View Full Version : Pirates Kill Americans, Are Captured.
nismaratwork
Feb22-11, 12:09 PM
http://www.cnn.com/2011/WORLD/africa/02/22/somalia.us.yacht/index.html?hpt=C1
CNN) -- A round-the-world boating adventure ended tragically Tuesday for four Americans, whom pirates shot to death after capturing their yacht in the Indian Ocean last week, U.S. officials said.
The 58-foot vessel, named the Quest, was being shadowed by the military after pirates captured the ship off the coast of Oman on Friday. Officials had said earlier Tuesday it was less than two days from the Somali coast.
Ship owners Jean and Scott Adam and Phyllis Macay and Bob Riggle were found shot after U.S. forces boarded the vessel about 1 a.m. ET, officials said.
The forces responded after a rocket-propelled grenade was fired at a U.S. Navy ship about 600 yards away -- and missed -- and the sound of gunfire could be heard on board the Quest, U.S. Navy Vice Adm. Mark Fox told reporters.
Pastor prays for captured couple
How pirates operate
Doing business the pirate way RELATED TOPICS
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"Despite immediate steps to provide life-saving care, all four hostages ultimately died of their wounds," U.S. Central Command said.
The incident took place as negotiations involving the FBI were under way for the hostages' release, Fox said. Two pirates had boarded a U.S. Navy ship Monday for the negotiations, he said. He told reporters he had no information on details of the negotiations or whether a ransom had been offered.
Two pirates were found dead on board the Quest, he said. In the process of clearing the vessel, U.S. forces killed two others, one with a knife, Fox said. Thirteen others were captured and detained along with the other two already on board the U.S. Navy ship. Nineteen pirates were involved altogether, he said.
The Adams were from Marina del Rey, California, Fox said, and Macay and Riggle were from Seattle.
The 15 detained pirates were being held together on a U.S. warship, Fox said, and "we will go through the appropriate process to bring them to a judicial process and hold them accountable for their activities."
Walk the Planck scale to hell.
Nasty business, and I wonder where this takes us now?
zomgwtf
Feb22-11, 12:15 PM
What I don't understand is why the pirates would kill the hostages or show any hostility towards the American Navy vessel?
It doesn't add up to me.
nismaratwork
Feb22-11, 12:24 PM
What I don't understand is why the pirates would kill the hostages or show any hostility towards the American Navy vessel?
It doesn't add up to me.
I don't understand either.
It could have been an act of desperation. At some point the pirates figured out they had no way to get out of the situation in light of the fact that a Navy vessel was following them all the way.
nismaratwork
Feb22-11, 02:23 PM
It could have been an act of desperation. At some point the pirates figured out they had no way to get out of the situation in light of the fact that a Navy vessel was following them all the way.
Hmmm... or maybe just panic fire.
By the accounts coming out it seems Navy SEALs attempted a rescue, but the hostages had been mortally wounded before they could be saved... not dead, but wounded. They died of those wounds however.
I have to say, it seems to me that they just turned a prison sentence into a death sentence.
CheckMate
Feb22-11, 03:43 PM
What happened is this :
Pirates had hostages, realized that Navy Seals were on the way, panic fired and left the hostages on verge of death.
nismaratwork
Feb22-11, 05:18 PM
What happened is this :
Pirates had hostages, realized that Navy Seals were on the way, panic fired and left the hostages on verge of death.
That could be, but the report is that shots were heard, and THEN the SEAL team was deployed. If that's the case, it may be that internal tensions, or an escape attempt prompted the killing.
Either way... everyone invovled is either dead, or as good as dead now. We're going to have to deploy drones at this point I think, and be damned with the loss of life. Piracy doesn't stop unless you make it unprofitable, and history has shown one sure way of doing that: death on sight.
This post will more than likely be judged harshly, but I see two problems here.
First is the ill-conceived business practice (insurance related) not to arm the security forces on commercial vessels - ridiculous given the documented risk. Next is the decision by (these) private citizens to sail this 58 foot yacht through these very dangerous waters. The value of such a vessel is in excess of $100,000 without a payload. Their decision resulted in (their own) deaths and risked the lives of several military persons - needlessly.
Astronuc
Feb22-11, 06:19 PM
This post will more than likely be judged harshly, but I see two problems here.
