Piracy Makes World Powers Unlikely Allies
U.S., Russia, China Share Naval Intelligence To Combat Rampant Somali Pirates
-
In this June 2, 2009 file photo, members of a visit, board, search and seizure team and members of U.S. Coast Guard Maritime Safety and Security Team 91112, from the USS Gettysburg respond to a suspect vessel in the Gulf of Aden. (U.S. Navy/Mcs1C Eric L. Beauregard)
-
Interactive Piracy On The High Seas A modern twist on the villiany of the seas
Analysts say the shift from competition to co-operation is also helping to safeguard naval budgets in countries like the United States and Britain that are fighting land-based wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
"It's remarkable you have in what is generally considered not to be the most strategically important corner of the Earth, you have the Chinese, the Russians, the Americans, the Indians, all working together against a common enemy," said piracy expert Roger Middleton from the London-based think-tank Chatham House.
"They've been trained to fight each other, not small enemies," he said.
Pirates have launched increasingly bold attacks against vessels in the Indian Ocean and Gulf of Aden in hopes of capturing a ship and crew and collecting millions of dollars in ransom. They currently hold nearly 250 hostages from around the world, including a British couple taken last month. Three ships have been seized in the last week alone.
Lt. Nate Christensen of the Bahrain-based U.S. Fifth Fleet said 25 ships from 14 nations are now patrolling the Gulf of Aden and Indian Ocean.
Russia and China announced in September that they would be doing joint anti-piracy patrols under "Operation Blue Shield," and many nonaligned countries such as Japan or South Korea also have sent ships to the region. Russia is also supporting the NATO patrols.
Cmdr. James Kraska, a professor at America's Center for Naval Warfare Studies, says all except Iran are sharing information and protection.
Major players in the region meet once a month to share information and to deconflict areas of responsibility. Last week, navies from 26 nations, including from the EU, NATO, China, India, Japan and Russia met. Ukraine participated for the first time.
"The bottom line is that the way we describe it is unprecedented co-operation between all anti-piracy players in the Gulf," said Cmdr. John Harbour, spokesman for the EU Naval Force.
The effort is not always trouble-free. The U.S., India and Pakistan all have non-compatible cryptography equipment, said Christensen. And the Chinese and Americans have been forbidden to communicate using their official military email addresses because of fears of espionage, so the crews email each other using Yahoo or Hotmail addresses, Middleton said.
Nations have managed to overcome obstacles to help each other, even if their governments are at loggerheads on land. Last May, a South Korean warship sent a helicopter to help the North Korean cargo ship Dabaksol when it was under attack.
In September, the Turkish frigate TCG Gediz pursued pirates attacking the Greek-owned bulk carrier Handy V, despite the fact negotiations between Turkey and Greece over the disputed island of Cyprus have broken down repeatedly.
"No nation can do it alone," Krasaka said.
It may be easier for naval forces to co-operate than land forces. The traditional mariner's code states sailors are obligated to help another ship in trouble, and no one has a territorial claim on the seas.
Even working together the warships cannot prevent all attacks. The Indian Ocean and Gulf of Aden are simply too vast. Analysts say the lure of multimillion dollar ransoms is too strong for men in Somalia, a war-ravaged country that hasn't had a stable government for a generation and where nearly half the population is dependent on aid.
On Wednesday, the European Union Naval Force said that Somali pirates had seized a cargo ship in the Indian Ocean with 22 crew members on board.
Naval spokesman Cmdr. John Harbour said that there are three Greeks and 19 Filipinos among the crew of the Greek-owned Filitsa. The ship is registered in the Marshall Islands.
A press release by the EU said the ship was taken 400 miles northeast of the island nation of the Seychelles. It had been heading for the South African port of Durban but has now turned around and is heading north.
Also on the Net:
Maritime Security Center Horn of Africa
© MMIX The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
- it should not come down to a one man decision on afganistan or any other major operation regardless of advisors involved,the congress should vote on all actions,obama is not qualified . to many mistakes have been made already, and for nothing .
- Reply to this comment
- "IF" - If we can bridge the gap of mistrust spawned and perpetuated by years of propaganda (all nations invovled) a unified alliance of Russia, China, India and the U.S. could do much to address this problem and other threats to Civilized Man throughout the World.
- Reply to this comment
-
- It would be simple to do so, if only central governments did not continue to propagate, and even encourage such mistrust and hate even.
Grammy winner Shakira on her music career, philanthropy and being sexy..



