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Follow on Google News | Piracy And Private Enterprise. Splashing, And Clashing, In Murky WatersPrivate security firms are increasingly involved in the fight against pirates. The allocation of tasks between them and navies needs some thought
By: The Economist At one point, German police commandos were training on board an American navy ship, hoping to storm the vessel, until America’s national security adviser, James Jones, said it was too dangerous. At last, on August 3rd, the saga ended after negotiations between the ship’s Hamburg-based owners and the pirates, who boasted that they had netted $2.75m in ransom. Parleying with pirates, and then paying the ransom (often by airdrops), are jobs that shipowners regularly contract out to private firms or “risk consultancies” Business protecting ships off east Africa has tripled in the past year, says Eos Risk Management, a London firm that says it has fended off at least 15 attacks from Somali pirates since January. Eos usually uses non-lethal defences, but David Johnson, its boss, says new players are rushing into maritime security, taking advantage of the ample supply of weapons in Africa. Armed escort ships, offering protection for a price, are becoming a lot more common off east Africa. Local coastguards, where they exist, have got used to private-security vessels plying their waters, says Stan Ayscue of Securewest International, a firm based in Singapore and Virginia. But for strategists grappling with the diminished safety of the world’s seas—off east Africa and in other perilous spots such as South-East Asia and the waters of Nigeria—figuring out a sensible and workable division of labour between navies and private firms is not easy. In at least one way, the activities of private firms clash with the concerns of navies and their masters. The payment of ransoms is a menace for law and order. As Robert Gates, America’s defence secretary, lamented in April, the fight against piracy would be going better if shipowners stopped paying to regain their vessels. But of course, when private security companies, often employing veterans of national armed forces, work well to prevent piracy, they and the world’s navies are broadly on the same side. America in particular says countering piracy requires a joint effort by states, shipowners and other private interests, including security firms. “In appropriate circumstances, onboard armed security, private or military, can provide an effective deterrent to pirates in the Horn of Africa region for certain vessels deemed to be at high risk,” the State Department has said. It is clearly true that no single agency in the war against piracy is likely to succeed. About 15 countries conduct anti-piracy naval patrols in the Indian Ocean under various hats. That might sound a lot; but 30 warships are operating in an area almost as big as the United States. Achim Winkler, a spokesman for the European Union naval force, says hundreds of ships would be needed to secure the area. John Pike, of GlobalSecurity.org, an American consultancy, offers a hard-boiled view of all this. “A lot of navies are looking for something to do—and there are many ships in the world prepared for big naval war, which isn’t going to happen.” Deterrence, or at least stopping attacks at the earliest stage, is always best. These are areas in which the private sector (both shipowners and their security advisers) must play a role. America has also encouraged small countries with large shipping registries such as Liberia, Panama, the Marshall Islands and the Bahamas to mandate prudent self-protection by vessels. Already, the line between peaceful merchant ships and naval ones is blurring a little. These days, maritime-security providers operating off east Africa almost always make some use of weapons, says Didier Berra, a French army veteran who has worked for Secopex, a naval-security firm based in Carcassonne in France. Draconian force is seldom necessary, adds Mr Berra. Attackers often give up when 12.7mm machineguns are fired into the water, creating a big splash. The head of another European security firm says many outfits sidestep bans on weapons in port by tossing them overboard. Yet a show of firepower is increasingly necessary because pirates are getting blasé about “non-lethal” Navies are also starting to deploy seamen on merchant ships, something hitherto rare unless the cargo was military. The French navy, for example, has been sending sailors to protect the country’s tuna-fishing ships in waters around the Seychelles. Such assertiveness at least marginally reduces the opportunities for private firms; a few games really are zero sum. In any case, private security firms can’t do more than tackle the symptoms of piracy. More needs to be done onshore. Tracking where the ransoms are stashed, reportedly in banks in the Gulf, would be one way to start. Another idea would be to find new ways for young Somali boat-owners to survive. Somalis who once fished say they were pushed out by foreign trawlers. Ultimately piracy in Somalia is unlikely to stop until chronic instability, caused by rival warlords and Islamist fighters, is tackled. Yet no outsider has a convincing panacea. American forces have bombed Islamist fighters in southern Somalia, and Russia favours knocking out pirate coastal bases; neither action promises stability. The absence of an effective state in Somalia means there is no local ability to police national waters. Last year the “transitional federal government” signed a deal with Secopex under which the firm would have set up a small national navy. Secopex estimated it would need two dozen fast gunships. But the deal failed. The government was too broke and disorganised. Across Africa, in Nigeria, lies another danger zone for ships. According to GEOS, a French firm, the insurgents who make pirate-like attacks on shipping in Nigeria’s Delta region are very well armed and informed about targets, through contacts in the oil and shipping worlds. Yet Nigeria’s semi-functioning state helps keep piracy within bounds. GEOS typically protects its clients’ ships with help from a Nigerian police boat or small navy gunship. The UN Security Council has authorised naval ships to enter Somali waters in pursuit of pirates. But the high seas are simply getting more perilous than they were, and neither governments nor private interests seem to have the capacity to make them safe. # # # RSB International carries a worldwide presence safeguarding personnel and assets from international and domestic threats. Experts in Global Security, Executive Protection, Covert Protection operations, Tactical Training, Covert Protection Training End
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