The ghosts of pirates
Opinion: Piracy off the coast of Somalia emerged after years of failed and flawed US policy in the region.
When the American-led coalition chased Al Qaeda fighters out of Afghanistan in late 2001, Pentagon planners feared they might establish new bases in Africa and began training African armies to handle the potential threat. Their worst fears were realized (or so they thought) when an alliance of Somali Islamists that called itself The Union of Islamic Courts chased the warlords out of much of the country and established a rough-and-ready Islamic brand of law and order.
The Somali people were for the most part relieved to have a functioning government after years of anarchy, but the Bush administration was not pleased. It believed the new government was harboring terrorists linked to the bombing of two American embassies in Africa in 1998.
Washington had no appetite for going back into Somalia, particularly with the ghosts of Black Hawk Down. So the CIA poured money into a clumsy attempt to create an alternative government out of a collection of mutually hostile warlords.
When that plan floundered, the Pentagon tried Plan B. It organized an invasion of Somalia by that country’s traditional enemies, the Ethiopians, in 2006. Americans provided intelligence, aviation, naval support and a few special forces, but the fighting was done by Ethiopians. The invasion inflicted utter devastation on the capital, Mogadishu, and toppled the new Islamic government that was making progress stabilizing the country.
That plan failed, too. It precipitated a new round of civil war in Somalia and has left the country in the grip of a humanitarian crisis that, according to the United Nations, rivals Darfur. The Ethiopians have withdrawn, and with the exception of Somaliland (a separatist region in the north) Somalia has no effective government.
And so it has become a haven for local pirates, who pay off local warlords as necessary and operate with impunity.
How could our government have made such a blunder without provoking a wave of moral indignation from the American people? The simple answer is that most of the mainstream American media didn’t know, didn’t care, and did not want to spend the money or take the risks they would have incurred to report a nasty American proxy war in Africa.
For the most part, it is only the Africans who are paying the price for this American policy failure.
In fact, if it were not for the pirates and a riveting drama of one brave American captain held captive, few Americans would have heard anything at all about Somalia in the past few years.
Read more about Somali pirates:
I can't say how incredible I find your analysis that Somali piracy is now the fault of the Bush administration policies of the last eight years and that the American people are ignorant about this enlightening expose because the mainstream media in which you have been a member for over 48 years is not telling them the truth as you see it.
You need to get out of London more often. And I am not a supporter of the Bush administration in case you've undoubtedly concluded.
The fact of the matter is that Somali piracy has become rampant recently for the very simple reason: it pays. And Somalia is a failed state because it was built by European colonial masters - the original pirates - from a disparate collection of tribes and clans with nothing in common.
Blaming America will not change these simple facts.
You mention Bill Clinton as the President who deployed US troops to Somalia, but I distinctly remember being dumbfounded (hey, I was a teenager!) when in the closing days of #41's term, HE sent troops to Somalia. Personally, I would tend to lay at least a LITTLE blame at the feet of a DraftDodger-cum-POTUS who failed to keep our troops properly equipped, instead seeking a "Peace Dividend". The dividend of peace is PEACE. When we equip soldiers to be police, and we prosecute enemy soldiers (aka terrorists) as criminals, we LOSE. We've BEEN there, we've DONE that, we're DOING it AGAIN.
As an American Merchant Seaman I have absolutely no sympathy with the Somalis. Whatever problems their country is experiencing are entirely of their own making, and should not be used as an excuse to condone kidnapping an extortion perpetrated upon innocent seamen plying their trade. If piracy is flourishing it is simply because it is more profitable than fishing. Why shouldn't it continue? The steamship companies don't want to incur the expense of arming their crews or supplying armed guards. Warships from Europe and Canada simply disarm any pirates they capture and then let them go. As for the one pirate the U.S. Navy captured alive, he was grinning from ear to ear when he arrived in the States. Why shouldn't he be, when he was probably treated better than he ever had been back home? Sounds like a pretty good business to me!
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