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30 Apr 2009
Thousands of experienced security specialists, now out of work because of a much less violent Iraq (and a much smaller demand in Afghanistan), are finding work guarding commercial shipping. Most of these teams (4-6 men) are armed, usually just with pistols.
But it's not firepower they depend on, but a growing toolkit of techniques for keeping pirates off a ship.
The professional security teams are usually defending the most
lucrative targets (large ships carrying valuable cargoes). These teams
began to show up last year, and the first ones were not equipped with
firearms. Instead, several of them had an LRAD (Long Range Acoustic
Device). Commonly called a "sonic cannon", it is basically a focused
beam of sound. It was designed to emit a very loud sound to a very
small area. Anyone whose head was touched by this beam of focused
energy, heard a painfully loud sound. Anyone standing next to them
heard nothing. It was believed that those hit by the beam would
promptly flee, or fall to the ground in pain. Some U.S. Navy ships also
carry it to keep suspicious civilians away . While the LRAD worked in
one case last year, when two boats of pirates were going after a cruise
ship, it failed later when pirates went after a merchant ship.
Apparently the pirates did some research and discovered that the LRAD
was painful, but survivable. That's all they needed to know.
The security teams don't rely on high tech, but will instead organize
and drill the crew on things that can be done to keep the pirates from
boarding. This ranges from stringing barbed wire around likely boarding
points, to showing the sailors how to use fire hoses and other tools
(like long poles) to keep the ladders or grappling hooks from enabling
the pirates to get aboard. These drills build confidence, and show how
the security team will take the big risks, and how the crew can play a
role in defending their ship. The security team also keeps track of how
close warships are, and prepare a "safe room" (an area of the ship the
crew can barricade themselves in, if they have to, until help arrives.)
The security personnel make sure emergency communications is available
in the safe room, and that the pirates cannot take control of the ship
unless they have the crew. Usually this comes down to barricading the
crew in the engine compartment.
The security teams get on the ship outside the danger zone (which,
these days, is as far east as the Seychelles islands (1,500 kilometers
east of Africa), or the Straits of Hormuz, and get off as the ship
enters safe areas, like the Red Sea or south of Kenya. The security
teams have to arrange for all these pickups and drop offs, and this
adds to the cost (which is $20,000 or more). But the owners of many
large ships, with expensive cargoes, find the cost worth it, even
though the risk of getting captured by pirates is quite low.
For most of the past decade, the pirates preyed on foreign fishing
boats and the small, sometimes sail powered, cargo boats the move close
(within a hundred kilometers) of the shore. During that time, the
pirates developed contacts with businessmen in the Persian Gulf who
could be used to negotiate (for a percentage) much larger ransoms with
insurance companies and shipping firms. The pirates also mastered the
skills needed to put a grappling hook on the railing, 30-40 feet above
the water, of a large ship. Doing this at night, and then scrambling
aboard, is more dangerous if the ship has lookouts, who can alert
sailors trained to deploy high pressure fire hoses against the borders.
Few big ships carry any weapons, and most have small crews (12-30
sailors). Attacking at night finds most of the crew asleep. Until
recently, very few of these ships had any armed security. Ships can
post additional lookouts when in areas believed to have pirates. Once
pirates (speedboats full of armed men) are spotted, ships can increase
speed (a large ship running at full speed, about 40+ kilometers an
hour, can outrun most of the current speed boats the pirates have), and
have fire hoses ready to be used to repel boarders. The pirates will
fire their AK-47 assault rifles and RPG grenade launchers, but the
sailors handling the fire hoses will stand back so the gunmen cannot
get a direct shot.
Last year about one ship out of every 500 passing near Somalia was
captured by pirates. Those odds have persuaded most ship owners to just
pay the higher insurance rates, and have the crews practice avoiding
capture, and taking advantage of warships in the area (knowing who and
where they are, and how to quickly contact them.) Armed security
details are, to many ship owners, not worth the cost.
With the pirates getting more and more ransom money for each ship, the
number of pirate groups operating in the Gulf of Aden, and elsewhere,
is growing. An increasing number of mother ships, usually captured
fishing trawlers (able to stay out for weeks at a time, and carry speed
boats for attacks) are traveling farther from the coast in the search
of victims. Now the danger zone extends 1,500 kilometers from the
Somali coast, to the Seychelles Islands. This is putting many cruise
ships and super tankers at risk, and these ships are most frequently
hiring the security teams to help avoid any problems with the pirates.
Source: StrategyWorld