I see our
@Jimbob is an absolute charmer
Jimbo, I have no idea what you're blathering about with "large parts of the islands". I understand you enjoy living here in Buenos Aires, so perhaps you'd like to familiarize yourself with what is still the official Argentinian position (and, I would expect, the position of most Argentines), and not continue your existence as an ignoramus in a country you don't understand:
"On January 3, 1833, the Malvinas Islands were illegally occupied by British forces who expelled the Argentine population and authorities established there legitimately, to replace them with British subjects. The illegitimate occupation of the Malvinas Islands was immediately protested by the Argentine authorities at that time and was never consented to by any Argentine government. T
hroughout the 188 years of usurpation, Argentina uninterruptedly maintained the firm claim for the exercise of sovereignty over the islands".
From:
https://cancilleria.gob.ar/en/188-y...reaffirms-its-sovereignty-rights-over-islands
There's a lot of history involved, not that you would care or understand. I can offer this:
"The Buenos Aires government declared its independence in 1816. [...] Despite the uncertain political situation in this period, the Argentine version is that 1810 saw the creation of modern Argentina. Furthermore, like the other new States that were forming out of the Spanish Empire in America, it claimed to be the successor to Spain to the whole of the administrative units whereby its territory had formerly been governed by Spain.
Thus, the part of the United Provinces which became Argentina was entitled to all lands between the Andes and the Atlantic from the Rio de la Plata to Cape Horn together with the islands of Tierra del Fuego, Staten Island and the Malvinas.
From chrome-extension://efaidnbmnnnibpcajpcglclefindmkaj/https://falklandstimeline.wordpress.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/01/greig.pdf
My reading leads me to believe that as the Portuguese and Spanish empires crumbled, and decolonization began, there was an understanding among the European powers of the day that the former colonies would inherit their territories intact from the receding empires. Unfortunately, the British meddled, in the Malvinas, in Guayana, in support of a Monroe doctrine that the US wasn't able to enforce, and perhaps most famously in Gibraltar. Sticky fingers everywhere, even as far as the Chagos Islands (soon to be decolonized, one hopes).
You wanted tangible, you got it, twit.