Falklands War From Argentina's Perspective | Animated History

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 17. 02. 2022
  • Support this channel by checking our NordVPN exclusive deal at nordvpn.com/historyvpn
    Sign up for Armchair History TV today! armchairhistory.tv/
    Promo code: ARMCHAIRHISTORY for 50% OFF
    Merchandise available at store.armchairhistory.tv/
    Check out the new Armchair History TV Mobile App too!
    apps.apple.com/us/app/armchai...
    play.google.com/store/apps/de...
    Discord: / discord
    Twitter: / armchairhist
    Sources:
    Büsser, Carlos A. C., “Reflexiones y experiencias sobre la actuación de la Infantería de Marina en la defensa de las Islas Malvinas en 1982,” Boletín del Centro Naval, December 2007
    “Confirman el juzgamiento por torturas en Malvinas,” Clarín News, 2007, www.clarin.com/ultimo-momento...
    “Historical Background.” The Question of the Malvinas Islands | Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores, Comercio Internacional y Culto, www.cancilleria.gob.ar/en/for....
    Programa Nuestro Ejército - Héroes De Malvinas 37 Años De La Gesta. Ejército Argentino, 2019. • Programa Nuestro Ejérc... .
    “Report of CONADEP (National Commission on the Disappearance of Persons) - 1984.” Proyecto Desaparecidos/Project Disappeared, 1984. www.desaparecidos.org/nuncamas....
    UN General Assembly Resolution 37/9, Question of the Falklands Islands (Malvinas), A/RES/37/9 (4 November 1982), undocs.org/en/A/RES/37/9
    Yofre, Juan B., 1982: Los documentos secretos de la guerra de Malvinas/Falklands y el derrumbe del proceso (English: The secret documents of the Malvinas / Falklands war and the collapse of the process) Penguin Random House, Grupo Editorial Argentina, 2011.
    Music:
    Armchair Historian Theme - Zach Heyde
    Underground Tango Nights - Medité
    Latin Passion - Medité
    Queen of the Night - Andrés Cantú
    Alleys of Buenos Aires - Tiki Tiki
    Accordions Galore - Tiki Tiki
    A March Across Ancient Land - John Abbot
    Aspire to Inspire - Howard Harper-Barnes

Komentáře • 8K

  • @TheArmchairHistorian
    @TheArmchairHistorian  Před 2 lety +479

    Support this channel by checking our NordVPN exclusive deal at nordvpn.com/historyvpn
    Sign up for Armchair History TV today! armchairhistory.tv/
    Promo code: ARMCHAIRHISTORY for 50% OFF
    Merchandise available at store.armchairhistory.tv/
    Check out the new Armchair History TV Mobile App too!
    apps.apple.com/us/app/armchair-history-tv/id1514643375
    play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=tv.uscreen.armchairhistorytv
    Discord: discord.gg/NqubRnRZ8W
    Twitter: twitter.com/ArmchairHist

  • @SpaceMonkeyBoi
    @SpaceMonkeyBoi Před 2 lety +6328

    When my Argentinian grandfather found out that the British took back the islands, he started having ww2 flashbacks. I think he was an electrician or something, since he had this helmet with 2 lightning bolts on it.

  • @ScienceChap
    @ScienceChap Před 2 lety +3188

    There is a legend that while planning this invasion, a respected retired Admiral was brought in to review the operation. He read it thoroughly, then looked up and said, "This is a marvellous plan, but it is missing a bit." The other officers asked, "what is missing?" He replied, "the plan to invade London, which is the only way you will win."

    • @ar2014
      @ar2014 Před 2 lety +137

      Never heard of that, but the truth is the Air Force chief was against it, this was all the navy's idea. At that time, the Navy, the air force and army made decisions on their own (something that by today's standards would be totally out of place, but it was typical in LATAM). They were unfit to rule a country, and to fight a war against a modern military. Now that's a thing of the past

    • @somefurryguy1811
      @somefurryguy1811 Před 2 lety +396

      @@ar2014 Actually, argentina's military situation was unique, because the military was more political than anything, so you basically had every branch(military, air force, navy, naval air force, and other sub-branches such as the marine infantry and etc) basically fucking hate eachother to the point of refusing to co-operate with eachother, up to the 1960s-ish most coup'd'etat attempts were made by rival military branches, one side attempted to gain power and the other defended the government, it was a fucking shitshow.

    • @anzaca1
      @anzaca1 Před 2 lety +31

      @@somefurryguy1811 Unique? China and North Korea's militaries are basically all political too. None of their generals etc are actual military people, nor do they have any experience.

    • @CalvinK300
      @CalvinK300 Před 2 lety +29

      @@anzaca1 China & North Korean generals are what? Clearly, you have no idea what you are talking about. 😂

    • @jackroutledge352
      @jackroutledge352 Před 2 lety +106

      @@ar2014 As I understand it, the Air Force wasn't even told about the invasion until shortly before it was carried out. They weren't part of the triumvirate, so weren't consulted. Ultimately, their failure to hold the islands was in large part due to their lack of air superiority so far from the Argentinian mainland, since they had insufficient refueling aircraft to do the job. Just a couple more refueling aircraft and half a dozen more Exocets would have completely changed the situation.

  • @pyromaniacaloctoling5957
    @pyromaniacaloctoling5957 Před 2 lety +1828

    Fun fact: when the BBC broadcasted the news of the British landing point, the Argentinian commanders thought it do outlandish to have a state media company broadcast plans of military operations that they completely ignored it and failed to adequately re-in force the beachhead.

    • @firasajoury7813
      @firasajoury7813 Před 2 lety +2

      Fun fact Britain almost lost to a shitty third rate army that was afraid of Chile

    • @seagcomputacion
      @seagcomputacion Před 2 lety +2

      tu le hubieras creído a una radio de tu enemigo?....serias muy idiota!

    • @stevemc01
      @stevemc01 Před rokem +268

      "It's a trap!"
      *proceeds to fall into a trap they set up to counter the supposed trap*

    • @MTC008
      @MTC008 Před rokem +44

      why does argentina military wears ww2 era clothing lol

    • @seagcomputacion
      @seagcomputacion Před rokem +60

      @@MTC008 ropa militar de la época del 1960, cada nación utiliza lo que le gusta mas, lo que es mas cómodo para sus hombre y diferenciarse en lo posible del enemigo, pero no fue ropa de la degunda guerra mundial.

  • @averagejoe8358
    @averagejoe8358 Před rokem +1601

    Fun fact: Argentina was shockingly close to invading Chile. On 22 December 1978, their troops actually entered Chile, but after a few hours of mountainous terrain, the attack was called off due to extreme weather, and the Argentines retreated back into their borders with Chile not even knowing it happened until later on.

    • @francoramirez4894
      @francoramirez4894 Před rokem +175

      @Gary Adame To prevent Argentina from invading Chile, Chile provided with logistical and military assistance to Great Britain.
      Finished the war, there were strained relations between those countries, for what Chile calls "preventive measure to deflect invasion" or what Argentina calls "deliberate treason". A friendship memorandum was made years later, normalizing relations between both governments. However, animosity between both countries, overall Argentina, are still prevalent.

    • @francoramirez4894
      @francoramirez4894 Před rokem +75

      @Gary Adame Also, given the opportunity, Chile considered the use of chemical weapons on Argentina. In fact, Chile was planning to poison the water's supply of the Argentine capital, Buenos Aires. That plan was part of Project Andrea. Luckily, the war didn't happened, because if it did, Chile would be compared with Iraq.

    • @pronessguy4567
      @pronessguy4567 Před rokem

      @Gary Adame chile was going to do everything possible to see the downfall of Argentina. Argentina broke the beagle treaty which recognised chile as the rightful owner and then decided to move its troops over to Patagonia. Chile was isolated at the moment by most of the world diplomatically and was outnumbered. Also, Luciano Benjamin Menéndez during the beagle conflict and the falklands war, he was quoted by saying an infamous remark which was “they let us attack the Chileans, we'll chase them to Easter Island, we'll drink the New Year's Eve toast in the Palacio de La Moneda, we’ll rape their women and then we'll piss the champagne into the Pacific”.
      Overall I’m glad Argentine forces headed towards downfall once the junta was dismantled. Argentina just runs pissy little 70’s equipment which is both poorly maintained and outdated, hence as to why they’re no longer a threat to chilean sovereignty

    • @huachimingo616
      @huachimingo616 Před rokem +27

      @@francoramirez4894 comentes un grabé error argentinos no entraron al territorio Chileno es incorrecto lo que ocurrió fue la amenaza de argentina en la invasión lo cual no sucedió el objetivo de Chile no era envenenar las agua era tomar los suministros y bases lo más rápido es el típico plan relámpago

    • @seban8225
      @seban8225 Před rokem +70

      And then call the chileans traitors😂

  • @EzequielMinsburg
    @EzequielMinsburg Před 2 lety +4862

    Many of the Argentinian soldiers were teenagers between 16 and 20 forced into the war by a lottery-like system that functioned based on your National Identity Number (DNI in spanish). Many of the veterans, including one of my high-school teachers say that surrendering and being captured by the British was the best thing that they could do, because many of their officers would treat them with violence, while the British would take care of them as POWs. Even more, many of the on-ground soldiers had to hunt sheep in an effort to get any food, since the Military Junta barely sent supplies to the islands

    • @juanoberhofer502
      @juanoberhofer502 Před 2 lety +167

      That's a lie, the minimum age for military service was always 18.

    • @carlosjavierpalacios6194
      @carlosjavierpalacios6194 Před 2 lety +73

      @@juanoberhofer502 exactly, and they only drafted two classes, I think the 64's or so

    • @EzequielMinsburg
      @EzequielMinsburg Před 2 lety +635

      @@juanoberhofer502 legal enlisting age yes, but the military junta didn't really care for "legal age" did they? You can look it up for yourself, Néstor Planiscig is one name I can give you that you can find information by just using Google. Instead of saying "that's a lie" try and think why someone is saying something and if it differs to what you know or believe, investigate properly before throwing accusations

    • @thejoshandcharles1
      @thejoshandcharles1 Před 2 lety +188

      @@juanoberhofer502 Because who's ever heard of young men who want to fight for there country so bad, that they would fake there age in a country desperate for soldiers?

    • @juanoberhofer502
      @juanoberhofer502 Před 2 lety +41

      @@EzequielMinsburg Nestor Planiscig did not fight, he was aboard the aircraft carrier 25 De Mayo, which never saw combat.

  • @stevemc01
    @stevemc01 Před 2 lety +1519

    RANDOM FACT
    The ARA General Belgrano was actually a US-built and commissioned Brooklyn-class cruiser given to the Argentine Navy.
    Her name was the USS Phoenix (CL-46), and she was a Pearl Harbor survivor.

    • @residentelect
      @residentelect Před 2 lety +254

      It's unreal to think it was still in service during an age of fast jets, nuclear subs and ICBMs...

    • @Nicolas-zw5ex
      @Nicolas-zw5ex Před 2 lety +170

      @@residentelect well peruan navy had a cruiser which lasted til 2017

    • @stevemc01
      @stevemc01 Před 2 lety +35

      @@Nicolas-zw5ex Impressive... which cruiser was it?

    • @Nicolas-zw5ex
      @Nicolas-zw5ex Před 2 lety +131

      @@stevemc01 The BAP Almirante Grau, it was made in 1941, sent to the Peruan navy in 1973, Decomissioned in 2017 and now it might be scrapped.

    • @genericname4739
      @genericname4739 Před 2 lety +79

      The Argentine navy actually operated a WWII era carrier during the war. It was known as the ARA Veinticinco de Mayo. It was ironically a British built Colossus class Carrier with 2 previous designations. HMS Venerable, and HNLMS Karel Doorman. The Argentine navy acquired it from the Dutch and was active during the Falklands War. The Royal Navy actually hunted for the Carrier and for a time it evaded the Royal Navy, but it was withdrawn back to Argentina.

