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To: sukhoi-30mki
The UK’s deterrent fleet of Typhoon fighters on the island can tear apart any Argentine aerial formation till the cows come home. A single Astute class submarine carries enough Tomahawks to level most assets in Buenos Aires while having enough torpedoes to sink most of its rickety fleet.

A sneak attack similar to the initial landing of Argentine troops during the Falklands campaign would neutralize the Typhoons and the lone destroyer. Argentina's modern German subs and P-3 Orions could be tasked to hunt the British sub prowling the island's waters. While the Falklands are 400 miles away from Argentina, they are thousands of miles from the UK. Reinforcement and resupply are expensive and complicated. The last engagement stretched the limits of Thatcher's political capital. The next one may end up with the islands renamed the Malvinas.

As to escalation, if Britain levels Buenos Aires, it will face a trade embargo from Latin America. And much of South America would jump in on Argentina's side, including Brazil. Would the EU even stand behind the UK during the ensuing economic hostilities?

My view is that the Brits need to station more assets on the Falklands. Because if the Argentines grab it, they won't have the political capital necessary to marshal the immense resources necessary to take it back.

17 posted on 10/28/2014 8:34:01 AM PDT by Zhang Fei (Let us pray that peace be now restored to the world and that God will preserve it always.)
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To: Zhang Fei

Modern German subs? Those are 3-decade old designs. The British subs don’t need to be anywhere near the Islands. 400 miles is enough ocean for subs to play around till their food runs out.

The Brits have a detachment of about 1,000+ troops in addition to aerial and naval assets on the Islands so its not going to be a cakewalk for Argentine troops trying to steal ashore. They are far better equipped for logistical support with C-17s than the Argentines are. The Argentines struggled to keep their units supplied in 82; they will struggle even more now.

Argentina is economically too sick to contemplate any action on the Falklands and expect the whole of South America to jump on its side. Brazil, Chile and the rest all have their own independent world views and local rivalries are not exactly absent in that part of the world.

The UK, despite its decline as a welfare State, still has the determination to keep its flag on the Falklands and they (and most of the British public) wouldn’t hesitate to fight for it. Call it colonial pride if you may.

Bottomline, as the article says, Argentina is just too weak economically to become capable of having the military assets to take the Falklands for the foreseeable future.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/debate/article-2077493/It-simply-inconceivable-Argentina-Falklands.html


22 posted on 10/28/2014 10:44:05 AM PDT by sukhoi-30mki
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To: Zhang Fei
A sneak attack similar to the initial landing of Argentine troops during the Falklands campaign would neutralize the Typhoons and the lone destroyer. Argentina's modern German subs and P-3 Orions could be tasked to hunt the British sub prowling the island's waters. While the Falklands are 400 miles away from Argentina, they are thousands of miles from the UK. Reinforcement and resupply are expensive and complicated. The last engagement stretched the limits of Thatcher's political capital. The next one may end up with the islands renamed the Malvinas.

As to escalation, if Britain levels Buenos Aires, it will face a trade embargo from Latin America. And much of South America would jump in on Argentina's side, including Brazil. Would the EU even stand behind the UK during the ensuing economic hostilities? My view is that the Brits need to station more assets on the Falklands. Because if the Argentines grab it, they won't have the political capital necessary to marshal the immense resources necessary to take it back.

Going to disagree with your analysis here. Argentina would have to land a sizeable force undetected and the destroyer would have to be in port. It would have to take out the SAMs as well. While the US might be able to do it, not clear Argentina could pull it off. Leaks during training etc would make OPSEC very hard. The UK has its ears on these days.

As for the UK attacking the mainland, I could see that happening, but I would not expect a conventional attack against a BA or other large city. Instead I would expect attacks against key infrastructure like transportation,power and POL, maybe even ports. It would force the Kirchner regime to focus on domestic matters. Its hard to wage war when your population is starving in the dark. Sort of a price tag attack

26 posted on 10/30/2014 1:43:50 PM PDT by Starwolf
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