. Earth Science News .
Countering Piracy By Maintaining The Status Quo

-
by Ilya Kramnik
Moscow (RIA Novosti) Jan 22, 2009
The U.S. Navy is finally joining international forces in the fight against the Somali piracy. The U.S. Fifth Fleet is going to deploy its forces specifically for this purpose, teaming up with the Combined Task Force 151.

Supposedly, it will be composed of U.S. allies' ships and units, hence its name, the Combined Task Force. Thus, the world's most powerful fleet will embark on ensuring navigation security off the Somali coast, where the ships of the European Union's Naval Task Force, as well as the Russian, Indian and Chinese navies, have been carrying out this mission.

Navigation security is ensured by caravans of two to five ships, which convoy civil vessels through the dangerous area and patrol the coast to detect and search waterborne vehicles suspected of being piratical. The patrolling is performed also by shipborne helicopters and patrol jets, which aim battleships at detected targets.

Apart from crews, there are also marine units which land on escorted ships periodically to protect them in case of a pirate attack. Marines also examine vessels detained under suspicion of piracy.

Unfortunately, excesses occur sometimes: For example, on November 19 the Indian frigate Tabar sank a Thai trawler which it mistook for a pirate vessel.

One cannot say yet that the counter-piracy efforts have had any effect; at any rate, pirates have not hijacked any new ships recently. At the same time, they have released several ships seized earlier, including the Iranian vessel Delight, which was hijacked on November 20, and the Turkish ship M/V Yasa Neslihan, captured in late December.

The Saudi supertanker Sirius Star, ransomed recently, has also been released, according to pirates. However, other data suggest that it is still near the Somali coast: Pirates cannot leave the ship because of the rough sea. The five pirates who tried to reach the coast by boat died after the boat turned over hit by a huge wave. Local residents found one of the bodies on the shore, with $153,000 in his pockets.

The Ukrainian dry-cargo ship Faina remains in captivity; negotiations for ransoming its crew and cargo have been unsuccessful so far. Unfortunately, given the present economic situation in Ukraine, one can hardly expect the vessel to be ransomed soon, or any other method to be used to release the hostages.

In any case, through high costs, the world's leading military powers will most likely manage to keep the trouble at bay - it will simply become too dangerous to attack the ships going past the Somali coast, and pirates will become less active. Only best-prepared and well organized groups capable of hijacking a ship several hundred miles off the coast, taking its crew hostage and bringing the booty to a port will continue operating, as was in the case of the Sirius Star tanker. International forces cannot guarantee that such a capture is impossible.

Experts have repeatedly pointed out that in order to eradicate the Somali piracy it is necessary to normalize the situation in Somalia, including a ground operation to destroy pirates' bases; but it is an absolutely different task, with absolutely different forces required for its implementation.

The opinions expressed in this article are the author's and do not necessarily represent those of RIA Novosti.

Source: RIA Novosti

Share This Article With Planet Earth
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit
YahooMyWebYahooMyWeb GoogleGoogle FacebookFacebook



Related Links
- 21st Century Pirates



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Cabinet backs plan to send SKorea warship against Somali pirates
Seoul (AFP) Jan 20, 2009
Seoul's cabinet on Tuesday approved a plan to send a warship and 310 troops to combat piracy off Somalia where several South Korean ships have been seized, officials said.







  • Indonesia braces for flood-related diseases
  • China to rebuild quake town, call it 'Eternal Prosperity': state media
  • Australia boosts aid to flood-ravaged Fiji
  • As lightning deaths soar, Cambodians look to superstition

  • Climate fight will cost 175 billion euros a year by 2020: EU
  • Swings In North Atlantic Oscillation Variability Linked To Climate Warming
  • Slight Changes In Climate May Trigger Abrupt Ecosystem Responses
  • Drought-hit Kenya declares 'national disaster'

  • First Global Hawk Unmanned System For Environmental Science Research
  • Landmark Year Ahead For Earth Observation Science Missions
  • Satellite to keep eye on Ecuadoran turtle
  • Mapping In A One Meter Sea Level Rise

  • Flexible Photodetectors Could Help Sharpen Photos
  • Smart Lighting: New LED Drops The Droop
  • Carnegie Mellon Researchers Develop New Research Tool
  • China's CNOOC to defy low oil price and boost production in 2009

  • China seeks to ease fears over bird flu threat
  • China to distribute new AIDS drugs
  • Bird flu threat in China rises as third person dies
  • China warns of bird flu risk after second fatality

  • Museomics Yields New Insights Into Extinct Tasmanian Tiger
  • Elusive search for Kruger crocodile die-off baffles scientists
  • Genetic Snapshot Of Iceland 1,000 Years Ago
  • A Case Of Mistaken Dino-Identity

  • Refinery Dust Reveals Clues About Local Polluters
  • Hong Kong's economic growth spluttering on filthy air
  • Report Calls Aerosol Research Key To Improving Climate Predictions
  • More than 80 pct of China's coastal waters polluted: report

  • Mummies Calling For Lenin Burial Arrested On Red Square
  • Adaptation Plays A Significant Role In Human Evolution
  • As Super-Predators, Humans Reshape Their Prey At Super-Natural Speeds
  • First Americans Arrived As Two Separate Migrations Says New Genetic Evidence

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2007 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement