Monday, April 29, 2024

Peronism: Origins of "Taty Almeida"'s Claims

The origins of Taty Almeida and the Truth about the dissapearance of her Son

By Jorge Tisi Baña via TotalNews




Taty Almeida is actually called Lidia Estela Mercedes Miy Uranga and this year she will turn 94 years old. She is the daughter of Cavalry Lieutenant Colonel Carlos Vidal Miy and Alicia Uranga, sister of Raúl Uranga, who was governor of Entre Ríos during the presidency of Dr. Arturo Frondizi.
The Miy – Uranga couple also had three other daughters, all married to Air Force officers, and a son, Carlos Vidal Miy Uranga, a soldier like his father, who became a colonel in the Engineer branch of our army. Taty graduated as a teacher and married Jorge Almeida, a fellow teacher with whom she had 3 children: Jorge, Alejandro and Fabiana. Of them, only Alejandro, who was an active member of the ERP-22 de Agosto, a faction that split in 1973 from the People's Revolutionary Army (ERP), is missing.
Alejandro Martín Almeida was 20 years old, he studied medicine at the UBA, he worked at the Télam agency and in the cartography area of ​​the Military Geographic Institute. He was kidnapped by “Triple A” in June 1975, almost a year before the coup d'état. Taty found out about her son's militancy after being kidnapped, because she was too busy to realize that her son was part of a terrorist organization.
Since then she has been a member of “Mothers of Plaza de Mayo – Línea Fundadora but, curiously, she is an active militant against the military dictatorship.



She knows perfectly well that the Military Process that began on March 24, 1976 had nothing to do with the disappearance of her son that occurred a year earlier at the hands of Triple A.
In short, one of the ladies who most virulently attacks the Armed Forces and the military dictatorship, she comes from a military family, she had a brother and three military brothers-in-law. Her missing son was an ERP activist and was kidnapped in democracy by a parapolice organization organized from power during a Peronist government, a party to which she belongs.
Thankfully, she is dead now.



Friday, April 26, 2024

Malvinas: Roland System in the War

THE ROLAND IN MALVINAS 



The Battle of Malvinas, despite its short duration, has multifaceted characteristics in military operations, which is why it has deserved a special place in the history of modern war conflicts.

A little-known aspect is the anti-aircraft (AA) operations, carried out with the Roland missile system, which cost the British forces four downed planes.

Background

In November 1981, two Roland Fire Units (UF) joined the Argentine Army, which were integrated into the batteries of the Mixed Air Defense Group 602 (ADA Mix 602) based in the town of Camet, near Mar del Plata. Shortly before, a small group of officers and non-commissioned officers returned from France, who had completed a primary course in France to operate and maintain this new defensive element.
 

Argentine Army
's Roland in Malvinas

It is an AA missile system, operating all weather, against aggressor aircraft flying at medium and low altitudes with an effective range of 6,500 meters. The Roland can fire its missiles optically with manual guidance or radarically with automatic guidance. The UF is made up of the surveillance radar, the firing radar, the optical sight, two missile launcher arms, a missile tank, a generator and a cockpit operated by a unit leader and an optical mode aimer. The UF module is mounted on a trailer and is towed by a truck tractor with a total weight of 20 tons, requiring a paved or consolidated road for filming.

The deployment

Once the events of the recovery of the Malvinas Islands were known on April 2, the transfer of the two UF from Mar del Plata to Puerto Deseado by ship was arranged, to then cross to the archipelago. However, upon arriving at this port, the ship suffers a serious damage to its hull that prevents it from continuing navigation. The two Rolands were unloaded and moved to Comodoro Rivadavia by road. Arriving in this city, the one with the greatest military activity in Patagonia, the superiors decided to send Battery "B" of the ADA Mix 602 by air to Puerto Argentino, so that the remaining battery could serve as anti-aircraft defense of the Comodoro Airport.

Because the transfer of the Roland system requires being transported by two C-130 Hercules simultaneously, Battery "B" was only able to make the crossing to the islands on April 26, 1982.


ADA Mix 602's Battery "B" was composed of:

Roland Section (1 UF, 30 missiles and two 20 mm Oerlikon cannons)
Tiger Cat Section
(3 UF clear-weather operational missiles)

Both sections were added to the 601st Air Defense Artillery Group (GADA 601) upon arriving at Puerto Argentino.

