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nick armbrister Jan 2018
Natalie. Battle Maiden
Flying the Skyhawk was easy. Learning tactics wasn't. Aerial refuelling was hard, as was formation flying. Natalie grew up and lost her girliness. Inside she was a woman. Her view on the government remained. Should she bomb the junta in her plane? Thoughts of that were brushed aside when she was deployed near the Chilean border when tension increased in the long running border dispute.
Flying three armed patrols convinced Chile to stop sabre rattling and withdraw her soldiers. Nat was gaining experience. Public opinion was turning against the government, an ongoing crisis that needed expert handling. War was the answer. Not with Chile but in the Malvinas.
An army, armed to the teeth, sailed and was flown out. British resistance was subdued and Argentina took the Malvinas. Natalie and her squadron were on standby for action. Britain retaliated and UK ships headed south. Nat trained in anti ship attack. Soon her skills would be needed.
People were behind the war. Not questioning about The Disappeared or how to get rid of the evil junta. The Malvinas were finally ours and a joyous mood overtook many people. In the military, it was different. A real fight would soon erupt. The Brits were coming and Nat was scared. What had she got herself into?
Training continued and there was no time for her band, seeing her friends or little else. Not even secretly discussing how to help make the government fall with her fellow activists. It was a fine line of madness. An Argentine air force jet pilot with illegal views and rebellion songs.

She could change the history of her country, Argentina, forever. If she dropped a few bombs on the leaders, it was over. The new war, The Disappeared, the fear. All of it. Could she do it? Would she? Nat knew where the leaders were and would strike on her next armed training mission. Fate stopped her. Events moved quickly and the young warrior woman never had chance.
from my book Berlin Tokyo War Hearts By Nick Armbrister
Robert C Millar Sep 2010
Car packed and ready to go;

on leave so we thought but it wasn't so;

I suppose it wasn't just meant to be;

T Air Defence Battery was going to sea;

Across the south Atlantic Ocean;

Well at least that was the notion



One hundred and ten ships all packed to the top;

Commandoes, Paras, Guards,  Ordinance, Artillery, the lot;

This is it lads.  We're going to war;

But nobody knew, what was  in store

And all those mixed up feelings inside;

Were **** near impossible for us to hide.



We landed at a place called San Carlos Bay;

In nineteen eighty two.  On the twenty first of May;

To repel Argentine invaders from the Malvinas;

Anxious, proud and scared.  You had to have seen us.



Across the Falklands, the Task Force did travel;

By air, sea and foot and not as a rabble;

Objective Port Stanley for the final shove;

First taking Tumble Down; Goose Green and Bluff Cove



We recaptured the Islands.  They were British again,

And amid all the glory, cheering and pain;

We now look to peace for as long as we reign

And no more hostilities, that drive man insane
martin Sep 2012
-After Diana-                                              
The paparrazi are nobody's friend            
It all seems such a pity
He shouldn't have trained his big long lens
On her poor little Bristol Cities

-After Maggie-
When the daisies push up with Maggie beneath
To mark her grave will be taking a chance
For some may come to lay a wreath
But others will come to dance

-After the war-
The Argentine girl was all smiles
All went well between us
I didn't mention the Falkland Isles
And she didn't say Las Malvinas
Kate Lion Jan 2015
if i were in Paris
i would march for you
hold up a banner made from scraps of your favorite shirts

if i were in Greece
i would carve your face into a column of the parthenon with "God" written legibly across your lips
(for He is love, and i love kissing you)

if i were in China
i would cover myself in paper mache
disguise myself as a Terrecotta soldier,
move up to commanding officer and lead the whole army to guard your resting place
(because
you
are my emperor)

if i were in Israel
i would build a bomb shelter
and safe from the heat of those who hate us,
our bodies would discover fire

if i were in Argentina
i would lay claim on you
the way the country claims LAS ISLAS MALVINAS and vows to never forget

if i were in the United States
i would miss you the way that Obama misses his intelligence briefings
we would sit on our smartphones and text haikus back and forth as we sat back to back with each other

darling?
i love you to the comet Europe landed on
and back.
Nunca he podido confirmarlo, pero dicen que en plena guerra de las
Malvinas le preguntaron a Borges qué solución se le
ocurría para el conflicto, y él, con su sorna
metafísica de siempre, respondió: "Creo que Argentina y
Gran Bretaña tendrían que ponerse de acuerdo y adjudicar
las Malvinas a Bolivia, para que este país logre por fin su salida al mar".

En realidad, la ironía de Borges (siempre que la cita sea
verdadera) se basaba en una obsesión que está presente en
todo boliviano, ese alguien que siempre parece estar acechando el
horizonte en busca del esquivo mar que le fue negado. Tiene el
Titicaca, por supuesto, pero el enorme lago sólo le sirve para
que crezca su frustración, ya que en vez de conducirlo a otros
mundos, sólo lo conduce a sí mismo.

De todas maneras, cuando algún boliviano llega al mar, aunque
éste sea ajeno, siempre se trata de un blanco, nunca de un
indio. Hubo un indio, sin embargo, nacido junto a las minas de Oruro,
que por un extraño azar pudo alcanzar el mar prohibido.

Debió ser un niño simpático y bien dispuesto, ya
que una dama paceña, que estaba de paso en Oruro y
pertenecía a una familia acaudalada, lo vio casualmente y se lo
trajo a la capital, allá por los años cincuenta.
Rebautizado como Gualberto Aniceto Morales, aprendió a leer y
aprendió a servir. Y tan bien lo hizo, que cuando sus patrones
viajaron a Europa, lo llevaron consigo, no precisamente para ampliar su
horizonte sino para que los auxiliara en menesteres domésticos.

Así fue que el muchacho (que para ese entonces ya había
cumplido quince años) pudo ir coleccionando en su memoria
imágenes de mar: desde la tibieza verde del Mediterráneo
hasta los golfos helados del Báltico. Cuando al cabo de un
año sus protectores regresaron, Gualberto Aniceto pidió
que lo dejaran viajar a su pueblo para ver a su familia.

Allí, en su pobreza de origen, en la humilde y despojada
querencia, ante la mirada atónita y el silencio compacto de los
suyos, el viajero fue informando larga y pormenorizadamente sobre
farallones, olas, delfines, astilleros, mareas, peces voladores, buques
cisternas, muelles de pescadores, faros que parpadean, tiburones,
gaviotas, enormes transatlánticos.

No obstante, llegó una noche en que se quedó sin
recuerdos y calló. Pero los suyos no suspendieron su expectativa
y siguieron mirándolo, esperando, arracimados sobre el piso de
tierra y con las mejillas hinchadas por la coca. Desde el fondo del
recinto llegó la voz del abuelo, todavía inexorable, a
pesar de sus pulmones carcomidos: "¿Y qué más?".

Gualberto Aniceto sintió que no podía defraudarlos.
Sabía por experiencia que la nostalgia del mar no tiene fin. Y
fue entonces, sólo entonces, que empezó a hablar de las sirenas.

— The End —