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[Closed] Anyone remember how the Falklands began?

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nope


 
Posted : 11/03/2011 1:55 am
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The thought of military victories in foreign lands seemed reasonably exciting. Things are different now

you have the context in reverse

The Falklands war was due to the invasion of British Terroritory by a foriegn country

compare and contrast with the invasion of Iraq

Thatcher would have know that

a. the british public wouldn't have re-elected a PM who lost the Falklands (imagine the stories of islanders "disappearing" etc)

b. she wouldn't survive if we lost

c. that any operations were high risk and the likelihood was high that we would have another Suez

The hatred of a single personnality seems to forget the context and blind those who do not want to see

the post-war jingoism of those who were not there is used to argue for the "conspiracy theory" that the govenment wanted a war to gain popularity

classic example

I am however certain that the chance to go to war was seized [b]gleefully with both hands[/b] and that any chances for a peaceful negotiated settlement were deliberately spurned.


 
Posted : 11/03/2011 2:02 am
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What I remember is a TV play in which this took place. It was screened in Oz about a year before the actual invasion.

The Oz press did not expect the British to win.

Regardless of the whys and wherefores, an enemy invaded British soil. The only sensible reaction was to go and get it back. The overseas credibility of the British military rose substantially after that.

As for the Belgrano, I'm sure if they had got close enough, it wouldn't have been flowers they were sending over, so tough titty.


 
Posted : 11/03/2011 2:10 am
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Thatcher would have know that

a. the british public wouldn't have re-elected a PM who lost the Falklands (imagine the stories of islanders "disappearing" etc)

b. she wouldn't survive if we lost

Yes, but more important than that........Thatcher would have known for certain that she would lose the next general election unless she could somehow pull a rabbit out of the hat - the Argentine invasion of the the Falklands gave her a unique opportunity. And she took it.

There was no risk involved for her at all. The only "risk" for her was that Britain might win and that would save her political skin.

.

The hatred of a single personnality seems to forget the context and blind those who do not want to see

the post-war jingoism of those who were not there is used to argue for the "conspiracy theory" that the govenment wanted a war to gain popularity

classic example

[b]I am however certain that the chance to go to war was seized gleefully with both hands and that any chances for a peaceful negotiated settlement were deliberately spurned[/b].

But TJ completely denies that there was "conspiracy". He simply states that Thatcher seized an opportunity which presented itself to her. So how does that give you a "classic example" of a "conspiracy theory" ? ๐Ÿ˜•

On the contrary, I fear that it is the deep admiration for "a single personality" which leaves some blind to the facts which led to the Falkland's War.

So getting back to the OP's original question : how did the Falklands begin ?

Check the following quotes :

[i]"Captain Nick Barker RN , captain of HMS Endurance during the Falklands War, tells a convincing and enraging story of the wilful stupidity of intellectually arrogant diplomats, civil-service mandarins, admirals and politicians, and of [b]the needless conflict and loss of life that resulted[/b].

Among these was the Falklands `guardship', the Endurance, an adapted Danish Baltic trader armed with 16 AS 12 air-to surface missiles and equipped with sophisticated electronic listening gear. Nott announced that she would be withdrawn in 1982 and not replaced. This would leave the Falkland Isles (with its population of British stock) and other British dependencies in the South Atlantic and the Antarctic to be defended by a few lightly armed Royal Marines. [b]A clearer signal of British abdication of interest in this region could not have been sent to the Argentinians, notoriously obsessed with recovering "the Malvinas"[/b].

Thus no firm British response was made to the opening Argentinian moves, such as the landing of a military party on South Georgia under cover of a phoney scrapcollecting operation. [b]On a previous occasion under the Labour Government a nuclear attack submarine had been ostentatiously despatched to the South Atlantic to cool Argentinian heads. But in 1982 the Conservative Government failed to make any such deterrent gesture".[/b] [/i]

The source of these quotes ? An anti-Thatcher left-winger maybe ?

No ! the Spectator ! .......that Tory "Daily Telegraph owned" magazine which takes an unashamedly pro-British line in foreign affairs.

http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qa3724/is_199705/ai_n8781734/

On another note - Che G - must be time for another beer.

Yup ๐Ÿ™‚


 
Posted : 11/03/2011 2:38 am
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the british public wouldn't have re-elected a PM who lost the Falklands (imagine the stories of islanders "disappearing" etc)

b. she wouldn't survive if we lost


So she did think about the electoral implications of a war then ๐Ÿ˜ฏ . When I suggested this I was talking TOSH.
Could you make your mind up?