First is the ill-conceived business practice (insurance related) not to arm the security forces on commercial vessels - ridiculous given the documented risk. Next is the decision by (these) private citizens to sail this 58 foot yacht through these very dangerous waters. The value of such a vessel is in excess of $100,000 without a payload. Their decision resulted in (their own) deaths and risked the lives of several military persons - needlessly. People shouldn't venture outside the borders of their nation? Those folks were apparently in international waters far from Somalia. Essentially, any place on the high seas is at risk.
The Adams, Macay and Riggle departed Feb. 15 from Mumbai, India, and were headed to Salalah, Oman, when the pirates hijacked the Quest on Friday.
http://www.usatoday.com/news/world/2011-02-22-pirates-hostages_N.htm
They handn't even gotten near Somalia.
...We're going to have to deploy drones at this point I think, and be damned with the loss of life. Piracy doesn't stop unless you make it unprofitable, and history has shown one sure way of doing that: death on sight.
And I promised you I wouldn't post here in the Politics & World Affairs forums. (Personal note you all)
Anyway, I'm surprised they didn't blow the dang thing out of the water long before this had to happen.
People shouldn't venture outside the borders of their nation? Those folks were apparently in international waters far from Somalia. Essentially, any place on the high seas is at risk.
http://www.usatoday.com/news/world/2011-02-22-pirates-hostages_N.htm
They handn't even gotten near Somalia.
The world is a very dangerous place - especially for nice people.
russ_watters
Feb22-11, 06:39 PM
The navy needs to learn to be much less efficient in these cases: far too many pirates survived this. People shouldn't venture outside the borders of their nation? Rules to live by: Don't swim right after eating, don't cross the street without looking both ways, don't drink and drive, don't sail a half-million dollar yacht into pirate-infested waters. Those folks were apparently in international waters far from Somalia. Essentially, any place on the high seas is at risk.
http://www.usatoday.com/news/world/2011-02-22-pirates-hostages_N.htm
They handn't even gotten near Somalia. The only part of that that is really true is that they were in international waters. They were "south of Oman" when hijacked, which puts them at most about 700 miles from Somalia and at least 400 (their destination was 400). That's well within the known radius of Somali pirate attacks. It isn't even close to true that "any place on the high seas it at risk": the vast majority of the worlds' piracy happens within a thousand miles of Somalia. Sailing in the Atlantic or Pacific oceans presents virtually no risk at all. It was just plain stupid to be sailing in that region of the world. Whether it is worth it to try and save them, I'm not sure, but the effort cost us many millions of dollars.
nismaratwork
Feb22-11, 07:37 PM
And I promised you I wouldn't post here in the Politics & World Affairs forums. (Personal note you all)
Anyway, I'm surprised they didn't blow the dang thing out of the water long before this had to happen.
Indeed... and as I said... please DO post here!
@Russ_Waters: Again, we agree. Piracy needs to be the death-sentence it was, because the fundamentals haven't changed. Here, we need violent and terrifying deterrence.
The navy needs to learn to be much less efficient in these cases: far too many pirates survived this. Rules to live by: Don't swim right after eating, don't cross the street without looking both ways, don't drink and drive, don't sail a half-million dollar yacht into pirate-infested waters. The only part of that that is really true is that they were in international waters. They were "south of Oman" when hijacked, which puts them at most about 700 miles from Somalia and at least 400 (their destination was 400). That's well within the known radius of Somali pirate attacks. It isn't even close to true that "any place on the high seas it at risk": the vast majority of the worlds' piracy happens within a thousand miles of Somalia. Sailing in the Atlantic or Pacific oceans presents virtually no risk at all. It was just plain stupid to be sailing in that region of the world. Whether it is worth it to try and save them, I'm not sure, but the effort cost us many millions of dollars.
This point was discussed in the other "pirate" thread a few months ago, but why aren't "pirates" identified by the time they are 50 miles from shore - let alone 400 or 700 miles out?
