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         Falkland War History:     more books (100)
  1. The Land That Lost Its Heroes: The Falklands the Post-War and Alfonsin by Jimmy Burns, 1990-01
  2. Call for Fire: Sea Combat in the Falklands and the Gulf War by Captain Chris Craig, 1995-10
  3. Tempest in a Teapot: The Falkland Islands War (Stokvis studies in historical chronology and thought) by R. Reginald, Jeffrey M. Elliot, 1983-10
  4. The Falklands: Politics and War by G. M. Dillon, 1989-03
  5. RAF HARRIER GROUND ATTACK - FALKLANDS by Jerry Pook, 2007-07
  6. Coronel and Falkland: Two Great Naval Battles of the First World War by Barrie Pitt, 2004-09
  7. Battle for the Falklands (1) : Land Forces (Men-At-Arms Series, 133) by Will Fowler, 1982-11-25
  8. The Official History of the Falklands, Vol 1: The Origins of the Falklands Conflict (Cabinet Office Series of Official Histories) by Sir Lawrence Freedman, 2005-08-09
  9. Royal Navy in the Falklands Conflict and the Gulf War: Culture and Strategy (Cass Series--British Politics and Society) by Alistair Finlan, 2004-06-18
  10. Sea Harrier over the Falklands: A Maverick at War by Sharkey Ward, 1993-02
  11. Operation Corporate: The Falklands War, 1982 by Martin Middlebrook, 1986-05-06
  12. Argentine Forces in the Falklands (Men-at-Arms) by Nick Bijl, 1992-07-30
  13. The History of the South Atlantic Conflict: The War for the Malvinas by Ruben O. Moro, 1989-07-07
  14. Hostile Skies: My Falklands Air War by David Morgan, 2007-02-01

81. The Educational Encyclopedia, Modern Warfare
Chronicle of the Falklands / Malvinas history and war of 1982 the FalklandIslands are a group of islands in the south Atlantic. The two main islands,
http://users.pandora.be/educypedia/education/modernwar.htm
EDUCYPEDIA The educational encyclopedia Home Electronics General Information technology ... Science Science Automotive Biology Biology-anatomy Biology-animals ... Space Social science Atlas - maps Countries Dinosaurs Environment ... Sitemap
Modern warfare Anglo Boer war Cold war Falklands General Gulfwar Israël Korean war Nuclear warfare ... Weapons-army General and miscellaneous topics about modern warfare Ambush at Mogadishu Ambush in Mogadishu tells the story of the most violent combat firefight since Vietnam. On October 3, 1993 elite units of the US Army's Rangers and Delta Force were ambushed by Somali men, women and children armed with automatic weapons British military conflicts from 1945 to 2001 India, Palestine, Malaya, Korea, Suez Canal Zone, Kenya, Cyprus, Suez Borneo, Vietnam, Aden, Radfan, Oman, Dhofar Northern Ireland, The Falklands War and The Gulf War Russian military conflicts Center of military history the wars fought by the U.S. Army Chemical warfare in the Iraq-Iran War chemical warfare in the Iraq-Iran War Laos the secret war Russo-Japanese war Russo-Japanese war Russo-Japanese war ... Russo-Japanese war the Russo-Japanese War began on February 8, 1904 when Japan attacked Port Arthur in Manchuria. It ended on September 5, 1905 with the signing of the Treaty of Portsmouth

82. Galtieri And The Falklands War (from Argentina) --  Encyclopædia Britannica
Galtieri and the Falklands war (from Argentina) Videla was succeeded in history The return of military government Galtieri and the Falklands war
http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-33095
Home Browse Newsletters Store ... Subscribe Already a member? Log in Content Related to this Topic This Article's Table of Contents Expand all Collapse all Introduction Land Relief The Northwest The Gran Chaco Mesopotamia The Pampas ... Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego People Ethnic groups Language and religion Settlement patterns The Northwest ... Transportation and telecommunications Government and society Constitutional framework Provincial and local government Justice Political process ... History Early period Discovery and settlement Colonial centres Independence Dominance of Buenos Aires ... Perón's legacy The return of military government The Videla regime and the Dirty War changeTocNode('toc214358','img214358'); Galtieri and the Falklands War Restoration of democracy The Menem era and the 21st century Additional Reading Geography The land and the people The economy Cultural life History Overviews Political developments The Dirty War and the Falklands dispute The return to democracy ... Print this Table of Contents Shopping Price: USD $1495 Revised, updated, and still unrivaled.

