Buenos Aires will
acquire military hardware including fighter aircraft, anti-aircraft
weapons and specialised radar, as well as beefing up its special forces.
The
news comes months before drilling for oil begins in earnest off the
Falkland Islands, provoking Argentina’s struggling President Cristina
Fernandez de Kirchner.
Last month she created a new cabinet post of Secretary for the Malvinas, her country’s name for the Falklands.
Meanwhile,
Defence Secretary Philip Hammond has refused to confirm that Britain
would retake the Falklands if they were overrun by enemy forces.
The
extra cash means Argentina will increase defence spending by 33.4 per
cent this year, the biggest rise in its history. It will include
£750million for 32 procurement and modernisation programmes.
They
will include medium tanks and transport aircraft and the refurbishment
of warships and submarines. The shopping list also includes Israeli air
defence systems, naval assault craft, rocket systems, helicopters and a
drone project.
There will be a range of hi-tech capabilities for the army and the formation of new commando and special forces units.
In
August last year the Sunday Express revealed details of a contract to
buy 20 French Mirage fighter jets from Spain, giving Argentina the
ability to attack Port Stanley airfield with laser guided bombs.
Sources from
British oil and gas firm Rockhopper Exploration confirmed serious
drilling could begin in a few months. Its Sea Lion field is thought to
have 394 million barrels of oil.
“We’re just
waiting for a rig, which isn’t easy to organise in the South Atlantic,
before we can escalate to the next stage,” said the source.
President
de Kirchner’s new Malvinas Secretary Daniel Filmus sent over 200 letters
to oil firms threatening fines of up to $1.5billion and 15-year-jail
terms if they drilled without consent.
Though
the threats have no validity in international law, it is seen as an
example of the lengths the president will go to in order to bolster
domestic political support.
Britain has
strengthened its defences of the islands, with four RAF Eurofighter
Typhoons and 600 troops. A Royal Navy nuclear submarine armed with
Tomahawk cruise missiles visits twice a year.
Senior
military sources told the Sunday Express they were “carefully
monitoring” the situation. The real fear, however, is a raid by
Argentinian special forces aimed at damaging Port Stanley’s runway.
Admiral
Lord West, who was at the helm of HMS Ardent when she was sunk in the
Falklands War, said: “Any major increase in defence expenditure by
Argentina must be viewed with concern. I am concerned that, without any
aircraft carriers, we are incapable of recapturing them.”
He said Britain’s new carriers will not be operational until 2020 and until then Argentina had a window of opportunity.
Sumber : Express
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