Proton Soup
Feb22-11, 08:53 PM
they picked a really bad time to go sightseeing in a really dangerous place. USN is a little pre-occupied atm.
also saw some military guys being interviewed on CNN. they said the pirates wouldn't "negotiate", kept asking for money. :rolleyes: jebus guys, just say that we don't negotiate. don't parrot stupid crap like that.
they picked a really bad time to go sightseeing in a really dangerous place. USN is a little pre-occupied atm.
also saw some military guys being interviewed on CNN. they said the pirates wouldn't "negotiate", kept asking for money. :rolleyes: jebus guys, just say that we don't negotiate. don't parrot stupid crap like that.
I guess they were on the mission to convert pirates to Christianity :rofl: They were sailing across the world distributing bibles to the locals.
russ_watters
Feb22-11, 08:59 PM
This point was discussed in the other "pirate" thread a few months ago, but why aren't "pirates" identified by the time they are 50 miles from shore - let alone 400 or 700 miles out? We don't have a large enough military presence there.
Astronuc
Feb23-11, 06:08 AM
The navy needs to learn to be much less efficient in these cases: far too many pirates survived this. Rules to live by: Don't swim right after eating, don't cross the street without looking both ways, don't drink and drive, don't sail a half-million dollar yacht into pirate-infested waters. The only part of that that is really true is that they were in international waters. They were "south of Oman" when hijacked, which puts them at most about 700 miles from Somalia and at least 400 (their destination was 400). That's well within the known radius of Somali pirate attacks. It isn't even close to true that "any place on the high seas it at risk": the vast majority of the worlds' piracy happens within a thousand miles of Somalia. Sailing in the Atlantic or Pacific oceans presents virtually no risk at all. It was just plain stupid to be sailing in that region of the world. Whether it is worth it to try and save them, I'm not sure, but the effort cost us many millions of dollars. Mumbai is due east and slightly north of their destination -Salalah, Oman - which is on the south coast of Oman. I would expect that they were north of Socotra Island (Soqotra, Suquṭra, or سُقُطْرَى), which is part of Yemen.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salalah
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Socotra
I would imagine that they expected to be safe not being near Somilia, as much as a person from San Antonio or Austin would feel safe from crime in New Orleans, or someone in Philadelphia feeling safe from crime in Indianaoplis.
I have to wonder though what research they did for their journey.
I remember hearing about a hijacking of a private yacht of the coast of Brazil a while ago. And some of the seas around Philippines and Indonesia, particularly the Moluccan straits are risky.
nismaratwork
Feb23-11, 11:56 AM
I guess they were on the mission to convert pirates to Christianity :rofl: They were sailing across the world distributing bibles to the locals.
Really?... well... you take your risks, but piracy has always been a global problem. When you can spend a few tens of thousands of USD and net a 9 million USD oil tanker, well... that's a pretty strong impetus, especially in Somalia. If those ships are armed and start shooting when there's no IFF response...
Russ: If we simply required IFF past a certain point we could setup a drone network supported by radar dirgibles and submarine forces. I would rather see a mix of that and heavily armed ships or a convoy system. It has to be brutal however... piracy has to mean you die at sea and are buried at sea.
Remember, the point is not to stop all piracy directly, it's to make anything that even looks like piracy the riskiest profession on the planet. A study of the history of piracy indicates you can either change the circumstances of pirates, or kill them. We tried the former, now it's time for the latter. Will innocent people die? Yes.
Really?... well... you take your risks, but piracy has always been a global problem. When you can spend a few tens of thousands of USD and net a 9 million USD oil tanker, well... that's a pretty strong impetus, especially in Somalia. If those ships are armed and start shooting when there's no IFF response...
Russ: If we simply required IFF past a certain point we could setup a drone network supported by radar dirgibles and submarine forces. I would rather see a mix of that and heavily armed ships or a convoy system. It has to be brutal however... piracy has to mean you die at sea and are buried at sea.
Remember, the point is not to stop all piracy directly, it's to make anything that even looks like piracy the riskiest profession on the planet. A study of the history of piracy indicates you can either change the circumstances of pirates, or kill them. We tried the former, now it's time for the latter. Will innocent people die? Yes.
I've posted this before - pirates move pretty slow and a single fighter jet moves pretty fast. It doesn't seem that difficult a task to set up a "911" (for lack of a better description) for any ship that sees a threat closing in > sinking of the pirate craft would be inevitable. For very large ships (travel in convoys and) - why not let an attack helicopter ride along - same thing - if you're a group of guys on a small boat and approach a convoy > you will be blown out of the water.
