quinta-feira, 25 de fevereiro de 2010
Pegged to The Economist's 'Oil and troubled waters'
What is the UN's stand on these islands?
Perhaps it matters not depending who you side with in a conflict that appears intractably bogged down in hopeless diplomatic stalemate.
While the British stance looks visibly enhanced by the 1982 military showdown, a residual yet permanent settlement on the islands and a successful economy that has strengthened itself, Argentina's is based on historical claims and downright nationalism.
What then is held in store now that oil has become a trigger for UK bashing again?
If oil is found and the Falklands strike it rich and plentiful a new chapter in UK-Argentina relationship is sure to follow.
It remains to be seen what form that relationship will shape into.
Could Argentina be bought out into finally recognising UK sovereignty by, say, sharing oil revenues or would that add insult to an already injured national pride?
No dispute can be so intractable as to make otherwise friendly nations - sharing a common Western root - go to war.
1982 was odd enough but there was then a military dictatorship on one side and a mature democracy led by an Iron Lady on the other.
The Generals wished for domestic distraction by stirring up nationalist feeling, Mrs. Thatcher was aiming to put Great back to Britain.
2010 presents a substantially different scenario.
Yet the two countries look set to continue to agree to disagree...
Oil could turn out a curse or a blessing to the dispute.
Perhaps it matters not depending who you side with in a conflict that appears intractably bogged down in hopeless diplomatic stalemate.
While the British stance looks visibly enhanced by the 1982 military showdown, a residual yet permanent settlement on the islands and a successful economy that has strengthened itself, Argentina's is based on historical claims and downright nationalism.
What then is held in store now that oil has become a trigger for UK bashing again?
If oil is found and the Falklands strike it rich and plentiful a new chapter in UK-Argentina relationship is sure to follow.
It remains to be seen what form that relationship will shape into.
Could Argentina be bought out into finally recognising UK sovereignty by, say, sharing oil revenues or would that add insult to an already injured national pride?
No dispute can be so intractable as to make otherwise friendly nations - sharing a common Western root - go to war.
1982 was odd enough but there was then a military dictatorship on one side and a mature democracy led by an Iron Lady on the other.
The Generals wished for domestic distraction by stirring up nationalist feeling, Mrs. Thatcher was aiming to put Great back to Britain.
2010 presents a substantially different scenario.
Yet the two countries look set to continue to agree to disagree...
Oil could turn out a curse or a blessing to the dispute.
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