January 20, 2010: Western intelligence specialists are focusing on how the Somali pirates operate, in order to gain insight on how best to interfere. While the Somali pirates have to work harder for their money, because of all the foreign warships in the area, they have plenty of incentive. With up to $100 million in ransoms a tear in play, the few thousand men, associated with the few warlords who dominate the business, keep coming up with new ways to get around the warships, and defensive measures adopted by the crews on merchant ships.
American and NATO intel specialists are collecting more and more information about the pirates. Some comes from eavesdropping on While all this makes it easier to interfere with pirate attacks, the lack of laws, and will, prevent the crews of the warships of doing anything to the pirates, other than firing back if fired on (rare), or firing on them to halt an attack on a merchant ship (less rare). So better intelligence makes it possible to interfere with more attacks, but not to reduce the number of pirates. As long as the pirates continue to take ships, they will keep coming. All the security measures forced the pirates to make twice as many attacks in 2009, to take the same number of ships as 2008. For the pirates, that was good. And the future looks bright.
Sweden to strengthen its commitment in Somalia
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