The Royal Navy and the Falklands War
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The Royal Navy and the Falklands War

David Brown

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eBook - ePub

The Royal Navy and the Falklands War

David Brown

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This military history reveals the untold story of the United Kingdom's Royal and Merchant Navies during the Falkland's War. Soldiers and journalists alike wasted no time in memorializing the campaign to recapture the Falkland Islands after the Argentinian invasion in April, 1982. With the overwhelming focus on the role of the Army, the vital contributions of the Royal and Merchant Navies have been largely overlooked. Yet no British military forces would have been there at all had the Royal Navy not provided the necessary transport, not to mention air cover and bombardment support. In this book, naval historian David Brown tells the extraordinary story of how the fleet was assembled. Merchant-ships ranging from luxury liners such as the SS Canberra to cargo-carriers of every description were quickly converted to their new role as STUFTs, or Ships Taken Up From Trade. Brown describes the stupendous problems presented by the assembling and stowing of the thousands of tons of stores and equipment needed by the Expeditionary Forces and the way in which these problems were solved.

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Information

Jahr
1987
ISBN
9781473817791
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Contents
Introduction
Maps
Glossary
Prologue
PART I
A Convenient Station near Cape Horn
PART II
1 Scrap at South Georgia
2 Operacion ROSARIO
3 The Defence of Grytviken
4 The Task Force Prepares
5 Passage South
6 The Advance Guard
7 Halfway House
PART III
1 The Recapture of South Georgia
2 The Carriers Close In
3 The Argentine Preparations
4 The First Strike
5 ‘Lombardo’s Fork’
6 First Losses
7 Bad-weather Blockade
PART IV
1 ‘D’-Day
2 ‘The Battle of Clapp’s Trap’
3 The Loss of the Atlantic Conveyor
PART V
The Break-out
PART VI
1 The Siege of Stanley
2 Battles in the Mountains
3 The Last Battle
4 Aftermath
STUFT (Ships Taken Up from Trade)
Appendix I
Appendix II
Appendix III
Appendix IV
Equivalent Ranks
Sources
Index
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Introduction

This book was conceived as a tribute to all those who took part in and contributed to the success of Operation ‘Corporate’, in particular those of the naval services – the Royal Navy, Royal Fleet Auxiliary, Royal Marine Auxiliary Service, the Merchant Navy, the Queen Alexandra’s Royal Naval Nursing Service and the Royal Marines, as well as all the men of the Army and Royal Air Force who found themselves attached to naval and Marines units. Behind the men ‘at the sharp end’, there were the legions of the staffs and organizations which kept the ships at sea and maintained the Commando Brigade on the far shore – condemned in time of peace as the excessive ‘tail’, in war they showed that they were none too numerous. As might have been expected, British industry provided wholehearted and unstinted support, rising to a new challenge every day, as it seemed, during the two and a half months of active hostilities. With the parts played by the other Services and their contributors, teeth and tail were united to form the body corporate which succeeded in restoring British rule in the Falkland Islands and South Georgia.
Although many might feel that their contribution is not fully reflected in the following pages, only in one area is this intentional. For reasons which they well know, the doings of the submariners must remain discreetly unreported for the time being and it must suffice to say that all those who served in the South Atlantic are in the debt of the men of the six submarines which provided the advanced guard and then the first line of defence against the Argentine Navy. That the Fleet did not venture forth after the example of the General Belgrano does not detract from the dangers and discomforts of long patrols, often in shallow and inadequately charted waters, right up to the time of the Argentine Government’s acceptance that the campaign was over.
I am grateful for the ready assistance and guidance of many officers and men of the Royal Navy and Royal Marines who took part in the various aspects of the campaign. Without their help it would not have been possible to piece together, and in some instances reconcile, the various accounts, semi-official, private and published, British and Argentine, which have been used to compile this narrative. I am also indebted to Admiral Sir Peter Stanford KCB MVO, the Vice Chief of the Naval Staff from 1982 to 1984, and to Mr Alistair Jaffray CB, the Deputy Undersecretary of State for the Royal Navy until 1984, for their permission and encouragement to undertake this work.
David Brown
June, 1984
Although what follows is published by permission of the Ministry of Defence, any opinions which may be expressed are my own and do not represent those of the Ministry, the Navy Department or the Naval Service as a whole.
DB
September, 1986
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Maps

