Argentina in search of missing Navy submarine
An
Argentine navy submarine with 44 crew members has been missing for
three days after the navy lost contact with it off the country's
Atlantic coast, the military service says.
The
ARA San Juan submarine was last spotted Wednesday in the San Jorge
Gulf, a few hundred kilometers off the coast of southern Argentina's
Patagonia region, the navy said.
Crews are searching for the vessel by air and sea, navy spokesman Enrique Balbi told reporters Friday.
The
submarine had been traveling from a base in far southern Argentina's
Tierra del Fuego archipelago to its home base in Mar del Plata, a city
hundreds of miles to the northeast. The sub's last known location in the
San Jorge Gulf is nearly midway between the bases.
The vessel had been due to arrive at its destination Sunday.
Officials hope the crew would bring the sub to the surface, if possible, Balbi said.
"The submarine knows that if it does not have communication with land for this long, it has to surface," Balbi said.
News
of the search struck a chord in the Vatican. Pope Francis, an Argentina
native and a former archbishop of Buenos Aires, offered his "fervent
prayers for the 44 officers aboard the ARA San Juan" in a message
released on his behalf Saturday by Cardinal Pietro Parolin, the
Vatican's secretary of state.
Francis
encouraged efforts to find the vessel and "asks that his closeness be
conveyed to their families and to the military and civil authorities of
the country in these difficult moments," the message reads.
Search efforts
The
Argentine navy said it ordered "all terrestrial communication stations
along the Argentine coast to carry out a preliminary and extended search
of communications and to listen into all the possible frequencies of
the submarine."
The US Navy said it
was helping. It planned to deploy a P8-A Poseidon maritime aircraft to
Argentina on Saturday, the US Naval Forces Southern Command said in a
statement.
The 21-person US crew
had been in El Salvador supporting "counter-illicit trafficking patrol
operations," the agency said in a statement. The aircraft also had
assisted in a search for a South Korean ship that sank in April in the
South Atlantic, and more recently, it was sent to Dominica in the aftermath of Hurricane Maria.
NASA
also will help in the search with a P-3 Orion aircraft, agency
spokeswoman Katherine Brown told CNN. She said the US plane was "already
in Argentina on a scientific mission."
The P-3 is a turboprop aircraft capable of long-duration flights, according to NASA.
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