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News, April 2009

 

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Editorial Note: The following news reports are summaries from original sources. They may also include corrections of Arabic names and political terminology. Comments are in parentheses.

 

Somali Leaders Demand Support from World Governments to Handle the Pirates Problem

 

Bail out Somalia to curb the pirates?

 Christian Science Monitor

By the Monitor's Editorial Board

 – Tue Apr 14, 2009, 5:00 am ET

It would be easy to hope, after Sunday's dramatic rescue in the Gulf of Aden, that heroic ship captains, Navy Seal sharpshooters, and an armada of foreign warships will somehow contain pirates off Somalia or keep that anarchic land free of Al Qaeda-friendly Islamists.

But a bit of history: In the early 19th century, it took America and Europe nearly 30 years to defeat the Barbary pirates off the coast of northern Africa, relying on horrific battles and eventually imperialist conquest.

So it's unlikely that President Obama, occupied with two wars and costly "nation-building" at home, wants to get to the root of the piracy problem by fixing the failed state of Somalia with an invasion, occupation, or oodles of foreign aid.

And yet, Somali pirates still hold captive more than 200 foreign sailors and more than a dozen ships. American crew members on passing cargo ships might now be particularly targeted in retaliation for the killing of the three pirates.

What's more, Mr. Obama's defense secretary, Robert Gates, cites weakly run countries as a major threat to the US. In a speech last October, he said: "The security of the American people will increasingly depend on our ability to head off the next insurgency or arrest the collapse of another failing state."

Mr. Gates calls for "enlightened counter-measures" to bolster vulnerable states that harbor violent networks. And this week, after the rescue of the kidnapped Capt. Richard Phillips, he went further to say there is "no purely military" solution to Somalia "unless you get something on land that begins to change the equation for these kids."

Yes, kids. The pirates were 17 to 19 years old. While they were greedy for a $6 million ransom, they came from poverty and a clannish community resentful of the way that foreign ships have overfished and polluted Somalia's coastal waters.

Somalia's internal chaos, famine, and wars have boggled four presidents since 1992. The US military's 1993 retreat from the capital, Mogadishu, was one reason George W. Bush scorned the idea of nation-building – until 9/11 pushed him to think he might try it in Afghanistan and Iraq.

Obama has already decided to wind down US involvement in Iraq and devised a plan to eventually turn over Afghanistan to others. Those are clues to his likely action toward Somalia: Only assert US leadership in order to create a coalition of other nations and groups to solve the problem.

That's a difficult calculation – knowing when a distant threat can be contained or whether to use sufficient resources to avert an attack on Americans, either at home or abroad.

The Pentagon's 2008 national defense strategy called for "building up the capacity of fragile or vulnerable" areas to prevent a haven for terrorists, arms smugglers, and drug merchants (and now pirates).

But for now, Obama sees the threat from Somalia as largely a law-enforcement problem. After Sunday's rescue, he said, "We have to ensure that those who commit acts of piracy are held accountable for their crimes."

He may have decided, based on the Iraq war, that America first needs to spend its money and energy at home preventing economic and social collapse. After all, only when Rome was weak were the barbarians able to enter.

But without US leadership, it's unlikely that Europe or the United Nations will do more than support beefing up the international naval presence off Somalia's coast. Obama still needs to keep probing for new ways for all concerned parties to solve, or at least better contain, this thorny problem.

Or, as Gates admits, "All I can tell you is I am confident we will be spending a lot of time in the situation room over the next few weeks trying to figure out what in the world to do about this problem."

Somalia says: Let us handle the pirates

By Edmund Sanders

LA Times, 3:48 PM PDT, April 14, 2009

Reporting from Mogadishu, Somalia --

Somalia government leaders say they could deal more effectively and cheaply with the piracy problem off their shores if the international community would provide funding.

With foreign warships looming off its shores and a worldwide debate raging over how to defeat piracy, leaders in this seaside Somali capital say there's a solution that could be fast, simple and relatively cheap: the Somalis themselves.

With the exception of the pirates, who showed they were undeterred by seizing two more ships Tuesday, Somalis have been largely bystanders in the unfolding drama playing out hundreds of miles from Mogadishu's coastline.

The crisis has again exposed the impotency of Somalia's transitional government, but its leaders hope to turn the negative publicity into international momentum to end their nation's 18-year stint as a failed state.

"We are not being utilized as much as we could be," Somali Prime Minister Omar Abdirashid Ali Sharmarke said in an interview at the government's well-guarded compound in Mogadishu. "We need to fight pirates on land. We have information about how they function and who they are.

