Subtitles section Play video
-
This video is based off of reports coming out of the eastern front during World War
-
I.
-
No first hand accounts were recorded, so what follows is a recreation based on events as
-
reported by soldiers on the front lines.
-
You are a Russian soldier on the front lines of World War 1.
-
You are fighting alongside your comrades in the Lithuanian forest.
-
From across the battlefield you spot your enemy.
-
You take aim through the dense pine trees of the forest.
-
You inhale and hold your breath to steady your aim.
-
The air is silent as you and your squad track the enemy and prepare to fire.
-
You are about to unleash a barrage of bullets when suddenly you hear a guttural growl from
-
the thicket next to you.
-
You glance at where the sound is coming from.
-
Out of the bushes steps the largest wolf you have ever seen.
-
It's eyes are blood red and drool drips from its jowls.
-
You open your mouth to scream, but before you can get a noise out, the wolf lunges and
-
knocks you down.
-
The wolf's jaws and razor sharp teeth snap at you.
-
You use your rifle as a barrier to protect your neck from the vicious creature.
-
The wolf clamps down on the middle of the rifle.
-
You hear the wood begin to splinter and crack as its powerful jaws clasp down harder.
-
You look around for help, for anything that could save you.
-
All you see is more and more wolves running out of the bushes.
-
They kick up the freshly fallen snow as they begin attacking your comrades.
-
Screams can be heard from all around.
-
You look up at the wolf who has you trapped under its immense weight.
-
Its claws tear through your army issued jacket and uniform as if it were tissue paper.
-
You lock eyes with the creature and see that it is driven solely by hunger.
-
The war has displaced animals of all kinds from their natural habitats.
-
These wolves are just trying to survive World War 1 like everyone else.
-
Unfortunately for you in order to survive a wolf has to eat, and you will make a fine
-
meal.
-
The wolf on top of you does not crave human flesh, but there is nothing else to eat.
-
Its usual prey of deer has either been killed and eaten by soldiers, or moved to other areas
-
further east where the war hasn't reached yet.
-
Warm saliva lands on your forehead as the wolf continues to clamp down on the rifle.
-
You glance at the razor sharp teeth.
-
The rifle is about to snap.
-
The wolf will then have a clear path to your throat and its meal.
-
Suddenly you hear the crack of a gun firing.
-
The wolf seems to slow.
-
You hear another gunshot.
-
The wolf slowly slumps down on top of you.
-
Its massive weight pins you to the ground.
-
It has been shot and killed.
-
You glance to the side and see the white snow being dyed red.
-
It takes all of your strength to roll the heavy canine body off of you.
-
Once you have gotten out from under the wolf you look up to see an outstretched hand offering
-
to help you up.
-
Relieved, you take the hand and are pulled to your feet.
-
What you see next shocks you almost as much as the wolf.
-
The man who saved you was not one of your Russian comrades, but an enemy German soldier
-
instead.
-
You thank him in the little broken German that you know.
-
The German soldier picks up your rifle and hands it to you.
-
He then signals you to follow him deeper into the forest where wolves and men are engaged
-
in a battle with one another.
-
You hesitate for a moment unsure of whether to trust the enemy soldier.
-
But he saved your life, so you give him the benefit of the doubt.
-
The war between two nations has stopped for the moment.
-
The war between beast and man has begun.
-
You have been fighting in World War 1 since it started in 1914.
-
But you have never experienced anything like the wolf attacks that became common recently.
-
With the help of the Germans you successfully fend off the pack of wolves that attacked
-
your squad.
-
The commanders of both armies meet and decide to call a momentary truce while you deal with
-
the new enemy.
-
Both sides work together to track and hunt the wolves that have become a menace to soldiers
-
and civilian populations in this region.
-
1917 becomes the year of the wolf for Russian and German soldiers on the North Eastern front
-
of the war.
-
After your commander comes back from meeting with the Germans, he informs the Russian troops
-
of the momentary truce.
-
He assigns you to a mixed squad of Russian and German soldiers.
-
Your new mission is to track down and hunt the wolves in the area.
-
The attacks started with hungry wolves picking at the remains of dead soldiers after battles.
-
But you will never forget the day they became more bold and aggressive.
-
You shudder as you think back to that horrid day.
-
Your squad was engaged in battle with German forces.
-
You were fighting alongside one of your comrades when he was shot in the leg.
-
You flanked the enemy soldier who shot him and eliminated the threat.
-
When you turned around to help your fallen comrade you came upon a gruesome sight.
-
As the wounded soldier tried to crawl back to the safety of your trench, a group of three
-
wolves lunged out of the forest.
-
Two of the wolves grabbed his legs and the other grabbed his neck.
-
They dragged the wounded soldier deeper into the forest.
-
You could hear his screams for help and then silence as the wolves killed him and ate his
-
remains.
-
This was not just a one time occurrence either.
-
You had witnessed wolves run into the middle of a battle and attack soldiers who were not
-
even wounded.
-
The wolves had become bold and fearless.
-
They were driven by hunger.
-
They would do anything for food.
-
This happened on the German side of the battlefield as well.
-
The ceasefire was necessary so that both armies could turn their attention towards the wolves.
-
Casualties of the ravenous creatures were starting to mount.
-
Both sides decided that the war needed to be put on pause so that the four legged enemy
-
could be stopped.
-
You hear stories from the German soldiers of the first unusual attacks by wolves.
-
They claim the attacks started when hungry wolves snuck into farms and villages where
-
they killed calves, sheep, and other livestock.