  • @rutger726
    @rutger726 Před rokem +191

    "Despite this utter betrayal by the producers of Wallace & Gromit..." - Is a truly amazing line for a history documentary. Excellent work whoever came up with that.

    • @acme181169
      @acme181169 Před 9 měsíci

      W+G produced by Aardman, nothing to do with BBC

    • @Max1988_
      @Max1988_ Před 2 měsíci

      Spain established its sovereignty starting in the 15th century over the Argentine territory and the Malvinas Islands. At the Nootka convention in 1790, England recognized as Spanish territory up to 18,520 kilometers (10 nautical leagues) from the coasts that its colonies occupied, with the Falkland Islands, South Georgia and the Sandwich Islands only a little more than 500 kilometers away.
      In 1816 Argentina achieved its independence by claiming what was previously Spanish territory.
      In 1820 Argentina established its colony in Puerto Soledad and MAINTAINED POSSESSION OF THE ISLANDS FOR 13 YEARS.
      Rejecting illegal US fishing led to the attack by the war corvette Lexington on Puerto Soledad.
      On January 2, 1833, the British war frigate HMS Clio arrived, commanded by Captain John James Onslow, who took possession of the islands from the captain of the schooner Sarandí, José María Pinedo, because he was not in good condition. to resist.
      Let all good English people know that the Malvinas Islands are currently under the UN Special Committee on Decolonization. And the only thing that holds them back is British political and military power.
      nnn

    • @tomfox8551
      @tomfox8551 Před měsícem

      ⁠@@Max1988_that falls apart, when you realise Britain also claimed, the island. And it was under Britain, before Argentina existed. You claim the islands, because Spain claimed them. Even though they stopped there claim, a century ago. The only reason why Argentina, has even been entertained the idea, of owning the Falklands, is because of close proximity and, colonial ties. Argentinas are upset, because the war, should have been avoided. However, the British had a duty to protect their people, from foreign aggression. Whether that seems hypocritical, from a historical standpoint, it doesn’t matter. Argentinians, now attribute their pain and loss, to the British for besting them. And see the brits, as a mirror of colonial Spain. The problem is, Argentina has never tried to properly, claim the islands, until their dictator told them to. Most of the anger shot at the Brits, can mainly be attributed, to their ability to get on, even after the war. With Argentina still feeling the fallout, of decades of authoritarianism, political corruption, economic, and social instability, along with their general disdain, of aristocracy, and a flexing military. Britain doesn’t have any reason, to want the islands, other than the fact, they have residents on the islands. But because they own them, and because they do have citizens, on the islands. There’s no reason why, they shouldn’t have them. Argentina can’t argue migration, because the Brits can also argue it. That’s why Argentina, doesn’t have the right to the islands, even if Britain isn’t that bothered. And at the end of the day, the war is over now. The residents are British, and voted to remain so.

    • @LiliamElizabetnNeyraAguirre
      @LiliamElizabetnNeyraAguirre Před měsícem

      ​@@tomfox8551la razón por la que reino unido quiere mantener como suyas las islas no es por los colonos británicos si no porque es una posición estratégica para el comercio, el puerto de las malvinas es de los más rentables para el reino unido.

    • @tomfox8551
      @tomfox8551 Před měsícem

      ⁠​⁠@@LiliamElizabetnNeyraAguirreregardless why they, might want it. They have it. Why should Argentina, need the islands, any more than the UK. Other than, they feel like it. I can understand the want, to heal a scar. To ignite patriotism. However, just because they might, want it more than us. Doesn’t give them anymore, of a right to own them. Again, the claim is baseless. Whatever reason, the UK has for it, however small or not. It is a reason……..to have them! The need, and the purpose for them, now, has only been heightened, by modern strategical, and resources purposes. Argentinians preach, this idea of decolonisation, and peace. Yet, Argentina is a white majority country, with almost no natives, and no black people. Even though they are in, South America. You can criticise the UK, for its own past, and for our history. But don’t act high and mighty, when you yourselves are perpetrators, of ethnic cleansing. You’re ancestors, we’re imperialist racists yourselves. And again! If you’re position on the matter, are claims based solely on, proximity and colonialism. Then you have less, of a reasonable claim, then we do. And don’t try, to factor in immigration, from back in the 1800s, because we also had migrants. And we were the ones, who allowed fishermen on to the islands. It was you guys, who claimed the islands, after they were in our possession. In fact, we kicked you off, because you setup, a military garrison. After we allowed you, to use the islands for fishing. You claimed them, without our knowledge, or consent. Then we kicked you off. Plus you didn’t have, that many people there. Also you guys, keep bringing up, immigrants and Spain. That’s not a reason, to claim anything.

  • @calzabbath
    @calzabbath Před rokem +71

    You may not know an almost lost move on our (Argentine) side: before the conflict we used the flag without the sun (Sol de Mayo, Sun of May) on most civilian occasions. Displaying the flag with the sun was a military tradition as it is understood it means war.
    Well, since 1982 the flag has always been displayed with the Sol de Mayo thoroughly depicted. Greetings from Hudson, Argentina to my beloved British foes.

  • @BHuang92
    @BHuang92 Před 2 lety +2492

    I've heard some intersting perspectives from other South American countries like Chile and Brazil about the Falkland War. Basically, many of them were supportive of Argentina's claim to the island but going to war with the British was a stupid move (even Chile supported the British with a place to land their planes).

    • @Mrchivo33
      @Mrchivo33 Před 2 lety +232

      In Uruguay we supported Argentina's claim but remained neutral in the actual conflict, as we always do since our military is mostly for show. Still it is important to remember that we were also under a brutal dictatoriship so their decisions tended to lean towards preserving their own positions of power rather than helping our brothers.

    • @gooby8953
      @gooby8953 Před 2 lety +245

      Chile also allowed the British fleet to use one of their refueling ships

    • @belegthoron8603
      @belegthoron8603 Před 2 lety +420

      Chile had good reasons to support the U.K due to the almost war with Argentina in 1978.

    • @ScholarHaru
      @ScholarHaru Před 2 lety +88

      @@belegthoron8603 Chile is the L in South America.

    • @belegthoron8603
      @belegthoron8603 Před 2 lety +24

      @@ScholarHaru yep. What's with that? Haha

  • @AROBASPARK
    @AROBASPARK Před 2 lety +225

    The Falklands War: Also known as "That time a Junta couldn't had misread a situation on the ground even more!" _OR_ "How to destroy your dictatorship in 3 Easy Steps?"

    • @tavdy79
      @tavdy79 Před 2 lety +13

      I suspect Thatcher's "error" of reducing the British military forces on the island prior to the conflict was a trap: she lured the Junta into what looked like an easy way to boost its domestic popularity, positioning her for a quick and easy military victory which would boost her own. The Junta fell for it, and the outcome was better than I suspect Thatcher even hoped: not only did the UK win, the junta was destroyed in the subsequent domestic backlash in Argentina, and democracy was restored. This allowed Thatcher to promote herself as a nationalist and military victor on the one hand, and a champion of global democracy on the other, a heady combination that played a significant role in Thatcher winning the 1983 general election with an increased majority, rather than (as had been predicted prior to the conflict) being unceremoniously booted out.
      If I'm right, that means over nine hundred people died so she could win an election.

    • @KeluskTV
      @KeluskTV Před 2 lety +9

      @@tavdy79 It's certainly an interesting perspective, and entirely plausible.
      I would however contest you assertion that it was a 'quick and easy military victory'. Having read Admiral Woodward's book on his account of the conflict, he paints it as a very close run thing, what with the southern hemisphere's winter drawing very quickly in giving them a very limited window with which to retake the isles. He also stated that if he'd lost one of his two aircraft carriers (which was not entirely unlikely) it was basically game over as they'd be unable to maintain control of the air of the isles.

    • @Jason.cbr1000rr
      @Jason.cbr1000rr Před 2 lety +1

      Isnt this the most stupid war? Lol

    • @AROBASPARK
      @AROBASPARK Před 2 lety

      @@Jason.cbr1000rr Pretty much XD

    • @1611__
      @1611__ Před 2 lety +2

      @@tavdy79 Democracy kinda fucked us more but ok

  • @every1665
    @every1665 Před 2 lety +630

    I remember hearing an RAF fighter pilot praise the skills of the Argentine Air Force. He compared them with F1 drivers and pointed out they were fantasic race drivers seemingly undeterred by risks, and they flew the same way.

  • @yktom
    @yktom Před 9 měsíci +21

    13:38 "Chileans are traitors!" "Why did chile not back-up Argentina during the falkland war? 😭😭😭" Literally Argentina and Chile being on the verge of war at the time.

  • @Bullet-Tooth-Tony-
    @Bullet-Tooth-Tony- Před 2 lety +1080

    It's an interesting conflict, one of the last ones that was fought over a long distance and using naval forces.

    • @ernestov1777
      @ernestov1777 Před 2 lety +4

      I recently made a POV video about Falklands War with Wojak, it's interesting this channel is now talking about this conflict.

    • @terrorgaming459
      @terrorgaming459 Před 2 lety +4

      We won its done Falklands is ours

    • @barrybookmaker7433
      @barrybookmaker7433 Před 2 lety +2

      Interesting conflict ? Are you normal ?

    • @MrSuperpiff4
      @MrSuperpiff4 Před 2 lety +24

      I see what you mean and for the UK it’s one of the last, but the US has been fighting long distance conflicts with naval forces for the the last 30 years.

    • @ArenBerberian
      @ArenBerberian Před 2 lety

      And one of the last true genuine wars....

  • @Jean_Jacques148
    @Jean_Jacques148 Před 2 lety +691

    Nice to see your doing this. I barely see anyone else talk about the Falklands war.

    • @residentelect
      @residentelect Před 2 lety +22

      It's like both the Korean War and Soviet-Afghan conflict, somewhat lost in the consciousness of the greater Western audience whom are subjected to far more media covering WW2, the Vietnam conflict and the War on Terror etc.

    • @Livelaughandlaughmore
      @Livelaughandlaughmore Před 2 lety +7

      What everyone talks about it so many videos on CZcams about it. It’s popular

    • @Xavier-ty4jw
      @Xavier-ty4jw Před 2 lety +3

      By that you mean "westerners" because in LATAM is a hot issue

    • @dexterityisbetterthanstren8961
      @dexterityisbetterthanstren8961 Před 2 lety +4

      I think it’s probably because it’s mostly inconsequential to the majority of the population. Whereas wars like WW1 and 2 affected millions if not billions of people.

    • @nqh4393
      @nqh4393 Před 2 lety

      you*

  • @lightravenn
    @lightravenn Před rokem +133

    I think is a major mistake not to talk about the geopolitical situation of the cold war in south America, the aid of the USA to all the countries including Chile and Argentina military regimes.
    The strong hate among Chileans and Argentinians, and the big international scene where diplomatic pressure from UK could bend a private corporation to not comply with a contract to supply Argentina with the Exocet missile for their SE Aircrafts.
    Uruguay didn't vote with Argentina and remained neutral because some minor dispute over an island in the river plate that belongs to Uruguay but as today keeps a military garrison from Argentina.
    Peru did help Argentina because they always saw Chile as an enemy, they always wanted the regions chile won in war, the same war that took the Bolivian path to the Pacific ocean.
    No one expected the British to form a task force to retake those islands, plain and simple. But the islands still had an strategic value.

    • @hititmanify
      @hititmanify Před rokem +1

      what strategic use do they have? even geographical , like what use does britain have, if they hold falksland, gibraltar, etc.

    • @jamiewoods33
      @jamiewoods33 Před rokem +13

      ​@@hititmanifyfor 1 it was home to thousands of UK residents meaning that there are large geopolitical reasons for taking the island. Also it was an important ship refuelling station at the time

    • @kopite8971
      @kopite8971 Před rokem +1

      @@hititmanify military capabilities.