83. IWM Portal > Your History > Some Interesting Facts... : Falklands War 1982, Casu
Search Your history Falklands war 1982, casualty statistics In the 1982Falklands war, 255 British people were killed and 777 wounded.
http://www.iwm.org.uk/server/show/ConWebDoc.2477
Text Only Site Map About Us IWM London ... IWM Collections  You  are  here:  IWM Portal Your History Some interesting facts... Search Your History:  Back to Your History The North at War First World War Second World War ... The Imperial War Museum Falklands War 1982, casualty statistics Wreaths laid in front of the War Memorial in San Carlos to those killed in the Falklands War. In the 1982 Falklands War, 255 British people were killed and 777 wounded. This includes three Falkland Islanders who were killed by shelling. Three weeks after the surrender, the Argentine government estimated that its country’s losses amounted to 746 people killed, but it later revised this figure, confirming the number of dead to be 635. Estimates of the total Argentine wounded vary, but are generally put at just over 1,000. Numbers of Argentine prisoners were carefully recorded by the British Task Force, with 12,978 in total. The heaviest losses on both sides were at sea. There were 197 British deaths at sea or on ships bombed in Falkland harbours; Argentine naval losses were 356, including 323 on the General Belgrano. If you are interested in reading more about the Falklands War

84. Falklands War - Enpsychlopedia
HMS Conqueror returning from the war. Military history of Argentina Militaryhistory of the United Kingdom. Conflict, Falklands war
http://psychcentral.com/psypsych/Falklands_War
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Falklands War
HMS Conqueror returning from the war Military history of Argentina
Military history of the United Kingdom
Conflict Falklands War Date March 19 June 14 Place Falkland Islands and South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands Result United Kingdom regains possession of the islands. Combatants Argentina
United Kingdom

Strength Geographical advantage Tactical and experience advantage Casualties About 700 killed, 1,100 wounded, 11,313 prisoners 236 killed, 746 wounded
The Falklands War or the Malvinas War Spanish Guerra de las Malvinas ), was an armed conflict between Argentina and the United Kingdom over the Falkland Islands , also known in Spanish as the Islas Malvinas , between March and June of . The Falklands consist of two large and many small islands in the South Atlantic Ocean east of Argentina, whose ownership had long been disputed. (See History of the Falkland Islands for the background of that dispute.) Argentina was in the midst of a devastating economic crisis and large-scale civil unrest against the military junta that was governing Argentina in the period leading up to the war. The government, headed by

85. Falklands War 1982
Chronicle of the Falklands / Malvinas history and war of1982, (http//www.yendor.com/vanished/falklandswar.html). Hit Counter.Discussion Forum.
http://www.changingthetimes.co.uk/samples/coldwar/falklands_war_1982.htm

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Alternate Histories Book Reviews My Comments ... Authors Falklands War 1982 The Fall of Britannia By David Atwell Introduction The War for the Falkland Islands will inevitably go down in history as one of the events of infamy. Regardless of what Argentina said at the time, or what has been said since 1982, Argentina nevertheless attacked, without warning or provocation, the British territory of the Falkland Islands. Furthermore, in another historical circumstance, the War would also see then end of the phrase ‘Britannia Rules The Waves’. The audacious Argentine air attack, on 10 th May 1982, would ensure the end of the Royal Navy as a force in global affairs. And coinciding with the British defeat, the Conservative Government of Margaret Thatcher would, likewise, be defeated in the British general elections two months later in July. Treaty of Utrecht, saw Spain awarded ownership of the Islands, but then in 1764, in defiance of the Treaty, the French established a settlement at Port Louis, thus making a claim to the Islands. Then the Spanish established their own colony at

