A Damn Close-Run Thing: A Brief History of the Falklands Conflict

Related article: Falkland Islands Defence Force

Share |

Preview from Google Books

 

"It was a damn close-run thing"

— Major-General Moore, commander of the British land forces in the South Atlantic

In 1982, the average Briton didn't know the Falkland Islands existed, let alone their status as a disputed British territory just off the coast of Argentina. That changed when the Argentinians invaded the islands and overwhelmed the small defending force. Both nations claimed the islands were theirs, but now Argentina thought the British would give them up without a fight.

They were wrong.

Britain sent a task force into the South Atlantic to re-take the islands, and the short, intense war that followed was--in the words of Major-General Sir John Jeremy Moore--"a damn close-run thing."

This short history sums up the events leading up to the war and its major military actions including details of an Argentinian plan to sink a Royal Navy ship in Gibraltar harbour (foiled at the last minute by Spanish police) and an audacious British plan to land SAS soldiers in Argentina to destroy Exocet-carrying aircraft while they were still on the ground.

30% of all sales will go to The Forgotten Heroes, a charity dedicated to assisting wounded or injured Servicemen and women.

It is available from:

If you prefer, you can buy it direct using PayPal (£2.49). E-pub, Mobi and PDF formats will be e-mailed to you as soon as payment clears.