June 20, 2005 10:50 | by Kathryn
Tarker
Argentina Presses the Falklands/Malvinas Dispute
Argentine foreign minister Rafael Bielsa this week addressed the
UN C24 Decolonization Committee after raising the Falklands sovereignty
question at the Organisation of American States summit in Ft. Lauderdale,
Texas. Almost simultaneously, an Argentine court renewed the ineffective
demand that former UK Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher be put on trial
for the 1982 sinking of Argentina's cruiser, the Belgrano. Current
Argentine President Néstor Kirchner, despite a history of opposition
to his country's brutal military junta of 1976-1983, his rejection
of neoliberal economic policies and his advocacy for the forced retirement
of Dirty War officers, continues to aggressively promote one of the
bastard children of that era, the Falkland dispute. As such, he follows
in the reprehensible footsteps of former Argentine President Carlos
Menem. Fishing and oil exploration on the Falklands are booming, bringing
far too much economic incentive not to fuel a continuing struggle
that served as a cover for a raw power grab by the cynical military
junta that attempted to substitute nationalism for memory of the massive
human rights violations committed by Argentina's armed services. Meanwhile,
the Falkland Islands inhabitants' rights were ignored. Kathryn Tarker
explains what's going on.
As anticipated, Argentine foreign minister Rafael Bielsa raised
the Falklands, also known as Malvinas, question at the Organization
of American States (OAS) summit in Ft. Lauderdale (June 5-7, 2005)
and again in a pointed document on June 10, all as a lead-in to
his June 15 presentation on the issue before the UN C24 Decolonization
Committee. The decades-old, ongoing sovereignty dispute is between
Argentina and the UK over the South Atlantic islands, whose 3,000
inhabitants are currently self-governed by a tiny civilian administration
and protected by a British garrison as a UK overseas territory.
The OAS has decked the issue by holding, in a number of past declarations,
that the dispute is "of permanent hemispheric interest"
and that the issue should continue to be examined until Argentina
and the UK reach "a definitive solution," a relatively
non-committed stand that Bielsa cited during his presentation.
Argentina's appeal to the OAS and Bielsa's statement at the UN
were the latest developments after a summary rejection of the country's
proposals to negotiate the Falklands dispute at the UN decolonization
seminar held in mid-May at St. Vincent and the Grenadines. On this
occasion, Argentina called for greater restrictions on Falkland
islanders' self-determination only to be skilfully rebutted by Gibraltar
Opposition Leader Joe Bossano. Last weekend, the lower house of
the Argentine Parliament passed a motion demanding that former UK
Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher stand trial for her order to sink
the Argentine cruiser Belgrano during the 1982 Falklands war, which,
Argentina claims, was sunk after a cessation of the conflict had
been declared. All of this goes to prove that the heat generated
by the territorial conflict is far from over and is certainly not
likely to be resolved peacefully while Argentina sticks to its relatively
hard-line, no-compromise position.
Early History
The 1982 war was brief but consequential; it was a political turning
point for the Argentine military junta under General Leopoldo Galtieri
and for the British government under Thatcher. The war was initially
popular in Argentina, as it was instigated by the Galtieri administration's
calculated desire to feed off the bounteous anti-British sentiment
in the country, and to divert growing domestic opposition to his
brutal junta and the country's increasingly ruinous economy under
its jurisdiction. However, such demagoguery lost its power when
the war ended in disaster for Buenos Aires. Military rule was pressured
to end in favour of a return to constitutional government and Galtieri
was persuaded to resign even before the formal end of the conflict.
In Britain, winning the war was a lustrous boost to Thatcher's standing,
and she was able to remain in power until 1990.
The sovereignty issue itself, which has murky foundations, dates
back hundreds of years before the 1982 war. Both parties have previously
occupied the islands for long periods at a time, and Britain forcibly
seized control of them in 1833. Argentina bases its ownership claims
on papal bulls inherited from Spain, continuous colonization and
geographical proximity; the UK points to its maintenance of the
islanders' right to self-determination and to its long-term administration
of the archipelago.
