Thursday, September 19, 2019
War In The Falklands :: essays research papers
 War in the Falklands    Fact:  April 2, 1982, Argentina invaded the Falkland Islands    At 4:30 A.M., helicopters had started to land on Mullet Creek; they were  the first of the many invaders from Argentina. At 6:08 A.M., an attack was at  full fledge. The Argentina government had claimed that they told their men it  was to be a bloodless fight, but that was not the case. Argentineans busted  down barrack doors and began to throw powerful grenades into the barracks and  killing many unsuspecting men.  Fact:  February 26, 1982, The war could have been prevented    On February 1982, there was supposed to be a meeting where the British  government would hold a meeting with the Argentinean government to talk about  preventing the war. This was a two-day event in New York, the first day the  Argentineans were to host the meeting, but there was a glitch in planning, and  the dates were to be changed. The leaders were under so much pressure, that  some said they were going to breakdown. What basically happened at the meeting,  was that both sides could not come to agreement. This resulted in a war.  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Nobody really knew who owned the Falkland Islands. Some thought  Spain, Argentina thought they owned it, and Britain thought they owned it. No  agreements could be made.    Fact:  The war of the Falklands was a perfect opportunity to unleash  state of the art weapons on the opponents.    Later, after the first invasions, some messages went out over the radios.  The first ones told people of a small invasion, then they began broadcasting  from live sights, complete with gun fire in the background.  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  There were a lot of battles that went on between the British and  the Argentineans. The British won some, and the Argentineans won others. They  were all fighting for the Falklands. These were a group of small islands that  were all bunched up. You could not use the islands for much, seeing as that  they were craggy mountains. That would not make for very productive farm land,  but there were a lot of mountain lions and goats.  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  After the many battles, many deaths and many tests on weapons,  the British had won the War in the Falklands. This war was won both in military  action, and in speech. Most say to end violence in verbal communication, but  verbal communication was a giant factor in the beginning of this war.    Conclusion    Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  This book had a couple aspects of history, it had facts, told the reader  how the British government thought, and even had some of the British speech in  it. I learned how the Falklands were fought over, in the sense of military    					    
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