He is the last because he fights when all others have fled. He is the last because he represents a dying breed of honor in a world of drone strikes and proxy wars. He is the last because every morning he looks over the valley, sees the flags of his enemies, and refuses to blink.
One might look to Ihsan Nuri Pasha, the leader of the Ararat rebellion in the late 1920s. Leading the Khoybun organization, Nuri Pasha established a small Kurdish republic on Mount Ararat. It was a last stand of the old world against the new nation-states carving up the region. Facing the modernized armies of the Turkish Republic, Nuri and his fighters utilized the mountain passes in ways that seemed to belong to a bygone age of guerrilla warfare. Though the rebellion was eventually crushed by superior air power, the image of Nuri—uniformed, stoic, staring out at the impossibility of his task—remains a touchstone for the archetype. The Last Warrior Kurdish
A remote village tucked into the Qandil Mountains. The air is thin, and the ancient stone paths are worn by centuries of resistance. The Conflict He is the last because he fights when all others have fled