this post was submitted on 26 Nov 2025
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"We immediately dispatched a covert team being inserted under the cover of darkness."
"And?"
"Nothing. Not a damned thing. The only material evidence left is large cardboard camouflage panels and some steel struts. Somehow they must've know we were coming. We've got no idea how they managed to pack everything up and exfiltrate. It's maddening."
During the last dictatorships in South America, Brazil and Argentina were in a bit of an arms race.
One day, the Brazilian government created a nuclear program that over the course of several years managed to enrich some nanograms of uranium. The Argentinian gov started their own program as a response.
When both countries published their data, the Argentinians had plenty of spying documents saying that the Brazilian program had incredibly security, they could only discover a small lab and some people digging missile silos.
(And yeah, the Argentinians managed to enrich milligrams of uranium, beating Brazil by 2 orders of magnitude.)
Any sources for this story? I learned that Brazil and Argentina had long been partners in nuclear matters, and never heard of any spying or competition that took place in the last century.
I have no deep sources in English, but Wikipedia has some references:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brazil_and_weapons_of_mass_destruction
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Argentina_and_weapons_of_mass_destruction
Argentina's last dictatorship was extremely afraid of Brazil attacking them.
thanks; and I'm sure some level of spying happened, but idk if there was any actual tension between the countries, especially considering that the Argentinian president was one of the first people officially informed when Brazil achieved enrichment capabilities in the 80s and later on both countries joined a bilateral inspection agreement.
maybe things were different during the dictatorship
That one was about the official nuclear program, that wasn't intended to create nuclear weapons. The Brazilian nuclear weapons program was a secret out of the clearance level of the official nuclear program so there was never any interaction between them.
And yes, it was in the later 80s, when Brazil was trying to repair the damaged relations with Argentina.