The Pirate Hunters
As buccanneering is back with a vengeance, stepped-up law enforcement and high-tech tools work to help protect shipping on the high seas
- By Paul Raffaele
- Smithsonian magazine, August 2007, Subscribe
Editor's Note -- April 9, 2009: In the first capture of an American crew in over 100 years, Somali pirates took hostage the captain of the ship Maersk Alabama after an aborted attempt to seize the cargo on board. Smithsonian revisits its August 2007 article on the challenges facing those who are trying to bring an end to the piracy in the Indian Ocean.
The attack came after daybreak. The Delta Ranger, a cargo ship carrying bauxite, was steaming through the ink-blue Indian Ocean in January 2006, about 200 nautical miles off Somalia's coast. A crewman on the bridge spied two speedboats zooming straight at the port side of his vessel. Moments later, bullets tore into the bridge, and vapor trails from rocket-propelled grenades streaked across the bow: pirates.
A member of the Delta Ranger's crew sounded the ship's whistle, and the cargo ship began maneuvering away as bullets thudded into its hull. The captain radioed a message to distant Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, where the International Maritime Bureau (IMB) operates the world's only pirate reporting and rescue center. In describing the attack, he added that the pirates seemed to be using a hijacked Indian dhow, a fishing vessel, as their mother ship.
The center's duty officer immediately radioed an alert to all ships in the Delta Ranger's vicinity and found that two other cargo ships had escaped similar attacks in recent days. The duty officer's next message went to the USS Winston S. Churchill, a Navy guided-missile destroyer on patrol about 100 nautical miles from the pirates' last reported position. Soon after, the Churchill headed for the dhow.
Pirates have been causing trouble ever since men first went down to the sea in ships, or at least since the 14th century B.C., when Egyptian records mention Lukkan pirates raiding Cyprus. A millennium later, Alexander the Great tried to sweep the Mediterranean clear of marauding bandits, to no avail. In 75 B.C., ship-based cutthroats took Julius Caesar hostage and ransomed him for 50 talents. The historian Plutarch wrote that Caesar then returned with several ships, captured the pirates and crucified the lot of them.
That hardly spelled the end of pirating. At the beginning of the 13th century A.D., Eustace the Monk terrorized the English Channel, and the European colonization of the Americas, with all its seaborne wealth, led to the so-called golden age of piracy, from 1660 to 1730—the era of Blackbeard, Black Bart, Captain Kidd and other celebrated pirates of the Caribbean. The era ended only after seafaring nations expanded their navies and prosecuted more aggressively to deal with the threat.
Now the seedy romance of the golden-age legends may be supplanted by a new reality: as governments cut their navies after the cold war, as thieves have gotten hold of more powerful weapons and as more and more cargo has moved by sea, piracy has once again become a lucrative form of waterborne mugging. Attacks at sea had become rare enough to be a curiosity in the mid-20th century, but began to reappear in the 1970s. By the 1990s, maritime experts noted a sharp increase in attacks, which led the IMB to establish the Piracy Reporting Centre in 1992—and still the buccaneering continued, with a high of 469 attacks registered in 2000. Since then, improvements in reporting, ship-tracking technology and government reaction have calmed the seas somewhat—the center counted 329 attacks in 2004, down to 276 in 2005 and 239 last year—but pirates remain very much in business, making the waters off Indonesia, Bangladesh, Nigeria and Somalia especially perilous. "We report hundreds of acts of piracy each year, many hundreds more go undetected," says Capt. Noel Choong, head of the Piracy Reporting Centre, in Kuala Lumpur. "Ships and their crews disappear on the high seas and coastal waters every year, never to be seen again." Even stationary targets, such as oil platforms, are at risk.
Global commerce would collapse without oceangoing ships to transfer the world's fuel, minerals and bulk commodities, along with much of its medicines and foodstuffs. According to the U.S. Maritime Administration, about 95 percent of the world's trade travels by water. Boston-based Global Insight, a forecasting company, estimates the value of maritime trade for 2007 to be at least $6 trillion. Estimates of the pirates' annual global plunder range into the billions.
Unlike the galleons of old, which sat low in the water and were easily boarded, the supertankers and bulk carriers of today may rise several stories—and yet they pose no great obstacle to thieves. Bullets and rocket-propelled grenades have persuaded many a captain to stop at sea; at that point, almost any pirate can climb to the deck by tossing grappling hooks over the rail.
