Margaret Thatcher came close to resigning as Prime Minister during the 1982 Falklands Conflict when her Foreign Secretary, Francis Pym, recommended to the War Cabinet proposals which she regarded as unconditional surrender.
Twelve-year-old Falkland Islands schoolgirl, Emily Hancox, has enjoyed one of the proudest days of her life, when she was presented to the Queen, the Duke of Edinburgh and Prince Charles in London at the multi-cultural Commonwealth Day Observance at Westminster Abbey.
The British task force could not have retaken the Falkland Islands from Argentine occupation without the latest version of the side-winder missile. This is admitted by Baroness Thatcher in another of her Times articles giving her version of the conflict.
Following the approval last week by the Falkland Islands Planning Committee of an application submitted by the association grouping next-of-kin of Argentine servicemen killed during the 1982 South Atlantic war seeking to build a memorial to the Argentine war dead at the Argentine Cemetery at Darwin, a fund raising campaign was launched yesterday to collect funds for this purpose.
The British Secretary of State for Defence, Geoffrey Hoon, is according to an official of the Ministry of Defence, likely to raise the issue of Argentine military involvement in Afghanistan, supporting the ?war against terror'.
Former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher is re-telling what the Times newspaper calls the riveting inside story of how she took Britain to war to reclaim the Falklands.
Coinciding with her articles, the Times praises Margaret Thatcher's handling of the Falklands crisis, declaring that re-examination of the conflict shows that Baroness Thatcher earned her international reputation through true leadership. She was not lucky. She deserved it.
Geoffrey Hoon, the British Secretary of State for Defence, on a brief one-day visit to the Falkland Islands, has stressed the importance of ?wider cooperation' between the Islands and Argentina.