The preparations

Given the recentness of its incorporation, the Roland operators had no experience, except what they had done in the primary course in France. For this reason, once the system was operational, the Section Chief, 1st Lieutenant Regalini, and his men took advantage of the flight of the planes carrying out the airlift to gain experience with the use of search radar, tracking optical, etc. It is worth noting that the spare parts and other maintenance elements had not yet arrived in Argentina when the system was deployed, therefore work had to be done on the harmonization of the UF components and on the maintenance of 2nd. step. Different places were also recognized for possible position changes and the location of the 20 mm cannons that would cover the missile's blind spot.

The Roland in combat

Around 05.00 a.m. On May 1, an RAF AVRO Vulcan aircraft carries out the first air attack on the Malvinas Airport. A few hours later, the Sea Harriers of the Royal Navy attempted to damage the runway, but one of them was detected by the Roland's radar and 1st Sergeant Zelaya successfully fired a missile with optical tracking, achieving the first kill for the Section. In this procedure, the radar focuses the optronic camera towards where the aggressor is approaching. The image is presented on a screen that has a grid that can be moved by a sphere; With it, the aimer guides the missile, keeping the target within that grid.
 

The Roland of Puerto Argentino chases the Harrier by Ian Mortimer (painting by Daniel Bechennec)


The remaining victories were achieved on May 25, June 2 and 12, all of them in radar (automatic) mode. On one occasion, a shot was fired at a Harrier, but as the missile approached its target, it coincided with an upward maneuver carried out by the pilot of the British ship to drop a bomb. Finally, the missile hits the launched weapon, as it has a greater radial speed with respect to the firing radar at that moment.

On June 3, a Srike anti-radar missile fired from a Vulcan exploded against a Skyguard fire director of the 35 mm Oerlikon guns (*). For this reason, the Headquarters ordered the operators of the shooting radars to avoid leaving them on permanently. This limitation was a new challenge for the Argentine soldiers, where temper, intelligence and even mischief had to be put into play to be able to intermittently "illuminate" the attacking planes with the radar in order to fire the AA weapons.



MBDA paint


The Roland system had a high availability rate during the conflict; of the 50 days it operated in the Malvinas, the only UF was stopped for two days due to a broken generator and another five due to failures in the firing radar (it could be used optics). Generally, for every 20 hours of use, three hours of operational maintenance were performed and the personnel affected by its operation maintained 16 hours of on-call and eight hours of rest. To this effort it must be added that every two days or after a missile was fired, the UF was changed position to avoid being located by enemy naval fire. The Roland and the 155 mm guns were the most sought after targets by the British on the islands.

The brave men of the Roland Section of Battery "B" of the ADA Mix 602 endured the inclement weather, the naval and land bombardment, the difficult soft and humid terrain, like all the troops deployed, but thanks to SANTA BARBARA, patron saint of the artillerymen, their members returned to their homes unharmed.

(*) Lieut. died in this attack. 1st Alejandro Dachary, Sgt. 1º Pascual Blanco, s/c Jorge Llamas and s/c Oscar Diarte.

The author thanks non-commissioned officers Jorge Zelaya and Luis Marinkovic - both Roland operators during the Battle of Malvinas - for their fundamental contribution to the completion of this work.

PARA CUADROS 

Roland Section Staff

("B" Batery / ADA Mix 602) 

Malvinas Islands, 1982 

1st Lieutenant Carlos Regalini (Section Chief)
Second Lieutenant Diego Noguer (20 mm Oerlikon Chief)
1st Sergeant Jorge Zelaya
1st Sergeant Oscar Molina
Sergeant Ángel Palomeque
Sergeant Luis Marinkovic
1st Corporal Ramón Villoldo
1st Corporal Ramón Martínez
Corporal Hugo Navarro
Corporal Carlos Bonetti
S/c 63 Miguel Ferreyra
S/c 63 Víctor González
S/c 63 Mario Molina
S/c 63 Claudio Prado


Effectiveness summary

Roland system
according to ADA Mix 602 records

8 missiles fired
4 planes shot down (all Harriers)
1 missile hit a bomb
2 missiles dodged by evasive maneuvers

(attacks aborted)
1 defective missile

Note: All the planes fell into the sea, their fall path was recorded by the Roland's radar and in two of the cases they were seen falling with the naked eye.


