Powerless against Pirates?

Powerless against Pirates?

Pirates are plundering the sea lanes practically at will, and world governments are saying they can’t do anything about it:

Somali pirates struck again yesterday, seizing an Iranian cargo ship holding 30,000 tonnes of grain, as the world’s governments and navies pronounced themselves powerless against this new threat to global trade.

Admiral Michael Mullen, the US military chief, pronounced himself stunned by the pirates’ reach after their capture of the supertanker Sirius Star and its $100 million (£70 million) cargo. Commanders from the US Fifth Fleet and from Nato warships in the area said that they would not intervene to retake the vessel. . . .

Operations undertaken by the coalition fleet are fraught with legal difficulties, ranging from restrictive rules of engagement to rights of habeas corpus, as the British Navy discovered when it detained eight pirates after a shootout last week. Yesterday the detainees were passed on to Kenya, where efforts to prosecute them will be closely watched for precedent.

Have the old laws of the sea been repealed? In the past, pirates, being combatants under the authority of no nation, had no legal protection. It would be inconceivable that a naval vessel would have any qualms about pursuing and destroying pirates.

UPDATE: India’s navy is responding in the old school manner.

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