 
Posted : 11/03/2011 10:37 am
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The Falklands war was caused by a dictator from a foriegn country invading the islands

the fact he thought he could get away with it is likely to stem from (the failure of) British and American (anti communism) foriegn policy at the time

it's a war that shouldn't have happened and the casualties on both sides is a tragedy

the fact that in UK politics Labour were in disaray with Michael Foot and his donkey jacket leading them and the SDP/ liberals taking a large share of the vote (but not seats)at the 1983 election. A half decent opposition would have been able to point out that the war should not have happened and the cost in "blood and treasure" never paid. Thatchers government should have been unelectable, the reality was that labour were unelectable and with the rise of Militant at the time thank goodness.

You can (and probably will ad nausiam)continue to insist that the only reason that shots were fired after the marines were evicted was to get her re-elected in 1983.

As for the spectator quote I defer to Yes Minister "the Daily Telegraph is read by people who think they should run the country". It also reinforces my point which is that failures by the government of the day were part of the chain of events that led to the invasion. The Junta still were to blame, they invaded, we should have made sure they didn't think they could before it happened.


 
Posted : 11/03/2011 11:04 am
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You can (and probably will ad nausiam[sic])continue to insist that the only reason that shots were fired after the marines were evicted was to get her re-elected in 1983.


Do you actually read my posts before replying?
I have not said that and it is pretty moronic of you to suggest i have
ME
PP are you claiming thatcher was so politically naive that it did not cross her mind that it might just make her popular if she had a war

you accept she considered the political implications on your own posts - do you want me to quote you or can you at least recall your own posts? yet you still want to argue for some reason

re the war my view was clearly stated as

i dont doubt for a second that option 2 [considered debate of the options and conequences]also occurred- perhpas it was even the main reason who knows. i simply stated that it is naive to think it did not cross the mind of a serving politician [very unpopular at the time] as to what the electoral consequnces for their action may be.

Again a point you have accepted
You may try to misrepresent, simplify and distort my view as often as you like and go on a wibbly rant if you wish but it is rather pathetic tbh. Clearly you have accepted the point a number of times on this thread now. Clearly you are going to argue on and continue to misrepresent my view


 
Posted : 11/03/2011 11:21 am
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Labour were in disaray with Michael Foot and his donkey jacket.......the rise of Militant

WTF you on about ?

How has Michael Foot and his donkey jacket, or the rise of Militant, got anything to do with "how the Falklands War begun" ?

You don't want to blame Thatcher for the Falklands War, but you want to blame Michael Foot's donkey jacket ?

I have no idea whether you're big, but you are obviously daft.

And well done for trying to pin some of the blame for the Falklands War on the yanks btw.


 
Posted : 11/03/2011 11:29 am
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Anyone remember how the Falklands began?

Well, after several million years of evolution when the earth had cooled and oceans developed, the great land mass called Gondwanaland began to split apart, whilst......

Oh.


 
Posted : 11/03/2011 12:33 pm
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For those who have actually looked back further than 1979 into the causes of the Falklands conflict, they would know that the single biggest factor in the Falklands was the strong embarrassment within the foreign office over the status of the islands, and that this had gone on for a number of years, under governments of both flavour's.

The problem is, that the Falklands are seen as a colonial possession, and the UK was bound under international law to dispose of colonies, at the same time, international law also guaranteed and respected the right of the islanders to self determination, and they were utterly opposed to any plans that would surrender the UK sovereignty (understandably, given the Argentinean threat)

The foreign office had been pushing behind the scenes strongly to solve the problem, as the ongoing colonial problem and the "Malvinas question" was causing embarrassing problems over trade agreements with various South American countries - other Sections of the government saw the disposal of the islands against the will of the residents as an unacceptable outcome.

The "hand wringing" within the civil service had led to a great many mixed messages, both upwards to the higher levels of government, downward to the islanders, and sideways to the Argentineans - there were discussions over possible independence, discussions over sovereignty and leaseback, and all these discussions through the seventies led to some very dangerous speculation and extrapolation in Buenos Aries...

So, the Falklands war, like so many others, had its true origins in post colonialism.


