Nearly a century and a half since the first king's father, Tunsa Perogime Naumier, drove away the British in the Duva War, the people of Bhutan have lived in peace and stability. However, the trees are quiet and the wind is blowing, and in 2003, the war clouds once again shrouded the country of Thunder Dragon, and militant groups in northeastern India established guerrilla camps in the dense forests of southern Bhutan in order to cross the border to launch terrorist attacks, through six years of fruitless negotiations, It was inevitable that the enemy would be expelled by force. That summer, the Queen Mother found that her son, who was going to Oxford, would rise early every day, not for morning reading, but for rigorous physical training, and, carrying out his mother and king, he signed up for the militia. On December 4, 2003, the prince and the king went to the front. The king did not intend to give orders in Thimphu, and his post was on the battlefield, for every soldier was his child, and the prince said to the queen-mother, be prepared to never see him again, and if there was any misfortune in his father, he would not return alive. Like every Bhutanese wife and mother, the Queen Mother was heavy and uneasy. Two days later, she climbed the snow-covered Dotara Pass and vowed to build another 108 towers around her former tower. Planning the blueprint began that day, and she personally participated in every subsequent ceremony, purifying the site and planting the tree of life. All sectors of society, all walks of life, from monks to farmers, from merchants to housewives, all Bhutanese are a heart, only one faith, hope that their team can overcome the indian army as soon as possible.