JimC wrote:Warren Dew wrote:JimC wrote:As well as stronger action against the pirate ships, it may well be valuable to attack their bases, but in a very precise and targetted way that minimises civilian casualties.
The pirates themselves are civilians, as are those in their entire support infrastructure. By definition, if you go after them, you're going after civilians.
Possibly some attacks on ports could be useful, but I think with modern satellite tracking techniques, a gloves off approach to destroying pirate vessels would be sufficient. Their speedboats could be taken out pretty easily with Apache miniguns if we weren't overly concerned with taking the pirates themselves alive.
I'm unconvinced about the value of a formal "coalition" of countries. There are already forces from many navies patrolling the area and they are cooperating informally, but requiring them to go through a bureaucratic international chain of command would likely doom operations against nimble pirate vessels.
Action against the "mother ships" might require a bit of coordination with the nation that was the flag nation of the ship before it was pirated.
1. The pirates may technically be civilians, but they are a clear and murderous enemy of the civilian maritime trade of the civilised world, and as such deserve no mercy (their dependents and others living near their bases are not fair game, however...)
That pirates are not members of any national military does not mean that military action cannot be taken against them on sight. The international laws of the sea permit any nation to prevent and punish piracy at sea, including by the use of lethal force.
2. You may be right that it would be more effective to attack the boats rather than the ports. However, in an ideal world, that would be a military judgement, not a judgement by paralysed fools in high places. However, any military solution needs to be minimal and highly targetted, not Seth's barbaric Gotterdamerrung...
Traditionally, the authority to deal with piracy has always been directly in the hands of the commanders of our naval vessels. That was of necessity, but it was also of great utility. First, military action could be taken as necessary, in the moment, without having to await orders from Washington. Second, it gave the United States plausible deniability. If some ship commander overstepped his authority, he could be cashiered and the blame laid upon him, and the President could give sincere condolences to the nation or individuals who were wrongfully harmed by an error in military judgment. Ship's Captains knew and accepted this heavy responsibility as a part of their commission. Nowadays, with modern communications, military decisions, which are often hard and often result in death and destruction, are relayed back to someone who of just about every President in history, is absolutely the least qualified person to be making tactical decisions in the heat of battle. Presidents are "Commander in Chief," but they are only rarely qualified military strategists who need to be worrying on a moment-to-moment basis about the individual decisions of military commanders in the field, because they have neither the intelligence data nor the skill to make such decisions. Presidents set broad military policy, and then they let their professional military officers produce the desired results, as best they can, without micromanaging by the White House.
The President should set a simple policy: "Save innocent hostages whenever possible, and kill pirates in every instance." This policy is necessary because to have a policy that says "Save hostages at all costs, and only kill pirates if there is no other choice," as we have just seen, emboldens the pirates and costs more lives. We SHOULD have raided the pirate's den while they were still focused on getting money. Now they have decided that if they are attacked, they will always kill the hostages. So be it. It sucks to be a hostage under any circumstances, but like the Entebbe raid, it's more important to kill all the pirates/terrorists than it is to try to save every single hostage's life. The Israelis believe that once you are taken hostage, you are dead already. They will try to save you, but they will first ensure that the hostage takers are killed as quickly as possible.
We've missed a golden opportunity to extirpate the pirates, and now it's going to cost hostages their lives, but it's necessary to wipe out the pirates completely, down to the last armed individual, be it man, woman or child, in order to save many MORE innocent lives that will be lost if the pirates are not eliminated quickly. We can no longer afford to allow this to escalate, and drastic measures are called for, including the summary execution of all persons found at sea under arms off the coast of Somalia who are not authorized to be there.
The only way to persuade the pirates to take up another line of work is to kill them on sight, without mercy, and make sure that their pirate havens are utterly destroyed.
3. The coalition idea, if workable, would be in the American interest. If you had warships from many nations, perhaps even including China and India, taking effective, coordinated action against an enemy of all, much of the automatic antipathy to "arrogant America" would dissipate... I agree that such cooperation woukld not be easy...
Fuck "coalitions." I say we tell the other countries that we're going to wipe out the pirates, and if they want to join in the fun, that's fine, but we won't be asking them for permission to do anything. Never in US history has a "coalition" been of any real use to us. The "coalition" forces in Afghanistan and Iraq were insulting dribs and drabs, a few hundred or thousand "coalition" forces that were quickly withdrawn when the cowardly fuckers who supplied them couldn't stand up to the whining of their own people over combat deaths. We've always pretty much gone it alone in such conflicts, and "coalitions" just slow us down and prevent us from getting the job done.
If we hadn't been part of a "coalition" during the first Gulf War, we might have continued to Baghdad and killed Saddam the first time around, and saved hundreds of thousands of Iraqi lives, and no few American lives, in the process.
We do not need any "coalition" authority to wipe out pirates.
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"All that is required for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing." Edmund Burke
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