Thursday, December 14, 2017

Sister Of Missing Crew Member Claims A Royal Navy Helicopter Was Chasing Her Brother's Argentine Submarine Before It Went Missing

Photo: This picture was tweeted by a Falkland Islands account, saying: '#ARASanJuan as she left port for the last time on Monday, Nov 13'

Daily Mail: MoD blasts claims that a Royal Navy helicopter was chasing an Argentine submarine when it went missing with 44 sailors on board as 'completely untrue'

* Sister of missing crew member said British helicopter chased missing submarine
* Roberto Daniel Medina messaged his sister saying aircraft was tracking them
* Jesica Medina also claimed of family members of crew were told similar stories
* But Ministry Of Defence has denied the claims and said it is 'compeltely untrue'

The Ministry of Defence has denied claims that a Royal Navy helicopter was chasing an Argentine submarine when it went missing.

Jesica Medina, the sister of one of the 44 missing sailors, Roberto Daniel Medina, claimed she had received a 'strange' message from her brother days before the vessel's last known communication.

Read more ....

WNU Editor:  Her comes the conspiracy theories.

More News On Sister Of Missing Crew Member Claiming A Royal Navy Helicopter Was Chasing Her Brother's Argentine Submarine Before It Went Missing

Argentina submarine chased by British helicopter before vanishing, sailor's sister claims -- Fox News
Missing Argentine Submarine Latest: Defense Ministry Denies Royal Navy Helicopter Chased Vessel -- International Business Times
Ministry of Defence denies claim made by sailor's sister that Royal Navy was chasing Argentine submarine -- Evening Standard
MoD Denies Claims That Missing Argentine Sub Was Being "Chased" By Royal Navy Helicopter -- Forces Network

2 comments:

B.Poster said...

If this has something to do with the Falkland Islands, these are eventually going to Argentina anyway. Any attempt by the British to maintain control over them will eventually probably sooner rather than later end very bad for them. In any event, the los of these islands is inevitable and they cannot prevent it.

When faced with a hopeless situation, the best bet on an overt level is to try and salvage something from it while working towards a face saving transition. The Argentinians might be willing to negotiate and allow the British some face saving concessions. Either way the loss for Britain is inevitable and they cannot prevent it. As such, while I'm not British and would not tell them what to do, it does appear the only way they are going to be able to salvage something is some type of negotiated settlement where the islands are transferred to the Argentinians with a complete withdrawal by the British. Either do it now or do the equivalent of banging one's head on a brick wall. The brick wall does not move and one has a terrible head ache. In other words, try and maintain control of these and the ending for the United Kingdom will be even worse than if they try a negotiated surrender right now.

Reality can be a real b!tch. She does not care about you. Though she does not care about you she does not necessarily want to hurt you, however, you ignore her and it generally ends badly. Recognizing her has the prospect of good endings for those who do.

As for the "conspiracy theories," I agree. We are going to need more than this for this to be believable.

fazman said...

Have you looked at the Argentinean armed forces lately?
They will never take it by force.