List of hostile incidents at the Argentine border

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This is a list of hostile incidents at the Argentine border. This timeline does not include events from the 1982 Falklands War.

1950s

1960s

Special edition of the Argentine newspaper Clarín, 29 November 1966. The Argentine government considered the act as "seditious", but its perpetrators were rehabilitated in 2014 by the government of Cristina Fernández de Kirchner.

1970s

  • 4 February 1976: The Argentine destroyer ARA Almirante Storni fired warning shots at the RRS Shackleton.[3]
  • 3 and 4 October 1977: The Argentine Navy shelled and captured the Russian trawler Prokopyevsk and the Bulgarian Ofelia and Aurelia off Puerto Madryn. Three Argentine sailors died from drowning and one Bulgarian sailor was wounded.[4][5]

1980s

1990s

  • 5 July 1991: The British trawler Pict, which had been part of the British Task Force in the Falklands War as an auxiliary minesweeper,[8] was captured by the patrol boat Azopardo, from the Argentine Naval Prefecture.[9]
  • 1995: According to British reports, the Argentine corvette ARA Granville harassed seven trawlers and illuminated RFA Diligence with her radar.[10]

2000s

  • 5 February 2000: The Argentine corvette ARA Spiro shelled and captured the Taiwanese trawler Hou Chun 101 off Gulf San Jorge.[11]
  • 12 June 2002: The Argentine Naval Prefecture's patrol boat Thompson shelled and damaged the Russian squid trawler Odoyevsk off Puerto Madryn.[12][13][14]
  • 11 February 2004: The Argentine corvette ARA Drummond shelled and sunk the Taiwanese trawler Jim Chin Tsai off Comodoro Rivadavia.[15]
  • 15 March 2004: The icebreaker ARA Almirante Irízar entered a maritime area designated as conservation zones under the jurisdiction of the Falkland Islands and issued demands for other ships to identify themselves.[16]
  • 20 February 2006: The British squid trawler John Cheek was seized by the patrol boat Prefecto Fique from the Argentine Naval Prefecture.[9][17]
  • 14 March 2016: The Argentine Mantilla-class patrol vessel Prefecto Derbes shelled and sunk the illegal Chinese fishing trawler Lu Yan Yuan Yu 010 after the ship refused to obey in a 4-hour pursuit and attempted to ram the patrol vessel, all 32 crew members were rescued.[18]

Note

Michael A. Morris stated that Argentina's use of force against Chile and the United Kingdom has been "the exception rather than the rule", and that some of the hostile acts or armed incidents appear to have been caused by zealous local commanders, and not as the result of a widespread strategy.[19]

Most of the naval incidents involve illegal fishing boats predating squids and fish species outside exploitation seasons and allowed sizing by the Argentine law in Argentine EEZ waters.[20] Is usual for illegal boats to enter the first miles of the EEZ an run away when they are detected by the authoritys. Illegal fishing boats tends to ignore official orders and when intercepted they try to ram de patrol vessels.[21]

References

External links