Nine of our escorts were sunk or damaged. The official count of escorts sent up to the surrender is 23, consisting of eight destroyers & 15 frigates, i.e. more than we have now.
The Advanced Group had eight escorts: five destroyers & three frigates. They were the first to sail.
That was followed by the Carrier Battle Group, amphibs & transports with four frigates.
That's 12 escorts by the time the ground troops set sail.
The remaining 11 escorts were distributed from Ascension southwards by the time the amphibious group caught up with the carrier group off the islands.
So no, we didn't send just five escorts.
Hi Swerve,
I understand how many escorts were sent, I appreciate that.
I said in my comment: "The Type 21, the backbone of the navy, shouldn't have ever been put in harms ways."
My whole point is that the older frigates/ships were out of their depth and and not much better than target practise for the Argentine air force. I'm arguing that their numbers were largely irrelevant. Am I wrong in saying that they took a pounding? I'm interpreting that the 'five' were vital to the success of the operation. Even with the 'five' we had the situation where either Broadsword or Brilliant had to protect the Type 42( the fleet area air-defence ships) because they had no defence at short range or low flying aircraft, i.e. every single engagement they were involved in.
For the whole duration of the war there was an Argentine submarine in Falkland waters, totally undiscovered by the RN, it took several pot shots at British warships. It's only due to the fact that the officers and crew didn't know what they were doing that it wasn't successful.
My point , ultimately, is that a force of 3 Type 45 destroyers and 6 Type 23/26, with a QE carrier, a SSN with deep strike capability, a proper amphibious force is far preferable to what came before. I guess it harks on the 'we couldn't do another Falklands' debate. Sure, I understand the numbers argument, the two places at once point - though I argue that a Type 45 shouldn't ever be off chasing drug runners and Somali pirates. I get that.
Not saying I am right, just putting it out there for debate. I'm not convinced by the trauma of decline, whiny, forelock tugging, navy smaller than Belgium, Jellicoe had 80 destroyers - we have six standpoint that the UK media regularly puts forward. I think it's far more complex than that.