    • @maximilianohernandez8462
      @maximilianohernandez8462 Před rokem +12

      @@hititmanify Falklands = Antartica ....Gibratal= Mediterranean sea.

    • @hrk59
      @hrk59 Před rokem +1

      Jamás hubo odio a chile antes de la guerra de las malvinas, solo habia pequeñas discrepancias, sobre la definición de limites. El odio fue introducido por UK, sosteniendo el lema "divide y vencerás"

  • @kissmy_butt1302
    @kissmy_butt1302 Před 2 lety +155

    The Belgrano was formerly the USS Phoenix. It was sold to Argentina after WW2. It actually was in port during the Japanese raid on Pearl Harbor and took damage.

    • @thomasgoldthorpe1158
      @thomasgoldthorpe1158 Před 2 lety +9

      I just watched a Pear Harbor documentary the other day and remember the Phoenix being mentioned. Thanks for this interesting fact.

    • @davidrobertson5700
      @davidrobertson5700 Před rokem +10

      Rule Brittania
      Brittania rule the waves
      Love from
      Great Britain

    • @tonybrowneyed8277
      @tonybrowneyed8277 Před rokem

      actually it was moored at the far end of battleship row (lots of maps around for that), so most of the japanese pilots had expended their bombs by the time they got to her. a lucky survival.

    • @bulbs_
      @bulbs_ Před rokem +7

      Imagine surviving Pearl harbour and then getting sunk by your ex-ally

    • @Jimo1956
      @Jimo1956 Před rokem

      @@bulbs_ Not difficult to imagine if you use a former US ship to hunt down and try to sink ships of an "ex-ally", the "ex-ally" (especially if it's British) will turn the scales and hunt you. And if it needs be ... sink you. What does one expect if one attacks someone else. The attacked to say thank you?

  • @Mixcoatl
    @Mixcoatl Před 2 lety +925

    One of the ironies of the war is that the population on the Falklands was declining prior to the conflict, and within a few years would have been deemed unsustainable by the British government, who would then have been open to discussing a transfer of sovereignty. However, largely due to the conflict, the population has since increased to a sustainable level.

    • @andrewgenio
      @andrewgenio Před 2 lety +132

      Due to the strategic position of the archipielago, i seriously doubt any state would ever give them up. You can simply make a propaganda program to convince a few families to move in and you solved the problem.

    • @JG-ib7xk
      @JG-ib7xk Před 2 lety +154

      @@andrewgenio it doesnt take much to google. The government were literally looking in to giving the Falkands up from 1979 but a vote in the House of Commons to give the Islanders citizenship in the UK didn't go through by one vote

    • @sirsurnamethefirstofhisnam7986
      @sirsurnamethefirstofhisnam7986 Před 2 lety +53

      The irony that if Argentina had only waited a few more years British will to keep the islands would have gone completely and the extended drawn-down of British naval size would have been completed meaning the islands would have been taken by Argentina peacefully by now anyway

    • @andrewgenio
      @andrewgenio Před 2 lety +26

      @@JG-ib7xk it took me a while to find information about this, i ended up on the "British Nationality (Falkland Islands) Amendment Bill [H.L.]
      HL Deb 29 November 1982 vol 436 cc1076-106 Second Reading debate resumed."
      For what i could tell, it only talks about the creation of diferent states of citizenship, "The 1981 Act gets away from this confusion by creating one citizenship, British citizenship, for those who belong to the United Kingdom; a second, British Dependent Territories citizenship, for those who have connection with a dependent territory; and a third, British Overseas citizenship, for those citizens of the United Kingdom and Colonies who have no continuing connections with either the United Kingdom"
      But a found no mention of even considering giving up the islands
      Am i reading the wrong article?

    • @uingaeoc3905
      @uingaeoc3905 Před 2 lety +24

      @@andrewgenio You got it correct. The weird thing is that the ENTIRE total of ALL UK Overseas Territories combined populations is less than one year's net Immigration of EU citizens into the UK.

  • @residentelect
    @residentelect Před 2 lety +743

    There is only one victory worth celebrating when the guns fall silent; the fact you are still alive.
    To all those British and Argentinan lads whom lost their lives, God bless and Godspeed 🇬🇧 🇦🇷
    Never again.

    • @jackabe2690
      @jackabe2690 Před 2 lety +26

      No entendí nada no hablo inglish

    • @jackabe2690
      @jackabe2690 Před 2 lety +14

      @fine Bro
      Me no speak inglish xd
      Am argentinian

    • @jackabe2690
      @jackabe2690 Před 2 lety +7

      @fine sorry 4 my inglish

    • @residentelect
      @residentelect Před 2 lety +8

      @@jackabe2690
      Tu ingles es mejor que mi español! 👍

    • @jackabe2690
      @jackabe2690 Před 2 lety +5

      @@bigmoniesponge siiuuu he tell me my inglish Is fine
      In your face open inglish

  • @graham197103010
    @graham197103010 Před rokem +55

    My parents `British` said that when they visited Argentina in the 2000s the Argentinian people were really friendly and looked after them very well. Thank you and best wishes from the UK.💌

    • @alavalle69
      @alavalle69 Před rokem +3

      Because, although we will always claim and fight for our lands, we respect your veterans (they faught with honor, as ours also did), and we dont think the same things about your governments and uk ordinary people. We are a nation with great tradition to receive immigrants from all over the world open arms. So, anybody who is respectfull will be welcome.

    • @korosuke1788
      @korosuke1788 Před 9 měsíci

      Yeah, they like white people. In contrast they discriminate the very peeuvians that helped them during the war.

  • @tonygeddes9558
    @tonygeddes9558 Před 2 lety +362

    Great video, and it’s good to see things from the Argentinian side. I’m British but it was a bloody battle, and frankly I have huge respect for the forces on both sides. God Bless all those who lost their lives.

    • @Scraves
      @Scraves Před rokem +29

      Greetings from argentina 🇦🇷🇬🇧
      I would like to see The War of the Malvinas/Falklands on the british side

    • @pablosebastian5823
      @pablosebastian5823 Před rokem +19

      I'm argentine and would love to visit the islands and have a beer with people there, maybe spend a time there too although I know there's not much to do there.

    • @davidrobertson5700
      @davidrobertson5700 Před rokem +18

      I respect the British forces thank you chaps,
      I have no respect for the Argentine military whatsoever who were obviously drunk as a skunk to think they stood the slightest chance of victory over
      Great Britain
      Lots of love from
      Great Britain

    • @davidrobertson5700
      @davidrobertson5700 Před rokem +3

      @PeePee PooPoo the euro fighters will take everything you send out.
      Those planes may look crap but the carry an obscene amount of ordnance that will
      Sink ships
      Shoot down aircraft from so far away the euro fighters will not even be on radar
      Lay waste to ports and airfields that attempt to launch anything,
      Then we have the Astute class
      Good luck against one of them, seriously the Argentinians will need it
      Type 45 well that's self explanatory or shall I mention that Aster that never misses ?
      Then we have the FDF 2000 well armed individuals that will slot anything and anyone that every lands full stop
      Then we have the garrison that is well funded with manpads, anti tank weapons and marines ,
      Marines job is to keep St Peter busy by stacking fresh souls at the gates .
      Very best of luck seriously
      Oh I forgot to mention tomahawk and all the other lovely missile systems that GB owns .
      Plus, we destroyed the Argentinian economy twice , dont forget the money goes through London.
      As I said
      Best of luck

    • @davidrobertson5700
      @davidrobertson5700 Před rokem +6

      @@Scraves Yes, the winning side of GREAT BRITAIN

  • @ZeroGamerAssassin
    @ZeroGamerAssassin Před 2 lety +755

    I see the Falkland’s I click. Such a interesting conflict that doesn’t get covered as much as it should.

    • @mredmond8393
      @mredmond8393 Před 2 lety +18

      Probably because it was wholly avoidable. Had it not been for Margaret Thatcher reducing the Falklands garrison to a skeleton crew.

    • @darkmemes953
      @darkmemes953 Před 2 lety +17

      @@mredmond8393 To be fair, it was done to cut down expenses.

    • @ArenBerberian
      @ArenBerberian Před 2 lety +4

      40th anniversary this year as well.

    • @1993Crag
      @1993Crag Před 2 lety +25

      @@mredmond8393 Ah yes, blame thatcher and not the whole Argentina invading them thing

    • @danielburden7373
      @danielburden7373 Před 2 lety +8

      @@1993Crag would have been better if the Brits hadn't stole the islands in 1833 🤔🤔

  • @matty6244
    @matty6244 Před 2 lety +537

    The friend of a teacher I had in High School is a veteran from the war... It was awful, not only he was just a conscript (When you were 18 you could be selected in a lotery for 1 year of military service... he "won") from a zone that is hot and dry as Texas/Australia... with barely any supplies he was sent to an island closer to the end of the world than home.
    Also a fun trivia fact... the democratic elected presisent after the fall of the Junta (R. Alfonsin) caused an economic calamity that ended with hyperinflation... Argentina can't get a break

    • @connorh2215
      @connorh2215 Před 2 lety +27

      Damn I hope you guys can get some competent leadership soon

    • @naamadossantossilva4736
      @naamadossantossilva4736 Před 2 lety +46

      Argentina caught a break in the late 1800s ....but then came Péron.

    • @Average_Slav
      @Average_Slav Před 2 lety +13

      @@naamadossantossilva4736 untrue really, it was more of a break for the 3% of the society

    • @indiald3373
      @indiald3373 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Average_Slav respeto

    • @lillyie
      @lillyie Před 2 lety +48

      you know what they say:
      "Hey, argentina, how are you able to stay cool when there's a crisis?"
      "It's simple, i'm always in crisis!"

  • @Awakeningspirit20
    @Awakeningspirit20 Před rokem +6

    That intro was beautiful and masterfully put together

  • @fireiron369
    @fireiron369 Před rokem +18

    Argentina: *gets taken over by a dictatorship that murders and tortures thousands of its own civilians
    UN: “I sleep”
    U.K.: *starts extracting resources from its own territory
    UN: “ *Real Shi* “

  • @patrickazzarella6729
    @patrickazzarella6729 Před 2 lety +1823

    Shout out to the quality of these videos only getting better! Your team is doing an amazing job!

  • @MarshallChems
    @MarshallChems Před 2 lety +578

    I don’t know how to explain it but this video feels much better animated than any video before, like it was already really good but this one just feels even BETTER. Hope someone in the animation/drawing team sees this, you guys are doing a wonderful job. Can’t believe this is all accessible for free

  • @RitchieCollins
    @RitchieCollins Před rokem +65

    Your comments regarding the British pilfering From the islands interested me. My understanding is that the Falklands are barren rocky crags only suitable for raising farm animals. What did they actually steal ??

    • @emilianosilva8266
      @emilianosilva8266 Před rokem +15

      Right for Antartida and the submarine plataform, plus a rich fish zone.

    • @TheSm1thers
      @TheSm1thers Před rokem +37

      Nothing

    • @davidwilliams3659
      @davidwilliams3659 Před rokem +24

      There’s also a huge oil reserve underneath it, however i dont think anyone is currently drilling it.

    • @planetkc
      @planetkc Před rokem +1

      White propaganda.

    • @samneil496
      @samneil496 Před rokem +17

      @@planetkc what

  • @panzer1944
    @panzer1944 Před 2 lety +29

    Excellent, well produced programme and so interesting to learn about the war through Argentines eyes and how they went about it. So good to watch these programs, they are all well done and very educational.

  • @afailureofaanimator6744
    @afailureofaanimator6744 Před 2 lety +319

    Gromit came out unscathed. As he was vigilant. Though the same couldn’t be said for innocent little Wallace. The war changed him. He no longer smiles outside the presence of cheese…

  • @malakaragua702
    @malakaragua702 Před 2 lety +821

    Defeat is sometimes the best thing that can happen in a war. Argentina missed out on some penguin inhabited rocks settled by some English speaking sheep farmers but instead it got its democracy back.

