Wednesday, November 22, 2017

Hope Dwindles As Search For Missing Argentine Submarine Enters A Critical Phase



Reuters: Search for missing Argentine submarine reaches 'critical phase'

MAR DEL PLATA, Argentina/BUENOS AIRES (Reuters) - The search for an Argentine navy submarine missing in the South Atlantic for one week reached a “critical phase” on Wednesday as the 44 crew on board could be running low on oxygen, a navy spokesman said.

Dozens of planes and boats were searching for the ARA San Juan, a mission that has plunged relatives of the sailors into an anguished wait for news and transfixed the South American country of 44 million people. (Graphic: Argentina missing submarine - tmsnrt.rs/2zQ8HGZ)

If the German-built submarine, in service for more than three decades, had sunk or was otherwise unable to rise to the surface since it gave its last location on Nov. 15, it would be using up the last of its seven-day oxygen supply.

“We are in the critical phase...particularly with respect to oxygen,” navy spokesman Enrique Balbi told reporters. “There has been no contact with anything that could be the San Juan submarine.”

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WNU Editor: This does not look good.

More News On Hope Dwindling As Search For Missing Argentine Submarine Enters A Critical Phase

Hope dwindles for families of lost Argentina submarine crew -- AP
Search for missing Argentinian submarine enters critical phase --The Guardian
ARA San Juan: Hunt for missing Argentinian submarine entering 'critical' phase as air supplies run low -- ABC News Online
Missing Argentine submarine 'is located by US Navy and a new sonar signal heard' as rescuers race to the spot with oxygen due to run out imminently -- Daily Mail
Clues dismissed as investigators admit they have ‘no trace’ of submarine -- Daily Telegraph
Why are stealth submarines so difficult to find? -- DW
Argentina sub: What happens when a submarine vanishes -- BBC

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