seconds. The fire found the ammunition.

The blast killed 48 men, Welsh guards, crew, support staff, 48 on a single ship in a single afternoon. Scores more were burned so badly that doctors were still treating them years after the war ended. It was one of the worst losses the British suffered in the entire campaign. The Girkas heard the explosions before they saw anything.

A sound like thunder, but flatter [music] and more immediate. A concussive wave that moved through the air and then the ground. Then the smoke. A column of black smoke from the direction of the ships that rose into the [music] clear cold sky and did not dissipate because the wind had momentarily stopped, which it [music] almost never did on the Falklands.

Danurong was in a forward position looking toward the mountains when the smoke appeared. He had been watching the [music] ridge line. Now he was watching the smoke. The men around [music] him were very still in the way that soldiers are still when they are calculating. The Skyhawks came back for [music] a second pass.

This was their mistake or perhaps their misfortune or perhaps both. The second pass brought them over the Girka positions. What happened next took approximately [music] 4 seconds and involved approximately 4,000 rounds. The Girkas did not have anti-aircraft systems. They had rifles, machine guns, one and the sharp focus of men who are angry and well-trained and given a target. They opened fire.

Every weapon in range was turned on the aircraft. The noise was total, a single hard roar that swallowed every other sound. The feeling was in the chest. a rapid pressure like being punched from the inside from the blast of hundreds of weapons firing at once. The Skyhawks did not come back for a third pass.

Whether the fire hit the aircraft is a question that has never been fully resolved. The pilots turned. They left. The column of [music] smoke from Sagalahad kept rising. The bay smelled of burning fuel and something else. Something chemical and wrong. The wind carried it to every position within 2 mi.

The Girka soldiers lowered their weapons. They looked at what they had done. They looked at the smoke from the ships. And they did both things at once, which is what soldiers in combat learn to do. They do not stop feeling. They learned to keep doing the task in front of them while feeling the thing beside them.

[music] There were men on those ships who were burning. Some of them were being pulled from the water. There was nothing the Girkas could do for those men from where they stood. They held their positions. They cleaned their weapons. They ate what was in their packs in the cold afternoon light. That night, Dan Gurong slept 4 hours.

He dreamed nothing. In the morning, he was cold and his boots were wet, and his section commander told him that the final advance was being planned. Mount William was 6 mi east. The Argentine fifth Marine Infantry [music] Battalion was somewhere ahead, dug into positions on the ridge lines above Stanley.

Nobody [music] had told the Argentines precisely when the Girkas were coming, but everyone within range of a loudspeaker or a translated newspaper already knew they [music] were here. What Argentine soldiers did the night they heard the Girkas were coming was not stand and fight. It was leave quietly in the dark before the Girkas ever arrived.

That night [music] had not come yet. It would come in 10 days. But in the forward positions, in the wet trenches above Stanley, the waiting [music] had already taken on a different quality. It was no longer the waiting of men who expected to fight. It was the waiting of men who were already deciding. June 13th, 1982. Last light on East Falkland.

The battalion moved out in the dark. Not full dark. There was some ambient light from the sky. It and the ground ahead was pale with frost on the upper stones of the ridge line. The temperature had dropped below freezing in the hour after sunset. The wind had returned coming from the southwest and it moved through the battalion in the way wind moves through anything that is [music] trying to hold still.

Danurong moved with his section in single file. Boots finding the ground one step at a time. each man watching the shape of the man [music] in front. The pete had frozen slightly on top and gave a small sound underfoot, not a crack, more a compression that was covered by the wind. The wind covered a great deal.

Morgan had given his orders in the flat, methodical way he gave all orders. Mount William, approach from the south. The Scots guards would take Tumbleown to the west simultaneously. The two attacks were coordinated to prevent Argentine forces from concentrating on [music] one objective. The timing mattered. The terrain mattered.

Everything [music] had been gone over twice and then once more. A battalion of that size does not sound like a quiet number. It does not sound like something that can [music] move without making noise. on a frozen ridgeel line at night in single file with weapons tight to the body and nothing [music] loose enough to rattle.

It was a number that the darkness absorbed. The battalion moved and the wind moved and the ground gave its small sounds and the mountain got [music] closer. Somewhere ahead, in positions the Girkas had studied on maps and in aerial photographs, the Argentine defenders were waiting. They had been there [music] for weeks. They knew the ground.