    • @zen4men
      @zen4men Před 2 lety +78

      British blood created that situation - and I am glad for it.
      I am British, hold no enmity for Argentina ( am aware of Argentina's good points, including assistance to Britain in WW2 ), and think the Argentinian people deserve better leaders.

    • @steampunkastronaut7081
      @steampunkastronaut7081 Před 2 lety +3

      That's an interesting take, but I think the war started precisely to distract increasing discontent with the current government. Democracy would have come anyways

    • @zen4men
      @zen4men Před 2 lety +6

      @@steampunkastronaut7081 But not with the punch caused by defeat in a truly stupid enterprise

    • @doujinflip
      @doujinflip Před 2 lety +25

      @@zen4men Right, Putin's Russia risks similar if their assault on Ukraine continues to cost considerably more than expected, and the PRC faces similar should they commit to take Táiwān by force as promised. In both countries there are not insignificant pro-democracy sentiments not only in the streets but also into their own ministries, hence why they have to spend so much of their budget on "internal security" and political "discipline".

    • @zen4men
      @zen4men Před 2 lety +3

      @@doujinflip True enough

  • @oliverhaywood9224
    @oliverhaywood9224 Před 2 lety +1

    Great video 👍 and animation and info on point

  • @galmoray2529
    @galmoray2529 Před rokem +2

    Thanks good info keep it up :)

  • @juan21646
    @juan21646 Před 2 lety +218

    I am 26 years old now, and my mother was only 12 years old when the war broke out here in Argentina.
    At her school, a campaign was raised in order to supply our soldiers with chocolates and other goods that they wouldn't get otherwise.
    I remember my mom telling me how she even wrote letters to these unknown soldiers, some of which where just 6 or 7 years older than her.
    I've recently heard that those supplies never reached the soldiers, because they were stolen by some corrupt argentinian officials on their way to the islands.
    I don't know if my mom knows this, but what I know is that I she will never hear it from me.

    • @martindione386
      @martindione386 Před 2 lety +3

      there's a misconception over the donations, the islands were under naval blockade and supply ships weren't able to reach them, only the Hercules transport planes were able to bring supplies and evacuate wounded soldiers, but it was utterly insufficient, they couldn't carry as much supplies as a cargo ship by a long margin. so they had to prioritize what supplies to load, and chocolates and letters were very low priority.

    • @HarleyHerbert
      @HarleyHerbert Před 2 lety +8

      @@martindione386 I doubt the Argentine government and military at the time would send such luxuries anyway. They would have seen it as wasting precious limited resources and luxuries on lowly worthless conscripts and kept it all for themselves instead. They didn't care about the conscripts in the slightest

    • @martindione386
      @martindione386 Před 2 lety +3

      @@HarleyHerbert that myth is another misconception, only a very small minority of the officers were brutal with the conscripts, today is common to see both soldiers and their officers making reunions every year, sharing asados and wine

    • @1993Crag
      @1993Crag Před 2 lety +3

      Basically as soon as the British fleet were in region and UNSC-502 was up, no supplies effectively reached the islands, minimal made it out.

    • @srdante6948
      @srdante6948 Před 2 lety +1

      Jaja...pobre de tu madre, muestro gobierno era corrupto en esos tiempos.

  • @javkiller
    @javkiller Před 2 lety +880

    Being as the last military Junta was essentially placed, supported and partially trained as a US effort against the chance of a south american red uprising, the fact it ended in a fluke of a conflict against a NATO partner essentially makes this a preview of what would later happen with the Taliban.

    • @Dourkan
      @Dourkan Před 2 lety +45

      Lol I never thought of it that way. Interesting, isn't it.

    • @adrianshephard378
      @adrianshephard378 Před 2 lety +5

      I don't get it

    • @storrho
      @storrho Před 2 lety +37

      @@adrianshephard378 Don't use your voting rights.

    • @adrianshephard378
      @adrianshephard378 Před 2 lety +4

      @@storrho What does that have to do with the taliban?

    • @storrho
      @storrho Před 2 lety

      @@adrianshephard378 Taliban was previously funded and supplied by the USA, just like the junta.

  • @jondobbs69
    @jondobbs69 Před rokem +2

    Whoa! I've been meaning to check out your channel for a while now, just always seeming to miss the opportunity. Anyway, I recently found your USSR and WWII videos, And I just wanted to say that I really admire your storytelling skills, script writing and artwork. I'm not sure if you do it all yourself or you have help, but it's very well made. You have a new subscriber.

  • @mn5rojo
    @mn5rojo Před 2 lety +4

    I really apreciate your effort for looking wich was the perspective of the argentinians in that moment.
    As one of them, I thank you.

  • @CatSans
    @CatSans Před 2 lety +578

    As an argentine... thank you.
    Many people fail to see just how badly argentina was in this period.
    I have a teacher that assisted the war and told me how terrifying the night was. See, at that point, the british had night vision technology, while we didn't. They also had the communication advantage. Politics dominated the military.
    I love that little note at the end, that 2021 diplomatic talks only started because the president had low approval ratings, hinting that absolutely nothing has changed.
    You're goddamn right.

    • @loyalist5736
      @loyalist5736 Před 2 lety +25

      Not true Argentina had night vision equipment a generation above the British. FACT

    • @CatSans
      @CatSans Před 2 lety +7

      @@loyalist5736 How weird... i'll ask him when i'm back to school.

    • @die6oo
      @die6oo Před 2 lety +51

      @@loyalist5736 thats true, but we had just a few, while all english troops had a lightly outdated one

    • @abcdm1442
      @abcdm1442 Před 2 lety +24

      @@loyalist5736 eran malos en realidad se veía mejor sin ellos y la mayoría estaban muy mal en las tropas

    • @yeng1855
      @yeng1855 Před rokem +3

      @@loyalist5736 It's all about how it can be a standardize equipment.

  • @seraphik
    @seraphik Před 2 lety +83

    this war spawned the best newspaper headline ever: THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK, superimposed over a British carrier sailing full-speed to war.

    • @HellbirdIV
      @HellbirdIV Před 2 lety +7

      The movie was only 2 years old at the time and Return of the Jedi was still in production, so the reference was quite timely!

    • @DMG0011
      @DMG0011 Před 2 lety +1

      @@HellbirdIV actually the best headline was "stick it up your junta"

    • @cock9
      @cock9 Před 2 lety

      @@DMG0011 wtf is junta?

  • @joaquindubini3681
    @joaquindubini3681 Před rokem +14

    My dad was doing his obligatory military service in Mendoza when war broke out, and if the war had lasted longer, he might have been sent there. Thankfully, that never happened, and its just an anecdote

  • @Drummer2020
    @Drummer2020 Před 2 lety +7

    I went as a medic aboard the Canberra and wrote a best selling book about it called 'The Band That Went To War'. I also came back from the war with an unusual souvenir, a signed 'thank you card' from the enemy!

    • @TalentSpotter83
      @TalentSpotter83 Před 2 lety

      What did you make of how accurate this video is Brian?

    • @Drummer2020
      @Drummer2020 Před 2 lety +2

      @@TalentSpotter83 I think it is very well made but inaccurate.

    • @TalentSpotter83
      @TalentSpotter83 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Drummer2020 totally agree Brian. I shall have to get your book. Grateful for your service.

  • @MrBandholm
    @MrBandholm Před 2 lety +96

    There is a small mistake, the Argentinian soldiers that invadede the Falklands, were not just conscripts, or poor second hand units, but the elite and very motivated Argentinian Marines.
    They were replaced by the conscripts after the taking of the islands.
    This actually matters, because the professional soldiers were much better (in part due to better officers) at upholding order, and making sure the civilians were not at risk, something conscripts units have a much harder time doing.

    • @lightravenn
      @lightravenn Před rokem +4

      He didn't mention it, but some conscripts can't move like that to make the garrison surrender, it is obvious they were not conscripts and they knew what were the dangers, Intel failed and they lost the upper hand, that's why they only managed to surround the UK forces without killing anyone, probably the officer of the marines died without knowing the fact that they were already exposed.
      Because of the Chilean situation, they used only the minimum vets possible to manage the situation on the islands.
      The Navy were outmatched for a face to face with a British task force, and the pilots either from the air force or the navy did a great job considering the little time they had to retrain their skills.

    • @Turbo_vortx
      @Turbo_vortx Před 4 měsíci

      I believe that

  • @sartainja
    @sartainja Před 2 lety

    Superb presentation.

  • @youdontseeanoldmanhavinatw4904
    @youdontseeanoldmanhavinatw4904 Před 4 měsíci +2

    Its neat seeing my close friend's thumbnails on such big videos

  • @facundomouly9446
    @facundomouly9446 Před 2 lety +244

    Just the amount of details that the graphics team put into this is insane! Even the typical 70's milico moustaches on the officers, very well done you guys!

    • @ricardokowalski1579
      @ricardokowalski1579 Před 2 lety +10

      21:25 The shelves on the right with the bottles says "armchair historian" 😁

    • @felixc.3444
      @felixc.3444 Před 2 lety +6

      @@ricardokowalski1579 good eye

    • @lche6971
      @lche6971 Před 2 lety +8

      Milico mustaches lmao...well put brother ...that was on point che

    • @facundomouly9446
      @facundomouly9446 Před 2 lety +7

      @@lche6971 un clásico el bigote milico papá, definió la década. Como la cancha de paddle y el parripollo en los '90s

    • @Housey1985
      @Housey1985 Před 2 lety +1

      That’s all true which makes it a shame it’s so full of factual errors and bias…

  • @danielnavarro537
    @danielnavarro537 Před 2 lety +266

    Godspeed to those who perished in the cold waters and the land of the Falkland Islands. Que en paz descansen los muertos. 🇦🇷🇫🇰🇬🇧

  • @charliechan8063
    @charliechan8063 Před 2 lety +2

    You are a great teacher thank you for your service of teaching

  • @lifted1785
    @lifted1785 Před 2 lety +4

    Interesting video, I find some similarities within the follies of the Argentinian military to that of some other incidents in our time. Also find it interesting that the dispute has been brought to the table by Argentina as recently as just last year, troubling indeed. In these times we cant count anything out on the world stage anymore... many are emboldened as of late

  • @HistoryMonarch1999
    @HistoryMonarch1999 Před 2 lety +374

    I actually never heard of this war until I saw the film “blessed by fire”, a pretty good film about the Falkland’s war.
    It’s a pretty interesting war

    • @Liynt
      @Liynt Před 2 lety +14

      Not a war it was a conflict as no nations made a formal declaration of war but yes it is very interesting

    • @itachi-wg3gu
      @itachi-wg3gu Před 2 lety +32

      @@Liynt it started as a conflict then turned to a war. Both side declared a zone of war in the Atlantic off of Argentina.

    • @UntrueHDBLP002
      @UntrueHDBLP002 Před 2 lety +13

      it's good cinematography but its undertones are bad for understanding the war. many of his comrades in arms testify Edgardo Esteban (writer and director) was a lazy coward. czcams.com/video/jlbXZsQfw_E/video.html here are some testimonies (they're in Spanish).

    • @HankD13
      @HankD13 Před 2 lety +9

      An Ungentlemanly Act [1992] is a pretty decent film covering the initial landings. Still a great deal of uncertainty about actual events, as Argentine, British and Islanders views are often in conflict. The best coverage (from the British side) is the British Army Documentaries channel four part "The Falklands War" with great detail and interviews with the people involved.