Astronuc
Feb23-11, 12:50 PM
Friends of the Americans killed by pirates say they were careful. Apparently not careful enough - especially if they separated from a group with whom they were traveling.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20110223/ap_on_re_us/us_piracy_americans
Proton Soup
Feb23-11, 12:59 PM
about taking on the pirates, it's not our job. unless... it involves ships flying under US flags. and when a US ship has been attacked, the USN has been decisive. if they weren't flying the flag, they should have been. as for those other ships in the region, if they want US protections, then they should register with us, and not the cheapest registry they can find.
nismaratwork
Feb23-11, 01:20 PM
about taking on the pirates, it's not our job. unless... it involves ships flying under US flags. and when a US ship has been attacked, the USN has been decisive. if they weren't flying the flag, they should have been. as for those other ships in the region, if they want US protections, then they should register with us, and not the cheapest registry they can find.
I'm suggesting a regional coalition including Europe, Russia, and ideally China. If not, then each flag defends itself, as it has been in the past.
Piracy needs to be a lethal offense, regardless of age, circumstance, or hope of trial. No friendly signal?... bye.
russ_watters
Feb24-11, 12:21 AM
I would imagine that they expected to be safe not being near Somilia, as much as a person from San Antonio or Austin would feel safe from crime in New Orleans, or someone in Philadelphia feeling safe from crime in Indianaoplis. If they believed that, then they were essentially by definition, terminally naive (but I don't believe that: see below). Based on this map, it appears to me the pirates conducted dozens of raids in 2010 that were closer to India than Somalia! http://www.icc-ccs.org/home/piracy-reporting-centre/imb-live-piracy-map-2010/piracy-map-2010
The furthest of them was about 1100 miles from the tip of Somalia, or about 400 miles from Mumbai I have to wonder though what research they did for their journey. In fact, they initially joined the group they left in Mumbia because of that risk. And they were headed to the Med the short way - a route they had already taken once before. They knew exactly what they were doing. On the trip in which they were hijacked, the Adams planned to travel across the Indian Ocean from their temporary dock in Phuket, Thailand, and then head up the Red Sea and through the Mediterranean to the Greek islands.
Friends in California said Scott Adam, 70, had previously discussed the dangers of piracy when navigating the Arabian and Red seas. Adam had considered shipping the boat to avoid the dangers of the trip but decided instead to join a rally of yachts heading to the same location, they said.
The couple, however, apparently decided to break off from the Blue Water Rally, which organized and supported the group of boats headed toward the Mediterranean. http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/sc-dc-0223-pirates-deaths-20110222,0,6836331.story?track=rss
I remember hearing about a hijacking of a private yacht of the coast of Brazil a while ago. And some of the seas around Philippines and Indonesia, particularly the Moluccan straits are risky. See the map I linked. Your odds of meeting a pirate are a couple of orders of magnitude better in the Indian Ocean/Arabian Sea than in the entire western hemisphere combined.
Pleasure Cruise the Somali Coast. http://fellowshipofminds.wordpress.com/2010/09/14/pleasure-cruise-like-no-other/
http://fellowshipofminds.files.wordpress.com/2010/09/cruise-8.jpg
mugaliens
Feb24-11, 07:06 AM
about taking on the pirates, it's not our job. unless... it involves ships flying under US flags. and when a US ship has been attacked, the USN has been decisive. if they weren't flying the flag, they should have been. as for those other ships in the region, if they want US protections, then they should register with us, and not the cheapest registry they can find.
If I'm aboard a ship, and pirates attempt to board, you can bet that if I have means of repelling illegal boarders, I'll use those means to repell illegal boarders.
The U.S. Navy cannot afford to keep 360' cruisers on station to defend 60' sailboats of US registry. If one happens to be in the area, terrific, as it'll make for some good real-world training for the crew. Don't expect the Navy to send a cruiser 1200 miles to one's rescue, however.
Funny. The Spike TV channel had a program on last night about the U.S. Navy catching pirates (a couple years old). Sure is a big ocean out there.
nismaratwork
Feb24-11, 08:47 AM
If I'm aboard a ship, and pirates attempt to board, you can bet that if I have means of repelling illegal boarders, I'll use those means to repell illegal boarders.
