ARA Granville (P-33) explained

ARA Granville (P-33) is a of the Argentine Navy named after Guillermo Enrique Granville, who fought in the 1827 Battle of Juncal against Brazil.

she was based at Mar del Plata,[1] and had for many years been conducting fishery patrol duties in the Argentine exclusive economic zone where she captured several trawlers.[2] [3]

According to reports in November 2012 the Drummond class "hardly sail because of lack of resources for operational expenses".[4] As of 2020, only Granville was reported to be operational, having undergone a refit in mid-2019, with the other ships of the class in reserve.[5]

Service history

The first two ships of the were built in 1977 in France for the South African Navy. The sale was embargoed by United Nations Security Council Resolution 418 during sea trials, and the ships were sold to Argentina instead. A third ship was ordered and entered service as ARA Granville on 22 June 1981, in time for the Falklands War the following year. There are minor differences in equipment fit compared to her sisters, for instance Granville has French Degaie decoys rather than the British Corvus chaff launchers.

On 28 March 1982 she sailed with her sister and took up station northeast of Port Stanley to cover the main amphibious landings on 2 April.[6] After the attack she operated north of the Falklands with her sister ships as Task Group 79.4, hoping to catch ships detached from the British task force.[7] On 29 April the corvettes were trailed by the submarine while she was looking for the Argentine aircraft carrier, but they managed to outrun the British submarine.[8]

Granville carried the P-3 pennant number until the introduction of the s in 1985, when she became P-33. In 1994, Granville and her sisters participated in Operation Uphold Democracy, the United Nations blockade of Haiti. During this time, she was based at Roosevelt Roads Naval Station in Puerto Rico.[9]

According to British reports, in 1995 Granville harassed a number of trawlers around the Falklands and confronted and illuminated the British forward repair ship with her radar.[10]

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: ARA Granville Returns to Mal del Plata – SeaWaves Magazine . . SeaWaves Magazine . 2 March 2021 .
  2. News: Pesca ilegal. Vigilan los movimientos de una flota extranjera de 250 barcos . Illegal fishing. Watching the movements of a foreign fleet of 250 ships . Gallo . Daniel . La Nación (Argentina) . 2 January 2021 . es .
  3. Web site: La depredación del Mar Argentino. es. Pillage of the Argentine seas . La Nación (Argentina) . 10 March 2006.
  4. Web site: Argentine navy short on spares and resources for training and maintenance . 22 November 2012 . MercoPress . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20121228222507/http://en.mercopress.com/2012/11/22/argentine-navy-short-on-spares-and-resources-for-training-and-maintenance . 28 December 2012 .
  5. Web site: Bettolli. Carlos Borda. 2020-08-03. Informe a diputados - Medios insuficientes para las Patrullas de Control de Mar. 2021-04-19. Zona Militar. es.
  6. Book: Freedman, Lawrence . The Official History of the Falklands Campaign: The 1982 Falklands War and Its Aftermath . 2 . Routledge . 2005 . 9780714652078 . 7.
  7. Freedman (2005), p. 272
  8. Freedman (2005), p. 274
  9. Web site: con el propósito de asegurar el cumplimiento del embargo comercial, dispuesto por el Consejo de Seguridad, por medio de las corbetas ARA Grandville, ARA Guerrico y ARA Drummond . .tau.ac.il . 2012-02-12.
  10. https://www.google.com/search?q=%22Argentine+corvette+Granville+(armed+with+exocet+missiles)+harasses+7+fishing+vessels+in+Falklands+waters%2C+and+illuminates+the+RFA+Diligence+with+its+radar%3B%22&oq=%22Argentine+corvette+Granville+(armed+with+exocet+missiles)+harasses+7+fishing+vessels+in+Falklands+waters%2C+and+illuminates+the+RFA+Diligence+with+its+radar%3B%22&aqs=chrome..69i57.6203j0j15&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8 Falkland Islands Information Portal – Time Line