    • @ArgentinoyLibertarioJL
      @ArgentinoyLibertarioJL Před 2 lety +7

      Edgardo Esteban quien escribio esa pelicula fue un cobarde que huyo el dia que le toco combatir. ademas es muy evidente el enfoque que tiene esa pelicula solo retratar como niños a los soldados y a los oficiales como el enemigo de la nacion siendo que la mayoria de ellos murieron de forma heroica

  • @A16AdamWalker
    @A16AdamWalker Před 2 lety +142

    US Gov during the conflict: "Could you not just give them these islands, it;s not as if they're near you or strategic?"
    UK Gov: "Like Hawaii is to you? The answers No"
    US Gov: "Fine... want some guns?"

    • @Pol66590
      @Pol66590 Před 2 lety +39

      Oversimplified.

    • @maxdavis7722
      @maxdavis7722 Před 2 lety +70

      @Jackaroo we didn’t wage war, war was waged against us. The idea that because Hawaii is a state do it matters is stupid. The US wouldn’t allow Puerto Rico to be invaded.

    • @timonsolus
      @timonsolus Před 2 lety +42

      A better analogy would be: the Falklands is to the UK what Guam is to the United States.
      Geographically, Guam should belong to the Federated States of Micronesia. But there is no way in hell that the USA would agree to acknowledge Micronesian sovereignty over Guam. It’s too important as a US military base.

    • @free_boiling4502
      @free_boiling4502 Před 2 lety +43

      @Jackaroo If the British shouldn't die to defend a sparsely populated island with no strategic purpose, the Argentines shouldn't die to take said island even more.

    • @free_boiling4502
      @free_boiling4502 Před 2 lety +12

      @Jackaroo The US also has a bunch of non-state Islands thousands of miles from home

  • @never2late_mtb349
    @never2late_mtb349 Před rokem +5

    One of my colleagues was on the prison ship that returned the Argentinian soldiers after the end of hostilities. They were taking the POWs up onto the open deck in small groups so that they could stretch their legs, have a cigarette etc. Before returning them below. One man asked him as they were led up "Is this it?". My friend was puzzled "is it what?". The guy replied "Last cigarette and over the side". Some of them genuinely thought we'd shoot them and dump them in the South Atlantic.
    I'm sure many are familiar with the story of the Argentine pilot who was shot down, Found himself in British military medical care and was surprised to discover he was treated in accordance to his injuries and not his nationality. Which put him higher up the queue than many of the British troops in the facility. it makes me wonder what the treatment of British troops would have been if the situation had been reversed. The state of Moody Brooks barracks gives us a clue. It was shot to bits and had evidence of hand grenades being set off in the barrack rooms. The Royal Marine contingent was supposed to be asleep in those barracks when the Argentines invaded. That they weren't is probably why none of them were killed.
    Also, Rex Hunt called for a cease fire because they were holed up in a wooden building and the Royal Marines had no intention of surrendering. He didn't want those young men to die pointlessly, as he saw it. It would have been nice if that had been shown in the video.

    • @littleshep5502
      @littleshep5502 Před rokem +3

      It wasn't just hand grenades, but also white phosphorus. Argentina denies this was them, and instead blames harriers. Because 30mm cannon leaves the same size hole as small arms. Obviously.

    • @GS-tl9uz
      @GS-tl9uz Před 11 měsíci

      Los comandos anfibios reducieron y tomaron posición de la isla sin realizar una solo baja, respetando la ley internacional. Incluso Argentina no fue el que dio el primer disparó, ya que aquí se tenia la idea de negociar, pero eso quedo claro que no era posible cuando se hundió el ARA General Belgrano, que marcó el inicio real de la guerra. Incluso la fuerza aérea nonhuzo uso de la bombas de napalm sobre las fuerzas británicas por razones humanitarias, cuando tranquilamente se lo podría haber usado ya que en ese momento no estába prohibido el uso del mismo.
      En el combates en la isla, la infantería de marina argentina no habría fuego contra varios helicopteros británicos por que se sabía que ahí en llevaban heridos, tampoco los pilotos se animaron a lanzar bombas en lus buques transatlánticos que estaban llenos de tropas británicas.
      La verdad es que para ganar una guerra aveces se necesita tener un poco más de maldad. El vietcong cometió un montón de atrocidades para la ganar la guerra, atrocidades que hasta el día de hoy siguen ocultas, en Argentina no somos capaces de hacer eso.

    • @urmum3773
      @urmum3773 Před 8 měsíci +2

      @@GS-tl9uz "in Argentina we are not capable of doing that." Lmao

  • @JanuszKrysztofiak
    @JanuszKrysztofiak Před rokem +17

    This obsession regarding remote islands that have never really been a part of Argentina, nor have ever had a sedentary Argentine population, amazes me. The only thing that comes to my mind, it is yet another way to deflect people's attention from the inability to solve problems at home.

    • @die1mayer
      @die1mayer Před rokem +3

      Those islands are near their coast. Like Germany having to cope with Helgoland being british.

    • @littleshep5502
      @littleshep5502 Před rokem +10

      @@die1mayer aside from unlike helgoland, the Falklands are roughly 400 miles off the coast

    • @die1mayer
      @die1mayer Před rokem

      @@littleshep5502 The Falkland Islands have only one strategic value for Britain, as a bridgehead for staging an invasion of Argentina.
      Legally everything west of the line of demarcation set in the Treaty of Tordesillas is spanish, and Argentina is a de-jure successor of the Viceroyalty of the Río de la Plata which held sovereignty over the Falklands. Those british colonists prove nothing, Argentina is well within its rights to deport them.

    • @littleshep5502
      @littleshep5502 Před rokem +7

      @@die1mayer the treaty of tordesillas wasn't recognised by anyone other than Spain or Portugal, hence why other countries held territory in south America. As for Argentina, they gained independence in 1816, whereas Spain had not only not held the Falklands, having left in 1811, but also moved the government responsible for the viceroyalty to Uruguay. Argentina then proceeded to say it wasn't theirs in 1825. Thus Argentina claimed them in 1829, were warned by Britain they were trying to claim British land, before Britain returned in 1833.

    • @garbancitolentejas486
      @garbancitolentejas486 Před rokem +2

      Never? Who belonged those remotes islands in 1800´s?

  • @lhugueny
    @lhugueny Před 2 lety +1165

    Great video! I find the Falklands War to be one of the most fascinating topics, I just read a great book I'd recommend by one of the Harrier pilots called 'Hostile Skies'. If done correctly it could be the perfect topic for a Christopher Nolan film 🧐

    • @raymurphy9749
      @raymurphy9749 Před 2 lety +27

      Another great book is 100 days by Admiral Sandy Woodward the Admiral in command of the British Fleet, a good read and an in depth look into his mind during the conflict

    • @lhugueny
      @lhugueny Před 2 lety +13

      @@raymurphy9749 Thank you for the suggestion, I'll read that one next 🙏😎

    • @raymurphy9749
      @raymurphy9749 Před 2 lety +9

      @@lhugueny definitely worth a read, interesting the tactics used and you get to read about the bigger picture of the conflict as a whole 👍🏼

    • @CavingIn2022
      @CavingIn2022 Před 2 lety +11

      Cool seeing you here dude!

    • @themarvelousemafia4457
      @themarvelousemafia4457 Před 2 lety +18

      @@lhugueny Ah I see you're a history geek, good.

  • @fortis3686
    @fortis3686 Před 2 lety +60

    When starting a war to gain popular support completely backfires

    • @fireiron369
      @fireiron369 Před 2 lety +16

      Russo-Japanese War 2: Electric Boogaloo

    • @ignacio1171
      @ignacio1171 Před 2 lety +5

      Damn kinda like the second Iraq war, crazy

    • @nicolaszan1845
      @nicolaszan1845 Před 2 lety +2

      Desperate times call for desperate measures. When the war started everyone in the Junta realized it was an all-or-nothing gamble; in truth, given the state of the British at the time (facing harsh economic woes and sorta seen as the US' minion after to the Suez crisis in 1956) the Argentine Junta didn't believe that a war would break out. Rather, the invasion was meant to be used as a bargaining chip for diplomatic negotiations.

    • @thekaiseroftheeast3895
      @thekaiseroftheeast3895 Před 2 lety +5

      Backfired for one side, successful for the other. The British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher was also extremely unpopular (and for good reason). Gallup polls in the fall of 1981 showed her to have the lowest rating ever recorded by Gallup, about 27%. Thatcher likely used the Falklands War to improve her own standing among the British people as well as serve as a distraction for the economic problems she was causing.

    • @CalvinK300
      @CalvinK300 Před 2 lety

      @@thekaiseroftheeast3895 yes, Falklands War basically was godsend for the Iron Lady.

  • @Knutwolf
    @Knutwolf Před 2 lety +9

    Stellar work. Waiting for part 2 when this is seen from the British POV

  • @brickistic8188
    @brickistic8188 Před 2 měsíci +3

    As someone who's lived there for more than 4 years with my family, you've done a good job at explaining the Argie's perspective. However, we will be keeping the islands.

  • @trauko1388
    @trauko1388 Před 2 lety +468

    You missed a HUGE detail, Argentina REFUSED to abide by the 1978 arbitration award with Chile and threatened to INVADE but had to back down when Chile prepared for war. They vowed to try again and went in an uncontrolled military shopping spree, until deteriorating local conditions made invading the Falklands look like a good idea, sicne the UK looked like an easier target than Chile.
    THAT is the reason why there was trouble with Chile

    • @joonker9607
      @joonker9607 Před 2 lety +21

      No lol, Argentina backed down due to arbitration by the Vatican

    • @trauko1388
      @trauko1388 Před 2 lety +63

      @@joonker9607 LOL!!!
      1. Argentina proposed arbitration early in 1978 confident Chile would refused due to the problems they had with the Vatican.
      2. Chile accepted Vatican mediation.
      3. Argentina WITHDREW its offer.
      4. Argentina readied its army and sent its fleet south.
      5. Chile readied its army and sent its fleet south.
      6. ...Argentina decided to accept its OWN mediation offer and claimed divine intervention!
      7. The Argentinian Military Junta was replaced by another one due the major embarrassment.🤣🤣🤣

    • @joonker9607
      @joonker9607 Před 2 lety +16

      @@trauko1388 ok so you're just ignoring the Pope's intervention, is this the chilean revisionism you're fed?

    • @trauko1388
      @trauko1388 Před 2 lety +14

      @@joonker9607 LOL!!! Yeah the "VATICAN FLEET" intervened, right??? 🤣🤣🤣
      Remind me, was the Pope in the Argentinian Junta?
      It is always hilarious to see the argentinians believe and regurgitate the lies their "brave" soldiers told them... right up til the day the ships with argentinian prisoners docked in buenos aires...
      Yeah, the POPE stopped you, right? Nothing to do with the Chilean Navy and Army waiting for your "brave" soldiers and sailors... 🤣🤣🤣

    • @Pabloto-dq3sx
      @Pabloto-dq3sx Před 2 lety +9

      @@trauko1388 I really don’t know pal. I could swear it was because of a pope’s mediation, at least that’s what it’s written everywhere I go to see about the resolution of the conflict.
      I recently watched a claux.7 video of him visiting the beagle channel and looking around the disarmed artillery and bunkers. It really seemed like a dry stop with the plan.

  • @raymurphy9749
    @raymurphy9749 Před 2 lety +614

    My uncle was a sailor on HMS Endurance when the war broke out, the only Royal Navy ship for thousands of miles, as an Antarctic survey ship she had very few weapons, she had to evade the Argentine navy for weeks whilst they hunted the Endurance, alone and defenceless hiding from radar alongside icebergs, she would have been a massive propaganda coup for the Argentines had they sunk her,, he listened in as the Santa Fe an Argentine submarine was attacked by Endurance's helo and was there with the SAS on board before and after retaking South Georgia

    • @leonardoflorentin
      @leonardoflorentin Před 2 lety +8

      Funny, the major argentine propaganda footag6 came from the own british defense cammera system, you could even see those videos on CZcams now, as "crazy real low flight malvinas/falkland war."