Sovereignty talks between Britain and Argentina were instituted
in 1964 by the UN Committee for Decolonization and were haltingly
under way when forty Argentine scrap metal workmen were sent by
their foreman to the South Georgia islands on March 19, 1982 to
dismantle a defunct whaling station. They landed without permission
of the British Antarctic Survey base at Grytviken, raised the Argentine
flag, sang their national anthem and refused to leave. This was
the second unauthorized landing by a scrap metal contingent in roughly
one month. Britain lodged a formal complaint and began to anticipate
hostilities. On April 2, Galtieri led his country into a war that
he could only have won with total Latin American support, U.S. neutrality,
or a more diplomatic response from Britain. However, the ruling
Argentine junta was disappointed on all counts.
In Search of Allies
The OAS initially condemned the Argentine invasion as a violation
of its non-intervention agreement, negating the possibility of highly
organized Latin American support. Galtieri had well-founded grounds
for expecting the Reagan administration, with its policy of courting
Latin American dictators, to at least remain neutral in the war,
in light of the known pro-Argentine proclivities of UN ambassador
Jeanne Kirkpatrick. However, the U.S. finally tipped its initial
uncertainty about the issue in favour of lukewarm support, in the
form of intelligence data and some resupply of weaponry, for its
faithful NATO ally. Most frustratingly to the Galtieri junta, despite
signs to the contrary, such as the British Nationality Act of 1981,
where islanders' rights to British citizenship were curtailed -
Britain refused to be ousted under duress and responded with full
military force to the Argentine invasion in an impressive display
of ingenuity and brilliant strategy.
During the war, Argentina broke its own pledge not to interfere
with the Falkland islanders' mode of life, by doing so in numerous
ways. For example, once the capital Port Stanley was occupied, Spanish
was made the official language and islanders were required to drive
on the right side of the road. These regulations strengthened the
already formidable local resentment and distrust of Argentina. From
the beginning, Buenos Aires has emphatically ignored the clear opinions
of the islanders, who are almost all of British descent and who
repeatedly assert their preference that the Falklands remain self-governing
while maintaining strong ties to Britain.
To this day, Argentina has not wavered in its position that the
islanders were unlawfully planted by a colonial power and as such,
deserve to have their voices and rights curtailed. Argentina thought
this stance would find acceptance at the UN seminar at St. Vincent
and the Grenadines, but found nothing but fierce opposition. Bielsa
maintained this as a key point in his June 15 speech to the UN,
while also stressing the illegitimacy of Britain's 1833 seizure
of the Falklands. In 1996, Argentina, under former President Carlos
Menem, warned the UK not to pursue a UN resolution on the self-determination
of the islanders, threatening to halt oil and fishing talks with
London if the British initiative were to move forward.
Enterprising Argentine Manoeuvres
Despite Argentina's disparagement of the islanders' right to self-determination,
it has made remarkably bold overtures to them in the past, especially
under Menem and his foreign minister, Guido di Tella. Though Menem
vowed in 1998 that his country would never again try to take the
Falklands by force, in the mid-nineties, he repeatedly tried to
win the islanders over with heavy financial incentives. Sources
dispute the exact size of the offerings, with estimates ranging
from $800,000 per family to $1.55 million per person for a rejection
of British sovereignty.
Argentina's other method of attack has been to scour the international
community for any possible signs of support for its cause. While
both the EU and the U.S. are firm British allies, the OAS and the
UN recognize a need for further negotiations. Brazil and Chile are
at the head of widespread but weak Latin American sympathy for the
beleaguered Argentine cause.
Individual Argentine stratagems have run the gamut. Opposition
to mentioning the Falklands as a UK overseas territory in the draft
of the EU constitution for fear that it would institutionalize the
Falklands' British status was understandable and found easy support
in the Latin American community. However, a pledge of mutual support
between Menem and former Chilean President Eduardo Frei Ruiz-Tagle
in 1999 to push Argentina's claim to the Falklands and to obstruct
an out-of-country trial for human rights pariah Augusto Pinochet
illustrated the problematic lengths that Argentina will go to in
resuscitating the Falklands dispute. The disagreement over the island
can still serve as the "last refuge of the scoundrel:"
a place where the worst offences and ambitions are purposely disguised
by the fine drapery of patriotism.
British Retorts
The European Community instituted sanctions against Argentina during
the war and, similarly, one of Britain's immediate responses to
the conflict was to institute an arms export embargo against Argentina
that remains in place today, but is reviewed on a case by case basis.
