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If you enjoy this content, subscribe for more forgotten stories from World War II. All images are AI-generated to better illustrate these historical events Normandy, 1944. A German officer stepped out of his vehicle. Three seconds later, he was dead. No one heard the shot. No one saw the shooter. His men searched the hedgerows for hours. They found nothing. This happened every day in Normandy. German soldiers called it "Invisible Death." British snipers. They came from the Scottish Highlands. The Lovat Scouts. Men who had spent their lives stalking deer across the moors. Now they stalked Germans. They invented the ghillie suit. Covered in rags, leaves, and grass. They could lie motionless for 48 hours. Waiting for one shot. Their weapon: the Lee-Enfield No.4(T). Accurate at over 800 yards. Silent. Deadly. Invisible. German officers stopped wearing their insignia. German soldiers stopped walking upright. German commanders banned standing near windows. One sniper. One bullet. Total paralysis. Wehrmacht veterans described the psychological terror. "You never saw them. You never heard them. Your comrade simply dropped dead beside you." The Soviets had famous snipers. The Americans had numbers. The British had ghosts. This is the story of Britain's invisible killers — and why Germans feared them more than tanks. #WWII #BritishSnipers #LovatScouts #ghilliesuit #Normandy #wehrmacht #InvisibleDeath #ww2history #SniperWarfare #militaryhistory