    • @harlequin2614
      @harlequin2614 Před 2 lety +7

      @@leonardoflorentin was it sunk? No. That was the Argentine propaganda claiming the sunk ships they had not

    • @leonardoflorentin
      @leonardoflorentin Před 2 lety +2

      @@harlequin2614 you can clearly see it burning, amazingly enough britain did not hide those sunken ships, most probably because those were too obvious to hide.

    • @Noremac023
      @Noremac023 Před 2 lety +23

      @@leonardoflorentin en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/HMS_Endurance_(1967)
      You can clearly see it in these photos taken after the war. It wasn’t sunk because that would require competency the Argentines lacked.

    • @leonardoflorentin
      @leonardoflorentin Před 2 lety +6

      @@Noremac023 the only attack hided by the britis, was the attack to the invencible, all the others were just on the open and couldn't be hide. Britain golden era died long before 1982, as a matter of fact britain was never known for being a formidable war machine but rather for being pirates.

  • @TheAegon
    @TheAegon Před rokem

    15:30 love the reference to "Empire strikes back" !

  • @daehr9399
    @daehr9399 Před 7 měsíci

    I just have to say the guy running by the screen stealing something always makes me laugh. He always looks so happy hahahaha

  • @Goldenblitzer
    @Goldenblitzer Před 2 lety +145

    In regards to Piaggis surrender, given his intelligence and that he was uncertain as of whether we had artillary, the decision to save the town and his men is admirable, of not commendable

    • @matiyah7788
      @matiyah7788 Před 2 lety +3

      @N Fels What are you talking? No soldier was unmotivated, they fought until they ran out of ammunition. Those best units that you are talking about, they thought that it would only take 2 hours to take goose green and then they would drink tea, but it ended only when the best units started using MILAN missiles, because those Argentine soldiers were so unmotivated, as you say , that to get them out of their positions they had to use the MILAN missiles,Sure!!

    • @matiyah7788
      @matiyah7788 Před 2 lety +1

      @N FelsWhat??? who soldiers and officers disagree with me? Is no my opinion,is reality!

    • @matiyah7788
      @matiyah7788 Před 2 lety +2

      @N Fels what??haha can you comment here a link to a video where they say that or an interview or something?

    • @roberteugene7295
      @roberteugene7295 Před 2 lety +4

      @@matiyah7788
      My apologies, but why don't you try researching it yourself? Just a thought...

    • @littleshep5502
      @littleshep5502 Před 2 lety

      At least he surrendered honourably, unlike those who murdered several of the 2 para under the white flag

  • @azzpocalypse134
    @azzpocalypse134 Před 2 lety +133

    Man you guys should totally turn some of your thumbnails into posters cause they're really well done this one is definitely one of the best ones you've made so far

  • @garanteicierto706
    @garanteicierto706 Před 2 lety +19

    It would be awesome to have a dedicated discord server of the war with both nations represented, as an Argentinian it would be interesting to know what a regular British citizen knows about the war and the point of view. Moreover there are a lot of stories about people that are still looking for soldiers from the other side because they end up being friends

    • @aegontargaryen9322
      @aegontargaryen9322 Před rokem

      It was very hyped up that a foreign power had invaded British soil Gurante . The whole nation was behind the task force as it sailed . Looking back now most people understand the truth of the matter was a lot more complicated than was made out at the time . Your correct of course , a lot of old adversaries are now good friends . Governments play politics and a lot of ordinary men must die for it .

    • @TheSm1thers
      @TheSm1thers Před rokem +9

      Most don't know much at all about the conflict but those who do typically are proud of those who stood up to a military dictatorship invading British lands and often see Argentines as crazy militaristic zealots due to the Argentine government still trying to take them even despite the referendum, not helped by the Top Gear special.

    • @InvagPrune
      @InvagPrune Před rokem +4

      I can give you my view: we don't really know much as it has not been taught in schools or anything, most of what i know is from my parents or from the internet including videos like this one. The circumstances are much easier to form an opinion on; i can sympathise with the Argentinians who want the islands back although not to the point of violence, and I feel bad about the junta and glad that it ended. However I'm not glad that it ended because of British victory, violence on our side was unnecessary, and a large part (i think) of the reason we reinvaded was because of Thatcher and the tories of the 80s. They have a generally unpopular legacy, although people are very divided over that, and its likely that the conflict would not have happened had it been started at a different time - i was told that it was an opportunity for a rally-around-the-flag close to British elections. However, its hard to see any other way for Argentina; the British refuse to negotiate (i am of the opinion that we should negotiate with the intent of handing back the islands but for guarantees and equivalent compensations) and the desire to have the islands back is clearly hugely popular in Argentina (see top gear).
      However, as a fan of the avro vulcan, it was pretty cool to have the rare opportunity for vulcans to actually do something. If the operation had ended after the vulcan bombing, i wouldn't be mad.

    • @InvagPrune
      @InvagPrune Před rokem +1

      @@TheSm1thersis essentially correct when generalising the opinion of the British people, although I would say most understand the Argentinian zealousness even if they don't agree with it, and also don't think the Argentinians are particularly militaristic, they understand it was the junta that wanted violence.

    • @TheSm1thers
      @TheSm1thers Před rokem +1

      @Gavin Crump Yeah I think most people understand the government are the problem. People also understand from the news that Argentina is suffering financially. Argentina is also known for football, badly for cheating to eliminate England but mostly positively for Messi.

  • @jeebusk
    @jeebusk Před rokem

    4:00 lol love the streetfighter analogy

  • @fotis5859
    @fotis5859 Před 2 lety +338

    I'm an Argentenian-American and I love this video. I feel as if the war isn't talked about much, and when it is talked about, the legacy is often left in the dark. It was this war that raised a dictator's approval rating, and it was this war that led to the Junta being overthrown. I visited the country last year in November and I saw firsthand how the low-approval government in the middle of an economic crisis is trying to get the country back to a patriotic Falklands state of mind: in Ushuaia, Rosario, and Buenos Aires, it's not uncommon to find flags, memorials, billboards, and even bills with the islands - but even isolated cities in the middle of nowhere have this. I love my country, yet I don't want people to think that all Argentines supported the war or people to think that the war doesn't live on. Argentina is a great country, yet it has its own flaws.

    • @craydussy
      @craydussy Před 2 lety +37

      What country doesn't have it's flaws? I know mine does. Love and peace from 🇺🇸

    • @thomasweir2834
      @thomasweir2834 Před 2 lety +30

      It's a very common ploy by politicians to distract from their own failings and inadequacies. They do it in the U.k. They do it in India. They do it in France. America. China. They're doing right now in Russia. All over the world the moment domestic policy hits the ropes, the moment economic problems grow: every politician resorts to nationalism and directing attention to the ‘other’. And it will continue forever. The youth and educated don't rely fall for it. But in every country there's a large group, often a majority, that allow themselves to be seduced by flags, rhetoric and nationalism. It's easier for Argentianians to complain about at war that happened 35 years ago then believe that they're powerless over their political and economic situation. But I've always thought the moment a domestic political group starts with the flag waving and directs attention to a historic ‘enemy’ or ‘other’ then it means they're probably on their way out as a political power.

    • @AbhijayAgarwal
      @AbhijayAgarwal Před 2 lety +11

      @@thomasweir2834 As an Indian, we have 2 enemy nations right on the border (Pakistan and China), so it's very easy for politicians to go "we will take back PoK (Pakistan occupied Kashmir) and Aksai Chin", just before elections. As India has extremely high levels of patriotism and to some extent, nationalism, millions of people support the party that makes such claims. For example, in 2019, the Balakot strikes, conducted by the IAF over Pakistan based terrorist groups, and ordered by the PM despite bad weather (he said that he approved it because the clouds would make the planes harder to detect), was used consistently for the 2019 elections. In 2020, Chinese soldiers killed 20 Indian soldiers in the Galwan valley (in response, Russian media suggests that 45 Chinese soldiers were killed). In response, our government banned 100 something Chinese apps over the span of a few months, and said nothing about China building villages in the Indian state of Arunachal Pradesh.
      However, they haven't gone to war yet, as they most likely know that if we lose, they'll be out of power.

    • @LuukvdHoogen
      @LuukvdHoogen Před 2 lety +14

      That is something that I was wondering about; how do Argentinians view the war nowadays.. To be honest, if it wasn't done for political gain by a diminishing junta,.. the claim still doesn't seem completely crazy or unethical to me. And sending the most modern military machines around the world, sinking a boat full of conscripts in the process, never looked like Britains finest hour to me.

    • @PixxelandNasal
      @PixxelandNasal Před 2 lety +13

      @@LuukvdHoogen if you’re curious about how we view it, I can summarize it in one word: unnecessary. I can’t watch, read or listen to anything about this topic without shedding a tear. So many lives lost in vain on both sides. There’s still people that think we could’ve “won” and others that celebrate the ships sunk by the Air Force, etc. People that were in the military service back then absolutely despise the army and always talk about how they ended up hating their superiors more than the “enemy”. That was well pointed out in the video. I would also say that I’ve never come across an Argentinian stating that the war was a correct move for the country, though sadly many (in their hatred for certain political movements, mainly Peronism-) actually romanticize the military dictatorship and wish it was back in place.

  • @napoleonibonaparte7198
    @napoleonibonaparte7198 Před 2 lety +150

    Lesson: Never steal Britain’s rock collection.

    • @ayomrwhiteigotdrip6235
      @ayomrwhiteigotdrip6235 Před 2 lety +23

      jesus they're minerals, not rocks 🙄😤

    • @joshagarza
      @joshagarza Před 2 lety +14

      Unless you’re the United States

    • @Brans-zy8dx
      @Brans-zy8dx Před 2 lety +14

      @@joshagarza United States failed to invade Canada in 1812 so you tried but failed unluckyyyy

    • @claudiotepedino5753
      @claudiotepedino5753 Před 2 lety +2

      @@ayomrwhiteigotdrip6235 breacking bad fan uh?

    • @chrisbruce5711
      @chrisbruce5711 Před 2 lety +2

      I mean the u.s burned Canada capital when they invaded

  • @Serpentoffire
    @Serpentoffire Před rokem

    El Historiador de sillon!! Loved it!

  • @iankinver1170
    @iankinver1170 Před rokem +28

    bearing in mind that the falkland islanids were settled by british people under british jurisdiction before agentina came into existence, it has always puzzled me how argentina feels justified in laying claim to anything. i think the referendum showing 99% support for remaining under british sovereignty caries some weight too.

    • @ramiro56899
      @ramiro56899 Před rokem +1

      Could it be because the islands are less than 200 kilometers from the Argentine mainland? Or, during its early years, Argentina sent mayors and inhabitants to the islands.

    • @WorthlessWinner
      @WorthlessWinner Před rokem +22

      @@ramiro56899 - Cool. Paris is less than 200 miles from london. Guess Paris belongs to London by this "logic"

    • @BC-ln2kq
      @BC-ln2kq Před rokem +3

      @@WorthlessWinner Alr, then what about the Convention of Nootca? When you guys agreed to ceede all of the south american island territories to Spain in exchange of Trade Benefits in the South Atlantic?
      You guys signed the damn treaty, And you are actually violating it.

    • @brendaaramayo7541
      @brendaaramayo7541 Před rokem +2

      A entonces el referéndum que hicieron la gente del Dombas también tiene peso según esa lógica, entonces porque tanto problema por eso

    • @shawnv123
      @shawnv123 Před rokem

      @@WorthlessWinner a city belongs to another city?

  • @silenthunteruk
    @silenthunteruk Před 2 lety +52

    The British have only just cleared the Argentine land mines from the beaches that had become penguin sanctuaries as a result. The birds were too light to set them off.

    • @mattlevens6382
      @mattlevens6382 Před 2 lety

      😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @leeboy26
      @leeboy26 Před 2 lety +12

      That explains why I've never seen a tubby penguin in the falklands.

