Exocet Attack on HMS Sheffield - Falklands War Documentary

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Published 2022-06-01
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Falklands War series:
[1] Invasion of the Falklands    • Argentina’s Shocking Invasion - Falkl...  
[2] Recapture of South Georgia    • Britain's Incredible Recapture of Sou...  
[3] Sinking of General Belgrano    • Sinking of the General Belgrano - Fal...  
[4] Attack on HMS Sheffield    • Exocet Attack on HMS Sheffield - Falk...  
[5] Raid on Pebble island    • Daring SAS Raid on Argentine Airbase ...  
[6] Battle for San Carlos -    • Argentina's Aerial Onslaught  - Falkl...  
[7] Battle for Stanley -    • Britain's Final Assault - Falklands W...  


0:00 - Intro
0:28 - Fabulous
1:36 - Tactical Situation
3:32 - The Raid Begins
9:23 - Impact!

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Sources for the Falklands War Series (so far):

Max Hastings & Simon Jenkins, Battle for the Falklands
archive.org/details/battleforfalklan00hast_0/page/…
Martin Middlebrook, Operation Corporate
Martin Middlebrook, Battle for the Malvinas
Mike Norman, The Falklands War There and Back Again: The Story of Naval Party 8901
Kenneth Privratsky, Logistics in the Falklands War
Sandy Woodward, One Hundred Days
Paul Brown, Abandon Ship
Julian Thompson, No Picnic
John Shields, Air Power in the Falklands Conflict
Edward Hampshire, The Falklands Naval Campaign 1982
Hugh McManners, Forgotten Voices of the Falklands
Cedric Delves, Across an Angry Sea: The SAS in the Falklands War
Rowland White, Vulcan 607
Vernon Bogdanor, The Falklands War 1982 lecture    • The Falklands War, 1982 - Professor V...  
Arthur Gavshon, The sinking of the belgrano archive.org/details/sinkingofbelgran0000gavs/page/…
Gordon Smith, Battle Atlas of the Falklands War 1982 by Land, Sea and Air
www.naval-history.net/NAVAL1982FALKLANDS.htm
Hansard- api.parliament.uk/historic-hansard/commons/1982/ap…
Recording of Thatcher's statement to the commons is from    • Falklands Invasion  

Music Credits:

"Rynos Theme" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License
creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

"Crypto" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License
creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

"Stay the Course" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License
creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

Other music and SFX from Epidemic Sou

All Comments (21)
  • @troo_6656
    I can't even begin to imagine the frustration and dread at HMS Glasgow when their sister ship isn't doing anything to prevent iminent danger.
  • @KibuFox
    As Sheffield burned, the men in the lifeboats began to band together. While British ships were close by, many of the young sailors were starting to panic. Reportedly, one of the officers started singing "Look on the Bright Side of Life" from the movie "Life of Brian", and before long had the entire surviving crew singing along. This helped raise morale and spirits of the survivors, and is regarded as one of the smartest decisions made that day.
  • Damn, those pilots had balls. They rushed headlong into what could have been almost certain death with no support or escort and waited till the last possible moment to maximize effectiveness of their weapons. It may be textbook in a way to get as close as possible but its easier said than done. And thats why you never underestimate your enemy because they are very capable of putting a hole in you if you font respect their ability to and willingness to be bold.
  • @aaronjohn6586
    Regardless of what happened to the Sheffield and why. The 2 Argentina pilots are to be credited with the daring boldness of their attack. They used their equipment to its full capability, maximized their skill set and attacked. They truly lived the credo "fortune favors the brave."
  • @Werrf1
    Props to the Argentine pilots, this was pretty much a perfect textbook attack.
  • @vinloy23
    Brilliant. The Super Etendard-Exocet combo is deadly for navies.
  • @Seyhawk
    As a former destroyer sailor, this is an absolute nightmare. Great job as always on this video.
  • @poxiplu1095
    Excellent video, very well done and entertaining. With just 5 exocets, the argentinian naval air force proved the enormous skills and bravery of their pilots. Sinking two majors british ships (HMS Sheffield and Atlantic Conveyor), if argentinian forces would have more exocets the outcome of the war could have changed. Another thing to note is that France not only refused to give Argentina the other 9 they should have give them, the french also refused to teach the argentinians how to operate them, so argentinians had to figure out how to do it in very short time. That was also very remarkable. I'm argentinian and I have to say that war sucks. But both sides fought bravely. RIP all the heroes that fought on both sides.
  • @phildurling7185
    The UK military learnt a lot from this conflict. Having being largely army focused due to the NI troubles no one thought that aluminium on warships or nylon uniforms for the ship's company would be a problem. Also putting the right personnel in the right positions. The captain of Sheffield, as I understand it, was a former submarine commander. This wasn't the only incident that lessons were learned from, there were others. In any conflict lessons are learnt quickly, early on. I don't think that it was just the fault of officers in command but also the designers and beaurocrats back in the UK ministry of defence. The bravery shown by both UK and Argentine military is without question.
  • Amazinly upon returning to Argentina, Argentine soldiers and pilots felt more respected by the Brits than by teir own people. For people it was the same reaction of losing a soccer game. But only veterans know the deep sadness that rests in a battlefield. This is why all veterans from any country, have my respect, especially if they are conscripts.
  • @rickm9244
    Balls of steel from the pilots and sailors and the mercy of command failures. The task force failed at basic defense and the pilots took full advantage of the command failures. This is from someone living in the UK. The enemy pilots (from my point of view) were very brave as everything should have been against them.
  • @iainmalcolm9583
    Of course, most people in the UK (that are old enough) remember the Falklands War. However the detail you provide is fantastic. Learned things I didn't know. Currently the IWM channel (Imperial War Museum) are running a video series about the Falklands war. Worth checking out for anyone interested in learning about it.
  • @maxkennedy8075
    You can’t build a “cheap ship” If you reduce the monetary cost you’ll pay in sailor’s blood
  • @AudieHolland
    How could the Sheffield's crew not imagine that the planes' position in relation to their ship was slightly different than that from their sister ship?
  • @avengermkii7872
    What a preventable attack. They had ample warning and they managed to screw it up. There are times, I think, some commanders don't deserve their post.
  • @mattyb7183
    I remember reading one book a while ago that talked about one issue the Royal Navy had during the war was its anti-air capability. From what I remember, the author said it was due to what the RN was expected to do in the event of the Cold War going hot. The RN had been given a particular task (anti-submarine if I remember correctly) as part of a larger NATO mission, with the expectation that other NATO Navies would be there performing other tasks like dedicated air defence and so on. So the RN had spent decades planning to fight as part of big multinational force and then came the Falkland War... Suddenly the RN was fighting a war it had never expected and they found they had some serious capability issues, with air defence being a big one. As what they had avaliable was good if there is someone else nearby with better kit and you expected to be part of a wider network. Not so good if it is the only thing avaliable. And of course, the Argentine pilots had the skills to find and exploit those short comings.
  • @herseem
    "I suspect someone's been bloody careless" - from your account, that was a very prescient and perceptive comment given how little he knew of the details of the situation at the time.