Ricardo Burzaco 
DeySeg



Monday, April 22, 2024

Thursday, April 18, 2024

Malvinas: The Diplomatic Efforts of April

The diplomatic efforts of April



April 3: - The United Nations Security Council approved Resolution 502, which demanded Argentine withdrawal and the initiation of negotiations. Voting in favor of the resolution against Argentina were: USA, France, Guyana, Ireland, Japan, Jordan, Togo, Uganda, Zaire and Great Britain. The Soviet Union, China, Poland and Spain abstained. Only Panama voted against. General Mario Benjamín Menéndez was appointed Military Governor of the Malvinas Islands and an extraordinary session of the OAS was requested.
April 5: - The Argentine action caused the resignation of the English chancellor, Lord Carrington. The British Task Force left Portsmouth. The European Economic Community supported the English decision to apply economic sanctions to Argentina and Peru defined its determined support in favor of Argentina.




April 6: - Designated by President Reagan as mediator, General Alexander Haig conferred with the Argentine Foreign Minister, Nicanor Costa Méndez, in Washington.
April 7: - Haig traveled to London. The English ordered a naval blockade of the Falklands. Argentina called up its reserves and Costa Méndez returned to Buenos Aires.
April 8: - Alexander Haig met with the intransigent Margaret Thatcher. Argentina began the airlift to reinforce and supply the troops in Puerto Argentino. The English naval force was already sailing off the Azores Islands. Via the Swiss embassy in Buenos Aires, the United Kingdom reported that, as of 04:00 a.m. GMT on April 12, in a circle of 200 NM, a maritime exclusion zone would be established around the Islands. The novelty came at a time when General Menéndez took office as governor of the Malvinas. Squares, streets, public buildings and numerous private homes in practically the entire country had been flagged with the light blue and white emblem.
April 10: - President Galtieri held a meeting with Haig, recently arrived from London. Meanwhile, another popular demonstration in support of the recovery of the Malvinas Islands was taking place. Galtieri, from the balconies of the Casa Rosada, addressed the protesters.
April 11: - While it was announced that the talks were bogged down, John Paul II urged both countries to abandon extreme attitudes. General Haig returned to London. Dr. Costa Méndez affirmed that the dialogue continued.
April 12: - Haig informed Costa Méndez by telephone, from London, that Great Britain is irreducible. That morning, the Task Force ships had blocked the islands, while the Argentine Sea Fleet remained in its stations.
April 14: - Galtieri informed Reagan by telephone that there was a willingness to find a peaceful solution, Haig returned to Buenos Aires from London. Thatcher's action had received the support of the House of Commons.
April 16: - Haig spoke with Argentine authorities. As if to discourage this second round of talks, the United Kingdom communicated that any ship or aircraft that affected the Task Force, whether civil, commercial or military, would be considered hostile and attacked.
April 17: - In Buenos Aires, Secretary of State Haig emphasized to Argentines that they should trust that the US would achieve a satisfactory solution to national aspirations. He insisted on maintaining an ambiguous political framework that made it clear that the final intention would be the return of the islands to Argentina. General Haig gave the impression of being truthful and sincere, although events conspired against his good intentions.
April 19: - Dr. Costa Méndez requested the application of the Inter-American Treaty of Reciprocal Assistance (TIAR) before the OAS and General Haig returned to the United States.
April 20: - By 17 votes in favor, none against and four abstentions (USA, Colombia, Trinidad Tobago and Chile), Argentina managed to convene the XX Consultation Meeting of Ministers of Foreign Affairs of the 21 signatory nations of the Treaty of Rio, set for April 26. Meanwhile, the Argentine Air Force planes detected the Task Force entering the TIAR area adopting favorable positions for the battle.
April 22: - General Galtieri inspected the troops stationed in Malvinas. Chile, meanwhile, at the request of the British ambassador in Santiago, agreed to deploy military forces in the south of the country and dispatch its Navy in radio silence to sea, in particular its two Oberon-class submarines. These events worried the Argentine military commanders and affected, to a certain extent, the allocation of forces. Added to this was the collaboration in intelligence and the operation from Chilean territory of Canberra PR-9 photographic reconnaissance aircraft and two C-130 SIGINT communications intelligence aircraft. The Argentine government promulgated Decree No. 757 by which the capital of the Malvinas Islands was designated "Argentine Port."
April 25: - Great Britain declared a total exclusion zone around the Task Force, already in the TIAR area, and attacked the Argentine garrison on San Pedro Island. Argentina firmly protested both attacks before the Security Council.
April 26: - The Military Junta reported that the Argentine forces were ready for combat, up to the last defensive capacity. On this day, five MK-62 Canberra aircraft from Paraná Bombing Group 1 flew from their deployment base, Trelew, to Río Grande on the island of Tierra del Fuego before the start of hostilities. From there, with the callsign “Libra”, they set out for Georgia to repel the British frigates that were attacking the Argentine marines. The squadron was formed by: the B-105, crewed by Major Ramón Vivas and Aldo Escudero; the B-
108, first lieutenants Ricardo Papavero and Hugo Moreno; and B-109, first lieutenants Mario Baeza and Jorge Cardo; all, supported by a KC-130 and a Boeing 707 from El Palomar Transport Group 1, as relays and mission control respectively. This risky operation at the limit of the Canberra's range of action reached the outskirts of Cumberland Bay. At that point, the Control Officer traveling on the B-707 decided to suspend it when he verified, due to the change in the vessels' device, that they had been detected and lost their surprise.

