Friday, February 18, 2011

US denies smuggling spy equipment into Argentina

The United States has denied charges by Argentine officials that it tried to smuggle espionage equipment into the South American country under the pretext of transporting training supplies for Argentine Federal Police. The charges were leveled on Thursday, after Argentine customs officials conducted what the US Department of State called an “unusual and unannounced” inspection of a US Air Force C-17 cargo plane that landed in the country. According to the Argentine government, the inspection turned up communications interception equipment, “powerful GPS” hardware, as well as “technological elements containing codes labeled secret”, among other items.

The material, which had apparently not been listed in the plane’s manifest, was confiscated, while the C-17, along with its American passengers, most of whom were members of the US Special Forces, flew back to the US. Authorities in Argentina are now accusing the US Pentagon and the Department of State of trying to smuggle in the equipment without declaring it to customs officials, as is prescribed under international air cargo transportation laws. Argentina’s Minister of Foreign Affairs, Hector Timerman, said that the country’s laws “must be complied with by all without exception”, and told journalists that Buenos Aires would file an official complaint through its embassy in Washington, DC, in addition to requesting that the US cooperates with an investigation into the incident. But US State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley denied the confiscated equipment was espionage-related, and said the US government is “puzzled and disturbed by the actions of Argentine officials”. UPDATE: Minister Timerman has told Agence France Presse that Washington has refused to cooperate with an investigation into the incident.

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