If Pirates Can Hijack An Oil Super-Tanker
With Such Ease, So Can Al Qaeda -
International Terrorism Monitor----Paper No.
468
By B. Raman
(To be read in
continuation of my article of October 19,
2008, titled "India At Long Last Wiser To
Maritime Threats From The West" available at
http://www.southasiaanalysis.org/papers29/paper2884.html)
Lt. Nathan
Christensen, a spokesman for the US Navy's
5th Fleet, said on November 17, 2008, that
"Sirius Star", a Saudi-owned oil
super-tanker, was hijacked by Somali pirates
off the Kenyan coast on November 15. The
tanker, owned by Saudi oil company Aramco,
is 330 meters (1,080 feet), about the length
of an aircraft carrier. It can carry about
two million barrels of oil. He stated
that the Sirius Star was carrying crude at
the time of the hijacking, but he did
not know what quantity, but, according to
some news agency reports, it was carrying
crude worth US $ 100 million. He also did
not know where the ship was sailing from and
where it was going with the crude.
2. According to a
press release issued on November 17 by the
5th Fleet's Middle East headquarters in
Bahrain, the super-tanker was overpowered
and captured by the pirates more than 450
nautical miles southeast of Mombasa in
Kenya. It was built in South Korea's Daewoo
shipping yards and was commissioned last
March. It was categorised as a Very Large
Crude Carrier and had 318,000 dead weight
tons.
3. According to
the Associated Press, the NATO has three
warships in the Gulf of Aden and the U.S.
Navy's 5th Fleet has its own ships in the
region. But the MV Sirius Star was seized
far from their normal area of patrol. The
Gulf of Aden, off Somalia, connects to the
Red Sea, which in turn is linked to the
Mediterranean by the Suez Canal. The route
is thousands of miles and many days shorter
than going around the Cape of Good Hope off
the southern tip of Africa.
4. Following the
incident, Odfjell SE, a major Norwegian
shipping group, announced on November 18
that it has ordered its tankers numbering
about 90 to sail around Africa rather than
use the Suez Canal. According to the AP, it
took this decision after the U.S. and other
naval forces deployed in the region decided
against intervening to free the
supertanker from the control of the pirates,
who have sized seven ships in the last 12
days, including an Iranian cargo ship which
was seized by them on November 18.Terje
Storeng, the President and the Chief
Executive Officer of the Norwegian shipping
group, said in a press statement: "This will
incur significant extra cost, but we expect
our customers' support and contribution.
Odfjell is frustrated by the fact that
governments and authorities in general seem
to take a limited interest in this very
serious problem. The seizures by the
pirates operating in the area are ruthless,
high-level organized crime."
5. The AP has
reported that the Sirius Star was anchored
on November 18 close to Harardhere, the main
pirates' den on the Somali coast, with a
full load of two million barrels of oil. The
pirates have managed to have the supertanker
moved for nearly 450 nautical miles without
being intercepted by any naval ship in the
region. It is not yet known how many pirates
were involved in the capture and how did
they manage to board the supertanker and
take control of it without facing any
resistance.
6. Since the
beginning of this year there has been a
worrisome increase in incidents of strategic
piracy involving the capture of ships
carrying food grains and one Ukrainian ship
carrying about 50 tanks and allegedly
also some chemicals. According to the
Ukrainian authorities, who have not
confirmed the presence of any chemicals, the
tanks had been ordered by the Kenyan
Government, but US naval sources reportedly
suspect that the tanks were actually meant
for a dissident group in the Sudan. The
Ukrainian ship is still under the control of
the Somali pirates since September 25.
7. This year,
there have so far been 81 incidents of
piracy attack---- 58 in the Gulf of Aden, 12
off the East coast of Somalia and 11 off
Tanzania. In 36 of these incidents, the
pirates managed to hijack the ships attacked
by them. Twelve of these ships, with a total
of 250 crew members, are still in the
custody of the Somali pirates without a
multi-naval force called the Combined Task
Force 150 based in Djibouti, which has
reportedly established a 960-km long safe
corridor for commercial ships, being able
to prevent incidents of piracy outside this
corridor. Nor have the naval ships in the
region been able to intervene and get the
hijacked ships released.
8. Somalia
itself, which is facing an insurgency by Al
Qaeda and pro-Al Qaeda forces, is not in a
position to act against the pirates. The
only sporadic armed interventions have been
from the security forces of northern
Somalia's breakaway Puntland region.
They have occasionally confronted the
pirates. They freed a Panama-flagged cargo
ship from the pirates on October 14.
9. This is the
first time the Somali pirates have seized a
supertanker carrying crude and that too in
an area far away from their normal zone of
operation. Their intention in seizing a
supertanker with such a large quantity of
crude is not yet clear. Are they interested
only in ransom as they were in the case of
other ships seized in the past? Or do they
also intend selling the crude to smugglers
to make extra money? Do the pirates
operating in this region have links with Al
Qaeda and pro-Al Qaeda groups active in the
Somalia region? Is there any danger of the
pirates, acting jointly with the terrorists
or at their instance, blowing up the
supertanker in order to disrupt maritime
trade passing through the region? These are
questions to which answers are not yet
available.
10. Scenarios of
terrorists, acting with the support of
pirates or on their own, seizing
supertankers and blowing them up at or near
important ports or in maritime choke points
have been worrying maritime security experts
since 9/11----particularly ever since it
came to notice that Al Qaeda had
contemplated such scenarios. It was to
prevent such scenarios that the maritime
security architecture in the Malacca Strait
and the neighbouring areas was strengthened
with the countries of the region, including
India, and the US co-operating in the
matter.
11. The bringing
into force of such a maritime security
architecture against pirates and terrorists
in the seas to the West of India has not
received adequate attention so far. India
itself was remiss in this matter till
recently. Only after the hijacking of a
Japanese ship with a largely Indian crew by
the Somali pirates that the Indian Navy
decided to deploy one of its ships with
helicopters in the region to protect Indian
ships and foreign ships with a large Indian
crew. The deployment of the ships of
countries such as the US, France, Russia,
Iran and India separately of each other has
not had a deterrent effect. They have not
demonstrated a capability for active
intervention against successful pirates. Not
even US naval ships.
12. Apart from
the navies of the US and other NATO
countries and Russia, the only other Navies
with a capability for operations in the seas
far away from their base are those of India,
Pakistan and Iran. Saudi Arabia's largely
French-assisted Navy has very little
experience of operations in the high seas.
No mechanism for maritime security in the
region can be effective without the
co-operation and participation of the
Iranian Navy. The present state of
non-relations between the US and Iran comes
in the way of any participation by Iran.
13. The bulk of
India's foreign trade and practically all
its energy supplies transit through this
region. So too the energy supplies of China,
Japan and the ASEAN countries. Instead of
leaving it to the US, India should take the
initiative in bringing like-minded
countries----- including Japan, China, the
ASEAN countries, Pakistan and Iran---
together for working out an effective
maritime security architecture. India should
also examine how to associate the US, other
NATO countries and Russia with this
architecture despite any US reservations
regarding the participation of Iran. The
matter brooks no further delay.
(The writer is Additional Secretary (retd),
Cabinet Secretariat, Govt. of India, New
Delhi, and, presently, Director, Institute
For Topical Studies, Chennai. He is also
associated with the Chennai Centre For China
Studies. E-mail:
seventyone2@gmail.com)