Chattanooga Times Free Press

Argentina minister says country has no means to recover submarine

- BY ALMUDENA CALATRAVA

BUENOS AIRES, Argentina — Hours after announcing the discovery of an Argentine submarine lost deep in the Atlantic a year ago with 44 crew members aboard, the government said Saturday that it is unable to recover the vessel, drawing anger from missing sailors’ relatives who demanded that it be raised.

Defense Minister Oscar Aguad said at a press conference that the country lacks “modern technology” capable of “verifying the seabed” to extract the ARA San Juan, which was found 2,975 feet deep in waters off the Valdes Peninsula in Argentine Patagonia, roughly 373 miles from the port city of Comodoro Rivadavia.

Earlier in the morning, the navy said a “positive identifica­tion” had been made by a remoteoper­ated submersibl­e from the American company Ocean Infinity. The company, commission­ed by the Argentine government, began searching for the missing vessel Sept. 7.

It remained unclear what the next steps could be.

In a statement to The Associated Press, Ocean Infinity CEO Oliver Plunkett said authoritie­s would have to determine how to advance. “We would be pleased to assist with a recovery operation but at the moment are focused on completing imaging of the debris field,” he said.

Navy commander Jose Luis Villan urged “prudence,” saying that a federal judge was overseeing the investigat­ion and would be the one to decide whether it was possible to recover a part or the entirety of the ship.

Without adequate technologi­cal capabiliti­es, however, Argentina would likely need to seek assistance from foreign countries or pay Ocean Infinity or another company, potentiall­y complicati­ng its recent commitment to austerity. Argentina is currently facing a currency crisis and double-digit inflation that has led the government to announce sweeping measures to balance the budget and concretize a financing deal with the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund.

Any move to recuperate the vessel would also be a logistical­ly large and challengin­g undertakin­g based on the submarine’s distance from the coast, its depth, and the kind of seabed upon which it is resting.

Relatives of crew members were determined to fight for it to be quickly surfaced.

Isabel Vilca, the half sister of crewman Daniel Alejandro Polo, told the AP the discovery was just the beginning.

She said families need to recover the remains of their loved ones to know what happened and help prevent similar tragedies.

“We do know they can get it out because Ocean Infinity told us they can, that they have equipment,” said Luis Antonio Niz, father of crew member Luis Niz. “If they sent him off, I want them to bring him back to me.”

The sub’s discovery was announced just two days after families of the missing sailors held a one-year commemorat­ion for its disappeara­nce on Nov. 15, 2017. The San Juan was returning to its base in the coastal city of Mar del Plata when contact was lost.

 ?? AP PHOTO/PABLO STEFANEC ?? Argentina’s Defense Minister Oscar Aguad attends a press conference in Buenos Aires, Argentina, on Saturday. Argentina’s navy announced early Saturday that it has located the missing submarine ARA San Juan in the Atlantic, a year after it disappeare­d with 44 crew members aboard.
AP PHOTO/PABLO STEFANEC Argentina’s Defense Minister Oscar Aguad attends a press conference in Buenos Aires, Argentina, on Saturday. Argentina’s navy announced early Saturday that it has located the missing submarine ARA San Juan in the Atlantic, a year after it disappeare­d with 44 crew members aboard.

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