86. Archives Hub: Falklands War Cuttings
Administrative/Biographical history. The origins of the Falklands war, AprilJune1982 lie in a 150 year dispute over the sovereignty of East and West
http://www.archiveshub.ac.uk/news/03010903.html
Archives Hub
Falklands War Cuttings
Reference GB 0162 MSS. Atlan. s. 15
Title : Falklands War Cuttings
Dates of creation
Held at : Bodleian Library of Commonwealth and African Studies at Rhodes House
Extent : c43 items
Level of Description : fonds
Language of Material : spa
Administrative/Biographical History
The origins of the Falklands War, April-June 1982 lie in a 150 year dispute over the sovereignty of East and West Falkland, South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands in the southern Atlantic. The Falklands were the most important of these and the only permanently settled islands - they were known by the Argentineans as the Malvinas. Originally discovered by the Spanish, the British had subsequently obtained and settled them, holding them despite Argentinean counter-claims. The immediate cause of the war, though, was the unauthorized presence of Argentineans, (contracted by scrap dealer C.S. Davidoff) on South Georgia. An attempt by the British in March 1982 to expel the party by force led to an excalation of hostilities, resulting in the landing of Argentinean troops on the Falkland Islands on 2nd April, the surrender of the Royal Marines on the same day, and the annexation of South Georgia on the 3rd. On 7th April the British sent a task force to recapture the islands. A series of diplomatic mediations proved unsuccessful, and on 25th April Royal Marines recaptured South Georgia. British forces landed on San Carlos, at East Falkland, on 21st May, after a period of bombardment, and the loss of ships and aircraft on both sides. The British took Goose Green and Darwin on 28th May, Teal Inlet on 30th and Mount Kent soon afterwards. Mount Tumbledown fell on 12th June and Argentinean forces, led by Gral Menendez, surrendered at Port Stanley on 14th June.

87. Falklands War British Argentine Islands Argentina Royal Marines
HMS Conqueror returning from the war. Military history of Argentina Militaryhistory of the United Kingdom. Conflict, Falklands war
http://www.economicexpert.com/a/Falklands:War.html
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HMS Conqueror returning from the war. Military history of Argentina
Military history of the United Kingdom
Conflict Falklands War Date March 19 June 14 Place Falkland Islands and South Sandwich Islands Result United Kingdom retain possesion of the islands. Combatants Argentina United Kingdom Strength Geographical advantage Technological advantage Casualties About 700
The Falklands War or the Malvinas War Spanish Guerra de las Malvinas ), was an armed conflict between Argentina and the United Kingdom over the Falkland Islands (Spanish: Islas Malvinas ) between March and June . Though surprised by an Argentine attack on the South Atlantic islands, Britain mustered a naval task force to engage the Argentine navy and airforce, landed Royal Marines and after heavy combat eventually prevailed and the islands remained in British hands, in accordance with the wishes of the inhabitants. The sovereignty issues remain contested. In Argentina, the conclusion of the war led to the downfall of the military junta
1 Background
The Falklands consist of two main and many smaller islands in the South Atlantic Ocean east of Argentina. Ownership of the group had long been disputed. The Falklands were probably first discovered in the

88. The Royal Signals In The Falklands War
The Royal Signals in the Falklands war. on the cover of The Vital Link TheOfficial Corps history. SOME OF THE CAPTURED EQUIPMENT FROM THE war
http://www.army.mod.uk/royalsignalsmuseum/displays/post_ww2_conflicts/falklands_
Serving Soldier Careers News Units ... What's New Falklands war
Museum

