Didn't you think she looked tired?
Here here.I remember the Falklands War, it always puzzled me why the British Left objected to the sinking of an enemy ship during war?
However the British Left always love to run down their own country, the West in General and especially America.
They couldn't stand Thatcher standing up for 3000 Islanders against a Military Junta.
I remember the Falklands War, it always puzzled me why the British Left objected to the sinking of an enemy ship during war?
However the British Left always love to run down their own country, the West in General and especially America.
They couldn't stand Thatcher standing up for 3000 Islanders against a Military Junta.
I remember the Falklands War, it always puzzled me why the British Left objected to the sinking of an enemy ship during war?
However the British Left always love to run down their own country, the West in General and especially America.
They couldn't stand Thatcher standing up for 3000 Islanders against a Military Junta.
Here here.I remember the Falklands War, it always puzzled me why the British Left objected to the sinking of an enemy ship during war?
However the British Left always love to run down their own country, the West in General and especially America.
They couldn't stand Thatcher standing up for 3000 Islanders against a Military Junta.
...or is it hear hear? Rarely see it in writing.
I remember the Falklands War, it always puzzled me why the British Left objected to the sinking of an enemy ship during war?
However the British Left always love to run down their own country, the West in General and especially America.
They couldn't stand Thatcher standing up for 3000 Islanders against a Military Junta.
Actually, 'the British left' generally supported the war, at least during the war: the then Labour party leader, Michael Foot, might have been a bit of an idealist, pretty left wing and in favour of unilateral nuclear disarmament, but he'd also made his name as one of the critics of appeasing the Nazis during the 1930s (Munich, etc), and was equally opposed to handing the Falklanders over to the dictatorship then running Argentina (wheras members of the Reagan cabinet like Jeanne Kirkpatrick were horrified when Reagan decided to back Britain rather than staying neutral).
The controversy over the Belgrano built up after the war, in particular over suggestions that statements to Parliament might have been 'economical with the truth', in Alan Clark's marvellous phrase.
(To divert from Neutral Zone-ish stuff to trivia: as QI pointed out, the Begrano was - before the US sold it to Argentina - a survivor of Peal Harbor known as 'the luckiest ship in the Navy'.)
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