aspire1670 wrote:Coito ergo sum wrote:Xamonas Chegwé wrote:
I was against the war at the time and I still am. It was driven as much by political expediency as by patriotism or any real desire to assist the islanders. Had Galtieri waited a few months, Thatcher would have been ousted in the general election and things would have proceeded very differently.
How so? Do you think that any British Prime Minister can tolerate British citizens being attacked on British soil, and having that British soil "conquered" by another nation?
Which British leader would have let the Islands go to Artgentina?.
Well, as Falkland Islanders were NOT British citizens and the Falkland Islands were not British soil at the time of the Argentine invasion your questions are moot. And as to your second question I direct you to consider Thatcher's reaction to the American invasion of Grenada.
The Brits announced their position that the islanders have a "right to self determination, including their right to
remain British if that is their wish," since the Falklands are a British Overseas Territory. If they are allowed to "remain" British, they must have been British. I doubt their Britishness arose only in the past 30 years.
I thought that in 1982, the Falkland Islands were basically British dependent territories. In the 1800s, the population of the Fallklands were British. In the 1890s it was a British "colony." How did the situation change since then?
And let's look at Argentina's bullshit claim - In the UN in the 1960s, Argentina based its claim to the Falklands on papal bulls of 1493 modified by the Treaty of Tordesillas (1494), by which Spain and Portugal had divided the New World between themselves; on succession from Spain; on the islands' proximity to South America; and on the need to end a colonial situation. So -- to end British colonialism, Argentina based its claim on Portuguese and Spanish colonialism, dividing the world among themselves.
Britain based its claim on its "open, continuous, effective possession, occupation, and administration" of the islands since 1833 and its determination to grant the Falklanders self-determination as recognized in the United Nations Charter. Britain asserted that, far from ending a colonial situation, Argentine rule and control of the lives of the Falklanders against their will would, in fact, create one.
Isn't Britain correct?