1st Edition

The Official History of the Falklands Campaign, Volume 1 The Origins of the Falklands War

By Lawrence Freedman Copyright 2005
272 Pages
by Routledge

272 Pages
by Routledge

272 Pages
by Routledge

Drawing on a vast range of previously classified government archives as well as interviews with key participants, this first volume of the official history of the Falklands Campaign is the most authoritative account of the origins of the 1982 war. In the first chapters the author analyses the long history of the dispute between Argentina and Britain over the sovereignty of the Islands,... Read more

1. Origins of the Dispute  2. Inconsistent Appeasement  3. Communications and Condominiums  4. Mis-Communication and Non-Cooperation  5. Shackleton  6. Unreliable Defence  7. Reappraisal  8. Undetected Deterrence  9. Marking Time  10. Towards Lease-Back  11. The Rise of Lease-Back  12. The Fall of Lease-Back  13. Micawberism  14. No Plans  15. Alarm Bells  16. South Georgia  17. Crisis  18. Delayed Response  19. The Worst Moment  20. Conclusion: The Quality of Hindsight, Types of Trouble, Crisis Management

Biography

Sir Lawrence Freedman is Professor of War Studies at King’s College where he is currently Vice Principal. He has written extensively on military strategy, cold war history and contemporary conflict and is a regular newspaper columnist.

'a masterpiece of even-handed scholarship, and will undoubtedly remain the definitive word on the conflict.’

Dominic Sandbrook, Daily Telegraph


‘Freedman is not just a good historian but a terse, readable writer. This is a fine book about modern war, warts and all, in an age when such evenly balanced conflicts are rare.’

Simon Jenkins, Sunday Times

‘Freedman has the rare gift of offering both strategic guidance and a fine grasp of tactical details.’
Jeremy Black

‘In Lawrence Freedman, the campaign has found an impeccable chronicler’
Max Hastings, Sunday Telegraph

‘Official this history certainly is, and something more. But is it definitive, critics may cry? With its personal panache and incisiveness, it is better than that – at least for this critic.' Robert Fox, Evening Standard

‘fascinating, balanced, fantastically well-researched and well-written.’ Andrew Roberts, New Statesman