"I understand the short-term need to use warships in a crisis," he added, "but the long-term objective should be to build institutions that will deal with pirates from inside the country."

So far, that has not been a big part of the global strategy. Somali officials say they were barely informed, much less consulted, about U.S. Navy efforts to rescue American ship captain Richard Phillips. He was freed Sunday when U.S. snipers killed three pirates holding him.

There have been calls among military experts for U.S. troops to pursue pirates on land or strike at their hide-outs in northern Somalia.

President Obama spoke Monday about coordinating with international partners and boosting U.S. efforts in the waters off East Africa, where three U.S. warships are already patrolling. But the anti-piracy coalition includes nations such as China, India, France and Kenya, not Somalia.

That's largely because the Somali government, which has no coast guard and no money to pay its disintegrating 3,500-person army, is barely holding its own against insurgents in Mogadishu.

But Somali leaders and some U.S. experts are beginning to question whether warships equipped with heavy weapons, commandos and sophisticated technology are the best tools to fight criminal gangs of young people carrying AK-47s and satellite phones.

The U.S. and other nations initially hoped a strong show of force might scare off the pirates, but the attacks have persisted. Tuesday, pirates grabbed the Greek-owned bulk carrier Irene with a crew of 22 in the Gulf of Aden. Hours later, others attacked the Lebanese-owned cargo ship Sea Horse less than 100 miles off Somalia, seizing a crew that was believed to number about a dozen.

Newly installed Somali President Sheik Sharif Sheik Ahmed said his government had a plan to bring piracy under control, similar to one he used to reduce the problem for a short time when he was in charge of the country in 2006. At the time, Ahmed led the Islamic Courts Union, a religious alliance that briefly unified southern Somalia until it was routed by Ethiopian troops.

"We had a small force on land, a small force in the water," he said. The courts backed them up with a pledge to execute pirates. The six-month period marked the only time in the last five years that piracy subsided.

Somali officials want to dispatch 1,000 soldiers dedicated to chasing pirates into a handful of port cities. They also want to create a 3,000-person coast guard as part of a 10,000-member security force.

But lack of money is preventing the new government from equipping and training the force. United Nations and international support for the government has slowed to a trickle, they said, leaving it to operate on the $2 million a month it gets from port revenue.

During a visit to Mogadishu this week, Rep. Donald M. Payne (D-N.J.) said providing direct assistance to allow Somalis to crack down on pirates might cost the international community less, especially after accounting for rising insurance premiums and the cost of using warships.

"It's a lot cheaper to deal with this on the land before these guys get into the water," Payne said. He said he planned to seek funding in Congress.

Payne called the hesitation by the international community understandable. Since 1991, numerous transitional governments have risen and fallen in Somalia amid infighting, corruption and human rights abuses. Donors want to see whether the current government does any better, he said.

Somalis say their hometown advantage makes them more effective at fighting piracy as well.

"We are all Somalis," said Abdi Wali Alitaar, an entrepreneur based in the autonomous northern Puntland region who sells protection services to commercial shippers. "These guys wouldn't dare kill us. At most, they'd probably run away. But when they are facing the Americans, it's a different story."

Pirates have learned from experience that foreign naval ships won't follow them into Somali waters.

"But as Somalis, we don't hesitate to track them down on land," said M.A. Jama, chief executive at Dalkom, a telecommunications provider that has been combating pirate attacks as it attempts to lay underwater cables. One of his European shipping contractors wants to arrange for a French naval escort to guard its boats, but Jama is trying to convince it that Somali security guards would be a better deterrent.

"If pirates see Somalis, they know when they get ashore, those guys will be waiting for them," Jama said.

Of course, U.S., French or other foreign naval powers could also take the fight against pirates to Somali soil themselves, but such moves risk heightening anti-Western sentiment and creating a backlash against "foreign occupiers," experts said.

Already many Somalis are angry about illegal foreign dumping and fishing off their coastline. The U.S. has launched airstrikes against suspected terrorists in Somalia over the last two years that witnesses said killed some civilians.

In the meantime, Somali government officials say the international community should move quickly.

Last year, pirates and their business partners netted at least $50 million in ransom. They're reinvesting the money in better weapons and entrenching themselves in coastal communities by hiring young people and bribing elders.

In short, Somalis say, pirates are becoming richer and more powerful than the government.

Said Prime Minister Sharmarke: "It's getting to the point where they are in a position to overthrow the government."

edmund.sanders




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