They had supplies and ammunition and prepared positions with fields of fire planned and ranged. They had everything that an established defensive position is supposed to have. They also had two months of fear sitting in the back of each man’s chest, put there by a tabloid and a diplomatic [music] note and a set of photographs of men with curved blades on the deck of a gray ship. The advance continued.

The mountain was close now. The air smelled of frozen pete and gun oil and the faint metal tang of frost on rock. The cold was complete. Not something outside the body, but a condition inside it, starting at the skin and reaching inward. Dan’s hands were inside his gloves, and still the cold found the joints of his fingers.

His breath was visible for a moment and then gone. His boots made a soft grinding sound on the frozen scree. The weight of his pack pressed into his shoulders in the way it always did after the fourth hour. Ahead, the ridge line was dark. No muzzle flash, no movement. The night absorbed [music] everything.

The battalion kept moving. Oh, 300 hours. June 14th, 1982. The lower approaches of [music] Mount William. The leading sections reached the first defensive positions and found them empty. Not empty in the way a position is empty because an enemy is [music] somewhere else. Empty in the way a position is empty because the men who occupied it left in a hurry.

Sleeping bags abandoned. Halfeaten food frozen in tins. Personal items. In one position, a photograph face down [music] in the mud. The cold had preserved everything. The smell was of damp wool [music] and cold iron and the particular unwashed smell of men who have been in the same hole in the ground for [music] 6 weeks.

The girkers moved through these positions quickly and quietly. The silence was not reassuring. It was the silence of something unresolved. The Argentine soldiers had moved. They had not moved east towards Stanley, which would have been a retreat to their own lines. They had not moved up the mountain to a secondary position.

They had moved west toward the Scots guards toward Tumbleown toward the fight that was already underway a kilometer away where two forces were genuinely shooting at each other in the dark. The Argentine soldiers had chosen a different battle rather than wait for the one that was coming. Andrea Admiral Carlos Hugo Robario commanded the Argentine fifth Marine Infantry Battalion.

They were some of the best troops on the island. They held tumble down. Years later at the University of Nottingham in November 2006, Robario admitted that his battalion had been worried about the Girkas. He said this to Brigadier David Morgan directly. Sit with that for a moment. Robario’s men never fought the Girkas, never saw them, never fired a shot at them.

They were worried about a unit they knew only from a newspaper article about a myth. The leading Girka sections continued up the mountain. Position after position was empty or lightly defended. The advance that had been planned as a contested night assault on a fortified objective was becoming something different.

It was becoming a movement through abandoned ground. Not all the Argentine soldiers had gone. Near the summit, the Girkas found a group of Argentine medical troops in a shallow depression in the rock. They were not armed. They were not attempting to fight. They were sitting in the dark with their hands visible and several of them were shaking with something that was not cold.

Captain Na Mel Ry was 31 years old. He came from Lam Jung district in central Nepal. And before the army, he had studied Spanish at school in Pokarra. Not because it was required, but because his teacher had told him that the useful languages were the ones nobody expected you to know. He was compact and quiet, the kind of officer whose authority was invisible until the moment it was needed.

By the time he reached the Falklands, Mi’s Spanish was good enough to have a conversation, good enough to make a point clearly under pressure. He was with the section that found the medical troops. He saw the state they were in. He understood what they thought was about to happen. The girkers had drawn their co-occ.

They had drawn them because they needed to bind the prisoner’s hands and they had nothing else to cut with. And bootlaces are the fastest restraint available when you are standing on a mountain at 3:00 in the morning in a situation that is moving quickly. Ry looked at the prisoners. He looked at their faces.

Then he explained in Spanish what was happening. He said the kukre were being used to cut up boot laces to tie them up with. That was all. The blades were for the laces, not for the men. He said this later in [music] 2001 to the BBC, but in words that are still one of the more precise descriptions of the gap between a myth and the men caught inside it.

The Argies were terrified we were going to chop off their heads. In fact, we had drawn the KO cre to cut up shoelaces to tie them up with. The medical troops heard this. They looked at the boot laces. They looked at the Koure cutting through them cleanly. They did not stop shaking immediately. But the quality of the shaking changed.