For example, the embargo was relaxed when internationalist Menem
dispatched Argentina's troops into a series of UN peacekeeping commitments:
Argentina served alongside Britain as part of the UN task force
in Kuwait in 1990 and again in the peacekeeping force in Cyprus
in 1993. The UK has also continually maintained its "Fortress
Falklands" policy since the war by maintaining a substantial
garrison on the islands, now numbering about 500 troops.
Less from genuine moral outrage than from her capacity for selective
indignation, Thatcher condemned the Argentine junta as a "tin
pot" dictatorship throughout the Falklands conflict. In fact,
the UK won the war with significant assistance from Pinochet, whom
Thatcher has since lavishly thanked for services rendered - presumably,
he is not a "tin pot" dictator in her estimation. This
may be because Chile was a de facto UK ally during the war but has
since switched sides, much to the confusion of the UK.
Whitehall has not shown any serious desire to alter the crux of
the Falklands debate since the war, though it made numerous conciliatory
gestures before 1982 that were rejected by the islanders. It also
had sent a secret task force led by a nuclear-powered submarine
to the Falklands in 1977, out of the fear that a full-scale invasion
could take place after 50 Argentine scientists landed there illegally.
Argentina and the UK re-established diplomatic relations in 1990,
and the UK ultimately relented regarding Argentina's requests for
establishing flights and visitation rights to the islands, but the
question of sovereignty itself has not been up for discussion. As
current UK Prime Minister Tony Blair explained in a 1998 BBC reference,
the UK does not regard it as a "fruitful line" to pursue.
Kirchner: No Break with the Past
The recovery of the Falklands islands is an Argentine state policy
goal as well as a constitutional mandate. The issue is addressed
in the first temporary provision of the Argentine constitution,
in which Argentina "ratifies its legitimate and non-prescribing
sovereignty over the Falklands, Georgias del Sur and Sandwich del
Sur Islands and over the corresponding maritime and insular zones."
The constitution asserts that these islands are an "integral
part of the national territory" and it contains a pledge to
recover them with deference to international law and the islanders'
way of life. The mechanism by which this way of life will be protected
is, however, not a policy matter or mandate. An Argentine Embassy
official told COHA in a recent interview that speculating on how
Argentina would treat immigration issues if it gained internationally
recognized sovereignty over the Falklands is as unclear as "looking
in a crystal ball." The official also confirmed that Argentina
still refuses to accept the islanders as an official third party
to the negotiations or to recognize the legitimacy of the Falklands
government.
As a former member of the 1995 Constituent Assembly, current President
Kirchner participated in the amendment of the Argentine constitution;
he should be no stranger to the above expanded claims to the Falklands
islands which were inserted during the 1995 revisions. Kirchner
apparently has not at all rethought Menem's unabashed ambition regarding
the Falklands, and as COHA's Argentine Embassy source explained,
Argentina will never settle for anything less than complete sovereignty
over the islands. Argentina also views every increase in normalization
of relations with the Falklands as a step towards cementing its
sovereignty claims, as Menem repeatedly had asserted while president.
Kirchner, justifiably hailed as one of Latin America's most admirable
New Left presidents, is noted for his clean-up of the Argentine
Supreme Court, hounding of military junta human rights violators
and his rejection of the cut-throat "Los Chicago Boys"
school of neoliberal economics. But most of all, he has become a
historic figure for daring to stand up to the IMF and the country's
bond holders by renouncing Argentina's foreign debts. However, his
uncritical acceptance of the nationalist Falklands cause is a disconcerting
blip on his record as the Argentine position actively spurns the
islanders' right to self-determination as protected by the first
chapter of the UN Charter. Kirchner thus is promoting continued
rancour by championing a flawed territorial cause that was violently
appropriated by Galtieri and his disgraced military junta's cabal
during the Dirty War. Next it was bolstered by the junta's specious
apologist, Menem, when it should have been consigned to the dustbin
of history on the lost cause basis of territorial sovereignty or
settled on the basis of the allocation of earnings from maritime
resources found in the Falklands basin. For once, a little less
consistency on a diplomatic initiative might have been more desirable.
The Argentine cause needs a substantial reconceptualization to become
legitimate enough to have a prospect for bringing about a definite
solution to the conflict, which is testified by the lack of progress
at yesterday's vanished opportunity, the UN Decolonization Committee
meeting that is held but once a year.
