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'On the beach the Lieutenant asked if he could say a prayer before
being shot. "Don't be so bloody silly," I replied, "get into the
boat."' My Friends, The Enemy recounts the Falklands War from the
viewpoint of the only Intelligence Corps in HQ 3 Commando Brigade
and serving with its Intelligence Section of Royal Marines, It is a
personal account supported by intelligence assembled since 1982.
Nick van der Bijl was a Staff Sergeant and his role meant that he
was expected to provide accurate intelligence to Brigade
Headquarters and deploy specialist skills. Little was known about
the Argentine threat and so the Intelligence Section was very
heavily involved in collecting, collating and distributing
intelligence from a variety of sources, initially from the UK and
after landing at San Carlos Water, also from documents, prisoners
of war, and a counter-intelligence operation. While the
intelligence proved to be accurate throughout the campaign, some
has been controversial, particularly relating to the Battle of
Goose Green. Van der Bijl was one of the first into Stanley after
the Argentinian surrender and was part of an intelligence operation
that searched enemy HQs for documents and selected several hundred
officers for further interrogation. My Friends, The Enemy is the
first time that the story of intelligence operations has been told
by a witness to events in the Falklands from the start of the
campaign to the finish.
In early April 1982, the UK despatched a Task Force to the South
Atlantic to recover the Falkland Islands and South Georgia from
occupation by Argentina. A distance of over 8,000 miles, it was the
second longest amphibious operation from home base to objective in
modern military history. On 21 May, 3 Commando landed at San Carlos
on East Falklands and a week later defeated the Argentinian
garrison at Goose Green. Within the week 5 Infantry Brigade landed
and by the middle of June, both brigades liberated Port Stanley
against a numerically superior force. The images here, almost all
of which are previously unpublished, illustrate the Argentinian
occupation of the Falklands and give an overview of the conditions
in which both sides fought the land war. The Argentines were
largely based in Port Stanley and Goose Green on East Falkland and
Port Howard and Fox Bay on West Falklands. Van der Bijl also looks
at the repatriation of prisoners and, finally, the Islands today.
Nick van der Bijl is the author of My Friends, The Enemy: Life in
Military Intelligence During the Falkands War, and was part of the
British intelligence team during the conflict. In possession of
unseen Argentinian photographs, he is in a unique position to offer
an important new perspective on the conflict.
'On the beach the Lieutenant asked if he could say a prayer before
being shot. "Don't be so bloody silly," I replied, "get into the
boat."' My Friends, The Enemy recounts the Falklands War from the
viewpoint of the only Intelligence Corps in HQ 3 Commando Brigade
and serving with its Intelligence Section of Royal Marines, It is a
personal account supported by intelligence assembled since 1982.
Nick van der Bijl was a Staff Sergeant and his role meant that he
was expected to provide accurate intelligence to Brigade
Headquarters and deploy specialist skills. Little was known about
the Argentine threat and so the Intelligence Section was very
heavily involved in collecting, collating and distributing
intelligence from a variety of sources, initially from the UK and
after landing at San Carlos Water, also from documents, prisoners
of war, and a counter-intelligence operation. While the
intelligence proved to be accurate throughout the campaign, some
has been controversial, particularly relating to the Battle of
Goose Green. Van der Bijl was one of the first into Stanley after
the Argentinian surrender and was part of an intelligence operation
that searched enemy HQs for documents and selected several hundred
officers for further interrogation. My Friends, The Enemy is the
first time that the story of intelligence operations has been told
by a witness to events in the Falklands from the start of the
campaign to the finish.
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