The U.S. Navy cannot afford to keep 360' cruisers on station to defend 60' sailboats of US registry. If one happens to be in the area, terrific, as it'll make for some good real-world training for the crew. Don't expect the Navy to send a cruiser 1200 miles to one's rescue, however.
If you have any rifle (assault, long, hell have a PSG-1!) would you open fire on a crew with an RPG, maybe a .50 cal, and more Kalashnikovs than can comfortably be imagined? Sounds like suicide unless you're part of a group, and in your case you benefit from training. Still, sniping on water is HARD, so you're losing means of attrition at a distance; you also lose the range of your assault rifle.
You're right about the navy however, but we could put in a request to contractors to design an armed drone, specializing in automated tracking in the region, and then under human control, firing on anyone suspicious who doesn't respond to any form of IFF, even optical-semaphore.
We don't need to stop them all, just make it a bad investment.
What is a reasonable distance from the shore for fishing - what distance is suspect - what distance is nonsense? Given the speed a fishing boat travels and aerial photos - it shouldn't be that difficult to categorize this way - should it? If the reasonable distance is 100 - 200 miles (???) - a great distance in a little boat - smile, wave and avoid these folks. They are trying to eat. At 300 to 400 miles - a little suspicious (???) do fly overs and monitor movements? At distances beyond 500 miles - question them.
nismaratwork
Feb24-11, 08:59 AM
What is a reasonable distance from the shore for fishing - what distance is suspect - what distance is nonsense? Given the speed a fishing boat travels and aerial photos - it shouldn't be that difficult to categorize this way - should it? If the reasonable distance is 100 - 200 miles (???) - a great distance in a little boat - smile, wave and avoid these folks. They are trying to eat. At 300 to 400 miles - a little suspicious (???) do fly overs and monitor movements? At distances beyond 500 miles - question them.
...And err on the side of sharing munitions with those who don't respond.
...And err on the side of sharing munitions with those who don't respond.
No need to waste munitions - bomb them with rocks.
nismaratwork
Feb24-11, 09:08 AM
No need to waste munitions - bomb them with rocks.
We do, they're just pointy, made of depleted uranium, and come out of a vulcan cannon faster than most rocks... :smile:
(note, this won't be on any drone, for weight of course)
http://www.deviantart.com/download/102105183/M61_Vulcan_Cannon_by_Mydin.jpg
mugaliens
Feb25-11, 05:29 AM
If you have any rifle (assault, long, hell have a PSG-1!) would you open fire on a crew with an RPG, maybe a .50 cal, and more Kalashnikovs than can comfortably be imagined?
I've sailed the open seas (I've an open ocean skipper's license from the US Navy), though not around the world, and certainly not in those parts.
Would I open fire on a crew? That depends entirely upon what that "crew" was attempting to do. If it was a legitimate boarding party (any number of countries' customs or harbor masters), no issue. But those relationships are almost always establish, and almost always with the appropriate paperwork (including various electronic and physical stamps of approval).
I learned to sail back in high school, and continued ever since, obtaining various licenses wherever I could, whenever I could.
I'd been planning a post-retirement round-the-world cruise (smaller, open-ocean sailing yacht circa 40-50 ft) for myself and my family from 1999 to 2005. My ex nixed that in 2005 with her plans for divorce, so, ptueyeui, and the lawyers got most of our saved funds. BIG HINT - GO WITH A MEDIATOR. You might wind up $1,200 in the hole instead of $50,000 in the hole. Moving on...
...to Yes. If pirates (not valid flag parties) attempted to board my vessel, I'd unlever every single god-damned thing I had aboard to prevent their heinous unlawful activities from ever, period.
Sounds like suicide...
Oh, I dunno... I'm a pretty good shot with a long rifle out to about a mile...
...unless you're part of a group, and in your case you benefit from training
All the better. And if you've ever hung around these groups, you'll know most aren't taking this, er.., a four letter word meaning excrement, beginning with "s,"...
Lying down.
Still, sniping on water is HARD, so you're losing means of attrition at a distance; you also lose the range of your assault rifle.
So are they. So what. What's new. If I were to replan my trip today, I'd include whereabouts of the U.S. Navy, but I'd also plan to put into port a hell of a lot less than I'd originally planned on account of the pirate situation which has developed in the region.
