Tackling the Pirates of the Caribbean
As the nation
of Venezuela suffers further indignities, and teeters on the verge of wholesale
economic collapse, its population are resorting to increasingly desperate
measures to secure the means to exist. Amidst the chaos and confusion of a
socialist dystopian nightmare, some are resorting to more blunt means of
capitalism to survive. Along the coastline small gangs are putting to sea and
engaging in armed robbery of small vessels, and in doing so they have become
the new pirates of the Caribbean.
For the island nation
of Trinidad and Tobago, a former British colony just off the coast of Venezuela
the notable increase in piracy incidents represents a not inconsiderable threat
to national security. The Washington Post reported this week about the rise in
piracy incidents and the growing concern about the risks this poses,
particularly given their small Coastguard. (LINK).
The declining
situation has led to some commentators on social media to ask why the Royal
Navy isn’t being sent to do something about the situation. Ignoring the minor fact that the nation hasn't actually asked for our help, although apparently according to social media types the UK should be proactive and just offer it anyway. The view goes that
as a friend to the UK and fellow member of the Commonwealth, we should send aid
and support to deal with the piracy threat. Possession of a global navy means
that it should be employed to counter pirates in the West Indies as a key
military task.
Is tackling
piracy though as simple as just ‘sending a gunboat’ or is it more complex, and
most importantly what is the UK’s national interest in all these events?
In purely
selfish terms the UK has a very limited strategic interest in the region. The
nearest UK overseas territory is in Montserrat, several hundred miles away. This
tiny island devastated by a volcano in the 1990s has a population of less than
5000 people. Beyond this, there are several nations who continue to regard Her
Majesty The Queen as their head of State (such as Barbados, Grenada and Saint
Vincent) although the UK has no responsibility for their external affairs.
There are other
nations in Europe with a regional strategic interest – the French territories
of French Guyana and the islands of Martinique and Guadeloupe, while the Dutch
islands of Curacao and Aruba are also nearby too.
From an
economic perspective, Trinidad & Tobago are not major economic partners of
the UK, in 2010 it was estimated that the UK accounted for just 2% of export
sales, and as of 2016 the UK is not in the top five economic importers for the
country. Unlike the MENA region, where piracy flare ups directly posed a threat
to the economic security of the UK by leading to a rise in insurance prices and
thus cost increases for fuel and goods, in part due to the highly constrained
waters making it easy for pirates to raid, there is no equivalent threat in
Trinidad & Tobago. At best a small amount of LNG is supplied to the UK
(forming a negligible part of the overall total imports), and the waters are
far easier to sail in. Somali pirates formed a threat due to their ability to
get relatively easy access to large merchant vessels in the Southern Red Sea
which were more predictable in their routes.
The nature of
the piracy remains, for the time being, highly limited – reports indicate low
level incidents involving small craft being boarded, armed robbery occurring
and the assault / murder of individuals. Whilst deeply distressing to those
involved, this is not something that is a direct threat to UK territorial
integrity. At best it represents an unpleasant and violent local problem, but
it is hard to see where the direct UK strategic interest lies in providing
military intervention to tackle the issue.
From the outset
then it is hard to see why the UK would want to send a warship to deal with the
piracy issue in the region, which appears limited to primarily low level
incidents, and not risks to major shipping. But, for the purposes of this
article, let us assume that the British Government is considering taking action
to counter the problem – what sort of challenges would it face?
What is the mission?
To start with,
before we launch eagerly in true internet style into the fantasy fleet world of
deciding that only HMS MASSIVE (with modified 18.2” side batteries and Stingray
submarine launchers) is able to do the job because of ‘reasons’, at which point
the debate quickly gets lost in a tedious wave of ship comparisons, let us take
a step back and ask what the mission actually would be.
At present the
risk seems to be a small amount of criminal violence occurring from a disparate
group of armed individuals, using small craft to go out to sea and commit crime
on mariners in small craft. Very little is known about these groups beyond the
fact they operate from Venezuela. It is reasonable to assume that the overall
mission is to stop piracy and enhance regional security by creating the
conditions where pirates are not operating at sea, and where local law
enforcement organisations are able to effectively police the situation without
recourse to external military support.