Opening Times

Royal Signals History

Museum History
... Falklands war
Royal Signals in the Falklands War
The war came as a surprise when, on 2nd/3rd April 1982, Argentine forces attacked and occupied British colonies on the Falkland Island and South Georgia. Altogether 600 officers and men of the Royal Signals subsequently took part in the conflict which became known as OPERATION CORPORATE. The Task Force set out from Portsmouth on 5th April 1982. The first Royal Signals involvement was with the SAS detachments that were inserted to obtain information about the enemy. One brave effort by Sergeant JG Mather, who was awarded the Military Medal, became the subject of one of the Corps’ paintings, CONTACT WAIT OUT, by Peter Archer. 30 Signal Regiment put up a Communications Centre at the staging post on Ascension Island and Royal Signals detachments provided Rear Link communications from most fighting units. By 1st June 1982, 5 Infantry Brigade HQ and Signal Squadron had landed at St Carlos using mainly CLANSMAN radios. 30 Signal Regiment, with detachments from 1 and 19 Infantry Brigade Signal Squadrons, formed a unit to support the Land Forces HQ. 50 Signallers ran 15 nets on HMS FEARLESS which was the Main Force HQ. 30 Signal Regiment also provided satellite communications back to UK and secure telegraph for two Brigades. The satellite detachments are pictured on the cover of The Vital Link - The Official Corps History. SOME OF THE CAPTURED EQUIPMENT FROM THE WAR

89. Alexander Fax Booksellers - Specialist New And Used Booksellers - Australian Mil
An oral history of the Falklands war. Includes interviews with key British,American and Argentinian negotiators; Falkand Islanders; and sailors,
http://www.booksandcollectibles.com.au/esearch.php3?restrict2=29&type=SUB&search

90. Line Of Departure Review Of The Falklands War: 1982
The Falklands war 1982 has a history of its own. Derived from Shrapnel Games successful ATF Armored Task Force game, it marks a major change in the
http://www.wargamer.com/Hosted/lineofdeparture/falklandswar.asp

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MRS. THATCHER'S WAR A REVIEW OF SHRAPNEL GAMES' THE FALKLANDS WAR: 1982 by Jim Werbaneth The Falklands War was one that one side bet would never happen. The generals who ran Argentina were losing whatever support they had been able to beat out of their country, a situation aggravated by a stumbling economy. Giving up power was hardly an option the junta , so it played the nationalism card, specifically las Islas Malvinas , known to most of the rest of the world as the Falklands. Two nations had a claim to the islands. Argentina's was by right of discovery, which was by Spain but inherited by Argentina. Great Britain's was by right of occupation; the Falklands were a British possession, long inhabited by British population, albeit a small one. Under international law, both claims were valid. In practice, that of the United Kingdom was the stronger one, under the time-honored principle that possession is nine-tenths of the law. Britain had possession, secured by a small force of Royal Marines. President General Leopoldo Galtieri and his associates were emboldened by some of Britain's own policies. One was to reduce Falkland Islanders' level of citizenship to a level closer to that of Hong Kong's inhabitants. The other was a cost-savings move, the withdrawal of the Royal Navy's only vessel in South Atlantic waters, the ice survey ship

91. Task Force : The Illustrated History Of The Falklands War: ‹IˆÉš ‰®‘“
Task Force The Illustrated history of the Falklands war by Reynolds,David/ Thompson, Julian (FRW) Sutton Pub Ltd ?\ Ltd.
http://bookweb.kinokuniya.co.jp/htmy/075092845X.html
US:New York Times US:PublishersWeekly US:Brandon-Hill US:Library Journal ... ŸŠúŠÔŒÀ’è“Á‰¿ƒR[ƒi[ ˜a‘ —m‘ “dŽq‘Ð “X“ªÝŒÉ Kinokuniya DataBase Search Result matches

