The
Falkland Islands have been at the heart of a long-running dispute between the United Kingdom and
Argentina.
Argentina's defender
Nicolas Otamendi and midfielder
Giovani Lo Celso show a banner that reads in Spanish, "The
Malvinas (
Falkland Islands) belong to
Argentina," after winning the
2026 World Cup football tournament semifinal match between
England and
Argentina [AFP]Published On 16 Jul 2026A spot in the final of the World Cup had just been secured, but
Argentina’s football players wanted to declare another victory over
England, whom they had just defeated 2-1 in the semifinal. Sweaty shirts off, they paraded on the field with a banner that read: “Las
Malvinas son Argentinas,” translating to “The Falklands are Argentinian.”The islands, British territory, have for decades been a source of simmering tensions between the United Kingdom and
Argentina, which claims them. In recent years, the governments of the two countries have mostly tried to limit those differences to formal positions, without escalating the dispute.Recommended Stories list of 3 itemslist 1 of 3Falklands claim: Can
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England ‘pirates’ ahead of World Cup semifinal clashend of listThe Argentinian team now risks being sanctioned by the football governing body,
FIFA, over the banner as it goes against the code of conduct, which bans “banners, flags, flyers, apparel and other paraphernalia that are of a political, offensive, and/or discriminatory nature” inside stadiums.But the banner, say analysts, has also underscored how the Falklands are once again returning as a major political talking point in
Argentina, stirred by the government of President
Javier Milei and his close friendship with
United States President Donald Trump.Following their win, Argentinian Vice President
Victoria Villarruel said in a post on X that “The Falklands are Argentine! They banned bringing them to the stadium and forgot that we carry them in our blood and our hearts.”Villarruel is also the daughter of a Falklands War veteran and said on X before the game that they were playing against the “usurping pirates”.“I’m not going to be politically correct or cold-hearted; against the English, it’s always something more. It’s the
Malvinas, it’s Diego, it’s Leo’s last one, and it’s putting the brakes on the invaders,” she said.“Go
Argentina! Because until our last breath, we’re going to claim what’s ours!” Villarruel added.A two-century-old disputeThe archipelago, with its two major islands of East Falkland and West Falkland, is situated 483km (300 miles) off the east coast of
Argentina.The dispute over the islands’ ownership dates back to the 19th century, with
Argentina stating that it inherited them from Spain.However, the UK has administered the islands since 1833, cementing its claim to the territory through its longstanding presence there, as Englishman John Strong named the islands after his patron, Viscount Falkland, in 1690.In April 1982, the disputes over the territory reached boiling point, leading to the Falklands War after
Argentina seized the islands in an attempt to control them.Britain dispatched a military force to the archipelago, triggering 74 days of fighting that killed 655 Argentinian and 255 British service members and ended in the UK taking the territory.That loss has since been a wound that many Argentinians have carried.“That [World Cup semifinal] win reignites for Argentines the political issue of sovereignty over the islands,” Louise Clare, lecturer in modern British politics at the University of Manchester, told Al Jazeera. “It reignites the burning embers from a conflict nearly 45 years ago, and I think it never will cease to be significant for
Argentina in terms of the relationship of the
Malvinas and Argentine sovereignty.”
Argentina’s present positionIn the days leading up to the match – the first time the two sides had faced each other since the World Cup in 2002 – Argentinian officials once again raised the dispute domestically.In an opinion piece in the Argentinian newspaper La Nacion, Foreign Minister Pablo Quirno said
Argentina’s claim to the
Falkland Islands, or Las
Malvinas as they are known in
Argentina, was based on “historical and legal grounds”.“The Falklands/
Malvinas issue is neither another case of decolonisation nor a matter of self-determination. It is a special and particular colonial situation, originating in the violation of
Argentina’s territorial integrity,” Quirno said.“Time does not transform an illegitimate occupation into sovereignty. Nor will it divide the territorial unity of the Argentine Republic,” he wrote.In response to Quirno’s op-ed, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s spokesperson told The Telegraph newspaper last week that the UK’s position was clear: “The Falkland Islanders are British with the right to determine their own future.”Yet recent months have injected a wild card into the mix, in the form of US President Donald Trump.The Reuters news agency reported in April that a Pentagon memo had suggested options for Trump to target allies who had not been helpful enough during the Iran war, which included the US reviewing its position on the
Falkland Islands. Trump has been critical of Starmer over the UK’s refusal to support the war on Iran.Days later, Argentinian President
Javier Milei, who had previously taken a more moderate stance on the issue, said
Argentina was “making progress like never before” on the Falklands Islands.Officially, until now, the US has both avoided talking about the archipelago’s sovereignty and acknowledged that it was under British administration.Moreover, in 2013, a referendum held in the
Falkland Islands on their status found that 99.8 percent of the islanders voted in favour of remaining a British overseas territory.Clare explained that the archipelago’s status has always been at the core of Argentinian identity and will continue to be so until it is resolved.“It’s something that’s been symbolic for successive Argentine governments because of just how significant the national cause is and what it means to Argentines,” she said.“It’s sort of a win for
Argentina, not just on the football match, but a win for
Argentina in the sense of sort of that type of redemption from the prior losses in terms of the Falklands conflict in 1982,” she added.