The ARA
Libertad conflict retained in Ghana has a new victim: Argentina’s Navy chief of
staff Admiral Carlos Alberto Paz tendered his resignation and was replaced by
his deputy Vice-Admiral Daniel Alberto Martin.
Vice-Admiral
Martin was involved in the Falklands conflict with the ‘Santa Fe’ submarine
Admiral
Paz resignation was tendered before Minister of Defence Arturo Puriceili after
it was announced that two Navy officers had been relieved from their command
and an investigation was opened to determine responsibilities in the decision
to make the ARA Libertad frigate dock in the Tema port.
Vice-admiral
Martin was designated by President Cristina Fernández and confirmed by
Presidential spokesman Alfredo Scoccimarro at the Government House on Monday
afternoon.
Martín
was born in Quilmes, Buenos Aires province, on September 27, 1955. After
studying at the Navy Lyceum “Almirante Guillermo Brown,” he graduated as
Midshipman at the Army and Navy Academy.
He later
specialized at the Submarines School and became an expert in submarine warfare
and arms. He becomes the first submariner to occupy the highest post in the
Argentine navy.
During
the Falklands’ conflict he was part of the “Santa Fe” submarine crew that
participated at the “Rosario” operation landing Argentine marines to invade the
Islands on April 1982 and later supplying the occupied South Georgia base.
He was
sent to the Argentine Embassy at the South African Republic in 2005 and 2006,
where he worked as Defence, Naval, Army and Aeronautical Assistant.
The ARA
Santa Fe was a Balao-class submarine which was lost during the Falklands
conflict. Built during the Second World War, the submarine served in United
States Navy as USS Catfish before being commissioned into the Argentine Navy in
1971. She served until 1982 when she was captured by the British at South
Georgia after being seriously damaged and subsequently sank alongside a pier,
with just her sail visible above the waterline. The submarine was raised, towed
out of the bay and scuttled in deep waters in 1985.
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