    • @Digitaaliklosetti
      @Digitaaliklosetti Před 2 lety

      To this day perfidious Albion does all in it's power to harm and hinder innocent penguins

    • @davidbrown2571
      @davidbrown2571 Před 2 lety +2

      Did we get Argentina to pay for the removal ?
      I doubt it as we end up paying for everything.

    • @williammorley2401
      @williammorley2401 Před 2 lety

      Silent Hunter, some of the birds from the UK would set them off, great big fat lasses they are!.

  • @DisgruntledHippo
    @DisgruntledHippo Před 2 lety +79

    After reading and learning about "The Dirty War" I'm unfortunately glad that this war happened. Severely undermind the military junta of Argentina and gave the people the final drive to demand democratization.

    • @audunms4780
      @audunms4780 Před 2 lety +4

      it could prob be done through diplomacy, a tone of people needed not to die.

    • @theanglo-lithuanian1768
      @theanglo-lithuanian1768 Před 2 lety +17

      @@audunms4780 They might of but since they decided to invade it instead it and were defeated, thereby cementing it as a source of British pride. Any British prime minister that gives up the Falklands now would be seen as a unpatriotic coward that spit in the face to everyone that fought in the war.

    • @Laucron
      @Laucron Před 2 lety

      Inb4 the british patting their own back again

    • @lubu2960
      @lubu2960 Před 2 lety +14

      More Argentinians dead due to the junta than from the British army.

    • @afailureofaanimator6744
      @afailureofaanimator6744 Před 2 lety

      You need a bad thing to happen for people to look for the good.

  • @croskerk
    @croskerk Před 4 měsíci +1

    That torpedo launch at 16:15 hurt me a bit
    Though makes sense cause you can't really do a long visual cut with torp going into the water and hitting the sub.

  • @microfonoabiertou2688
    @microfonoabiertou2688 Před 2 lety +1

    Exelente video, saludos desde Argentina

  • @brokenbridge6316
    @brokenbridge6316 Před 2 lety +255

    The Falklands will probably be disputed forever. Great video. It's always nice to see a different perspective on a war.

    • @LogieT2K
      @LogieT2K Před 2 lety +167

      Which is dumb. Its pretty clear that the islanders want to remain under the british. Seeing as its been almost unanimous everytime they’ve voted on it. I wish the Argentines would focus on their own domestic issues. They actually need to offer something of value for the islanders to want to join them. But i guess whining at the UN is easier

    • @eliasziad7864
      @eliasziad7864 Před 2 lety +1

      Why doesnt Argentina invade again?

    • @jabezcooke8012
      @jabezcooke8012 Před 2 lety +142

      @@eliasziad7864 Because they’d probably get embarrassingly blown up again obviously.

    • @henriquem.9763
      @henriquem.9763 Před 2 lety +32

      @@LogieT2K and crimeans want to remain under the russian..

    • @toveychurchill6468
      @toveychurchill6468 Před 2 lety +26

      @@eliasziad7864 It’s because the Argentine economy and military are in ruins

  • @r.a.llorente2694
    @r.a.llorente2694 Před 2 lety +47

    Hello, I am from Perú and yes my country supported Argentina in the war but many thinks that it wasn't a good idea because we were with our own internal problems to support with a war that wouldn't gave us something in return

    • @Laguihole
      @Laguihole Před 2 lety +13

      Maybe wasnt a good idea for you, but as an argentine im grateful for your support!

    • @r.a.llorente2694
      @r.a.llorente2694 Před 2 lety +3

      @@Laguihole I am sharing an opinion that not only me but many share but is just that an opinion, we can't change what happened

    • @cseijifja
      @cseijifja Před 2 lety +3

      @@Laguihole its only natural to help an ally , despite what this countryman of mine say , not many think it was bad in anyway , we never look to europeans meddling in america too kindly.

    • @brrrrrtenjoyer
      @brrrrrtenjoyer Před 2 lety +11

      @@cseijifja I'd agree with the meddling part but it was kind of more like Argentina meddling in British territory at the time. Not British but just saying.

    • @stefanodadamo6809
      @stefanodadamo6809 Před 2 lety +5

      Only a distorted and misdirected interpretation of anticolonial rhetoric could have led any Latin American country to side with Argentina. Seriously.

  • @mccanalla
    @mccanalla Před rokem +9

    Four years before this war, Argentina threatened Chile with an invasion over the "Beagle" dispute.

  • @adamperdue3178
    @adamperdue3178 Před 2 lety +97

    The production quality on these videos is getting so good that it's amazing that you're putting in so much detail both in your narrative and also into the visuals.

  • @mendozaguillermo8786
    @mendozaguillermo8786 Před 2 lety +168

    As an Argentinian i really apreciate this kind of content, such a great job you did here!!

    • @LilMigga10
      @LilMigga10 Před 2 lety +16

      Ñ

    • @mendozaguillermo8786
      @mendozaguillermo8786 Před 2 lety

      @@LilMigga10 Xd

    • @meltedelevator
      @meltedelevator Před 2 lety +14

      As someone from Britain I think that since the falklands are not only way closer to Argentina, but are also a very underpopulated area of the UK. And our money shouldn't be wasted on a tiny group of islands in south america I think Argentina should have it.

    • @miliba
      @miliba Před 2 lety +1

      @@meltedelevator
      nah sell it to Norway

    • @loop7280
      @loop7280 Před 2 lety +10

      @@meltedelevator they had a vote
      and i believe 3 people living in the Falklands actually wated to be part of Argentina vs the thousand British that had lived there for generations.

  • @juanleirado2204
    @juanleirado2204 Před 2 lety

    I am a history teacher and essentially it is how the conflict is taught in Argentina, very good.

  • @matt36866
    @matt36866 Před 2 lety +32

    Speaking as a Yorkshireman, Maggie's response to the Argentine invasion of the Falkland Islands was one of, if not the best thing she ever did during her Premiership

    • @Gaelic-Spirit
      @Gaelic-Spirit Před 2 lety +1

      Real

    • @DaBIONICLEFan
      @DaBIONICLEFan Před 2 lety +2

      It was to save her own political skin

    • @gianb3952
      @gianb3952 Před 2 lety

      Speaking as an BuenosAiresman, Maggie's a war criminal and can't wait to visit her tomb to piss in it. Just my 2 cents though

    • @Valencetheshireman927
      @Valencetheshireman927 Před 2 lety

      Hell yes it was

    • @petersmithm9
      @petersmithm9 Před 2 lety

      Closely followed by her original decision to remove and scrap Endurance from it's role in the South Atlantic a few months before the invasion.

  • @mathewkelly9968
    @mathewkelly9968 Před 2 lety +100

    The biggest irony is that the airforce of Argentina who weren't that enamoured at the idea of invading the Falklands fought heroically .

    • @roberteugene7295
      @roberteugene7295 Před 2 lety +13

      There was no shortage of bravery among the FAA pilots, that's for sure.

    • @mariadelrosarioacevedo6858
      @mariadelrosarioacevedo6858 Před 2 lety +1

      Nadie ama las guerras

    • @DEAR7340
      @DEAR7340 Před 2 lety +2

      @@mariadelrosarioacevedo6858 The US military industrial complex might be an exception. I have yet to meet an American veteran, with combat experience, that doesn't *hate* the very idea of going to war.

    • @tremedar
      @tremedar Před 2 lety

      @@DEAR7340 Well of course the industrial complex loves the idea of a war, they make out like fat rats, while the best the soldiers get is to come home alive and unharmed. It has been nearly 3 generations since there was a war fought by the US whose outcome affected national security. That may change soon, though...

  • @gunman47
    @gunman47 Před 2 lety +233

    There is an Argentine TV series, *Combatientes* (Fighters in English) that was made in 2013 and was billed as Argentina's version of the HBO miniseries Band of Brothers, which I think is worth a watch if one wants to see the Falklands War / Guerra de las Malvinas from the Argentine perspective. It narrates the experiences of a few young Argentine conscript soldiers and an officer during their time in the Falkland Islands / Islas Malvinas. Language is in Spanish though and I haven't been able to find English subtitles for this unfortunately.

    • @MrWiggo91
      @MrWiggo91 Před 2 lety +15

      Well as a Brit I'd be interested to see it but would need subtitles in order to have any chance of understanding it. I absolutely support the Islanders right to determine for themselves who they are aligned to (or no one if that is their decision) and as such feel it was right to remove the Argentinians from the islands but equally a part of me does feel sorry for some of the Argentine soldiers who wound up in that war. This being said, you can read about what they did to people, people's homes and the booby traps they left everywhere when they realised they were going to lose (grenades in coffee jars and on kids toys... That's fucked up beyond belief) and all of a sudden I find my resolve against them steeled again.
      Still it would be interesting to see and hear as I'm sure they weren't all arseholes.

    • @Leandro-pw6nw
      @Leandro-pw6nw Před 2 lety +5

      @@MrWiggo91 el trato a los civiles en 1982 fue mucho mejor que en 1833

    • @MrWiggo91
      @MrWiggo91 Před 2 lety +14

      @@Leandro-pw6nw I don't speak Spanish, fella

    • @mikeycraig8970
      @mikeycraig8970 Před 2 lety +14

      @@Leandro-pw6nw No it wasn't, the dirty argies used people's homes and the post office as toilets ffs. They set up artillery next to schools and hospitals. The Argentines fought dirty, and they still lost against someone fighting fairly!!

    • @juanma9511
      @juanma9511 Před 2 lety +4

      @@mikeycraig8970 not really, the english send nepalese soldiers as cannon fodder

  • @BrownFoxWarrior
    @BrownFoxWarrior Před rokem

    1:14 The pipe is sitting to the right, but the smoke is coming up in front of his arm.

  • @oldboygeorge7688
    @oldboygeorge7688 Před 2 lety

    Very good 👍

  • @Del_S
    @Del_S Před 2 lety +261

    You claim that the MoD "verified" execution of Argentine PoWs... but that's not strictly true. The investigation into those allegations didn't find evidence and the claims appear to have been mistaken or outright false. The MoD certainly didn't "verify" them. Quite disappointing you'd put such a contentious claim in a literal footnote.

    • @MarcosGarcia-kx4rb
      @MarcosGarcia-kx4rb Před 2 lety +8

      Argentinian here never heard about it only heard about decet treatment of PoW and medics working along in the floating hospital they set up for both countries. the only myth I ever heard is about the gurkhas mercs suposedly scalping PoW but they just tell it as a fun fact thats obviously false.

    • @EfftupSmith
      @EfftupSmith Před 2 lety +22

      I've heard stories that the British DID find American mercenaries amongst the Argentine troops who they DID execute. But only in those "I know someone who knows someone that was there" type of stories.

    • @jermainerace4156
      @jermainerace4156 Před 2 lety

      @@MarcosGarcia-kx4rb They only say that because of the big knives that they never seem to use for any real purpose.

    • @littleshep5502
      @littleshep5502 Před 2 lety +17

      There was at least one case of someone shooting an argentine soldier that had surrendered, rather than a POW, however, this was from a unit of 2 Para that had come under fire from argentines using the white flag, so they didnt want to take the risk he would shoot them in the back

    • @jermainerace4156
      @jermainerace4156 Před 2 lety +14

      @@littleshep5502 Ah the old "partial surrender" of a unit.

  • @chase151167
    @chase151167 Před 2 lety +7

    Why is it always you make a video that I needed in my life, but didn't know I needed in my life.
    Fantastic work, been watching y'all for years now. Keep up the amazing work!

  • @damianb.2437
    @damianb.2437 Před 2 lety +19

    Como argentino me sorprende (para bien) el respeto con el que se trata el conflicto y al que fue (en su caso) el "oponente". Ojalá algún día se encuentre una solución a esta disputa histórica. Sabemos que es probable que ninguno de los dos países renuncie a sus pretensiones, al menos por mucho tiempo. En mi país las generaciones son educadas desde el inicio de la escuela sobre la historia del archipiélago, los recursos y disposiciones históricas y, sobretodo, sobre aquella fatídica guerra. Lógicamente para nosotros siempre serán argentinas, pero el compromiso de resolver el conflicto mediante el diálogo debe ser algo irrenunciable.