 
Posted : 11/03/2011 12:42 pm
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Yeah, someone did that joke about the sixth post on the thread Woppit.

Still never mind - it was probably worth another punt.


 
Posted : 11/03/2011 12:43 pm
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Not reading all that; I assume that this has now become a "discussion" between perhaps four of our most prolific,who have rather different political views.

Still; reaching out and touching the Argentinians with Vulcans was damn impressive.

Doesn't make up for the poll tax or my wee brothers milk.


 
Posted : 11/03/2011 1:04 pm
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Seems to me that the point that everyone is missing is if you want to dip your bread in someone elses soup you need to have the resources to back your actions up. So the moral of the story is if you want to be one of the worlds playground bullies buy the kit. If you don't want to buy the kit shut up before you make yourself look stupid.


 
Posted : 11/03/2011 2:53 pm
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ernie_lynch - Member

[i]Labour were in disaray with Michael Foot and his donkey jacket.......the rise of Militant[/i]

WTF you on about ?

How has Michael Foot and his donkey jacket, or the rise of Militant, got anything to do with "how the Falklands War begun" ?

You don't want to blame Thatcher for the Falklands War, but you want to blame Michael Foot's donkey jacket ?

the donkey jacket had nothing to do with the war and lots to do with her re-election after it. read the post


A half decent opposition would have been able to point out that the war should not have happened and the cost in "blood and treasure" never paid. Thatchers government should have been unelectable, the reality was that labour were unelectable and with the rise of Militant at the time thank goodness.

or is Micheal Foot one of your heroes?

your argument and others is that political consideration in terms of getting reelected dominated the thinking prior to the shooting war started

Thatcher would have known for certain that she would lose the next general election unless she could somehow pull a rabbit out of the hat - the Argentine invasion of the the Falklands gave her a unique opportunity. And she took it.

There was no risk involved for her at all. The only "risk" for her was that Britain might win and that would save her political skin.

I disagree, lots of risk as discussed earlier

You don't want to blame Thatcher for the Falklands War

No I blame the Junta that gave the order for then invasion. Thatcher was fault for allowing the situation to develop

and finally

And well done for trying to pin some of the blame for the Falklands War on the yanks btw

in the context of Uncle Sam's back yard and the americans political position during the war, not including them as a player would be ignoring the facts of the time (again)


 
Posted : 11/03/2011 3:13 pm
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Indeed - Big N Daft makes a fair point - its outstandingly lazy to blame Thatchers victory in the '83 Election on the Falklands, without paying credit to Foot's contribution with the [url= http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_longest_suicide_note_in_history ]Longest Suicide Note in History[/url]


 
Posted : 11/03/2011 3:32 pm
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[i]your argument and others is that political consideration in terms of getting reelected dominated the thinking prior to the shooting war started[/i]

I'm all for reasoned debate but are you actually reading what other people are saying ? If you are you seem to be reading through blue tinted glasses.

I don't think people are saying it dominated the thinking (except for Project) but i still believe it played a significant part. That is not the same as saying it "dominated" the thinking.

What is so hard to accept about that. Thatcher was a politcian and leader of the country. She was in a dire situation with the electorate. Presented with this opportunity (which i accept she didn't engineer) can you really not see that it was an opportunity for her and her govt ?


 
Posted : 11/03/2011 3:43 pm
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I'm sure the Falklands conflict had certain Tory strategists thinking along the lines that a victory will help turn around the fortunes of the most unpopular Prime minister in British history...that and Micheal foot.

Every little helps. Nothing is going to save the current lot however.


 
Posted : 11/03/2011 3:43 pm
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thirty years late there is not enough desert gear for Iraq or Afghanistan. No body armour to go round. not enough helicopter transport. vehicles you could fire an air rifle through never mind a roadside IED.

Apart from being factually mostly wrong, there isn't much wrong with that statement.


 
Posted : 11/03/2011 3:49 pm
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It's amusing to see the "left" still frothing at the mouth about the sainted Margaret. Poor lambs. I think they will always be in denial about the actions of the union "leaders" of the time, Michael Foot (in mouth) and their fellow travellers who made her election inevitable.

The Falkland Islanders had no wish to live under the jackboot of an ugly military dictatorship and were saved from doing so by heroes.

The rest of it is just a bunch of fannies arguing about nothing.


