Todjaeger
Potstirrer
I would imagine part of the issue has to do with what much of the thread has discussed so far. Namely whether Argentina has the capability now or in the near future, to successfully invade the Falklands like it did in 1982. With the general concensus being that Argentina is not currently in a position to do so, and that concerted rebuilding efforts by Argentina are likely to be noticed by the British and/or allies in plenty of time for the UK to counter them... Therefore there is obviously going to be some concern or curiousity on the part of posters as to how Argentina could gain control of the Falklands.What the hell are you carping on about?
I intentionally did not go into any detail about how Argentina would launch a 'surprise' attack because it had nothing to do with the focus of my post. Now you are crediting me with all sorts of ridiculous opinions and motivations.
Now if you would like to discuss something rationally do everyone the favour of displaying a certain about of intellectual flexibility and address my post for what it actually says - how Argentina could avoid having to fight off another Operation Corporate by ethnically cleansing the Falklands of its residents.
If, however the premise for your discussion is that Argentina has already gained control of the Falklands and is acting to maintain that control in the face of a British response, the situation becomes quite different.
As for the idea that Argentina would ethnically cleanse the Falklands, even using a non-lethal/non-violent forced movement... I see two principal problems with that, neither of which has to do with Argentina's capability to actually carry out the effort, rather it has to deal with the reactions the effort will bring out. Rather the two problems are more in the realm of diplomatic/legal/political issues. The first is that, particularly of late, Western powers have taken efforts at ethnic cleansing by various groups rather badly. For Argentina to start efforts to that end, particularly to British citizens (subjects?), I could see that situation exploding in Argentina's hands. The second part is that AFAIK, Argentina officially recognizes those very same residents of the Falklands as citizens of Argentina as well. For Argentina to detain and relocate its citizens like that, and/or engage in a forced repatriation, IMV would likely cause some within Argentina to recall conditions under the military junta when numbers of Argentinian citizens 'disappeared'.
-Cheers