Indeed. I do wonder what the British escalation would have been had the attack carried on though. Any ideas?
Hi.
I m new here (have been following this forum as a visitor for a while) but just figured i d add my 2-cents.
Regarding the UK escalating the Falklands War by extending attacks to Argentinean targets on the mainland it wouldn't generally have been a problem with International Law provided the use of force was proportional to the military value of the target, and provided the force was used solely for the purposes of self-defence and that it was used in a way which discriminated between military targets, civilian targets, and military targets not involved in the conflict.
I.e. UK attacks on Argentinean military forces positioned along the Argentinean-Chilean border would almost certainly have been condemned via international law and the international community - since they were not being used in the conflict and played no part in it... so it would have been very hard for the UK to justify such attacks based on self-defence.
Attacks on Argentinean military forces and targets on the mainland which were involved in the conflict however would have been proportional i.e. targetting the air-fields which the Argentinean airforce was operating from, along with supporting infrastructure - since clearly these were being used by the Argentineans to interfere with the UK's attempts to retake the Falklands, and causing extensive losses.
I would guess it would have been a borderline area for the UK to attack targets such as Argentinean Naval Facilities - since on one hand these were used to attack the Falklands originally, and untill the Belgrano were still used against the UK - but after the Belgrano was sunk the Argentinean Navy mainly returned back to port and effectively became non-combatants. So in the circumstances hitting the Argentinean Navy while in port you could argue they still posed a serious threat to the UK, and could still be used against the UK since they were previously used... but on the other that they ve ceased being involved, so hitting them some would argue wouldn't be proportional. It would have been a very borderline incident and could have gone eithier way.
As such - i d guess any UK escalation would have taken the above into account, and consequently the escalation would have been only against targets actively involved in Argentinean efforts to resist the UK.