Minerals and Fishing
Surely Kirchner recognizes that gaining undisputed sovereignty
over the islands would not necessarily benefit Argentina beyond
the simple stoking of national pride. What is really of importance
is the distribution of resources in the region. As early as April
2, 1982, the day of the Argentine invasion, COHA reported that oil
might well be a significant factor in Galtieri's aggression. With
the UK and Argentina currently splitting the revenue from the Falkland
Islands government's lucrative sale of fishing licenses (which help
make the Falkland Islanders' GDP per capita one of the highest in
the hemisphere) and oil exploration fees, the allocation of earnings
from resources are what is important in today's dispute over the
islands' status. The UK and Argentina signed a Joint Declaration
of Cooperation over Offshore Activities in the Southwest Atlantic
in 1995, which established a "special area of cooperation"
in the most uncontested part of the quarrelled-over zones. In this
area the parcelling is at its most balanced. Companies are expected
to operate in this zone on a joint venture basis, with half of the
area licensed by the Falklands government and the other half by
Argentina.
Currently, seismic exploration for oil is moving full-steam ahead.
The Spanish petroleum company Repsol YPF is planning heavy investment
in Argentina and the South Atlantic in association with Enarsa,
the Argentine government's energy corporation. The British company
FOGL also has decided to expand its oil search, especially in light
of its late May finding of plentiful drill site possibilities. Conditions
for petroleum drilling have proven surprisingly favourable on the
islands, according to the Falkland Islands Government Department
of Mineral Resources. Of course, disputes over oil in the Falklands
might be used as a springboard for wrangling over oil exploration
in the greater Antarctic region, where Argentina and Great Britain
have additional overlapping claims.
Gold and diamonds are also suspected to be part of the islands'
resource base. Gold grains have been panned from numerous streams
while the presence of diamonds is somewhat less certain. The expectation
of finding such treasures rests on that fact that the Falklands
were once connected to South Africa along the edge of the Gondwanaland
super continent and might share exploitable natural similarities.
Both fishing and minerals exploitation carry risks. An oil spill
off the Falklands coast could affect Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay
and Antarctica, and over-fishing has threatened the survival of
the Illex squid and of its superiors in the food chain. Additionally,
there are 117 well-marked but still dangerous mine fields left over
from the war implanted with roughly 25,000 mines that could blow
up personnel or vehicles, though this hasn't seemed to function
as a deterrent to any company or even struck the islanders as a
matter of pressing concern.
Smokescreen Solidarity
Even under Kirchner, with a constitutional government trying to
legally resolve a territorial dispute, Buenos Aires refuses to recognize
that self-determination ought to be the goal of anti-colonial efforts.
Additionally, Argentina has at times not erected wholly wise standards
in its search for allies; too often, the support it manages to elicit
comes from governments or movements with domestic and international
records sometimes as questionable as those underlying Galtieri's
original invading junta. In 1982, Argentina received serious military
aid from its ideological rival Cuba as well as backing from Sandinista
Nicaragua and the leftist Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front
(FMLN) guerrillas in El Salvador, all backing a government that
otherwise despised them and which was killing their counterparts
daily in Argentina. In the mid 90s, Buenos Aires found its major
ally in Chile, a country trying to save face for Pinochet's leadership
role in Operation Condor, the covert 1970s' South American alliance
of dictatorships which systematically oppressed and murdered leftist
opponents.
Argentina's most respectable support has recently come from the
Rio Group (GRIO), which counts 19 South American countries as members,
but if it wants to find a final, satisfactory and legitimate way
of extracting more benefits from the small islands, it needs to
mobilize the UN. Buenos Aires would be wise to revise its approach
to an organization that repeatedly has declared the implementation
of the right to self-determination should be "carried out freely
and without outside pressure," in a form that recognizes the
"authentic interests and aspirations" of the people to
be decolonized. Because Kirchner's government cannot reconcile itself
with this mandate, Bielsa found the same indifferent response at
the UN Decolonization Committee meeting that just took place in
New York that he got in May at the St. Vincent and the Grenadines
UN conference, with the settlement of the sovereignty dispute not
making any discernible progress even more than two decades later.
Kathryn Tarker is a Research Associate at the Council on Hemispheric
Affairs. Founded in 1975, COHA is an independent, non-profit, non-partisan,
tax-exempt research and information organization. For more information,
go to http://www.coha.org
See also http://www.spectrezine.org/LatinAmerica/arms.htm