You're right about the navy however, but we could put in a request to contractors to design an armed drone, specializing in automated tracking in the region, and then under human control, firing on anyone suspicious who doesn't respond to any form of IFF, even optical-semaphore.
We don't need to stop them all, just make it a bad investment.
Wow, nismaratwork. Let's microtag their vessel from the drone, while we're at it. An AGM-114 Hellfire (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AGM-114_Hellfire)will absolutely decimate it's target.
Perhaps all we international sailors would need to arm ourselves with would be laser designators and a full suite of anti-jam communications to call in the troops where needed.
Folks, do any of you have any idea of what our Nation's Merchant Marine Academy stands for, what it's done throughout our history as a Union, and what it means to the continued commerce and integrity of our great nation?
Ok, sound's like sour cheese sauch to most of you, but WWI said otherwise, that everyone in the US joined together, then.
xxChrisxx
Feb25-11, 06:31 AM
Would you don your red bandana too?
mugaliens
Feb25-11, 07:29 AM
Would you don your red bandana too?
In San Fran it'd earn one a rapid butt-(unmentionable)
What, xxChrisxx, are you talking about with respect to flags on an international scale?
Please grow a brain. Your "flags" aren't shared around the world. Dah!
xxChrisxx
Feb25-11, 08:22 AM
Re: 'Opening up' on a boatload of heavily armed Somalis.
If pirates (not valid flag parties) attempted to board my vessel, I'd unlever every single god-damned thing I had aboard to prevent their heinous unlawful activities from ever, period.
Oh, I dunno... I'm a pretty good shot with a long rifle out to about a mile...
http://i260.photobucket.com/albums/ii3/cdcracing/ram.jpg
I still like my idea better. Get a big helicopter and a giant bucket to fill with rocks. Fly over the boat - aim and drop the load > boat fills and sinks - pirates swim home a few hundred miles.
xxChrisxx
Feb25-11, 12:11 PM
In San Fran it'd earn one a rapid butt-(unmentionable)
What, xxChrisxx, are you talking about with respect to flags on an international scale?
Please grow a brain. Your "flags" aren't shared around the world. Dah!
As an aside, not being of the fruity persuasion I actually had no idea handkerchiefs were used in this fashion.
Useful thing to know really, I'll never blow my nose if I should ever happen to go to a gaybar...
I still like my idea better. Get a big helicopter and a giant bucket to fill with rocks. Fly over the boat - aim and drop the load > boat fills and sinks - pirates swim home a few hundred miles.
Btw - sand is a good alternative and a quick water re-load could be fun as well - most anything will sink a fishing boat.
Btw - sand is a good alternative and a quick water re-load could be fun as well - most anything will sink a fishing boat.
A wrecking ball attached to a fast moving helicopter - skimming along the water - might also be effective?:surprised
nismaratwork
Feb25-11, 12:26 PM
I've sailed the open seas (I've an open ocean skipper's license from the US Navy), though not around the world, and certainly not in those parts.
Would I open fire on a crew? That depends entirely upon what that "crew" was attempting to do. If it was a legitimate boarding party (any number of countries' customs or harbor masters), no issue. But those relationships are almost always establish, and almost always with the appropriate paperwork (including various electronic and physical stamps of approval).
I learned to sail back in high school, and continued ever since, obtaining various licenses wherever I could, whenever I could.
I'd been planning a post-retirement round-the-world cruise (smaller, open-ocean sailing yacht circa 40-50 ft) for myself and my family from 1999 to 2005. My ex nixed that in 2005 with her plans for divorce, so, ptueyeui, and the lawyers got most of our saved funds. BIG HINT - GO WITH A MEDIATOR. You might wind up $1,200 in the hole instead of $50,000 in the hole. Moving on...
Better yet, pre-nup; you're never too rich, to well off, to middle-class, to poor, or too broke to make one. Love, then verify. :wink: Now, please try not to die on the open ocean!
...to Yes. If pirates (not valid flag parties) attempted to board my vessel, I'd unlever every single god-damned thing I had aboard to prevent their heinous unlawful activities from ever, period.
Oh, I dunno... I'm a pretty good shot with a long rifle out to about a mile...