    • @paulchristopher8634
      @paulchristopher8634 Před rokem

      I bet the schools don’t teach children that the Falklands were founded by the French until they were taken over by the British do they

    • @simonoreilly5141
      @simonoreilly5141 Před rokem +10

      Cuando uno usa la violencia para obtener sus metas, es el ùltimo recurso para resolver la situacion esa. Significa que el momento de la diplomàcia se acabo, y por lo tanto el que usa la violencia lo reconoce. Argentina usò la violence y al hacerlo perdonó la oportunidad de resolver el conflicto con el diálogo. La guerra fue la ùltima oportunidad para tomar las islas. El reino unido ya no tiene porque responder a ningun acercamiento argentino de discurso u oferta de negociaciones, la violencia era la ultima carta que podia jugar argentina y la ha perdido para siempre. si uno usa la violencia y pierde, el otro nunca más necesita responderles.

    • @damianb.2437
      @damianb.2437 Před rokem +4

      @@simonoreilly5141 no olvidemos que a través de la violencia fue que gran Bretaña expulsó a los ciudadanos argentinos durante la primera mitad del siglo XIX. Esta es una discusión que va mucho más allá de dos desconocidos intercambiando opiniones en una plataforma impersonal.

    • @simonoreilly5141
      @simonoreilly5141 Před rokem +8

      @Aaron Natanael te restas valor al punto principal de la conversación (la guerra de las Malvinas) y profundizas en la historia y el colonialismo. Esto está fuera de tema, pero como lo mencionaste y el colonialismo, me gustaría preguntarte qué le hizo Argentina (no España) a la gran población africana que existía hace menos de 100 años. ¿Qué idioma hablaba (personalmente) antes de hablar español? Su historia está tan contaminada como la de cualquier poder colonial. Tu hipocresía hacia el colonialismo, mientras cosechas los beneficios de su lengua y cultura europea, es impactante. Señor, parece no darse cuenta de su propia miopía.

    • @simonoreilly5141
      @simonoreilly5141 Před rokem +6

      @Aaron Natanael antes de empezar a lanzar calumnias sobre el colonialismo y la historia, asegúrese de que su propia historia esté libre de pecado. Viví en Colombia durante siete años, mi esposa e hijos son colombianos, he viajado muchas veces a Argentina por trabajo. Conozco la historia de América Latina (incluyendo a William Brown, ya que soy descendiente de irlandeses). cuando visito Argentina me sorprende la cantidad de gente que dice ser más europea que latina. Me parece hipócrita que tus compatriotas afirmen que por un lado son más europeos que latinos y por otro odian que esos mismos europeos hayan sido colonizadores de América del Sur. por eso te pregunto cual es? ¿orgullo de su historia europea o vergüenza de su historia europea? Solo recuerda, todo lo que tienes, todo lo que eres, tu maravilloso idioma (soy hispanohablante), historia, religión, arquitectura, literatura, arte, comida, líderes y héroes son casi todos europeos (en su mayoría españoles). Deberías estar orgulloso de esto y no usarlo como arma. que tire la primera piedra el que este libre de pecado.

  • @Swift-mr5zi
    @Swift-mr5zi Před rokem

    The Royal Marines being sent were just the regular rotation period swaps, there was a small period each year with 48 Marines

  • @kingjoe3rd
    @kingjoe3rd Před 2 lety +239

    Let's not pretend like Argentina is run by natives that have some higher stake in the claim than the British do. Argentina is to Spain as the United States is to the United Kingdom. They are second generation would be colonial powers. They played the great game just like all the others and got salty when they lost.

    • @JamesTilsley1
      @JamesTilsley1 Před 2 lety +38

      True!

    • @thomaszuk2696
      @thomaszuk2696 Před 2 lety +23

      Exactly.

    • @saulgoodman5042
      @saulgoodman5042 Před 2 lety +2

      We didn't get salty

    • @timbenbrown5716
      @timbenbrown5716 Před 2 lety +62

      @@saulgoodman5042 I’m sorry but trying to invade an island and losing, and then still trying to stake a claim is salty

    • @fedorrussel3810
      @fedorrussel3810 Před 2 lety +11

      @@timbenbrown5716 How is that any different from spain claiming gibraltar even though they lost that land centuries ago?
      "Salty" is an inaccurate word to describe this kind of international affairs; this isn't a football match after all.

  • @SwfanredLotr
    @SwfanredLotr Před 2 lety +42

    Also let me point out that the period of Argentina in the 70s was a much more complicated case. The former president and general Juan Domingo Perón, had returned to the country in 1973 after a long exile in which he was received by crowds of different currents. Before his return, he sponsored militant groups to destabilize the anti-Peronist governments that had expelled him back in 1955. Among these groups emerged the so-called "Montoneros", a revolutionary group with a Guevarist bent but which supported the return of Perón and advocated a “nationalistic socialism”.
    Los Montoneros, got public support thanks to the kidnapping they carried out with General Pedro Aramburu and their subsequent execution. The victim had already gained a lot of hatred among the population due to his role in the military coup that overthrew Perón in 1955. However, the support would not last, because a series of murders, kidnappings, robberies and bombings it created a climate of counterproductive terror on the part of the guerrillas. Between 1969 and 1975, almost 700 people were murdered, including Army officers, industrialists, trade unionists, priests and foreign diplomats.
    With the death of Perón in 1974, the chaos and disorder did nothing but harm the government of his wife Isabel Perón, who would end up being overthrown in a coup on March 24, 1976. As a result, a government was created from a Military Junta directed by Jorge Rafael Videla, who would become president from 1976 to 1978, supported by the admiral of the fleet Emilio Eduardo Massera and the chief of aviation, Ornaldo Ramón Agosti. The Junta began the so-called National Reorganization Process, which consisted of monitoring or purging everything that was linked to guerrilla subversion, including an intense campaign of persecution and kidnapping of leftist militants until 1979.

  • @TalentSpotter83
    @TalentSpotter83 Před 2 lety +3

    Really good production values and you vividly captured the battle scenes, certainly the best reenactment of the Falklands War I've seen. Shame it had a clear bias rather than strive to be objective by telling the story from both sides.

  • @TRD315
    @TRD315 Před 2 lety

    Good video.

  • @nicolaszan1845
    @nicolaszan1845 Před 2 lety +36

    Finally, thank you for this video. So many people seem to downplay or just ignore the dictatorship's role in the conflict, and the diplomacy that came before it. This is a welcome change of pace.
    Argentine Independence War and the Paraguay war are also interesting subjects to cover for a future video, assuming Europe runs out of wars eventually.

  • @dunkenbronuts5019
    @dunkenbronuts5019 Před 2 lety +16

    Been watching your videos since 2018 my friend!! Love all of your videos and one of the best history channels on youtube. Keep up the good work!!!

  • @oliversherman2414
    @oliversherman2414 Před rokem +6

    I'm British and I've never visited the Falkland Islands before, but I wanna go some day. It looks like an interesting place

    • @mrkilo-g8794
      @mrkilo-g8794 Před rokem +1

      Not just Penguin Islands nothing new, if you do you should check out sandwich islands

    • @oliversherman2414
      @oliversherman2414 Před rokem

      @@mrkilo-g8794 is that near the Falklands?

    • @mrkilo-g8794
      @mrkilo-g8794 Před rokem

      @@oliversherman2414 Yes by a few couple miles away

    • @oliversherman2414
      @oliversherman2414 Před rokem

      @@mrkilo-g8794 ok

    • @mirkoz843
      @mirkoz843 Před rokem

      The only airport that will take you to the Falklands is in Ushuaia, Argentina 😉

  • @vulpes7079
    @vulpes7079 Před 4 měsíci +2

    Interesting that the Argentines call the Falkland Islanders "colonists" when most of their nation is descended from Italians that weren't there almost 200 years ago, unlike the Falkland Islanders

  • @saurabhdusane8971
    @saurabhdusane8971 Před 2 lety +54

    Absolutely love your work, it's very important to look from the perspectives of both cambatants to take a clear picture, and you have been doing a excellent work in that regard. Love from India

  • @lucanahuelleiss1454
    @lucanahuelleiss1454 Před 2 lety +15

    Está bastante bueno el video. Muchas gracias por poner nuestra perspectiva de la guerra, pocas veces se hace.

  • @triplecastsleep1924
    @triplecastsleep1924 Před rokem +13

    One of the things that always frustrates me whenever people talk about this period of history is the framing of it as some nation rising up against colonialism and people just assume that Argentina must be in the right because Britain evil empire. The Falklands never had a native population to be displaced by colonists, and the Argentinian's only claim to the island is an inhereted claim from the Kingdom of Spain. In this situation, the Argentinians ARE the colonial power.

    • @littleshep5502
      @littleshep5502 Před rokem +5

      Not even an inherited claim, Spain kept their claim going until 1863. Argentina has a claim they raised in 1829 and dropped completely between 1848 and 1946

    • @vasosglykeriou8738
      @vasosglykeriou8738 Před rokem

      Well
      About that war , it's been Sayed ,that the Frances gives to the British the codes of the Argentinians ..EXCOSET ,anti ship missiles..
      ..was it any true about it..?

    • @littleshep5502
      @littleshep5502 Před rokem

      @@vasosglykeriou8738 no, that is a myth that Argentina likes to say. France, after pressure, ceased sales of the missiles, with Britain securing them off the black market. This didn't stop french engineers wiring them to the planes Argentina had at the start of the war (Argentina claims they did this)

    • @Agostoic
      @Agostoic Před 7 měsíci

      LMAO

    • @brunogomez2984
      @brunogomez2984 Před měsícem

      Falso, durante el corto tiempo que hubo una gobernación argentina se instalaron varias familias en las Malvinas. Nada que decir respecto a la parte en donde vienen los británicos a tomarlas.

  • @benjab6339
    @benjab6339 Před 2 lety

    Good job with the translation the accent of the accent it's perfect (I am from Argentina)

  • @pratosaurusrex1128
    @pratosaurusrex1128 Před 2 lety +260

    As a British person this very informative to watch.
    In English speaking media you rarely get to hear about claims from the Argentinian side. While I have issues and questions about the claims it nonetheless shows that both sides are only shown the aspects of the issue that benefit their own side. War and conflict is never as clear cut as it’s portrayed.

    • @DEAR7340
      @DEAR7340 Před 2 lety +30

      ...and in the US, bias tends to gravitate toward anglo perspective. Most Americans would not know or care to hear the Argentine point of view. I find this curious, given the Monroe Doctrine and colonial past of US.

    • @ProbablyTheBestUkuleleDadEver
      @ProbablyTheBestUkuleleDadEver Před 2 lety +97

      Argentina has no claim on The Falklands, it was a British territory before Argentina ever existed; the premise of "theft" stated at the start of this video is completely false.

    • @marley7868
      @marley7868 Před rokem

      @@DEAR7340 the monroe doctrine was anti-colonialism Ie euros are not welcome here as for why falklands is mostly shown from anglo perspective because a military attacking a target doesn't have there people on it whose only claim to it the people they overthrough also had a claim on it though that claim was never used as it colonized by french and british and then the british took it so it's argentinan and then there the fact argentina was dictatorship with a disasterous command structure in short the british are the heroes defending themselves from bs a dictator inflamed to look good not everything is a grand plan or bias sometimes someone can just be an asshole

    • @03056932
      @03056932 Před rokem

      this should be a lesson for everyone who is swalling the western narrative on Russia / Ukraine whilst knee jerk rejecting, or worse, not even keeping up to date with the Russian narrative.

    • @degoose2447
      @degoose2447 Před rokem +4

      @@ProbablyTheBestUkuleleDadEver true