92. 33. The Falklands War
The mixture of history, passion, miscalculation, national pride, Caught inthe middle, the United States found the Falklands war to be a nowin
http://eightiesclub.tripod.com/id319.htm
var TlxPgNm='id319'; setAdGroup('67.18.104.18'); var cm_role = "live" var cm_host = "tripod.lycos.com" var cm_taxid = "/memberembedded" Search: Lycos Tripod Dukes of Hazzard Share This Page Report Abuse Edit your Site ... Next The Eighties Club Material Things Index Table of Contents 33. The Falklands War In 1982 two nations went to war over the ownership of an archipelago 300 miles from the southernmost tip of South America and the United States was caught in the middle. The Falklands two main islands and 200 islets with a total land area the size of Connecticut had been claimed for Britain in 1594 by Sir Richard Hawkins, and named in 1690 for the First Lord of the Admiralty. But the Spanish insisted that the 1492 Papal Line of Demarcation gave the islands to them, and when Argentina declared its independence from Spain in 1816 it claimed sovereignty over the islands, which Argentines called Las Malvinas. In 1833 the British colonized the uninhabited islands the Royal Falklands Island Company transplanted Cheviot and Southdown sheep as well as Irish, Scottish and Welsh descendants of the 1,800 Falklanders who lived on the islands in 1982. For a century and a half Argentina protested. When the three-man military junta led by Leopoldo Galtieri launched a surprise attack on the islands, overpowering a small garrison of Royal Marines, the British public clamored for action, with a clear majority favoring the recapture of the Falklands by force. The U.S. government disappointed the British by initially attempting to remain neutral. Though aware of Argentina's poor human rights record, there were some in the Reagan administration, most prominently UN Ambassador Jeanne Kirkpatrick, who viewed the anticommunist Argentine government as a potential ally in the struggle to resist the spread of Marxism in Latin America. London did not fail to note that Kirkpatrick was guest of honor at a dinner held by Argentine's ambassador to Washington on the very day that 2,500 Argentine troops stormed Port Stanley on East Falkland Island. While the European Common Market's ten nations banned Argentine imports in a show of support for Britain, the tepid U.S. response threatened the stability of the NATO alliance.

93. The Royal Air Force - History Section
The history Section of the Royal Air Force Web Site. 20 years after flyingHarriers in the Falklands war, the UK Chief of the Air Staff,
http://www.raf.mod.uk/history/casarg.html
News and Events Information Centre
UK Chief of the Air Staff flies Argentinean aircraft 20 years on
20 years after flying Harriers in the Falklands War, the UK Chief of the Air Staff, Air Chief Marshal Sir Peter Squire has just concluded a visit to Argentina. Sir Peter met with his Argentinean counterpart, General Walter Barbero. 20 years ago, they were on opposite sides of the conflict. Sir Peter was a Harrier pilot commanding the RAF's No 1 Squadron, whilst General Barbero was flying Boeing 707 reconnaissance planes that "spied" on the British fleet. The meeting of the two chiefs is the first time they have met although they both flew on opposite sides in the Falklands War. The former opponents are now very much colleagues and part of the aim of the visit to Argentina was to build further, the relationship between the two countries. Talking about the possibility that he may have been in a position to have shot General Barbero down, Sir Peter Squire said: "It would not have been personal. We had great respect for our opposite numbers in the Argentinean Air Force. We thought they flew with great courage and skill".

94. Synergeez
The Falklands war 1982 Penguin Classic Military history S. The Falklands warBritain Versus the Past in the South Atlantic
http://www.synergeez.com/sgz/b60.php
Synergeez, LLC
Friends Made Moments Shared Memories for Life An Oral History of Vmsb 343 United States Marine Corps in World War II
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95. Telegraph | Opinion | Why An Old Colonial War Now Looks Very 21st-century
This week, he has brought out his twovolume history of the Falklands war. The Falklands war has been represented as the final act of Britain as a
http://money.telegraph.co.uk/opinion/main.jhtml?xml=/opinion/2005/07/02/do0201.x

