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A Carrier at Risk - Argentinean Aircraft Carrier and Anti-Submarine Operations Against Royal Navy's Attack Submarines During the Falklands/Malvinas War, 1982 (Paperback)
Loot Price: R533
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A Carrier at Risk - Argentinean Aircraft Carrier and Anti-Submarine Operations Against Royal Navy's Attack Submarines During the Falklands/Malvinas War, 1982 (Paperback)
Series: Latin America@War
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List price R601
Loot Price R533
Discovery Miles 5 330
You Save R68 (11%)
Expected to ship within 9 - 17 working days
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The naval warfare of the last few decades appears dominated by
operations of fast missile craft and a wide diversity of other
minor vessels in so-called 'littoral warfare'. On the contrary,
skills and knowledge about anti-submarine warfare on the high seas
- a discipline that dominated much of the World War II, and once
used to be the reason for existence of large fleets of the North
Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO) and of the Warsaw Pact - appear
nearly extinct. Indeed, it seems that no armed conflicts involving
this form of naval warfare have been fought for a significant time.
As so often, the reality is entirely different. Submarine and
anti-submarine warfare remain one of most sophisticated forms of
armed conflicts to this day. Unsurprisingly, considering the amount
of high-technology equipment necessary for their conduct, they are
shrouded behind a thick veil of secrecy. This is why the operations
of the sole Argentinean aircraft carrier - ARA 25 de Mayo - during
the much-publicised war in the South Atlantic of 1982 remain
largely unknown until this very day. It is well-known that the
United Kingdom deployed the largest task force its Royal Navy had
assembled since the Korean War over 12,000 kilometres away from
home. It is well-known that the operations of this task force
proved decisive for the outcome of the war: it not only brought the
air power that established itself in control of the air space over
the battlefield, but also hauled all the troops and supplies
necessary to recover the islands that were the core of the dispute.
However, the impression created very early during this conflict -
and largely maintained until today - is that ARA 25 de Mayo and
other elements of the accompanying Task Force 79 of the Argentinean
Navy were forced into a hurried withdrawal by the sheer presence of
multiple nuclear attack submarines of the Royal Navy. Based on
years of research, including extensive investigation into naval
operations of both sides of the conflict, 'A Carrier at Risk' is a
vibrant and lucid account of a week-long cat-and-mouse game between
anti-submarine warfare specialists on board ARA 25 de Mayo, and
multiple nuclear attack submarines of the Royal Navy: an entirely
unknown, yet crucial aspect of the South Atlantic War. Illustrated
by over 100 photographs, maps, and colour profiles, this volume
closes one of the major gaps - though also a crucially important
affair - in the coverage of this conflict.
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