Today's pirates range from villainous seaside villagers to members of international crime syndicates. They ply their trade around the globe, from Iraq to Somalia to Nigeria, from the Strait of Malacca to the territorial waters off South America. No vessel seems safe, be it a supertanker or a private yacht. In November 2005, pirates in two speedboats tried to attack the cruise liner Seabourn Spirit off Somalia. The liner's captain, Sven Erik Pedersen, outran them while driving them off with a Long Range Acoustic Device, or LRAD—a sonic weapon the United States military developed after the USS Cole was attacked by Al Qaeda terrorists in Yemen in 2000.
If you enter an anonymous office 35 floors above Kuala Lumpur's lush tropical streets and pass through a secured door, you will come to a small room dominated by maps of the world taped onto two of the walls. This is the IMB's Piracy Reporting Centre, which operates round-the-clock. When pirates attack anywhere in the world, this office almost always receives the first report of it and radios out the first alert. Tens of thousands of vessels depend on the IMB's information.
Red pins mark the latest attacks. On the day I visited, the pins looked like a rash covering much of the world. Another wall was covered with thank-you plaques from the admirals of many nations, including the United States. Noel Choong, who ushered me through this command center, spent more than ten years on oceangoing ships as a mariner. Now, in a dark suit, the soft-spoken Choong looked more like a corporate middle manager than a supersleuth of the seas.
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Comments (6)
what this doent help what weapons do they use.
Posted by niyah on March 3,2011 | 09:42 AM
Avast ye scurvy dogs!
The days of Pirates have returned. It is time to have an international treaty to train and allow mariners to go armed with deadly force on the high seas. We are talking belt-fed machine guns, shotguns, and modern military automatic rifles here. Upon entering a foreign port the comercial or private vessel could surrender the weapon onboard, or secure them onboard the vessel with customs tamper proof seals. This international treaty could and should be radified by all freedom loving states. Chance of happening? slim and nil! Better yet, let the would be totalitarians incorperate a second amendment like that of the U.S. Bill of Rights into the UN charter, instead of trying to disarm the law abiding citizen of the world. I propose that the U.S. defund the U.N. until they pass a treaty to garrantee the rights of all peoples to keep and bear arms as a INDIVIDUAL RIGHT!
Posted by Padraig's Ghost on January 10,2010 | 01:25 PM
If there were aircraft carriers deployed in the region that could launch aircraft in seconds of receiving report of pirate attacks, they could and should attack and sink the mother ship stranding the pirates in their speedboat. One should always attack the root of the problem. If enough such mother ships were sunk leaving the speedboat attackers helpless and the pirates become food for the sharks, the piracy would be quickly stopped. Unfortunately United States and many other western countries show far more mercy than these pirates deserve. I am certain that Russia would not show such mercy after some of their ships were attacked. There should also be well armed ships with air support enticing the pirates into a trap and then unleashing all the firepower at their disposal. Again if enough pirates were killed and others released to spread the message in the home base of the most savage retributions to the pirates, the piracy would stop. Mercy, trials, etc. against pirates are counter-productive.
Posted by Ali Nur on May 4,2009 | 03:13 AM
pirates operating from a lawless home country,pose a unique problem for shipping companys.Any government in this part of the world must continuosly curry favor with the public sympathy for the pirates cause,however perverted,any shipper employing aggresive methods,run the risk of alienating the governments of the ports they depend on for business. No poirt no shipping
Posted by rd johnson on April 16,2009 | 09:58 PM
As a former Australian serviceman,with over seas servic,i am ready to help with/in this problem, and i say,Their is only one way to deal with this problem,(of piracy on the high seas)and it is to take no prisioners,elimate the problem,as it will cut the number of boardings of forren ships, and will save the companys a lot of money,and our sea ways once again will be free, from this problem.
