Falklands War fought today?

Do the IA-63 Pampa's have the range to reach the islands with some combat payload + station time, and back to the continent?
 
But today, with the public embarrassment in trying to reinforce Cyprus against attacks (Cyprus is much closer to the British Isles than the Falklands), and reports of a secret deal whereby British taxpayers would pay Mauritius to take the Chagos Islands off the UK's hands, and the news about Gibraltar, may indicate that at long last Argentina has an opening with this current UK government. Like everybody else, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Buenos Aires can read news reports. I would not be surprised if discreet inquiries have already been made to London.

Chagos deal is now stone cold dead...Labour have abandoned the bill, and realistically over the remaining Parliament they've missed their chance. The bill is also Starmer's pet project...and he's the most unpopular PM we've ever had...the May local elections may be the end of him....with Starmer gone, or seriously damaged (the May elections are projected to be a disaster for Labour) and Lord Hermer not being popular in the rest of the party the deal is dead for all time...unlikely that the Labour Party (and certainly anyone in it thats interested in a deal) will ever be in government alone again...

Gibraltar, SBA's and Falklands only come up with the Green Party who are small potatoes...who also cannibalise Labours vote...
 
Do the IA-63 Pampa's have the range to reach the islands with some combat payload + station time, and back to the continent?

Technically yes, but in practice no. It's 735km from Rio Gallegos to Mount Pleasant in a straight line. For an IA-63 with limited combat load it could do that...but would need to transit at medium altitude all the way there and back...loadout would be limited as well. Goes without saying it wouldn't be making a return trip...
 
...Progressively over the next 5 years a lot of the RN's current major issues disappear....F-35B fleet is delivered in full (with Tranche 2 on order), FSS in build, T26 arrives, T31 arrives, Sea Venom FOC, SSN availability increases, T45 all available/working and upgraded, NSM on more of the fleet.... but to be fair there are some issues that still need resolution or are still a cause for concern.... like RFA pay, retention and availability, MRSS order, F-35 Block IV, Type 23 hanging in there etc etc. They're not out of the woods yet, but right now might be the absolute low point. IF there was a window (and there isn't a credible one) for Argentinian action its rapidly closing day by day...
...In every scenario the RN carrier task force would cut off the islands, pound the Argentinian defenders and eventually retake relatively easily. Unless the RN sinks itself... which admittedly it almost has given how badly it's been mismanaged.

You may be right that today's degradation is the Royal Navy's nadir, and that better times can be seen coming. I hope so. An interesting video today by British commentator 'Warships & Warriors' about the nine years the lead ship of the Daring-class Type 45 destroyers has spent off her feet. The Daring class was designed with innovative integrated electric propulsion, with power-hungry weapons and sensors. It has been decided that the flawed intercoolers in the engine room won't be replaced. Instead three bigger diesels are replacing the current two, so that those can handle all expected electrical loads while fighting at 20 knots. (For full speed, the intercooled gas turbines must work, and those have trouble in warm seas. But a future failure will reduce the destroyer's speed by a third, rather than depower all sensors and fire control and internal lighting, like what happened at the most inopportune time to battleship USS South Dakota during the Naval Battle of Guadalcanal.)

The good news is that HMS Daring is crewed and has been making day trips out of Portsmouth these past few weeks, and might be fit to return to service later this year, or at worst in 2027. See:
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LkEouplH5wI
 
A Shahed-type drones could be launched from containers, and have enough range to strike Falklands from up to thousand kilometers range. They could be equipped with heavy enough warheads (dual, shaped charge & penetration), to represent at least reasonable threat to HAS'ed aircraft.
Shaheds could be launched from the Argentine mainland. However their major defect is that are slow and will likely be detected while still far out to sea, even in a sea skimming profile. That leaves too much time for aircraft to take off and for SAM defenses to be ready... likely 15-20 minutes warning.
Well, they are small, and could exploit gaps in radar coverage to close with the islands. Also, I doubt that garrison would be fast to react, especially if drones would approach from unexpected direction (say, from East). They would be heistant to start shooting, fearing some kind of mistake.

Meh. Argentinians buying or building hundreds of a drone design with the range to fly a serious weight of explosive from their own coast would inevitably be noticed by British intelligence, and everybody else, and their intended purpose would be obvious, whatever cover story the Ministerio de Defensa gives out. Allowing the UK plenty of time to counter, reinforcing RAF Mount Pleasant by leveraging allied Ukrainian and American counter-drone expertise. Not a good plan.
 
