Quote:
"The picture shows the Arg A-4 Skyhawk # C-240 that sunk the HMS Sheffield near Port Stanley. C. June '82. Photo Che JNP via C/W.com"
The Type-42 destroyer HMS Sheffield was sunk as a result of an attack carried by a Super Etendard, which fired an Exocet missile
that hit the warship, and not by an A-4.
Besides the Sheffield and the Atlantic Conveyor, there were other British warships either sunk or damaged by Argentinean aircraft; I recall the following:
HMS Ardent
HMS Sir Galahad (RFA, I believe)
HMS Antrim
HMS Glamorgan
HMS Antelope
HMS Coventry
Now, for a little bit of data on Argentinean
Aircraft in the Falklands:
(This comes from memory, OK? Not the most reliable source, and from the very limited information that I have with me in my computer.)
Back in 1998-1999, I wrote a series of three
articles on the "small" airplanes employed by the
Argentineans, including the Pucaras, the Aermacchi MB-339As and the Beech T-34C Turbo Mentors. These were published at
www.laahs.com
Those articles are back home in Texas, and I will be glad to share them with anyone interested. There are many factual errors in my research, given the scarcity of material available to me
back then, but the articles are still a good source of data.
The war lasted more than a week, from April to late May (again, dates are off my head, no certain source) or early June, during the harshest part of the Austral winter season.
The sequelae of the conflict lasts up to this day, with tentative contacts being made by British and Argentineans; as a direct result, the military rule in Argentina ended, and a succesion of
civilian governments took root.
Too many people died on both sides, so that the Argentinean generals could have their ill-planned war and so that Margaret Thatcher could show to the world that she was indeed, the "Iron Lady."
The true grit of pilots and aircrew were shown to the world, both British and Argentineans performing under appalling conditions and
at great distances from their land bases in the case of the Argentineans.
Aircraft:
A Prefectura Naval Argentina (Coast Guard) Short Skyvan, was lost over the Falklands.
There were of course, the staggering losses suffered by the heroic A-4, Dagger and Pucara pilots, against a better armed and trained
enemy, but with the Argentineans valiantly pressing their attacks on, despite overwhelming odds against them.
Several Argentinean aircraft were damaged during landing accidents, but the groundcrews managed one way or another, to bring them back
to life; the same was true for those aircraft returning with battle damage.
When the conflict was over, several airframes were left around the islands, and the Brits took with them, as war trophies, several Pucaras, at least an Agusta 109, a Chinook, and whatever was left, was either placed as a gate guardian at Stanley, at the Governor's residence, and also moved to a bombing range.
One of more of the Pucaras were assembled out of parts, and the airplane was briefly operated by the RAF (Boscombe Down) and evaluated, and afterwards the remnants of these and the other
Pucaras, went to British museums, and at least to one individual owner.
The following is an outdated tally of the Pucaras in the UK:
A-515 Cosford Aerospace Museum, Cosford (U.K.) Jul 1998 Wore RAF serial ZD485 briefly.
A-517 (G-BLRP) Somewhere in Witney, Oxfordshire (U.K.) 1995 Last known owner Rod J. H. Butterfield.
A-522North East Air Museum (U.K.) May 1999 RAF maintenance number 8768M allocated, former FAA museum at Yeovilton.
A-528 Norfolk & Suffolk Aviation Museum, Flixton (U.K.) Nov 2000 Undergoing restoration.
A-533 DERA Boscombe Down Museum (U.K.) Apr 2002 Nose only.
A-549 Imperial War Museum (U.K.) Mar 2001 Falklands exhibit, hangar 3.
I have one photo by Ian Howatt, showing the burnt remains of one of the Argentinean Army's CH-47 Chinooks destroyed during the conflict.
T-34Cs:
T-34C-1 "1-A-412" was dumped at the Rabbit Range, and used as a target.
This T-34C was one of several aircraft destroyed and or / damaged during the D-Squadron SAS raid on "Isla Borbon" (Pebble Island), including T-34s, and Pucaras.
The Aermacchi MB-339As:
These were the only Argentinean jet aircraft to be based in the Falkland Islands, and were limited in their capabilities due to the length of the runway at Stanley, the many mechanical and electrical problems they encountered, and to the bombing raids by RAF Vulcans, Harriers and naval gunfire.
5 Aermacchi MB-339As were lost during the conflict:
s/n Serial Unit Date lost
0764 4-A-113 1a Escuadrilla de Ataque May 3, 1982
0765 4-A-114 1a Escuadrilla de Ataque May 28, 1982
0761 4-A-110 1a Escuadrilla de Ataque June 14, 1982
0763 4-A-112 1a Escuadrilla de Ataque June 14, 1982
0767 4-A-116 1a Escuadrilla de Ataque June 14, 1982 (Shrapnel damage)
Three MB-339As plus a large cache of spare parts, are stored in the Houston, TX area. I have seen and photographed these aircraft, as far back as 1,999.
Off the top of my head, I remember 4-A-118,
and I believe 4-A-115 and 4-A-111 are the other two.
For a while after the war, the Brits were actively working to build a new airport in the Falklands (Mt. Pleasant??), and had F-4K (IIRC) Phantoms, later replaced by Tornadoes.
BOOKS:
Mushroom books (
www.mmpbooks.biz )has published a book on the
Pucara, written by Phil Cater,Sawtry,Cambs and Ricardo Caballero (Buenos Aires).
Documentary Sources:
The Battle for The Falklands. M. Hastings & S. Jenkins. Ó1983 by Max Hastings and Simon Jenkins. W.W. Norton and Company, Inc. New
York. ISBN 0-393-30198-2
Falklands. The Air War. R. Burden, M. Draper, D. Rough, C. Smith,
D. Wilton. Ó1986 by R. Burden, M. Draper, D. Rough, C. Smith, D. Wilton. Arms and Armour Press, London. ISBN 0-85368-842-7
Latin-American Military Aviation. By John M. Andrade. 1982 by Midland Counties Publications. Leicester, England. ISBN 0-904597-31-8 .
T-34 Mentor in action. Aircraft number 107, Squadron Signal Publications. Lou Drendel, Illust. By Joe Sewell. 1990 by Squadron Signal Publications, Carrollton, TX. ISBN -89747-249-7
Air International, Vol. 23, No. 6, December 1982. By Fine Scroll Limited, Leicester, England. ISSN 0306-5634
Aircraft Illustrated, Vol. 16, No. 9, September 1983. By Ian Allan Ltd., Terminal House, England. ISSN 0002-2675
There are several excellent sources of information on Argentinean aircraft, published by Jorge Nunez-Padin, Javier Mosquera, Vladimiro Cettolo and another gentleman whose name regrettably, I cannot recall right now.
You can contact Jorge Nunez:
marauder@satlink.com
The books are great quality, many color and B&W photos, and they have English text, too. They go for about $15.00 each, and they usually come with a free, never published photo of an Argentinean aircraft.
www.fuerzasnavales.com is also a great source (albeit in Spanish only) for data and photos.
www.malvinasargentinas.com is also a very good site.
Saludos,
Tulio