Showing posts with label Piracy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Piracy. Show all posts
Thursday, April 16, 2009
A Follow-Up on Captain Philips and the Pirates
I'm glad to admit that I was wrong. I said that, "sadly, my prediction is that eventually the situation will be negotiated and that large sums of money will pass from the insurance companies to the pirates. And the next day, the pirates will be out on the water hijacking more merchant ships for their cargo or ransom."
I'm so glad that a Navy SEAL team proved me wrong, and that their snipers were able solve the problem with three precisely aimed shots. It's a cheaper alternative than paying a ransom, and it rids the world of three parasites.
Go Navy!
I'm so glad that a Navy SEAL team proved me wrong, and that their snipers were able solve the problem with three precisely aimed shots. It's a cheaper alternative than paying a ransom, and it rids the world of three parasites.
Go Navy!
Friday, April 10, 2009
The Pirate Hostage Situation Off the Horn of Africa
A day or two ago, we had a nasty little hostage situation 350 miles off the coast of Somalia, where four pirates were holding a ship's captain--Capt. Richard Phillips--in a lifeboat that was out of fuel. Thankfully, the ship, Maersk Alabama, was retaken by the crew, and has sailed on to its destination. The Navy destroyer USS Bainbridge is standing watch over the captain.
But here's where the situation begins to unravel: Captain Philips attempted to escape by jumping off the lifeboat and swimming away! Go Captain Philips! That is a brave and ballsy thing to do. Surely we could expect that the security forces monitoring this situation would be ready to assist in such an endeavor? Well, apparently not. The captain was recaptured and brought back on board the lifeboat by the pirates.
As if that isn't bad enough, we now hear that other pirates are converging on the lifeboat, bringing with them dozens of hostages taken from other ship hijackings; sort of a pirate's convention. Now, the Navy and the FBI negotiators will have to deal with additional factors that make this incident much more complicated. The old saying that "He who hesitates is lost" is apparently not one that our hostage negotiators are familiar with. They should follow Captain Philip's example of decisive leadership.
Sadly, my prediction is that eventually the situation will be negotiated and that large sums of money will pass from the insurance companies to the pirates. And the next day, the pirates will be out on the water hijacking more merchant ships for their cargo or ransom.
Diplomats and corporations can discuss and debate all they want. The only real diplomatic policy is the one that the Marines used two hundred years ago. You have to kill enough pirates that the rest give up.
But here's where the situation begins to unravel: Captain Philips attempted to escape by jumping off the lifeboat and swimming away! Go Captain Philips! That is a brave and ballsy thing to do. Surely we could expect that the security forces monitoring this situation would be ready to assist in such an endeavor? Well, apparently not. The captain was recaptured and brought back on board the lifeboat by the pirates.
As if that isn't bad enough, we now hear that other pirates are converging on the lifeboat, bringing with them dozens of hostages taken from other ship hijackings; sort of a pirate's convention. Now, the Navy and the FBI negotiators will have to deal with additional factors that make this incident much more complicated. The old saying that "He who hesitates is lost" is apparently not one that our hostage negotiators are familiar with. They should follow Captain Philip's example of decisive leadership.
Sadly, my prediction is that eventually the situation will be negotiated and that large sums of money will pass from the insurance companies to the pirates. And the next day, the pirates will be out on the water hijacking more merchant ships for their cargo or ransom.
Diplomats and corporations can discuss and debate all they want. The only real diplomatic policy is the one that the Marines used two hundred years ago. You have to kill enough pirates that the rest give up.
Thursday, April 9, 2009
Another Pirate Attack on the High Seas
As I write this, the standoff is still going on between pirates who boarded the merchant vessel Maersk Alabama about 350 miles off the coast of Somalia, and the US Navy destroyer, Bainbridge. The captain of the Maersk Alabama is also the former skipper of the USS Cole. He put himself in the position of becoming the only hostage for the pirates so that his crew could take back their ship and sail on to their destination. So now we have a standoff between a handful of pirates in a small boat, who are holding the captain, and the USS Bainbridge with remote support from the hostage negotiators of the FBI.
So I wonder, how long is the Bainbridge expected to to remain on station, waiting for the FBI to negotiate with a handful of third-world criminals for the safe return of the Maersk Alabama's captain, who has already proved himself to be an officer and a gentleman? Who makes that decision? The FBI? The ship's insurance company? Or the pirates? Putting aside any tactical considerations, such as snipers being able to make precision shots on the pirates from the rolling deck of a ship, why are we waiting? Where is the downside in shooting dead all the pirates clustered around the captain? This situation needs to be brought to an end very quickly. The longer it lasts the less control our people will have over it.
So I wonder, how long is the Bainbridge expected to to remain on station, waiting for the FBI to negotiate with a handful of third-world criminals for the safe return of the Maersk Alabama's captain, who has already proved himself to be an officer and a gentleman? Who makes that decision? The FBI? The ship's insurance company? Or the pirates? Putting aside any tactical considerations, such as snipers being able to make precision shots on the pirates from the rolling deck of a ship, why are we waiting? Where is the downside in shooting dead all the pirates clustered around the captain? This situation needs to be brought to an end very quickly. The longer it lasts the less control our people will have over it.
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