 
Posted : 11/03/2011 3:50 pm
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[i]Poor lambs. I think they will always be in denial about the actions of the union "leaders" of the time, Michael Foot (in mouth) and their fellow travellers who made her election inevitable.[/i]

Not sure whether i qualify as left in your eyes but i suspect i do ๐Ÿ™‚

I'm not in denial about the above at all. The conservatives stayed in power so long precisely because of the inept leadership and actions of the labour party.

How else do you explain John Major ๐Ÿ˜ฏ


 
Posted : 11/03/2011 3:53 pm
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I think they will always be in denial about the actions of the union "leaders" of the time,

It wasn't the Union leaders that lead the Falkland Islanders to be placed under the jackboot of an ugly military dictatorship, it was the upcoming defence cuts under Thatcher that "encouraged" the desperate Junta. I wonder what a sycophant like yourself would call that other ugly military dictatorship in the region at the time: Chile. Your Friends?

Poor lambs

Which is what everyone in this country is becoming without Unions.


 
Posted : 11/03/2011 4:14 pm
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It's amusing to see the "left" still frothing at the mouth about the sainted Margaret

i see very little forthing.on this thread and certainly nothing like when you appear on a religous thread and work yourself in to a frenzy
who made her election inevitable

so the Falklands played no role in the election victory then it was just the rubbish left ?
For big n daft clearly both were factors in the election result.


 
Posted : 11/03/2011 5:35 pm
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big_n_daft - Member

the donkey jacket had nothing to do with the war and lots to do with her re-election after it. read the post

Zulu-Eleven - Member

Indeed - Big N Daft makes a fair point - its outstandingly lazy to blame Thatchers victory in the '83 Election on the Falklands

Oh I see, the Falklands War wasn't the reason why Thatcher won the election in '83 .......it was Michael Foot's "donkey jacket" wot done it ?

The problem with that theory is that it is completely at odds with "actual facts".

[b]In every single MORI poll from the general election in 79, until the outbreak of the Falklands War in April '82, Labour was in the lead[/b]

Including in '81, the period in which the "donkey jacket incident" took place.

Check it out for yourself :

http://www.ipsos-mori.com/researchpublications/researcharchive/poll.aspx?oItemId=103

The Labour Party did not lose support because Michael Foot owned a donkey jacket.

After years of incessantly trailing Labour in the polls, support for the Tories suddenly increased and overtook Labour in the week the Falklands War started.

Only someone who is either deluding themselves, or too lazy to seek out the facts, would suggest that the Falklands War wasn't the reason for the Tories sudden and unexpected turn of fortunes.

There will always be a small minority of people who are sufficiently impressed by a scoundrel's last refuge, to tip the delicate political balance.

.

Mr Woppit - Member

It's amusing to see the "left" still frothing at the mouth about the sainted Margaret.

Of course if you didn't reduce everything to a tribal left-right conflict Woppit, and you saw beyond your narrow sectarian blinkered and desperately ill-informed perspective, you would have seen that my quote which refers to the Falklands War as a [i]"needless conflict and loss of life"[/i] had come not from "the left", but from the Spectator. That's the Spectator magazine - which is written by Tories, edited by Tories, and read by Tories.

But then doing anything [i]more[/i] than simply reducing everything to left vs right, is far too intellectually challenging for someone with as little political acumen as you. So don't let me down, and carry on with your ill-informed nonsense.


 
Posted : 11/03/2011 5:43 pm
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you would have seen that my quote which refers to the Falklands War as

Sorry ernie, I didn't read any of your posts, so I don't know what you're talking about.

VERY attractive high horse you have, though. Bet you can see a long way from up there...


 
Posted : 11/03/2011 6:08 pm
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Yes, the view is indeed quite pleasant.

So basically Woppit, you are passing judgement that those who suggest the Falklands War was a [i]"needless conflict"[/i] are 'the frothing left' ........despite not having acquainted yourself with the facts ?

So presumably Captain Nick Barker RN , captain of HMS Endurance, who made the above allegation was just a 'frothing leftie' ?

And let me get this right ....... you are surprised that I might feel a sense of moral superiority over someone who spouts ill-informed nonsense ?


 
Posted : 11/03/2011 6:24 pm
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The Labour Party did not lose support because Michael Foot owned a donkey jacket.

No, Wenie - as I said, [u]they lost because of the fact that the policies laid out in their 1983 manifesto made them completely unelectable[/u] - the longest suicide note in history!