96. From Port Said To Port Stanley
The significance of the Falklands war was enormous, both for Britain s Discuss, with reference to postwar British history, and particularly the period
http://www.univ-pau.fr/~parsons/worldpower.html
Licence d'anglais - From Port Said to Port Stanley. Reality and perceptions of Britain's world role: decline and renewal 1956-1982. Michael Parsons. Second semester, 2003
Last updated Monday, May 26, 2003
Suez After Suez From Devaluation to the Winter of Discontent Notes dissertation 2003 ... Notes dissertation 2002 Students are invited to study Britain's responses to its changing role in the world from the Suez crisis of 1956, when Britain suffered a resounding humiliation and learnt that it could not "go it alone" without the United States, to the Falklands war of 1982, when Britain learnt that with a little bit of help from its friends in the United States and the United Nations it could still, quite successfully, use its far from negligible military force in defence of its own interests. The Suez crisis of 1956 has been seen as the defining moment when Britain was forced to face up to its diminished role in world affairs. That did not stop Britain from continuing to play a substantial role overseas in territories for which it still had some responsibility, from Malaya to Cyprus, and from Kuwait to Borneo, to mention just a few of the many troublespots in which Britain became involved, not entirely unsuccessfully. However as the 1960s progressed, Britain's financial situation deteriorated to such an extent that it was forced to review its defence commitments and ultimately put an end to its military presence "East of Suez". By the early 1980s the suggestion that Britain might once again become involved in an "out of area" conflict (i.e. one which was not located within the priority defence area covered by the NATO treaty) appeared vaguely incongruous, at least to the general public.

97. YORKSHIRE'S ONLINE MAGAZINE - HMS SHEFFIELD And THE FALKLANDS WAR
One history of the Falklands war says that as there were no bogeys on any radarscreens at the time, the officers were making a satellite phone call back
http://ayup.co.uk/shuttup/shuttup2-0.html
Rant! If you have anything to say about anything you read, owt we should know about, or something we've said, join in the debate at Rant! - our online community forum. Click here THE FALKLANDS WAR REMEMBERED The Sinking of the Shiny Sheff On the twentieth anniversary of the Falklands War, David Gross looks back at the fate of HMS Sheffield, the first naval ship lost by the Royal Navy since World War Two.
Just before Christmas 1981 an Argentine businessman by the name of Constantino Sergio Davidoff visited an abandoned whaling station on the remote island of South Georgia, under contract to remove any scrap metal he could find. He landed without the proper permits from the British government, who (like the Falkland Islands, another British colony in the region) administered the place. The British authorities cried foul. Davidoff sent a crew of workmen to the island anyway, and within weeks the incident had escalated into an international incident. The British government dispatched a warship, HMS Endurance, and the Argentineans, determined to press their claim for The Malvinas (Their name for the Falklands), ordered their own warship, the Bahia Buen Succeso to the area.

98. The Falklands War: 1982 | PC | Games Encyclopedia | GamePressure
The Falklands war 1982 PC Games Encyclopedia of computer and video games- www Now ProSIM and Shrapnel Games gives you the chance to relive history.
http://www.gamepressure.com/game_info.asp?ID=5098

99. Scottish Parliament Online Shop In Association With Politico S
war in the Falklands 1982 £6.99 The Franks Report on the conduct of the war Official history of the Falklands Campaign Volume 2
http://shop.scottish.parliament.uk/category.jsp?ID=228

100. Strategic Insights -- The Falklands War -- Causes And Lessons
This paper will seek to analyze the Falklands/Malvinas war from a broad context In looking at the war through the lens of history, it very much appears
http://www.ccc.nps.navy.mil/si/2004/nov/mcclureNOV04.asp
The Falklands War: Causes and Lessons
Strategic Insights , Volume III, Issue 11 (November 2004)
by 2nd Lt. Jason McClure Strategic Insights is a monthly electronic journal produced by the Center for Contemporary Conflict at the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, California. The views expressed here are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily represent the views of NPS, the Department of Defense, or the U.S. Government. For a PDF version of this article, click here.
Introduction
] However, the British responded by sending a large naval task force to reclaim the islands. The British began military operations on May 1, and on June 13 the Argentines surrendered. The Argentine armed forces suffered a dismal defeat, with only the air force performing with any degree of competency. The military was fully discredited, and had no choice after the war but to announce plans for a return to democracy the following year. However, such analysis is risky, for it ignores key problems in the international system representing a rift between the developed and developing worlds. This paper will seek to analyze the Falklands/Malvinas War from a broad context of international relations by looking at the specific intentions and motivations for invasion. By uncovering

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