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New Atlanticist

Apr 8, 2009

Somali Pirates Capture U.S. Vessel, World Attention

By James Easaw

Over the past week, there has been a rash of maritime hijackings off the East African coast after what had been something of a lull.  But New Atlanticist readers were not surprised.

Somalia

New Atlanticist

Feb 13, 2009

US and Russian Navy Arrest 26 Somali Pirates

By James Joyner

 U.S. Navy and Russian warships arrested 26 suspected Somali pirates this week, Andrew Njuguna reports for AP.

Somalia

New Atlanticist

Jan 27, 2009

The End of Piracy: Can NATO Contribute?

By James Easaw

Now that the piracy crisis centered off the Somali Coast/Gulf of Aden, the Horn of Africa and, to a lesser degree, the West African Coast in the Gulf of Guinea has become big news, the international community, most recently the United Nations, has sprung into action.  The end of piracy draws nigh.  In fact, those […]

NATO Security & Defense

New Atlanticist

Jan 8, 2009

U.S. to Head International Piracy Force

By Peter Cassata

A new international antipiracy task force led by the U.S. is set to be operational in the Gulf of Aden by mid-January.  The Fifth Fleet of the U.S. Navy, based in Bahrain, said it will be called Combined Task Force 151 (CTF-151) and will include a U.S. command ship, two more American warships, and air […]

Somalia

New Atlanticist

Dec 18, 2008

Global Governance Deficit

By Robert Manning

Once again, a crisis is brewing in Somalia, this time compounded by the global impact of piracy around its waters. And once again, it illustrates several dimensions of the global governance deficit arising from the challenge of weak and failing states, still, all too often, largely unmet.

International Organizations Politics & Diplomacy

New Atlanticist

Dec 16, 2008

EU Piracy Force Given Green Light to Sink Ships

By Peter Cassata

“Robust” is the word now being used to describe the EU’s mandate for its new anti-piracy mission, Operation Atalanta, in Somalia’s treacherous waters.  With NATO’s Operation Allied Provider officially ending last Friday, news is beginning to leak about Atalanta’s rules of engagement. 

European Union International Organizations

New Atlanticist

Dec 16, 2008

Just Say No to a War on Piracy

By Derek Reveron

Secretary of Defense Bob Gates recently told an audience in Bahrain, “Under the United Nations Security Council resolution passed last week, members of the international community must work together to aggressively pursue and deter piracy.” This should not be interpreted as a new “war on piracy” or a call to wage war against pirates, a […]

Somalia

New Atlanticist

Dec 3, 2008

Maritime Shock and Awe Won’t Fix Piracy

By James Easaw

The rash of ships hijacked in the Indian Ocean and Gulf of Aden has focused the international community’s efforts to put an end to the scourge of piracy off the Somali coast. But eradicating piracy once and for all will require more than tough talk, sending in a few warships, and establishing shipping lanes that commercial […]

Somalia

New Atlanticist

Dec 2, 2008

Improving Our Maritime Vision

By David Sagunsky

Pirate attacks off the coast of Somalia and the sea-borne infiltration of terrorists into Mumbai are graphic (and recent) reminders why maritime domain awareness — being aware of activity occurring on or under the water that has a direct impact on a country’s safety and security  —  matters.  Transatlantic cooperation has already succeeding in making […]

Somalia

New Atlanticist

Nov 24, 2008

Learning from the Barbary Pirates

By Robert Manning

Amidst all the angst and astonishment about those wild and crazy Somali pirates, we seem to have forgotten that we’ve been through this movie before. It was more than two centuries ago when Muslim pirates were, after England, perhaps the most serious foreign threat bedeviling the new American republic. And the policy response too, is […]

Somalia

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