The Land that Lost Its Heroes: How Argentina Lost the Falklands War
This
is the book the late Graham Greene managed to read in manuscript
form on his way to Moscow to visit his old friend Kim Philby. Greene
- always
generous with young aspiring authors - subsequently wrote to me saying: "You
can quote me as saying this is a required book for anyone who wishes
to understand the Argentine situation before and after the Falklands
War.' My first book is the result of journalistic good luck:
of being in the right place at the right time. I was posted to Buenos
Aires in December 1981, and was the only full-time British foreign
correspondent to remain in Argentina in the lead-up to the Falklands
War, the three-month military conflict which involved Europe, the
US, South America, the Middle East, and the Soviet Union in diplomacy,
trade sanctions, spying, and secret arms deals. It was the last conventional
military campaign of the 20th century in which British troops in
defence of UK territory, against one of the world's bloodiest
dictatorships. This book gives a detailed account of the military
planning of the invasion of the Falklands by Argentina, and the hidden
motives and nature of the regime responsible for the bold aggression
against a NATO power. It exposes the international intrigue involving
US President Ronald Reagan and his ally Margaret Thatcher, and the
covert military operations including a daring British special forces
attack on the South American mainland. With unrivalled access to
all sides involved in the conflict, I also narrate the human drama
of Argentina's military occupation of the Falkland Islands,
a piece of England in the South Atlantic that stuck up for its human
rights. This revised and greatly expanded paperback version of the
original book that won the Somerset Maughan prize for non-fiction,
contains new chapters detailing the murky world of intelligence and
Argentina's secret missile programme which linked Buenos Aires
to Saddam Hussein's Baghdad Colonel Qadafi's Libya. I
hope this has become not just a standard work for military historians,
but will appeal to new readers who have lost faith in war and diplomacy
as experienced in the 21st century, and might value an important
point of reference. This was a war that had a beginning, a middle,
and an end, and in which soldiers and people defended just causes.
Related links:
Crónica de un inglés en Buenos Aires (in Spanish)
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