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March 1943. New Guinea. Twelve Australian commandos walked toward a Japanese strongpoint that had already defeated an entire U.S. battalion. No artillery. No air cover. No backup. American observers called the mission impossible. Forty-eight hours later, 137 Japanese soldiers were dead. The Australians suffered zero casualties. U.S. commanders questioned the numbers. Pentagon analysts demanded investigations. Allied officers quietly asked the same question: how did twelve men succeed where thousands had failed? This documentary tells the true story of the Shaggy Ridge operation—where Australian jungle warfare methods exposed a fundamental flaw in American doctrine. While U.S. forces relied on firepower, air support, and frontal assault, the Australians used patience, silence, and total adaptation to the jungle itself. Based on after-action reports, observer journals, and post-war analysis, this film explores how Australian commandos dismantled a fortified Japanese position without fighting it head-on—and why U.S. commanders later restricted Australian independent operations despite their success. What You’ll Discover: • Why American battalion assaults failed repeatedly • How Australian patrols used the jungle as a weapon • Why twelve men were more effective than entire formations • What shocked U.S. observers the most • How this mission changed Allied thinking—quietly 🔥 Subscribe for more untold Australian military history 💬 Comment below: Have you heard stories about female VC scouts or SAS patrols? 👍 Like if you appreciate respectful, accurate military history storytelling #wwiihistory #prisonersofwar #untoldhistory DISCLAIMER⚠️: This video is based on historical accounts and documented experiences of WW2. All details represent composite narratives drawn from veteran testimonies and declassified operational reports. This content is educational and intended to honour the service and professionalism of all soldiers who served. © All footage used falls under fair use for educational documentary purposes. @ForgottenBattleNotes