December1, 2005:
The proposed cure for the Somali pirate problem has some interesting
undertones. An American security firm has been hired, for two years, to patrol
the Somali coast and eliminate the pirates. They will probably get some help
from the U.S. government. CENTCOM (the American military command that deals
with events in the region) has monitored the activity of the Somali pirates
closely. There are daily intel updates about it, and U.S. Fifth Fleet devotes a
lot of intel to it. Overhead (aircraft and satellites) provides great info. The
locations of the captured vessels are known, as are the sites of the pirate
bases, which are also known is some detail. Apparently the pirates have actually
been seen in the act.
There's
more than enough info for SEALs or other American special operations forces to
take action. So the question is, why not act? Perhaps there's a relative
shortage of special operations troops, given the large number of missions
they're already doing for the war on terror. Or perhaps it's a matter of
policy? CENTCOM may be trying to do more than just remove the pirates
themselves, but also develop leads on who's responsible up the ladder (sort of
like how the cops often don't bust street-level drug dealers in order to get
leads on the distributors). Another possibility is political. Somalia is almost
totally broken up into tribal and warlord fiefdoms. The pirates may be bad
guys, but the folks they work for may be friendlier to us than some others
there. It's a pattern that we've certainly seen in the past. And one that
usually comes back to bite us in the ass.
Finally,
Somalia and "Another Mogadishu," are political hot buttons. No one in
DC wants to take the heat for allowing another swing at that tar baby. Spending
$60 million to let contract security folks go after the problem seems a safer
approach. Maybe the Germans are paying for it was well. One can make a case for
NATO doing the anti-piracy work, as there is no taint of Iraq about it, and
these pirates have harmed Europeans.