Il 2 aprile [1982]], il territorio britannico d'oltremare delle Isole Falkland, venne invaso dalla vicina Argentina. Il regno Unito, distante 13.000 Km, raggruppo e spedì una task force navale, che comprendeva Portaerei, sottomarini, e approssimativamente 7.000 soldati per riconquistare lìarcipelago. Il conflitto terminò a giugno con la sconfitta dell'argentina. Poco più di un mese prima dello scoppio della guerra, Cardiff, sotto il comando del capitano Michael Harris, aveva appena iniziato un periodo di sei mesi di dispiegamento nel golfo persico con Armilla Patrol.

Just over a month before the start of the war, Cardiff, under the command of Captain Michael Harris,[16] had begun a six-month deployment to the Persian Gulf with the Armilla Patrol. Cardiff had relieved her sister ship and class lead HMS Sheffield of this posting,[17] but was herself redeployed to the Falklands effort on 23 April. She sailed alone to Gibraltar[17] and rendezvoused on 14 May with the Bristol Group of British warships already heading south to the islands.[18]

During the journey, Cardiff’s crew performed various training exercises, including defence against air attack (involving simulation runs by friendly Harrier and Jaguar aircraft), nuclear, biological, and chemical weapons and Exocet anti-ship missiles.[19] All British Type 42's involved in the war were instructed to paint two vertical black stripes down either side the middle of their ships. This would allow the Royal Navy submarines to distinguish them from the two Argentine Type 42's.[20] On 22 May, an Argentine reconnaissance Boeing 707, no. TC-92 of the Argentine Air Force's Grupo 1, De Transporte Aereo Escuadron II (Spanish for "2nd Air Transport Squadron, Group 1"), was fired on by Cardiff.[21] The aircraft was detected while shadowing the Bristol Group, and Cardiff was ordered to drop back and engage.[21][22] The ship fired two Sea Darts at the aircraft at 11:40 (local time) from maximum range; the first fell short and second missed[21] due to evasive manoeuvres taken by the aircraft's crew.[23] After the attack, TC-92 dropped below radar level and returned to El Palomar.[23] On 25 May, Cardiff was tasked with the recovery of four Special Air Service (SAS) troopers, who had parachuted from a C-130 Hercules passing over the destroyer.[19]


Four SAS troopers rendezvous with Cardiff via airdrop, en route to the islandsThe Bristol Group met up with the main task force on 26 May.[24] Cardiff’s arrival allowed the damaged HMS Glasgow to return to the United Kingdom for repairs.[25][26] Cardiff’s primary role was to form part of the anti-aircraft warfare picket, protecting British ships from air attack and attempting to ambush Argentine aircraft that were re-supplying Port Stanley Airport.[27][28] She was also required to fire at enemy positions on the islands with her 4.5-inch gun. In one engagement she fired 277 high-explosive rounds,[19] although later problems with the gun prevented continual use.[29]

Shortly after arrival, she was involved in the final Exocet raid against HMS Invincible.[19] In the early hours of 6 June, Cardiff shot down a friendly Army Air Corps Gazelle helicopter (no. XX377 of 656 Squadron), in the belief it was a low flying enemy C-130 Hercules.[30][31] All four on-board were killed,[32] the factors contributing to the accident were a poor level of communication between the army and navy, and the helicopter's "Identification Friend or Foe" transmitter had been turned off due to it interfering with other equipment.[30][33] However a board of inquiry recommended that neither negligence nor blame should be attributed to any individual and that no action should be taken against any individual.[34] The number "205" was later painted at the crash site (51°47′01″S 58°28′04″W / 51.783600°S 58.467786°W / -51.783600; -58.467786) as a memorial, the significance being that two of the helicopter's passengers were from 205 Signal Squadron. Approximately an hour after the shootdown, Cardiff spotted four landing craft carrying troops from the 2nd Battalion, Scots Guards.[17] Having been told there were no other British forces in the area, Cardiff's crew assumed they were Argentine, and fired illuminating star shells over them in preparation to attack. When the Guards saw the star shells and realised Cardiff’s intentions, the officer in charge of the landing craft, Major Ewen Southby-Tailyour, moved them to shallow water in an attempt to outrun her. Cardiff, still closing on the craft, signalled to them a single word "friend" via Aldis lamp, Southby-Tailyour responded with "to which side".[35] At this point Cardiff "left them alone",[35] neither attacking or assisting them, nevertheless another "blue on blue" incident was avoided.[36]


Cardiff's helicopter, piloted by Lieutenant Christopher Clayton, practising search and rescue prior to the warOn the morning of 13 June, two Argentine Dagger aircraft attacked Cardiff’s Lynx helicopter, no. 335 of 815 NAS, while it was searching in the Falkland Sound area. Poor weather had forced the Argentine craft to abandon their original mission of bombing Mount Longdon, and the third Dagger of their formation had suffered a mechanical failure and returned to base.[37] The Lynx began evasive manoeuvres and dodged the attacks; the pilot, Lieutenant Christopher Clayton, was mentioned in despatches for his efforts.[38] Later that day, Cardiff shot down what would prove to be the last Argentine aircraft lost during the war,[17][39] Canberra bomber B-108 of Grupo de Bombardeo 2 ("Bombing Group 2") en route to bomb Port Harriet House.[37] The pilot, Captain Pastrán, survived but the navigator,[27] Captain Casado, was killed.[37][40] Although the remains of Captain Casado were discovered in 1986, they were only identified by DNA testing in September 2008.[41] Argentina surrendered on 14 June, and Cardiff was required to accept the surrender of a 700-strong Argentine garrison in the settlement of Port Howard on West Falkland a day later.[19] Members of Cardiff’s crew were used to man a captured Argentine patrol boat, renamed HMS Tiger Bay, in Stanley. Cardiff spent the rest of June acting as the Landing Area Air Warfare Controller (LAAWC) around San Carlos.[19]


Canberra bomber B-108 of Grupo de Bombardeo 2. This Argentine aircraft, the last to be lost during the Falklands War, was shot down by Cardiff.Over the course of the war, Cardiff fired nine Sea Dart missiles and one Mk 46 torpedo.[19] She returned to the United Kingdom on 28 July 1982, having left the Falklands three weeks earlier along with HMS Exeter and HMS Yarmouth.[17] Captain Michael Harris handed over command on 24 August 1982, after the annual maintenance period.[19] Following the war, all Type 42 destroyers were fitted with Oerlikon 30 mm twin cannons port and starboard, for protection against airborne threats.[42] These were later replaced by the Phalanx close-in weapon system.[12]

Categorie

Categoria:Unità della Royal Navy

Categoria:Cacciatorpediniere della Royal Navy
Categoria:Classe County (cacciatorpediniere)
Categoria:Classe Type 42
Categoria:Fregate della Royal Navy
Categoria:Classe Type 21 (fregata)
Categoria:Classe Type 22 (fregata)
Categoria:Incrociatori della Royal Navy
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Categoria:Classe Dido (incrociatore)
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Categoria:Classe Hawkins
Categoria:Classe Town (incrociatore 1936)
Categoria:Classi di incrociatori della Royal Navy
Categoria:Navi da battaglia della Royal Navy
Categoria:Classi di navi da battaglia della Royal Navy
Categoria:Portaerei della Royal Navy
Categoria:Classi di portaerei della Royal Navy
Categoria:Vascelli della Royal Navy
Categoria:Sottomarini della Royal Navy
Categoria:Classi di sottomarini della Royal Navy
Categoria:Classe Vanguard (sottomarino)
Categoria:Classe U (sommergibile)