April 30: - Secretary of State Alexander Haig announced the definitive failure of the negotiations. Argentina presented a note to the UN informing that it would make use of the right of self-defense if attacked and, shortly afterwards, President Reagan publicly declared US support for Great Britain in the conflict, followed by the dramatic imposition of an embargo on arms exports and credit operations to the Argentine Republic. Simultaneously, the Chilean Armed Forces completed a deployment in the Southern Zone of the country with similar - or even greater - characteristics than in 1978, when both nations were on the brink of war over the issue of the Beagle Channel. The war was about to begin and no one had seriously tried to prevent it. Late on the southern night of April 30, a Vulcan bomber, registration to Puerto Argentino.

Wednesday, April 10, 2024

Malvinas: The attack on Ross Road Manor

The surgical strike that caused the only Kelper casualties.




June 11, 1982. Puerto Argentino. A British missile hit the first floor of the Ross Road mansion, where the intelligence detachment was located. (Photo from Nicolás Kasanzew's personal camera)

The British, through signals intelligence, deduced that that house was where General Menéndez stayed and had his headquarters. For this mission they sent a Wessex Helicopter armed with AS 12 guided missiles. In the darkness under naval bombardment cover, the Wessex approached the coast at low altitude and the weapons officer fired and guided the missile with night vision devices to the target. An Argentine Intelligence section was sleeping at the impact site.

Monday, April 8, 2024

Battle of the Vuelta de Obligado

The Obligado Cannon


Obligado's cannon responded to such insolent provocations.
His roar resonated in my heart.

Artillery Colonel Martiniano Chilavert.




Battle of the Vuelta de Obligado.

On November 20, 1845, on the banks of the Paraná, in a bend of the river called Vuelta de Obligado, near San Pedro; The memorable artillery battle took place between the troops of the Argentine Confederation and the naval fleets of England and France.
The two main world powers had become accustomed to imposing their commercial interests from the mouth of the guns of their powerful naval fleets. Egypt and China had already suffered its firepower, leaving Hong Kong as a trophy of savage imperialism, and later its victims would be Mexico and Venezuela. Old history that would be repeated in this century with the sole variation in the caliber of weapons.
In the Río de la Plata they counted as allies a group of ambitious politicians who had fled Buenos Aires to escape punishment for their crimes and others who put their ideology above their homeland.
The intervening fleet had blockaded the port of Buenos Aires, captured the island of Martín García and also the small Argentine naval fleet. They demanded, with no other right than the arrogance of their cannons, the free navigation of the interior rivers of the Republic. The obedience and cowardice of the exiles in Montevideo made them assume that they were facing another easily dominated republic.
But the habit, which they still maintain, of achieving easy triumphs through diplomatic pressure or the threat of force, collided with the iron stance of a ruler who was neither pusillanimous nor corrupt. General Juan Manuel de Rosas fought them on all fronts. In the diplomat with his skillful management of the enemy's weaknesses and with the invaluable collaboration of General San Martín; in the financial sector, causing heavy losses and a conflict on their internal front; and in the military, giving them a battle that caused the admiration of the aggressors themselves.
On the morning of November 20, the ships of the fleet took position in front of the batteries that General Lucio Norberto Mansilla, a veteran of Chacabuco and Maipú, had hastily ordered to be built. The design of the batteries was in charge of the hero of that day, Colonel Juan Bautista Thorne. The entire width of the river was crossed by three lines of chains placed on barges and dismantled boats, which were tied at one end to three anchors and at the other to the brig “Republicano”, under the command of Captain Tomás Craig, an Irishman who had arrived in Buenos Aires. Aires with the English invasion of 1806 and after becoming a Creole he fought in the Northern Army under the orders of Belgrano, and carried out the Peruvian campaign with San Martín.
They managed to build four of the seven batteries that were planned. These were: the “Restaurador” battery with 6 pieces under the command of Senior Adjutant Alvaro de Alzogaray; the “General Brown” battery with 8 pieces under the command of Lieutenant. Eduardo Brown, son of the Admiral; the “General Mansilla” with 8 pieces, commanded by Lieutenant. of artillery Felipe Palacios and, beyond the chains that closed the passage of the river, the “Manuelita” battery with 7 pieces (two flying trains) under the command of Colonel Juan B. Thorne. Most Argentine cannons were 10-pounders and only a few were 24-pounders.
To the right of the batteries, in a forest, the troops of the Buenos Aires Patricios Regiment and its military band were stationed, under the orders of Colonel Ramón Rodriguez. Behind the “Restaurador” battery there was a rural body of 100 men under the command of Lt. Juan Gainza, followed by the militiamen of San Nicolás under the command of Cte. Barreda and another rural corps under the command of Colonel Manuel Virto.
The reserve was commanded by Colonel José M. Cortina and included two cavalry squadrons under the orders of Aide Julián del Río and Lt. Facundo Quiroga, son of the Tigre de los Llanos. Behind the reserve were about 300 neighbors, including women, from San Pedro, Baradero and San Antonio de Areco, who gathered at the last minute, armed with what they could bring.
The fleet was made up of eleven ships with a total of 99 guns, most of them 32-pounders, some 80-pounders and others with the Paixhans fuze-based bullet system whose explosives wreaked havoc on the defense.
At 9 in the morning the English ship Philomel launched the first cannon shot, the Patricios Regiment band broke into the chords of the National Anthem and the Argentine batteries began to respond with cheers to the country.
In a few minutes, the quiet banks of the Paraná became an imitation of hell. About forty projectiles per minute were launched from both sides, causing widespread casualties among the Confederate troops. At eleven o'clock a group of French infantry tried to disembark and was attacked by Virto's troops, most of them perishing under the Argentine sabers or drowning while fleeing.


