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Pirates Don't Fear the Red, White, and Blue

RT @SayNO_UNiTE: RT @safeworld4women: YOU can support #IVAWA (International Violence Against Women Act) http://is.gd/7DXw5
from UNIFEM
New Blog Post: #Peacekeeping -- International Forum Helps Turn Talk into Action http://bit.ly/cPTDEY
from DipNote
I posted 14 photos on Facebook in the album "UNIC Memorials for Haiti Earthquake" http://bit.ly/aVrjeG
from UN


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Visitor:
1 Feb 3:39pm
We are shipowners and we like to offer our vessel to the responsible agency
for contracting vessels
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Visitor:
26 Jan 1:15pm
WHo is this idiot? Tom Miller, president and CEO of the United Nations
Association of the United Sta
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Visitor:
26 Jan 4:16am
Haiti,Haiti, world waves, there are a survivalsituation, water, fire(energy),
shelter(whetherdefence
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Visitor:
25 Jan 10:17am
We have to keep Haiti in the news
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Visitor:
24 Jan 1:57pm
I think only good buildings will help them to prevent the disaster
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Visitor:
23 Jan 11:15am
Como podemos Ayudarsi El personal de las Naciones Unidas o la Fundación no
correso respoden los
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Final Durban Thoughts
John Boonstra - April 24, 2009 - 2:06 pm
Haiti Earthquake
Mark Leon Goldberg - January 12, 2010 - 5:52 pm
One Laptop Per Child - The Dream is Over
Alanna Shaikh - September 9, 2009 - 8:06 am
The Coup Caucus
Mark Leon Goldberg - July 7, 2009 - 11:05 am








DISPATCH TWEETS






John Boonstra - April 8, 2009 - 9:55 am
Well, I suppose it was bound to happen sooner or later. Hundreds of ships pass through the Gulf of Aden transporting cargo. Some of those ships are American. Today, one of those ships was hijacked by pirates.
After a lull in January and February -- which many analysts assumed, rather logically, corresponded a least somewhat causally with the increased international investment in naval patrols and anti-piracy measures -- pirates have been back with a vengeance over the last month-plus, even seizing five ships over a period of 48 hours recently. A number of factors are likely responsible for this surge, but what optimistic analysts seem to keep missing is the fact that, as many ships that NATO, EU, the United States, China, Japan, Russia, and other countries put off the coast of Somalia, they still have to cover an area of over a million square miles of water. And, we're dealing with pirates out here.
It's hard to see how the United States could be more involved in anti-piracy work, which, by all accounts, has been raised to the level of a priority far more serious than that with which the crisis on land in Somalia has been addressed. Unfortunately, it's this latter problem -- even more complicated and maddening than pirates that just won't stop hijacking your ships -- that will need to be dealt with before a lid can fully be put on the piracy problem offshore. For now, the United States and other countries will almost certainly bolster the international naval presence, hoping, effectively, that with a few more people looking, they'll be able to catch those needles in the haystack.