The Falklands War 1982
By (Author) Dr Duncan Anderson
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Osprey Publishing
15th February 2002
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
European history
997.11024
Paperback
96
Width 170mm, Height 248mm, Spine 7mm
322g
The Argentine invasion of the Falklands in 1982 sparked national outrage and Britain felt she had to avenge the humiliation and protect her own. This volume explores both the military and political dimensions of this important conflict, including detailed accounts of the air / sea battle, the Battle for San Carlos Water, Goose Green, Mt Harriet, Tumbledown and many others. It explains how success in the Falklands set the stage for the years of Thatcher's dominance, and restored British prestige. Including first hand accounts from both soldiers and civilians, this is an interesting and thoroughly up to date appraisal.
Dr Anderson is head of the Department of War Studies at Sandhurst. His main interests are military and diplomatic history, from the mid eighteenth century to the present. His books include Modern Military Elites (1993), D Day (1994), The Battle for Manila (with John Pimlott and Richard Connaughton, 1995), The World at War (1999) and the Fall of the Reich (2000). His battlefield tours conducted for both the British and American armies include Salamanca, Waterloo, the Somme, El Alamein, Normandy and the Falklands.