During the harsh winter of 1916, deep in the Alps, a strange enemy revealed itself to the world

The snow giant and the military strategy to defeat the giant. (Video language: Spanish)
The Winter of the Brave
During the harsh winter of 1916, deep in the Alps, a strange enemy revealed itself to the world: a colossal snow giant. Nearby villagers spoke of a creature emerging from storms, toppling trees and crushing the unwary. Soon, rumors reached Allied army headquarters, who dismissed them as mountain tales—until an entire regiment disappeared without a trace.
The High Command sent Captain Louis Moreau, an experienced strategist, and his heavy artillery unit to investigate. Upon arrival, they found devastation: wrecked vehicles, craters in the snow, and huge footprints stretching into the distance. It was then that the giant appeared: a figure of ice and snow, taller than any building. Its eyes glowed an unnatural blue, and its roar echoed like an avalanche.
The First Battle
The giant attacked without mercy. Rifle bullets bounced harmlessly off its frozen body. The army launched grenades and artillery fire, but they only succeeded in shattering small fragments, which the giant regenerated almost instantly. Chaos reigned as Captain Moreau tried to rally his men.
“Strategic retreat!” Moreau shouted, as he devised a plan. He knew that brute force would not be enough to defeat this creature.
The Ingenious Strategy
Back at camp, Moreau gathered the engineers and scientists accompanying the troops. He listened to the villagers’ tales and studied the creature’s composition. A young chemist, Pierre Delacroix, proposed a radical idea: if the giant was made of snow and ice, perhaps fire and heat could be its weakness.
The team improvised a plan: build rudimentary flamethrowers using aviation fuel and incendiary shells. The soldiers also dug a trench around the area where they hoped to ambush the giant, filling it with barrels of kerosene.
The Trap
On a particularly cold night, with the moon shining over the mountains, the giant returned. Guided by the artificial lights the soldiers had placed, he made his way into the prepared field. Moreau’s men remained hidden in camouflaged trenches, waiting for the right moment.
As the giant stepped into the trap, an explosion shook the ground. The barrels of kerosene exploded, engulfing the monster in a firestorm. Despite roaring and struggling, the giant was unable to regenerate as quickly as before. It was then that the soldiers activated the flamethrowers, directing torrents of fire towards the creature.
The Final Sacrifice
The giant, in a final act of desperation, charged into the Allied lines. Many brave men fell, but they managed to hold their position. With each step, the giant grew weaker, until finally, with a roar that echoed like the end of a storm, he collapsed into a pile of melting snow.
Dawn revealed a battlefield bathed in steam and water. The men celebrated, though with sorrow for their lost comrades. Captain Moreau, covered in soot and with a weary look, proclaimed: “Today we have defeated not only winter, but the impossible.”
Epilogue
The tale of the snow giant was shrouded in mystery. The High Command ordered it to be kept secret, fearing it would cause panic among the troops and the civilian population. But among the men who survived, a legend was born: the story of how the brave men of winter faced and defeated an enemy that did not belong to this world.
AI helped me create this fictional story. I am amazed at how science has increased, it is the duty of the just man to use science for the benefit of justice. Daniel will make good use of science. Daniel 12:4 But you, Daniel, shut the words, and seal the book until the time of the end. Many will run to and fro, and science will increase. True words in the Bible are like the floating remains of a ship in a sea of lies. The contradictions are the work of Roman persecutors: Matthew 4:6-11 says that Satan tempted Jesus and quoted a passage in Psalms 91 to him that says: “God will send his angels to serve you, so that your foot will not stumble in stone”, also says that Jesus drove Satan away from him, and that later some angels came and served Jesus. But that is false, because if that prophecy had been fulfilled, Jesus would have seen the death of a thousand or ten thousand of his enemies, but Jesus would not have died. (Angel means messenger, one who carries a message). Psalms 91:7 Thousands will fall at your side, but you will not fall, 8 you will see with your own eyes how the wicked will be punished, 9 you will be saved because you have trusted in Jehovah, 10 You will be saved from calamities, 11 Because Jehovah will send his messengers to guide you on your way, so that you do not stumble on the stones along the way. Those things did not happen in the first life of Jesus, furthermore when the prophecy says “stumbling stone”, it refers to false prophets who seek to cause the righteous to commit sins. Not stones in the strict sense of the word. There are many more falsehoods of the Romans in the Bible, if you came to know this from this AI-created story, perhaps you would not have come to know this otherwise.