The day Argentina knew Falklands War was lost
Not that it seemed like that at the time. It was a perilous operation. The textbooks say that for an amphibious operation an army should have secure lifelines, air superiority and a troop advantage ratio of 3 to 1. British forces were about to mount the biggest amphibious landing since Suez, 8,000 miles from home, with limited air cover and no missile defence shield. Nor did the numbers match up; the enemy, well dug in, was estimated at 11,000 men. As Brigadier Julian Thompson, the head of 3 Commando Brigade and the architect of the land campaign, told his unit commanders: "This will be no picnic."