Posted by william hinds on December 26,2008 | 03:06 AM
A quick recommendation regarding prevention of Somali pirate threats to ships, from someone who has been there and done this type of insurgency eradication. Why decide to steer way around the immediate standard sailing routes and add unnecessary costs to the consumers? The less costly, most easiest and effective means to counter any pirate threat is to simply contract and have onboard professional armed security teams. I am not talking about “simple security guards.” I am talking about professional ex-military operators. This “proper” type of ship security team can counter any of the armed pirate threats available. There are plenty of these people around for contract work. They will need to be screened with proper scrutiny before hired to ensure their abilities and skill-sets. They then need to be assigned into teams. Take the tough stand against these cowardly minions and make a strong statement that says, “You mess with us, we will exterminate you!” You say it sounds too simple and controversial. It is that simple and NOT controversial, but provocatively smart to continue the rite of passage on peaceful seas! You cannot depend on maritime patrol ships to counter pirate incursions because those patrol boats can only be brought to bear AFTER pirates have already control of the vessels. It is ex-post facto at work! Just as any law enforcement agency is activated ONLY AFTER the criminal act has already taken place, it is only reactionary! It takes experienced critical mass teams armed with the proper means of weaponry to not only “discourage” pirate raids, but will effectively in the immediate term overcome any pirate attack on a vessel with precision. Stop making it harder on yourself and your customers and do the smart thing. It is simple and cost-effective, and gets your product to market.
Posted by PETER R DUYSINGS on November 28,2008 | 01:38 PM
I agree with Peter. They don't do it just to do it. They have their reasons. We in America have it pretty well we don't know what it's like over there. So i guess until we do we should try to be more open minded.
Posted by DaughterofaPirate on October 24,2008 | 01:20 PM
There should be cargo ships, turned into pirate hunting vessels. Gut out the inside turn all the cargo space into rooms so you can hold 50 or 60 guys. Reinforce the top sides of the ship to give better cover. Kill all the pirates, siphon out all the gas and oil, sell that, and sink their ship. If this is already being done where do I sign up?
Posted by on July 17,2008 | 04:39 PM
I can not understand people who think that the USA is responsible for everything that is wrong in the world and gets credit for nothing. We give food to the hungry, their leaders keep it for themselves. We give money to their country, their leaders keep it and spend it on themselves. We have been sending support for many years what country has used to resources that we provide (along with countless other country's) to lift themselves out of the conditions these bleeding hearts cannot bear.
Posted by John Morrison on July 6,2008 | 11:41 AM
Caught and put in prison? Noooo. Give them maritime justice as it was in the yonder days of piracy. Hanging at best, burn at the stake at worst. I say if you are going to be dumb enough to run those hostile, foreign shipping routes in a pleasure yacht, or sailboat, you had best invest in arming yourself with machine guns off the black market. I think about 5 or so US made M-60s would do the trick. Easily portable and hidden for when you are port bound...and viciously deadly on the open water. Heck, even simpler may be to just hire a well trained mercenary sniper. You drop a few water bound sand monkeys at 1000 yards and the rest will run...fast.
Posted by M. Sixty SAW on May 7,2008 | 02:44 PM
Has it not occurred to you,that maybe,(just maybe), those buggers in the boat tried to sell the swag for their own profit; and then, came up with some ghost story to tell the boss?If any of them died; it could just as easilly have been caused by over greedyness, or non cooperance in the caper, dued to the dead bloke's stupidity, which was, obviously, blamed on the poor dark faced native sailors.I tell you, insurance companies should seriously look into that;just some food for thaught.
Posted by realist fellar on March 10,2008 | 11:00 AM
it's not a matter of simple-mindedness. Like it's been said before, there's a need to do these things, they may not be justified in our eyes, but in the eyes of the people carrying out these actions they are. That's the simple truth of it. Without evil, pain, or carelessness, there would be no light, comfort or caring in the world. These things hold a balance to one another and it will always be so. We just need to be able to deal with it correctly. (that's what our brave militaries and law enforcement agencies are for, thank you to all people who serve).
Posted by Ness on February 27,2008 | 05:59 PM
What's with the pointless comments above? Right lets kill everyone that commit robbery. For godsake enforcement is of little point if you don't tackle the causes of crime. What compels what is the essentially citzens of the third-world to take to rusty, decreipt vessels, to attempt extremely risky robberies? Spend a day in a third-world country and the answer will smash your narrow minded bigoted views. Yes these people don't rob just to feed themselves. They're stealing in order to lift their station in life. To move to a level that we in the western world expect, nay demand. I say the pirates of the sea are a symbol of what is wrong with this world, of what we've done to the world.
Posted by Peter on December 6,2007 | 06:42 PM
What about the notion of not negotiating with terrorist? Why is The U.N of all people paying for the release of hostages? Has anyone ever heard of Lo-Jack? How about talking to GM and getting these ships the ONSTAR system and locate these guys red handed.
Posted by Kevin on December 1,2007 | 09:41 PM