 
Posted : 11/03/2011 7:41 pm
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No, as I have already pointed out, the Tories had trailed Labour [i]for years[/i] in the polls, since the '79 election in fact. All that changed the week the Falklands War started. It did not coincide with the week the Labour Manifesto was launched - by then the Tories had a well established lead.

Check for yourself, it's all here in black and white :

http://www.ipsos-mori.com/researchpublications/researcharchive/poll.aspx?oItemId=103

And as for your 'funny-ha-ha' comment that the '83 Labour Manifesto was the longest suicide note in history, I'll remind you that one of the central policies in the Manifesto was the policy of nationalising the banks, on the grounds that they couldn't be trusted to do what was best for Britain.

Today in Britain and the US, much of banking have been nationalised [i]precisely[/i] because the private banks proved to be untrustworthy. A central policy in '83 Labour Manifesto has been proved to have been absolutely correct. And the subsequent New Labour policy of unregulated private banks has been proved to have been "suicidal".

The other central policy in '83 Labour Manifesto was withdrawal from the EEC. That is [u]precisely the same policy as your political guru[/u] Dan Hannan.....would you call it "suicidal" ? Well, would you Zulu-Eleven ? Is UKIP a "suicidal" party ? Are Tory right-wingers "suicidal" ?

Today Britain, imo, would be a much better place if we had a government committed to the policies which were in the '83 Labour Manifesto.

BTW, impressive deviation tactics ..... top marks mate.


 
Posted : 11/03/2011 8:24 pm
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Oh I see, the Falklands War wasn't the reason why Thatcher won the election in '83 .......it was Michael Foot's "donkey jacket" wot done it ?

The problem with that theory is that it is completely at odds with "actual facts".

In every single MORI poll from the general election in 79, until the outbreak of the Falklands War in April '82, Labour was in the lead

Including in '81, the period in which the "donkey jacket incident" took place.

funnily enough the great man seemed to hold a different view

On Labour's 1983 election defeat
[Explaining Labour's 1983 election defeat when he was leader.] We had not the armour, the strength, the quickness in manoeuvre, yes, the leadership. (Another Heart and Other Pulses, 1984)

Check it out for yourself :

http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2010/mar/03/michael-foot-key-quotes


 
Posted : 11/03/2011 8:43 pm
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and he seemed to understand the complexity and pressure of the situation

"I can well understand the anxieties and pressures that must have been upon you during this weeks and I can understand that, at this moment, these pressures and these anxieties may be relieved and I congratulate you." To Margaret Thatcher after the retaking of the Falklands in 1982.


 
Posted : 11/03/2011 8:45 pm
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big_n_daft - Don't bother, he's utterly indoctrinated.


 
Posted : 11/03/2011 8:52 pm
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Is this the same Thatcher that was earlier trying to sell the Falklands to the Argentinians?

After the deal fell through, blocked by the right wing of her own party, the Argentinians invaded and Thatcher developed a patriotic streak.

Or did I miss something?


 
Posted : 11/03/2011 8:52 pm
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i) Polls is not Elections, if you believed polls then the conservatives would have lost in 1992
ii) Not my "funny Ha-Ha comment, Gerald Kaufmans, you know, Labour MP, former Labour govt member - lets also look at the comment by Dennis Healey: [i]The reason we were defeated in so far as defence played a role is that people believe we were in favour of unilaterally disarming ourselves. It wasn't the confusion. It was the unilateralism that was the damaging thing.[/i]
iii) Hannan proposes no such thing, he proposes withdrawal from the EU, the EU is NOT the same as the EEC!
iv) Yes, very different, we'd be living in totalitarian marxist state, though I'm sure that thought makes you do a little sex wee!
v) You brought it up!


 
Posted : 11/03/2011 8:52 pm
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Interesting but completely irrelevant points big_n_daft.

So he said "We had not the armour, the strength, the quickness in manoeuvre, yes, the leadership" and ? .......does that statement claim that the Falklands War didn't save Thatcher's political skin ?

And the second quote is even more irrelevant. Michael Foot fully supported Thatcher's decision to send the task force to the Falklands.......so why wouldn't he congratulate Thatcher after the retaking of the Falklands in 1982 ....eh?

None of that detracts from the fact that firstly, the war was avoidable, and secondly, Thatcher benefited enormously from the Falklands War. Indeed it saved her bacon at a time when her political career was about to nose-dive..