Fair enough, and I'm also a good shot (although not out to a mile unless it's a .50, and my MOA is going to be ugly between shots), but I know my limitations when faced with overwhelming force. I'd add, sniping on water is HAAAARD; unless you're close to land or have a trained spotter, and that assumes you have the skills to be a sniper to begin with. I know I don't, but then, we're not talking aobut me, but your choice to make, and certainly surrender is no guarantee of survival.
All the better. And if you've ever hung around these groups, you'll know most aren't taking this, er.., a four letter word meaning excrement, beginning with "s,"...
Lying down.
So are they. So what. What's new. If I were to replan my trip today, I'd include whereabouts of the U.S. Navy, but I'd also plan to put into port a hell of a lot less than I'd originally planned on account of the pirate situation which has developed in the region.
They have RPG's, desperation, and massed fire. Which leads to...
Wow, nismaratwork. Let's microtag their vessel from the drone, while we're at it. An AGM-114 Hellfire (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AGM-114_Hellfire)will absolutely decimate it's target.
...Indeed, that's the idea. We can arm the oceans, or we can slaughter pirates... I prefer the latter.
Perhaps all we international sailors would need to arm ourselves with would be laser designators and a full suite of anti-jam communications to call in the troops where needed.
Works for me, but they should foot the bill for the fuel, time, and munitions.
Folks, do any of you have any idea of what our Nation's Merchant Marine Academy stands for, what it's done throughout our history as a Union, and what it means to the continued commerce and integrity of our great nation?
Ok, sound's like sour cheese sauch to most of you, but WWI said otherwise, that everyone in the US joined together, then.
Convoys baby... we could do that too...
nismaratwork
Feb25-11, 12:30 PM
Btw - sand is a good alternative and a quick water re-load could be fun as well - most anything will sink a fishing boat.
All good, but then they'd just use anti-air weaponry, or even small arms... and yes, I know you're kidding.
I'm genuinely a fan of the hellfire missiles, although I think a tank-killer main gun would work.
All good, but then they'd just use anti-air weaponry, or even small arms... and yes, I know you're kidding.
I'm genuinely a fan of the hellfire missiles, although I think a tank-killer main gun would work.
Well, if they think they're allowed to shoot back - there won't be much swimming.:grumpy:
nismaratwork
Feb25-11, 12:41 PM
Well, if they think they're allowed to shoot back - there won't be much swimming.:grumpy:
I don't think they should be given any chance beyond the standard IFF confirmation, radio, and optical semaphore. Fail that, resist boarding, and you're driftwood and mist: piracy has to be battled wtih 0 tolerance.... the oceans are too large.
I don't think they should be given any chance beyond the standard IFF confirmation, radio, and optical semaphore. Fail that, resist boarding, and you're driftwood and mist: piracy has to be battled wtih 0 tolerance.... the oceans are too large.
The point of my posts was to say it's time to send them a message - enough.
Vanadium 50
Feb25-11, 01:17 PM
The problem is that US policy is that this is a law enforcement issue. You have to collect evidence, capture the pirates, fly them back to the US, give them a lawyer, and let the the courts see if they can increase the number of pirates convicted in the last century from 5 to 6. You can't just sink them.
nismaratwork
Feb25-11, 01:18 PM
The problem is that US policy is that this is a law enforcement issue. You have to collect evidence, capture the pirates, fly them back to the US, give them a lawyer, and let the the courts see if they can increase the number of pirates convicted in the last century from 5 to 6. You can't just sink them.
That position needs to change, which is my point; if Ollie North can be a free man on Fox News, then we can sink some pirates and eat the scandal later.
nismaratwork
Feb25-11, 01:19 PM
The point of my posts was to say it's time to send them a message - enough.
Agreed, and my view is that such messages are best delivered at the pointy end of something fast or explosive.
...You can't just sink them.
Why the hell not. With a drone missile who would ever know?
That position needs to change, which is my point; if Ollie North can be a free man on Fox News, then we can sink some pirates and eat the scandal later.
I wonder how many people here even remember North? Let alone what he did.
A position change is needed and missiles seem like a good idea to me.
nismaratwork
Feb25-11, 04:31 PM
Why the hell not. With a drone missile who would ever know?
I wonder how many people here even remember North? Let alone what he did.
