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Africa Horn
Yemen: Pirates accused of vessel attack as NATO steps up aid escorts
2008-11-08
(AKI) - Pirates are reported to have stormed a ship located off the coast of Yemen in the Gulf of Aden, using rocket launchers and Kalashnikov rifles. The nationality of the affected ship, 'CC Future', is unknown. News of the attack was relayed by the commander of an Italian ship, the 'PB Tankers Green Point', from the sailing company Pietro Barbaro.

Last week, the United Nations called for the creation of a special peacekeeping force to tackle the issue of piracy in the Gulf of Aden, off the coast of Somalia and Yemen.

The move follows a resolution endorsed unanimously by the UN Security Council in June to allow foreign warships to enter Somalia's territorial waters to fight piracy.

During 2008 at least 77 vessels have reportedly been attacked in the Gulf of Aden, while 33 others have been hijacked, said the London-based daily The Financial Times.

Meanwhile, NATO warships have been trying to tackle piracy by acting as escorts and deterrents in the Gulf of Aden to food shipments of the United Nations World Food Programme.

A total of seven warships from Italy, Greece, Germany, Turkey and Britain who form the so-called Allied Provider operation have escorted at least 5 WFP vessels since 24 October, a NATO source told Adnkronos.

Safe passage is essential for the UN ships, since up to 90 percent of its food aid to Somalia is shipped by sea.

The Allied Provider operation is part of the wider naval force called Standing NATO Maritime Group Two or SNMG2, whose commander is Italian national Giovanni Gumiero.
Posted by:Fred

#5  Ok, lets get real, we're not living in the 18th century - sink their vessels, kill them - we have the technology.
Posted by: Last Breath Farm Resident   2008-11-08 23:44  

#4  yeah but this is diff from WW2 and we have alot more ROE now and with the euros helping you know it would worse than usual
Posted by: chris   2008-11-08 21:32  

#3  Convoy escort was pretty limited until the US began building "jeep" carriers to support the mission. After that, German losses climbed, and allied losses fell. We need to make a deal with the semi-autonomous province of Somaliland to build and use an airfield on their territory to patrol the Gulf of Aden. It would be nice to use Djibouti, where we already have a presence, but that area is a bit tight, operations-wise. The first time an AC-130 uses its 105mm cannon on a mother-ship, piracy will become far too expensive for the Somalis, and they'll quit. Until then, whatever we do will be a stopgap measure.
Posted by: Old Patriot   2008-11-08 14:00  

#2  It'll take months/years for the NATO coordinated ROEs and SOPs to get around to having ships park in a safe location to then be escorted in convoy through the area. Convoys, escorts, what an idea.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2008-11-08 13:19  

#1  well when you escort them and don't do anything thing it doesn't seem too deter them to much
Posted by: chris   2008-11-08 12:13  

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