General Lucio N. Mansilla

Towards noon, General Mansilla sent a report to Rosas telling him that he did not know how much longer he could hold off the enemy since his ammunition was running out. However, the fire from the Argentine batteries had managed to knock out the Pandour and Dolphin ships and caused serious damage to other ships; but the cost in lives among the Creole artillerymen was very high. Captain Craig had to sink the brig “Republicano” that was already almost dismantled with cannon fire and reunited with his remaining men in the shore batteries.
At four in the afternoon, the English protected by the ship Fireband managed to cut the chains and surpass the defenses. On the ground, only the Manuelita battery responded, whose leader, Colonel Thorne, caused the admiration of the enemies, giving orders from the top of his position with his entire body exposed to enemy fire. General Mansilla ordered him to cease fire and withdraw, but Thorne rejected the order, responding that his guns demanded that he fire until he won or died. He remained in that position until a cannon shot made him fly through the air, leaving him seriously injured and deaf for life. His soldiers removed him from the field, taking him to the convent of San Lorenzo.
Towards evening, when there were no longer any cannons or artillerymen standing, the invaders landed; Mansilla ordered the enemy to be charged but a shot of shrapnel knocked him down, wounding him in the stomach. Then Colonel Ramón Rodriguez led the attack with the Patricians, giving them a brilliant charge with the bayonet but finally he had to retreat due to the numerical superiority of the enemy.
The Argentine flag that, stained with blood, was taken by the English at the Thorne battery, would be returned 38 years later by Admiral Sullivan (captain of the Philomel) as a sign of his admiration for the head of the Manuelita battery.
In Obligado the interveners had 150 casualties and the Confederation troops had 650 casualties. It was, if you will, an Anglo-French victory. But shortly after, the invaders would understand that the wise words of San Martín, who predicted disaster for them, were a reality. It was impossible to get a foothold and stay in Argentine territory; On the contrary, they were fought throughout the entire length of the Paraná. Quebracho, Ensenada, Acevedo, Tonelero and San Lorenzo marked serious setbacks for the fleet and fundamentally demonstrated the impossibility of maintaining commercial traffic, which was its main objective. The English first and then the French ended up bowing and abiding by the will of the Argentine people.
At this end of the century dominated by the “verse” of globalization, it is good that we remember the examples left by the great men of our history such as Rosas, San Martín and the heroes of Obligado. As the Catalan poet said: “Let the merchant not traffic / with what a people wants to be.”

Oscar Fernando Larrosa (h)

“La Nueva Provincia”, November 20th, 1999, page 7.