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Military history of Argentina

 
Wikipedia: Military history of Argentina
History of Argentina
Map of Argentina colored by Argentina's flag
This article is part of a series
Pre-Columbian
Indigenous peoples
Spanish Empire
Viceroyalty of the Río de la Plata
British invasions
Independence
May Revolution
War of Independence
Congress of Tucumán
Building a nation
1853 Constitution
Conquest of the Desert
Generation of '80
Immigration
The Radicals in Power (1916-1930)
The Infamous Decade
Age of the Peróns
Juan Perón
Eva Perón
General Confederation of Labour
Argentina from 1955 to 1976
Revolución Libertadora
Revolución Argentina
Military government
Dirty War
Falklands War
(Guerra de las Malvinas)
Democracy and Crisis
Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo
Trial of the Juntas
Carapintadas
The Argentinazo
Present day Argentina
History by topic
Military
Nationality

Argentina Portal
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Pre-Independence

Independence and nineteenth century

Twentieth century

  • 1914–1919: Argentina remains neutral during World War I by orders of president Hipólito Yrigoyen.
  • 1921: The Argentine Army is used to eliminate strikers in Santa Cruz Province. Lt. Col. Varela commands the operation. Between 1,500 and 3,000 workers are executed.
  • 1939–1945: World War II. The civilian government was considering joining the allies, but many officers of the Argentine armed forces (and ordinary Argentine citizens) objected due to fear of the spread of communism. This was a factor contributing to the military coup of 1943. Pedro Pablo Ramírez Machuca, who had been attached to the Kaiser's army and later Mussolini's in the twenties, became dictator. In 1944 he was replaced by Edelmiro Farrell, who had spent two years attached to Mussolini's army. The government maintained a neutral policy but towards the end of the war, Farrell decided it was in the interests of Argentina to be attached to the winning side. Like several Latin American states, Argentina made a late declaration of war against Germany with no intention of providing any military forces.
  • 1976-1983: The Dirty War
  • 1978: After Argentine repudiation of the obligatory Beagle Channel Arbitration between the Republic of Argentina and the Republic of Chile to settle the territorial dispute with Chile concerning the Beagle Channel, infamous general Jorge Rafael Videla moved troops to the Andes mountains. The Argentine Operation Soberania to invade the islands was stopped with mediation from the Holy See just in time. The crisis lasted, over the Falkands War, up to 1984.
  • 1982: Falklands War (Spanish: Guerra de las Malvinas). The Argentine Armed Forces invade the Falkland Islands. In a six-week war 255 British and 649 Argentines are killed. The war ends with Britain reclaiming the Islands. Argentina's decisive defeat causes the collapse of the military junta.
  • 1990s: Argentina became greatly involved in United Nations peacekeeping missions around the world.
  • 1991: Argentine Navy ships and Air Force transports participate in the UN 1991 Gulf War. Is the only latin american country in the Coalition
  • 1993: Argentina joins UNFICYP mission at Cyprus replacing Canadians Forces. As of 2010, ground troops and helicopters are serving there and since 1999 have other latin american countries' troops embedded.
  • 1995: End of the compulsory conscription regime caused by the murder of the young conscript Carrasco. Decree 1537 of 29 August, signed by President Carlos Menem, establishes a Regime for Personnel of Professional Soldiers. People 18–24 years of age can voluntarily enter the Armed Forces, signing a compromise, and receive a course. Law 24429 ("Law of Voluntary Military Service"), is passed by Congress on 14 December 1994. [2]
  • 1998: In recognition for her peacekeeping efforts, US president Bill Clinton named Argentina a Major non-NATO ally
  • 2006: Ley de Defensa (National Defense Law) is reglamented making a breaking point in Jointness and civilian rule on defence matters
  • 2008: Creation of Cruz del Sur (Crux) combined force with Chile for UN mandates.
  • Current: Participation in UN peacekeeping missions continues (particularly in Cyprus and Haiti), as well as regional integration efforts with Brazil and Chile.

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Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Military history of Argentina" Read more