Los Angeles Times

Argentina can’t recover doomed submarine

Government says it doesn’t have proper technology to retrieve vessel lost a year ago.

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BUENOS AIRES — The Argentine government acknowledg­ed Saturday that it lacked the proper technology to retrieve a submarine found deep in the Atlantic a year after it disappeare­d with 44 crew members aboard.

Defense Minister Oscar Aguad said at a news conference that the country’s navy lacks submersibl­es with “modern technology” capable of “verifying the seabed” to extract the San Juan, which was found 2,625 feet deep off the Valdes Peninsula in Argentine Patagonia.

He said officials still need to determine the next steps.

Earlier in the morning, the navy said a “positive identifica­tion” had been made by a remote-operated submersibl­e from the American company Ocean Infinity. The firm was responsibl­e for the search for the missing vessel and was commission­ed by the Argentine government.

The discovery was announced just two days after families of the missing sailors held a commemorat­ion one year after the sub disappeare­d Nov. 15, 2017.

On Thursday, on the anniversar­y of the disappeara­nce, President Mauricio Macri said the families of the submariner­s should not feel alone, and he delivered an “absolute and non-negotiable commitment” to find “the truth.”

Macri promised a full investigat­ion after the submarine was lost. Federal police raided naval bases and other buildings last January as part of the probe, soon after the government dismissed the head of the navy.

The San Juan was returning to its base in Mar del Plata when contact was lost.

Argentina gave up hope of finding survivors after a search aided by 18 countries, but the navy had continued looking for the vessel.

The German-built dieselelec­tric TR-1700-class submarine, commission­ed in the mid-1980s, was most recently refitted between 2008 and 2014. During the $12-million retrofitti­ng, the vessel was cut in half and its engines and batteries were replaced.

Experts said refits can be difficult because they involve integratin­g systems from different manufactur­ers, and even the tiniest mistake during the cutting phase can put the safety of the ship and crew at risk.

The navy said previously that the captain reported on Nov. 15 that water entered the snorkel and caused one of the sub’s batteries to short-circuit. The captain later communicat­ed that the problem had been contained.

Some hours later, an explosion was detected near the time and place where the San Juan was last heard from. The navy said the blast could have been caused by a “concentrat­ion of hydrogen” triggered by the battery problem reported by the captain.

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