It became something other than terror. It became something closer to the specific relief of a man who has been braced for [music] a thing that did not come. Mount William was taken at approximately 0400 hours on the 14th of June. The Girkas fired no shots in anger in the taking of their objective, not one round.

And the mountain that had been fortified and held against them was taken without a single shot fired. By midm morning on June 14th, 1982, it was over. General Mario Mayendez, the Argentine commander in Stanley, signed the instrument of surrender that afternoon. Before he signed, he sent a final message to General Gali in [music] Bawees.

It was not a military report. It was something closer to a testimony. He said, “My general, you do not know what we are fighting here.” He had been fighting the British army, the paratroopers, the Marines, the Scots Guards, the Welsh Guards, the Royal Marines of 45th Commando, and the rest. He had also been fighting something [music] he could not quantify in a situation report.

A reputation, a two-month accumulation of fear that had done work no weapon had been asked to do. The total losses for 17 GR in the entire Falkland’s campaign were one man killed and 15 wounded. For a force that size in a full land campaign with live combat, that number needs its human meaning. One out of 650. The battalion’s single death was not from Argentine fire. It was a mine.

one of thousands that Argentine forces had planted across the approaches to Stanley. Many of those mines are still in the ground today. Dan Gurung walked down from Mount William in the early morning light. His boots were wet. His kit was heavy. He was cold in the way that men are cold when they have been moving all night without stopping.

He had not fired his weapon at another human being. He had not been asked to. and the mountain was behind him and Stanley was somewhere ahead through the gray light and the camp smoke of a military force that had just won. He thought about the teacher he had not become. He thought about the recruiter who had told him he had good hands.

He thought about the exercise books in the school in Makd where children still traced letters that he was no longer there to help them with. These thoughts came and went. [music] They were not heavy. He was 22 years old and he was alive and the war was finished. Morgan wrote his notes that morning with the same methodical care he gave everything.

He had prepared for a contested assault and been given a walkover instead. He was not confused by this. He was a soldier of 20 years. He understood that a battle you do not have to fight is not a lesser victory. It is sometimes at the greater one. If this story stayed with you, consider subscribing.

There are more like it. Stories that deserve more time than they usually get. That is the only promise I make. There is a version of the story of Mount William that wants to be about weapons, about the Kree and its edge and the custom that was never real. That version is not wrong exactly. It just misses the point.

The real story is about belief and what belief does in the dark. Corporal Eduardo VR Gas read an article aloud in a trench. The article was wrong about the cocree. It did not matter. The men listening were cold and far from home. And the thing the article described had the quality of truth because it fit the shape of the fear they already carried.

A myth does not need to be accurate to be effective. It needs to arrive at the right moment in the right container. It arrived in a trench on a frozen island read aloud in the voice of a 19-year-old mechanic from core doar and it did more damage than any round that was fired. Rear Admiral Roar Co sat in Nottingham in 2006 and told the man whose battalion he had never faced that his men had been worried about them 24 years after the fact in a university room with tea going cold on the table. He said it plainly because it was true and because there was nothing left to protect by concealing it. His men had been afraid of soldiers they never saw. That fear had shaped decisions made in the dark on a mountain at 3:00 in the morning. Captain Naamel Ry went back to Nepal after the campaign. He gave his BBC interview in 2001 and 19 years after the

fact in the same unhurrieded way he had explained the bootlaces to the medical troops on Mount William. He did not frame the story as remarkable. He described what happened, what he had in his hand, what he said, what the fear looked like when it left the men’s faces.

He spoke like a man who had long since made his peace with the gap between what people expected of him and what he actually was. Eduardo Vargas gas went home to Cordobbar. He finished his mechanics apprenticeship. He has not spoken publicly about the Faullands. Most of the Argentine conscripts who served there have not.

And Captain Na male Ry had stood in front of men braced for death and told them in their language that the blades were for the bootlaces. That is all. The blades were for the bootlaces or what the men on that mountain had believed. And what they found were two entirely different things. Between the belief and the finding was a space shaped exactly like human fear.

The Girkas walked through it. The Argentine soldiers ran from it. And when the fear was finally named, a knife, a lace, a quiet voice saying, “This is what is happening.” It dissolved in seconds. That is what fear does when it finally meets the truth. It does not fight. It does not argue. It becomes what it always was.

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