Owen, I watched an American political youtuber reaction to Felton's video, the second hand embarassment from seeing the brits getting clowned on still got me laughing today.
Pathetic that in the course of one, two decades the RN went from being a somewhat first class Navy to not much more than a second rate fleet with a kamikaze button. AFAIK, the current primary tool of wave-the-flag ops the RN use is the River class boats. Visually, for me, it looks barely bigger than the dredger my dad bought last month. And its primary armanent is a 30mm chain gun, god knows how much reload it has, with only optical directing too. A team of Russian/Pakistani advisors and a company of Somalian pirates, properly supplied and trained, could throw a pretty horrifying attack on a boat passing by.

Kicking a dog when it's down is unsatisfying to me. And if Brits are prompted to give as good as they get here, they would be in danger of a visit from their police.
 
Well, for the sake of the scenario we could allow that UK government would heistate, the internal politics would took its place, and Cabinet would still be debating - wouldn't reinforcing Falklands be viewed as too provocative. Of course, it's just the assumptions. But deploying full squadron of RAF and moving RN warships into area would basically cancel any Argentinean attempts of invasion anyway.
Could the MOD change the destinations of assets already in motion without PM-etc permission?

Say, a ship planned to come home via Suez taking the long way round instead?
 
Could the MOD change the destinations of assets already in motion without PM-etc permission?

Say, a ship planned to come home via Suez taking the long way round instead?
Given the politics involved, wwell nigh impossible. Foreign & Commonwealth Office would certainly have to be involved (as a starting point to liaise with foreign govts along the route). If tensions are running so high as to warrant sending a warship, then it would be worthy of discussion at Cabinet level.
 
Hm? I thought all RAF Typhoons were refitted to use LITENING pods & Paveway bombs?
Agreed. What the Tranche 1 Typhoon FGR.4 of 1435 Flight in the Falklands lack is the ability to use more modern weapons such as Storm Shadow, Brimstone and Meteor. Those capabilities only come with FGR.4 aircraft from Tranches 2 & 3.
Yes and No. Tranche 1, the type used in the Falklands, can carry Asraam Blk V and lower, Amraam (but not Meteor). In terms of A2G weaponry they can carry Enhanced Paveway II and Litening III. Some of the Tranche 1 (the ones upgraded to Block V's) can also use Paveway IV. The aircraft in the Falklands were rotated in in 2024. They are all late build Tranche 1's so are highly likely to have Paveway IV and Enhanced Paveway II capability (if we haven't retired all of the EPWII yet). They can also carry Litening V but have hardly ever been seen with it as its full capabilities can only be used with T2 and T3.
All this is, to a degree, moot though as in 15 months the Tranche 1 will all be retired and will be replaced by Tranche 2 or Tranche 3 Typhoon (I'm guessing they'll send Tranche 2). That will bring Meteor, Asraam Blk. VI, Litening V, Brimstone 2/3 and Storm Shadow capability (and obviously full Paveway IV capability). Personally I'd just leave the 4 T1's in the Falklands as a source of spares...and as decoys. Saves flying them home...
You could definitely drop PWIV on an Aspide armed ship well outside of its engagement envelope.
Yep. So essentially the four Typhoons are perfectly enough to kill any kind of direct invasion.

You seem to assume that because four Eurofighter Typhoons are present today in the Falklands, four Typhoons would fight a hypothetical second Argentine invasion. Well, maybe. Reports warn that the struggling Royal Air Force and British Army have as great a percentage of their vehicles immobilized as the Royal Navy does.

But, after your confirmation that older Tranche 1 Typhoons are indeed equipped and trained to drop 500lb Paveway IV guided bombs on moving ships, I concur that even two flyable jets would make short work of a bargain-basement invasion like I would guess achievable with current or near-term Argentine capability—cram four thousand conscripts with small arms, AT4s, and 81mm mortars into requisitioned merchant vessels, sail at best speed to the Falklands accompanied by what Argentine Navy warships remain functional, and unload the men quayside in Stanley and Mare Harbour in unopposed landings. With a plainclothes fifth column ("pilgrims to Argentine Military Cemetery", "here to film a documentary about penguins", "Chilean tourists", or whatever) already ashore at key points. Grab food and trucks/SUVs at gunpoint as needed. Done at very short notice, yet (unlike in 1982) thought out, planned, wargamed, and prepared for long beforehand, mindful of all lessons learned from the campaign (except the lesson Don't Invade the Falklands).