A position change is needed and missiles seem like a good idea to me.
Indeed!... 'A capital idea good chap, it should be dandy sport blowing those murderous sons' of bleeps out of the water what!' (me in a bad british accent).
Seriously, this is a soluble problem, and the solvent is packed into a warhead.
Here's an idea - it's for a reality show called "Ram the Pirates". We can dig some old ice breakers out of the moth balls, let some grafitti artists spray some offensive (to pirates) graphics on the sides and train some crews to compete. The challenge would be to ram and sink as many pirate crews as possible. If MTV picked it up - there could be a spin-off ..."Spring Break (off) Somalia" - and shot entirely on-board.
Proton Soup
Feb26-11, 12:01 AM
oh yeah, oliver north. iran-contra. US government state-sponsored terrorism. on several levels. like we need more of that.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iran-Contra_affair
mugaliens
Feb26-11, 04:10 AM
The problem is that US policy is that this is a law enforcement issue. You have to collect evidence, capture the pirates, fly them back to the US, give them a lawyer, and let the the courts see if they can increase the number of pirates convicted in the last century from 5 to 6. You can't just sink them.
Vanadium, you are incorrect. All owners of all vessels have the right to repel unauthorized/illegal borders, by force, if necessary.
Back at home, in more than half the U.S. States, it's referred to the "Castle Law." Bottom line: All of us, whether in our home, apartment, or sailboat, should, can, and will be free from unauthorized actions contrary to the normal course of events.
That's the nice of saying what's reflected in most state laws such that those who illegally bust down a door are likely to wind up dead for having illegally violated a home.
If you want to make it legal, get a warrent.
JaredJames
Feb26-11, 09:08 AM
Back at home, in more than half the U.S. States, it's referred to the "Castle Law." Bottom line: All of us, whether in our home, apartment, or sailboat, should, can, and will be free from unauthorized actions contrary to the normal course of events.
That's the nice of saying what's reflected in most state laws such that those who illegally bust down a door are likely to wind up dead for having illegally violated a home.
This is where the UK falls down, badly. I can legally eject a person from my property using appropriate force as necessary. However, any damage or injuries they sustain from me doing so, I am liable for. This is complete BS as far as I'm concerned.
As a nation we're more interested in the welfare of criminals and non-citizens than we are of the law law abiding citizens and persons in the country.
We need to readjust our attitude - perhaps start with the pirates and blow them out of the water...
Oh wait, we've just made some serious cut backs and couldn't defend our country let alone against pirates - Go UK government!!! :grumpy:
nismaratwork
Feb26-11, 11:13 AM
This is where the UK falls down, badly. I can legally eject a person from my property using appropriate force as necessary. However, any damage or injuries they sustain from me doing so, I am liable for. This is complete BS as far as I'm concerned.
As a nation we're more interested in the welfare of criminals and non-citizens than we are of the law law abiding citizens and persons in the country.
We need to readjust our attitude - perhaps start with the pirates and blow them out of the water...
Oh wait, we've just made some serious cut backs and couldn't defend our country let alone against pirates - Go UK government!!! :grumpy:
Wow.. that's absolutely absurd.
@WhoWee: I like that!... Very George Carlin, but with a genuinely practical side.
JaredJames
Feb26-11, 11:18 AM
Wow.. that's absolutely absurd.
There are two debates currently on the table:
1. Prisoners get to vote - European court says it violates their human rights to stop them, for once the UK stood up and said "tough sh*t".
2. Prisoners are trying to bring a lawsuit to allow them to collect their state pensions and other such things whilst in prison - all while living "at her majesty's pleasure" none-the-less!
I want pirates blown out of the water and the UK to have at least one aircraft carrier - in the words of Billy Bob Thornton in Bad Santa - "wish in one hand, sh*t in the other, see which one fills up first". The UK have this illusion we're still a super power, we need to face reality.
Get us some battleships and show these pirates we mean business!
nismaratwork
Feb26-11, 02:01 PM
http://www.cnn.com/2011/OPINION/02/26/etzioni.stop.piracy/index.html?iref=NS1
Intersting little bit, essentially calling for what Mugaliens has said: arm merchant ships, shoot on sight.
The bit about countries releasing pirates strikes me as a useful point too... release them, in the open ocean.
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