 
Posted : 11/03/2011 9:06 pm
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To summarise then, almost 30 years on and Teh Toriezz are back in power, ernie still hasn't recovered from the Thatcher years and creams himself nightly over a laminated copy of Clause 4.


 
Posted : 11/03/2011 9:14 pm
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So basically Woppit, you are passing judgement that those who suggest the Falklands War was a "needless conflict" are 'the frothing left' .

Am I?


 
Posted : 11/03/2011 9:16 pm
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Am I?

Don't worry, classic Ernie tactics, putting words into other people's mouths.

[Cue lots of [i]quotes[/i], [u]underlined [/u] [b]bold [/b]points, questions and the odd CAPS thrown in]


 
Posted : 11/03/2011 9:19 pm
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Polls is not Elections

When every single poll, over several years, says exactly the same thing, then they are extremely precise in gauging public opinion. And they all said one thing - that labour was in the lead. There is no doubt whatsoever that the Tories would have lost the election had it occurred before the Falklands War. No opinion polls have ever been so consistently wrong over several years - otherwise no one would bother with them. To suggest otherwise is dishonest nonsense.

Hannan proposes no such thing, he proposes withdrawal from the EU, the EU is NOT the same as the EEC!

Pedantic nonsense.

Yes, very different, we'd be living in totalitarian marxist state

[i]"The '83 Labour Manifesto would have led to a totalitarian marxist state"[/i] = more breathtakingly infantile nonsense from Zulu-Eleven. And with that, I don't think I can be arsed anymore. I gave you the benefit of the doubt for once and decided to enter a debate with you, but true to form, you end coming out with the usual puerile bollocks. I guess you can't help yourself.


 
Posted : 11/03/2011 9:23 pm
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Am I?

As allthepies suggests don't worry about it. If you didn't say it, then it must be me putting words into your mouth.


 
Posted : 11/03/2011 9:27 pm
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None of that detracts from the fact that firstly, the war was avoidable

no-one debating that in the context of 20:20 hindsight

, and secondly, Thatcher benefited enormously from the Falklands War. Indeed it saved her bacon at a time when her political career was about to nose-dive..

sorry I thought you said

Thatcher would have known for certain that she would lose the next general election unless she could somehow pull a rabbit out of the hat - the Argentine invasion of the the Falklands gave her a unique opportunity. And she took it.

so was it "events" or a deliberate plan to retake the Falklands (with support from Michael Foot) in order to get re-elected.

I just want to be clear seeing as I am so "daft"


 
Posted : 11/03/2011 9:53 pm
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So lets have a war with Libya, or just organise one and let the french fight it.


 
Posted : 11/03/2011 9:57 pm
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So the Argie bargies invade the Falkands inhabited by British subjects and the Uk Government decided to defend and retake the island, hmmmm don't know what the fuss is about.


 
Posted : 11/03/2011 10:07 pm
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Lol @ ernie_lynch what a ranting nutter.


 
Posted : 11/03/2011 10:12 pm
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No, it was all an evil plan by Thatch to aid her re-election chances. Any phool can see that.


 
Posted : 11/03/2011 10:13 pm
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flippinheckler - Member
So the Argie bargies invade the Falkands inhabited by British subjects and the Uk Government decided to defend and retake the island, hmmmm don't know what the fuss is about.

Posted 6 minutes ago # Report-Post

and quite a few squaddies sadly get killed,or injured, we then have to pay out millions to build an airport and infrastructure, and keeep 1000 troops there to defend a few puffins and a load of burnt out vehicles, oh and it allowed thatcher to win an election, while destroying the miners and steel workers with a good helping hand to the car industry along the way to destroy it as well.

IT WOULD HAVE BEEN CHEAPER TO JUST PUT ALL THE conservative VOTERS ON A BOAT AND LET THEM DEFEND THE DAMM ISLAND, AND LET PEOPLE WHO CARE RUN THE COUNTRY.

So easy in hindsight,


 
Posted : 11/03/2011 10:19 pm
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IT WOULD HAVE BEEN CHEAPER TO JUST PUT ALL THE[s] conservative VOTERS[/s] miners ON A BOAT AND LET THEM DEFEND THE DAMM ISLAND, AND LET PEOPLE WHO CARE RUN THE COUNTRY.

FTFY


 
Posted : 11/03/2011 10:22 pm
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