Issue 379
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By
Dan Robinson
Capitol Hill, April 30, 2009 – U.S. congressional committees have
examined the problem of maritime piracy and steps the U.S. and other
countries are taking to deal with it. Captain Richard Phillips, who was
held for five days by pirates off the coast of Somalia, testified before
a Senate panel, while U.S. officials appeared before a House committee.
In response to the sharp increase in pirate attacks in major shipping
lanes in the Gulf of Aden, the United States, European Union, and other
governments have stepped up counter-piracy operations in the area.
An international contact group was formed earlier this year. The U.S.
Central Command set up a special anti-piracy task force, assisted by the
U.S. Coast Guard.
So far this year, Ambassador Stephen Mull, Senior Adviser to the Under
Secretary of State for Political Affairs, said there have been 15
interdictions of pirate vessels, nearly double the total from 2008, with
52 pirates apprehended.
Mull says the international contact group, which will hold an emergency
session in coming weeks, is working to build a permanent security
approach:
"We want to protect America's right, and the world's right, to freedom
of the seas through enhanced international cooperation in stopping these
pirate attacks and building a lasting maritime security regime that we
think will serve all of our interests in the end," said Stephen Mull.
Arming merchant vessels, either through private security firms or
providing crews with weapons, was a key topic in House and Senate
hearings.
Republican Representative Dana Rohrabacher asked this question:
"Couldn't these people be deterred by just having private security
guards on the ships or having someone hired by the shipping companies to
keep a protective cover in that part of the world?," asked Dana
Rohrabacher.
While some shipping companies are using this approach, Coast Guard Rear
Admiral William D. Baumgartner said the issue is not simple, involving
questions of proper training, effective techniques, cargo safety and
insurance issues:
"There are many nations and many interests that think this raises the
danger to the crews and to the vessel and will take this whole thing to
a different level," said Admiral Baumgartner.
Captain Richard Phillips, held by four pirates who assaulted his ship
the Maersk Alabama, and later freed after U.S. Navy sharpshooters killed
three, testified to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.
Phillips favors further hardening of merchant vessels, enhanced training
for crews, and U.S. military protection, to the extent possible, for
U.S. flag vessels.
He says putting weapons aboard vessels would fundamentally change the
model of commercial shipping and urges that this be seen as only one
part of a broader strategy:
"At most, arming the crew should be only one component of a
comprehensive plan and approach to combat piracy," said Captain
Phillips. "To the extend that we go forward in this direction it would
be my personal preference that only a limited number of individuals
aboard the vessel have access to effective weaponry, that these
individuals receive special training on a regular basis."
John Clancey, chairman of Maersk, Inc. told lawmakers that arming the
crews of merchant ships could inject even more danger:
"Our belief is that arming merchant sailors may result in the
acquisition of even more lethal weapons and tactics by the pirates, and
a race that merchant sailors cannot win," said John Clancey. "In
addition, most ports of call will not permit the introduction of
firearms into their national waters."
Ambassador Mull told lawmakers no links have been identified so far
between Somali pirates and Islamic or known terrorist groups, but said
officials are closely watching to see if any emerge.
Democratic Senator John Kerry,Chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations
Comittee and Republican Richard Lugar both stressed that lawlessness in
Somalia is at the core of the problem:
KERRY: "Thriving on chaos and ungoverned spaces, perpetrated by small
groups of non-state actors, international piracy combines several of the
great security challenges of our age."
LUGAR: "The existence of failed states directly threatens the national
security interest of the United States. Failed states exist as potential
safe havens for terrorism, drugs and arms trafficking, and piracy."
Donald Payne, chairman of the House Africa Subcommittee, said profit and
criminal cartels, not ideology, drive piracy in Somalia.
Payne, who recently met with leaders of Somalia's Transitional
Government in Mogadishu, believes none of the groups in Somalia's
fractured political picture formally support piracy:
"The leadership of Puntland, Somaliland, [and the transitional federal
government in] Somalia really want to see this end, because it does
absolutely nothing for the country which is in terrible straits in the
first place," said Donald Payne. "Somalia has been abandoned for 15
years and they are certainly not going to get anybody investing in
Somalia with these gangsters doing what they are doing."
The bodies of the three pirates killed by U.S. Navy SEAL special forces
were returned to authorities in Somalia on Thursday. The surviving
pirate is in the U.S. facing prosecution.
Under special agreements, the United States, European nations and other
governments have turned over captured pirates to Kenya for trial.
Somalia's foreign ministry on Thursday said pirates captured off the
Somali coast should be returned there to face trial.
Source: VOA
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