-
Eventually the packs of wolves had consumed all of the animal food in the area.
-
This was when they turned to eating humans.
-
Their hunger drove them.
-
They ate whatever meat was available.
-
Unfortunately, because of the war, human meat was in plentiful supply.
-
The wolves were forced to attack and eat wounded soldiers to survive.
-
You sit around the campfire with the hunting squad and continue to listen to stories from
-
the German soldiers.
-
Apparently, once livestock started to run out in German farming settlements the wolves
-
turned to a different prey.
-
They started to hunt the children of the village.
-
At this point the wolves were in smaller packs.
-
The group you hunt now could be as many as 50 strong.
-
A full grown adult can do some serious harm to a single wolf, or a small pack, with a
-
weapon.
-
But children are little and easy prey to pick off.
-
Wolves will lay in wait until the children of the village come out of their homes and
-
then grab them.
-
They will pull the child into the forest where they can eat in peace.
-
“War is gruesome enough without wolves hunting children,” you say to the others around
-
the campfire.
-
You stand up and stretch.
-
It is time for you to go on watch.
-
You climb up onto a large boulder and sit silently.
-
From the bushes you can see the firelight reflecting off the eyes of something watching
-
you.
-
It looks like two unmoving fireflies in the darkness of night.
-
You bring your rifle up to your shoulder.
-
The eyes disappear.
-
Was it just my imagination? you think.
-
The wolves have become clever.
-
They will wait until a soldier leaves the group to relieve himself.
-
Once they are alone it is easier for the pack to surround him and attack.
-
You and the other soldiers start moving about in small groups.
-
This seems to keep the wolves at bay.
-
However, snipers who are used to working alone still travel out of the hunting party solo.
-
They take up positions in trees, high off the ground and away from the sharp teeth and
-
claws of the wolves.
-
Nonetheless, some snipers aren't so lucky.
-
They are specially trained to track and eliminate enemies from long distances.
-
But wolves have been in these forests a lot longer than humans.
-
This is their natural habitat, and they have evolved to be the perfect predators.
-
Even with their stealthiness and accuracy snipers cannot fend off packs of hungry wolves
-
that have stalked them.
-
The sniper might not even know they are being hunted until it is too late.
-
During this time and location of the war more snipers may have been attacked by wolves than
-
by enemy soldiers.
-
The wolf hunting squad you are assigned to is tasked with making contact with a village
-
not too far from where you were first attacked.
-
Your squad enters the village.
-
It is a ghost town.
-
There are no signs of life anywhere.
-
Fires smolder and smoke rises from the warm charcoal, but no one seems to be in the village.
-
Then you come upon a horrible sight.
-
Blood covers the snowy ground.
-
All around there are wolf prints.
-
The pack of wolves must have been at least 50 strong and they ate all of the villagers.
-
You decide it is time for drastic measures.
-
Your squad sets up traps around the area and puts poison in fresh meat.
-
You lay out nets and snares to catch the murderous wolves.
-
Your traps are successful and you end up eliminating some of the pack.
-
But the wolves still have a large group and they are on the prowl.
-
Your squad of Russian and German soldiers tracks the pack.
-
You come upon them as they are scavenging a battlefield from an earlier battle.
-
The mixed squad takes position along the treeline.
-
You first throw a grenade into the middle of the pack.
-
It detonates, killing several wolves in the explosion.
-
The squad takes aim and fires at the wolves as they scatter.
-
Some of the larger, more aggressive wolves run towards your squad.
-
You fire your rifle.
-
The bullets seem to have little effect on such large creatures.
-
But your hunting squad unleashes a storm of bullets.
-
Finally, the approaching wolves are stopped and fall over dead in the snow.
-
Through the joint efforts of both armies hundreds of wolves are killed.
-
Their reign of terror has ended.
-
Some wolves got away and relocated to deeper parts of the forest.
-
Their numbers are smaller now, and so they are not as bold.
-
They also leave the war zones for areas with more deer and prey for them to eat further
-
to the north and east.
-
Russia is a vast country and the war has not, and never will, reach all of the wilderness
-
of northern Russia.
-
After the wolf threat is dealt with your commander meets again with his German counterpart.
-
They disband the joint hunting squads and each soldier returns to his side.
-
The war resumes as it did before.
-
Russians killing Germans, Germans killing Russians.
-
Without the mutual enemy to bring the two sides together they are back to battling one
-
another.
-
When you return home from the war, you find that your joint wolf hunting force has made
-
headlines around the world.
-
The ceasefire and wolf hunt is written about in both German and Russian newspaper outlets.
-
One of your friends who lives in the United States sends you clippings from the New York
-
Times titled Russian Wolves.
-
Another article about your exploits is printed in the Oklahoma City Time and called Battle
-
Halts While Troops Fight Wolves.
-
It seems that all across the world the stories of man versus wolf on the Russian front has
-
made headlines.
-
You think about how a world war that can pit so many countries against one another can
-
be brought to a halt by a common enemy.
-
The wolves that hunted and ate humans in the forests of Germany and Russia caused an unlikely
-
alliance.
-
The two armies were forced to work together to overcome their common enemy of man eating
-
wolves.
-
Check out another video of soldiers having to fight off crazy enemies in our video Soldiers
-
Encounter Mysterious Monsters in Vietnam War.
-
Or check out this crazy animal in Tiger With 436 K/D. Thanks for watching, and, as always,
-
don't forget to like, share, and subscribe.
-
See you next time!