Land that Lost Its Heroes
How Argentina Lost the Falklands War
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Published:26th Apr '12
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Essential title for the 30th anniversary of the Falklands War on April 2, 2012
'A required book for anyone who wishes to understand the Argentine situation before and after the Falklands War' Graham Greene
'Full of insights about the extraordinary story of Argentina under Galtieri and Alfonsin' Max Hastings
--
Jimmy Burns was the only full-time British foreign correspondent to remain in Argentina covering the Falklands War.
In The Land that Lost Its Heroes, he gives a detailed account of the military planning of the invasion, exposing not only the hidden motives and nature of Argentina's military regime, but also the pitifully inadequate reactions of both British diplomacy and intelligence. Burns exposes the duplicity of other Western nations and the international banking community and gives a vivid first-hand account of the end of the regime, the debt crisis and the return to democracy under Raul Alfonsin.
Full of insights about the extraordinary story of Argentina under Galtieri and Alfonsin * Max Hastings *
An excellent study of the crisis * Robert Harris, Observer *
Exceptionally well written and well presented * Sunday Times *
A beautifully written and well-researched book, competently annotated and documented, which is special on several counts. His is a first-hand and authoratative account of the Falklands war as seen from Buenos Aires. Burns brings to bear his unique experience of a mixed British and Spanish upbringing in his quest for an answer to Argentina's incomprehensible descent into violent political chaos and moral as well as economic bankruptcy * Sunday Telegraph *
ISBN: 9781408834404
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 391g
584 pages