Of course there is, if Dover (British sovereign territory) was invaded would you either negociate with the Third Reich or would you try to free Dover? - and the same applies for the Falklands (British sovereign territory) which a brutal regime invaded and occupied.
Negotiatations, so how are you supposed to negotiate with a brutal regime which only occupied our islands because it was on its last legs and needed to drum up support at home? - even more so, I cant find this international outcry at the British regaining their own islands? Do you think if China, the US, USSR or any other country had their islands attacked, they'd be calling for negotiations?
Infact if there was any outcry then it was down to the time the battle took place, when the Falklands was on the USSR still existed and as you may know, half the world was on the USSR side and half on the US side. The Argentine regime at that time declared itself neutral, but was in reality a left-leaning regime which supported the USSR. Also there was some opposition from within the Reagan administration, but only because they felt that the possibility of the USSR and US being drawn in was dangerous. Infact, in the end the US supplied missiles to Britain.
I even read something the other day, although the USSR protested about the retaliation by the United Kingdom (as it would) against the Argentine occupation, a reporter I think it was told by a Russian diplomat at the time; 'We would no longer have considered you a serious country if you hadn't defeated the Argentines.'
The difference between Iraq, Afghanistan and the Falklands is that the Argentines posed a threat and carried out that threat, Iraq
did not pose a threat and the small threat posed by Afghanistan is unwinnable. You cannot beat guerilla warfare.
More here;
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/debate/ar...s-deepens.html