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Musings on Pirate Strategies

Ban: Millennium Development Goals must be met: http://bit.ly/aq48OX #UN #SecGen
from UN
"Haven't we said so already?" - Blog post on Beijing+15 and meeting the MDGs, by UNIFEM Regional Director for the... http://bit.ly/9kQsDp
from UNIFEM
RT @corporateknight: Aboriginals in Canada face ‘Third World'-level risk of tuberculosis (via @globeandmail) http://3bl.me/ztcah2
from Diplotweet


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Visitor:
18 Mar 5:18am
hdhbvfgvb
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Visitor:
18 Mar 5:18am
VERRY NISE
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Devid:
17 Mar 7:02am
This is a really good read for me, Must admit that you are one of the best
bloggers I ever saw.Thank
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Visitor:
14 Mar 1:22pm
The Women's day is a very honerable day of the World. In India our ladies are
very much proud of th
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Visitor:
13 Mar 6:25pm
"The Shock Doctrine" by Naomi Klein A wake up call-to-arms to resist the
male-chauvinist model of cr
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Visitor:
13 Mar 1:09pm
I am a driver with all categories,I would like to know how I can find a Work
in Haiti UN or in ONG
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Devid:
17 Mar 7:33am
This is a really good read for me, Must admit that you are one of the best
bloggers I ever saw.Thank
read more
Visitor:
7 Mar 11:37am
To Honorable Sir With due respect I am submitting few lines for your kind
consideration. I have co
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Visitor:
7 Mar 11:36am
To Honorable Sir With due respect I am submitting few lines for your kind
consideration. I have co
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Visitor:
7 Mar 11:35am
To Honorable Sir With due respect I am submitting few lines for your kind
consideration. I have co
read more
Visitor:
3 Mar 8:36pm
It can't be done. It's not about facts; it's about political opportunism.
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Chris de Ocejo:
26 Feb 12:29pm
Yes, but the IPCC report is one of many, hundreds of reports which show the
warming trend. It's a bi
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Devid:
17 Mar 8:14am
This is a really good read for me, Must admit that you are one of the best
bloggers I ever saw.Thank
read more
Chris de Ocejo:
23 Feb 10:32am
Stoning to death (rajm) is not a punishment prescribed by the Qur'an. Several
ahadith exist which su
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Visitor:
18 Feb 8:00pm
You know, I agree with your sense of absolute outrage. But the real reason
that women have these thi
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Visitor:
18 Feb 7:48pm
I am shocked. Not that Muslim women were caned. That was a LIGHT punishment
under Shari-a. The real
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Visitor:
18 Feb 7:37pm
No. We piloted the Nuremburg Courts, and we proved than that this concept can
work. We don't have to
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Visitor:
18 Feb 6:35pm
I wonder why the President of Chad wants the MINURCAT to leave when they are
protecting people???
read more

Male Monsters -- Girl Buried Alive for Being a Girl and the World Shrugs (Trigger Warning)
Peter Daou - February 5, 2010 - 2:12 pm
One Laptop Per Child - The Dream is Over
Alanna Shaikh - September 9, 2009 - 9:06 am
Haiti Earthquake
Mark Leon Goldberg - January 12, 2010 - 6:52 pm
Final Durban Thoughts
John Boonstra - April 24, 2009 - 3:06 pm








DISPATCH TWEETS






John Boonstra - April 13, 2009 - 11:13 am
According to Greg Scoblete at RealClearWorld, the lesson Commentary's Jennifer Rubin seems to have taken from the saga of snipers and pirates is that the United States should invade Somalia.
Thomas Jefferson understood you can not defeat pirates by chasing them one by one around a vast sea. We must either in concert with our allies or unilaterally, if need be, devise a strategy to take the fight to the pirates and re-establish some semblance of order...
If preventing future attacks means eradicating pirates’ safe havens then we may be on the right track. But if the ploy here is to play cat-and-mouse on the high seas and treat pirates as individual criminals we’re in for a long and likely inconclusive outcome.
I think treating pirates as "criminals" -- and in fact taking seriously the grievances of at least the original fishermen-cum-vigilante-pirates (namely, the illegal fishing and toxic dumping that engendered the whole viable life-as-pirate thing) -- is in fact the appropriate thing to do. Certainly better than just killing them summarily and arbitrarily. If Capt. Phillips' life was indeed in danger, then undertaking sniper attacks was probably the best course of action in such a tense situation. But consider how badly the plan could have gone wrong. I find no small hypocrisy in those who exuberantly cheer the SEALs and the unconquerable might of the U.S. military over this success, but who would have, without a doubt, be excoriating Obama for recklessness if the whole affair had gone awry. An anti-piracy strategy that succeeds or fails based on a couple inches of snipers' bullets seems very dangerous and ineffective.
The need for the United States to act "unilaterally, if need be" to tackle the piracy issue does not make any sense. This is something that affects every country that sends a ship through or around the Gulf of Aden. It only makes sense to pool these countries' collective resources and wisdom and address the problem together. Going solo on this one will just endanger the lives of real and potential hostages, undermine the efficacy of the whole project, and unduly antagonize the strange bedfellows of allies (read: NATO, EU, Russia, China, etc.) that piracy has brought together.
And one final note, re: what to call the pirates. Annie Lowery at FP (and Mike Allen at Politico, apparently) suggest calling them "maritime terrorists," to prevent the romanticization that marauding swashbucklers (okay, I'm guilty, too -- very guilty) conjures up. I agree, but I also agree with Yglesias, that "maritime terrorists" conjures up something far more sinister, of a larger scale, than what these criminals are essentially doing, which is robbing and kidnapping (at gunpoint). Combined with the international legal distinctions between piracy and terrorism, calling the pirates terrorists would only unnecessarily expand the blanket "war on terror" concept, at a time when the term is, thankfully, being dropped in favor of a more nuanced approach.
That said, I don't see much reason to take seriously the pirates' bluster about retaliating against American ships. First of all -- yeah right. And second of all, for the very reason that "pirates" is not really a helpful term, there is no monolithic bloc of pirates. From my understanding, the guys (and sometimes kids, I'd imagine) undertaking all these hijackings are not all coordinated actors. And that's another advantage that a unified international coalition has over these bandits.
Oh, and Robert Farley is right -- Victor Davis Hanson is crazy.
UPDATE: Greg at RealClearWorld responds, rightly pointing out that, while it's all well and good to say that we need to make development and state-building in Somalia priorities of our anti-piracy efforts, it's another thing entirely to actually propose those kind of initiatives, then gather up the political will to see them through.
(image from flickr user TMWolf under a Creative Commons license)