With the help of US airlift, the Royal Navy also used its mobility to build up a forward operating base at Ascension Island that would shuttle tankers and other replenishment ships to the task force, allowing it to stay at sea around the islands. See post 379
That is not the case. Strategically and operationally, the war shows the critical importance of having clear political and military goals. The invasion was conceived and executed almost without any strategic though of the implications by Galtieri and the Junta. The Junta saw it more as a political move than a military one. Galtieri thought they were going to negotiate a solution to the standoff, and as a remote possibly would have to fight. The British, on the other hand, assumed they would have to fight, and if there was a diplomatic breakthrough, so be it. This mindset clearly gave the British the upper hand in preparation for the coming battle.
In regards to Chile….As some of you may know, Argentina was in the midst of a serious border dispute with Chile at the time, known as the
(see my posts in the South American conflict posts in the History section) . This meant that a significant faction of the nation’s forces and better trained and equipped troops were committed to defending against a very possible conflict with Chile. That is why consripts with four weeks training were sent to the MalvinasAlso the two nations came to the brink of war in 1978. The conflict was averted by Papal intervention. However, border tensions where high and skirmished where not uncommon
As some of you may know, South America was a hotbed of Communist activity in those days, and the Reagan White House had made a concerted effort to assist South and Central American governments and strengthen diplomatic and military ties throughout the region. It still boggels my mind as to how Galtieri managed to convince himself this would outweigh 70 years of the “special relationship” and an alliance through two world wars as well as the ties of NATO is a question indeed.