title
View over Two Sisters of the final battlefields, Wireless Ridge to the left, running down to Navy
Point, and the tangled summits of Mount Tumbledown to the right, overlooking Port Stanley
(via Captain S.H.G. Johnston RN)
title
title
title
title
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Glossary

AAC
Army Air Corps (British)
Aden
30mm aircraft cannon (British)
AEW
Airborne Early Warning (radar)
Agave
French multi-purpose airborne radar fitted in Super Etendard – associated with AM.39 Exocet missile
AIM-9
Sidewinder air-to-air missile, carried by Sea Harrier (-9G and -9L) and A-4Q Skyhawk (-9B)
AOA
Amphibious Operating Area – the land and sea area in the vicinity of the landing beaches and the amphibious shipping anchorage: in practice, San Carlos Water and Port San Carlos and the surrounding hills, together with the northern part of the Falkland Sound outside San Carlos Water. Became the Transport Area from 1 June, 1982
ARA
Armada Republica Argentina: Navy of the Argentine Republic
AS.12
Air-to-surface missile carried by RN Wasp helicopters (see Appendix I)
ASW
Anti-Submarine Warfare
Avcat
High flash-point kerosene-based aviation fuel used by RN carrier-based turbine-engined aircraft
Avgas
Low flash-point aviation gasoline (petrol)
BAM
Base Aerea Militar: Military (ie Air Force) Air Base, eg
Dr Mariano Moreno (Buenos Aires)
Comodoro Rivadavia
Condor (Goose Green)
El Palomar (Buenos Aires)
Malvinas (Port Stanley)
Mendoza
Reconquista (Santa Fe Province)
Rio Gallegos
Tandil
BAN
Base Aerea Naval: Naval Air Base, eg
Bahia Bianca (‘Comandante Espora’)
Calderon (or Borbon) (Pebble Is.)
Rio Grande (‘Almirante Quijada’)
Trelew (‘Almirante Zar’) Ushuaia
BAS
British Antarctic Survey – a scientific research organization funded by the British Government to conduct research in the Antarctic and Falkland Islands Dependencies
Bergen
Royal Marines Arctic back-pack
Blowpipe
man-portable, shoulder-launched surface-to-air missile used by British and Argentine ground forces
BMA
Brigade Maintenance Area (British); the military logistic support area, including workshops and medical facilities as well as ammunition, stores, fuel and provisions dumps
CAP
Combat Air Patrol: originally a defensive fighter mission but subsequently extended to any air-to-air fighter mission
Carl Gustav
84mm recoilless anti-tank weapon (Swedish-built, used by Royal Marines)
Casevac
Casualty Evacuation (usually by helicopter)
CdoFAS
Comando de la Fuerza Aerea Sur: Southern Air Command – the Argentine Air Force operational control headquarters based at Comodoro Rivadavia
Chaff
Metallic foil, launched by ships or released from aircraft to form radar reflecting clouds to distract or confuse missile homing heads or human operators
COMAW
Commodore, Amphibious Warfare (British)
‘Corporate’
The overall code-name bestowed upon the operation to recover the Falkland Islands. Individual operations within the framework of ‘Corporate’ received separate names
Dracone
‘Sausage-shaped’ flexible towed bulk fuel container; buoyancy provided by the contents, which have a lower specific gravity than water
Dieso
Diesel-type light oil fuel burned by RN steam and turbine-engined ships and also usable by Wasp helicopters
ECM
Electronic Counter Measures – active anti-radio/radar techniques and tactics, particularly ‘jamming’ of transmissions
El...

Inhaltsverzeichnis