That Paveways promise a slaughter like 1943's Battle of the Bismarck Sea is all the more reason for Argentina to cripple all runways via an unconventional surprise attack immediately prior to hostilities.

Like you, I don't believe Argentina's armed forces would be fit for an opposed amphibious landing without a lengthy, sustained rebuilding effort that would take us beyond the chronology considered in this thread.
 
Chagos deal is now stone cold dead...Labour have abandoned the bill, and realistically over the remaining Parliament they've missed their chance. The bill is also Starmer's pet project...and he's the most unpopular PM we've ever had...the May local elections may be the end of him....with Starmer gone, or seriously damaged (the May elections are projected to be a disaster for Labour) and Lord Hermer not being popular in the rest of the party the deal is dead for all time...unlikely that the Labour Party (and certainly anyone in it thats interested in a deal) will ever be in government alone again...
Gibraltar, SBA's and Falklands only come up with the Green Party who are small potatoes...who also cannibalise Labours vote...

That's good to hear. For decades after the 1982 surrender I considered Falkland Islands sovereignty to have been permanently resolved, however loud Argentine domestic opinion got. But after tidings of the state of British armed forces and of Britain in general; the Chagos and Gibraltar shenanigans; the Cyprus embarrassment; and Javier Milei's address for the 44th anniversary of the war, I began to doubt. Hence this speculative thread. To be clear, I still don't believe a second Argentine invasion of the Falklands is likely in the coming years, absent a breakdown of civil order in Britain.
 
Like you, I don't believe Argentina's armed forces would be fit for an opposed amphibious landing without a lengthy, sustained rebuilding effort that would take us beyond the chronology considered in this thread.

Essentially yes. To be anything like realistic, such invasion would require a MASSIVE rebuild of Argentinean military - Navy and Air Force first - and considering the current state of Argentinean economy, such rebuild would took quite a lot of time. They simply can't increase their defense spending to the level, that would allow them to boost their military capabilities fast.
 
Politically Argentinian threat is literally gold dust to sitting PMs in the UK.
A chance to relive the Falklands boost and entrench one's party domestically.
 
Is this seriously a debate lol, what exactly can they do vs QEC's air wing even limited as it is, and how can they realistically threaten even the rather degraded CSG we could put together today?

even if they somehow took the islands, they would be eaten alive by what comes after
 
Is this seriously a debate lol, what exactly can they do vs QEC's air wing even limited as it is, and how can they realistically threaten even the rather degraded CSG we could put together today?

even if they somehow took the islands, they would be eaten alive by what comes after

The only realistic situation is, if Argentinean claims would be (for some reason) supported by some other major South American power - Brazil or Chile. Not sure why they might be interested in doing this. But well, modern geopolitical situation is so unpredictable, that it's not impossible to suggest that some South American leader would decide to support Argentina for some reason.
 
The only realistic situation is, if Argentinean claims would be (for some reason) supported by some other major South American power - Brazil or Chile. Not sure why they might be interested in doing this. But well, modern geopolitical situation is so unpredictable, that it's not impossible to suggest that some South American leader would decide to support Argentina for some reason.
Even if we assume that the United States would not be interested in the region for a moment, the formation of a coalition for the "liberation" of the Falklands would quickly lead to a coalition aimed at protecting the current status quo. No one would know if someone else in the region might suddenly get the idea to "liberate," for example, Guyana or the Dutch Antilles.
 
Is this seriously a debate lol, what exactly can they do vs QEC's air wing even limited as it is, and how can they realistically threaten even the rather degraded CSG we could put together today?

You must have missed it, EWPT2: specific options on the cheap for a hypothetical second invasion are just what is being discussed in this new thread. For you to engage critically with those here would be welcome.

even if they somehow took the islands, they would be eaten alive by what comes after

Many in the UK believe their armed forces, especially the Royal Navy, are unfit to face a second Falklands war, and have been loudly saying so these past two months. Take a look.
 
Only in the event of an internal collapse of the UK or an external threat greater than Argentina do the "cheap options" for 2026 run out. In any other case, Argentina would have to commit to planning a full-scale invasion. This would inevitably trigger alarms—if not within British intelligence, then within one of their allied nations—which would kick even the most sluggish Westminster bureaucrats into gear. Furthermore, Argentina's economic situation is well-known, and there is no sign of improvement on the horizon.
We can simulate the potential Argentine requirements needed to defeat the existing garrison and withstand a possible second wave arriving to retake the islands.
 
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