This in turn
suggest that any solution is far more complex than just sending a warship to
steam up and down and picking up the odd go-fast. It implies that the UK must
work with allies to resolve the incredibly complex situation in Venezuela,
helping stabilise the collapse of the nation state to avert a humanitarian
catastrophe, and set the conditions where the local population do not feel the
need to commit piracy.
This
immediately suggests a blended mix of both diplomatic and aid-based support
aimed to improve the quality of life of those most affected by the Maduro
regime, and also set the conditions for a return to genuine democracy and
improve the economic and political stability of the country. This will ease
tensions and reduce the potential for some of the gangs to put to sea if they
have a source of food, income and jobs.
The next task
it implies is a need to look at how to effectively police the waters in the
short term, improving the capacity of local Coastguards and other Law
Enforcement Officials (LEO’s) to interdict, arrest, charge and convict people
suspected of piracy. This is much more complex than just sending a boarding
party to intervene and shoot people – it requires a mixture of training,
capacity building and developing a culture where the entire boarding process is
built around securing the evidence to deliver a conviction.
This suggests
that the most appropriate activity the UK could do is provide a mixture of
specialist training, offers of police support and help with working on how to
deliver a long-term solution. This implies potentially some military training
teams, particularly for boarding parties and intelligence assessment, and maybe
in the very short term there may be a need to provide some assets to carry out
some of the patrols to improve capability, but this would need to be carefully
planned and executed.
What sort of constraints would we face?
It is easy to
assume that sending a Type 23 out to patrol the local waters and steam
menacingly about is all that is required to make the problem go away. In fact
putting a ship on patrol is arguably one of the last things planners will want
to do.
To begin with,
we would need to understand the potential opponent – what is known about their
tactics, means of working and how do these piracy raids get planned? Is it
purely opportunistic, or is there a level of co-ordination and support involved
that implies organised criminal or militia activity? What are the bases they
work from, and where are they? What is known about their means of getting out
to sea, how do they find targets and what is likely to influence them to change
their behaviours? What is the normal pattern of life for the region – do fishermen
go to sea armed with rifles (a common occurrence in the Southern Red Sea) and
how do you distinguish between fishermen and potential pirates?
Keeping ships
at sea on patrol is an expensive and time-consuming task, particularly if it
just involves sailing at random through a large chunk of waterspace. Instead
you want to make maximum use of the time that you’ve got the ship available for
– which in turn means you need a accurate intelligence picture of what is
actually going on. This would require a not inconsiderable level of
intelligence collection, probably involving both open source and more discrete means
of collection to understand the threat.
Once you know
where the pirates may potentially strike, you need to work out how to catch
them in the act. This probably requires use of ISTAR assets like helicopters,
MPA and drones to observe at a distance and then move in quickly once they see
evidence of a potential act of piracy occurring. This is not the movies, as a Commanding
Officer, you cannot just charge down the bearing of an alleged pirate, having
heard someone call up on Channel 16 that they are under attack, and with all
guns blazing to shoot and kill the pirates.
Maintaining an
effective evidence chain is key here – piracy is a crime, but you need to be
able to prosecute it effectively. This means having an effective means of
identifying suspects, catching them in the act, or post crime with proceeds of
their loot and being able to produce an evidence chain that, if presented in
court, could lead to a conviction.
This isn’t what
most people think of when they think about boarding teams – they prefer to
focus on all manner of ‘hard stops’ and bullets flying. In reality much of the
work is about low-level intelligence gathering, building a picture of the pattern
of life (e.g. consensual boarding of local fishing boats to gain information about
the area) and over time understanding the normal, and the abnormal. Occasionally
they may come across vessels and individuals that may have engaged in illicit
activity, but the challenge is to prove it in a court of law.
What this means
is that any ships conducting patrols need to be able to have an underlying idea
of what to do with suspected pirates when they capture them. Do they ship them
to Trindad and Tobago, where they will await trial? Do they enter Venezuelan territorial
waters and return the suspects ashore to the custody of the local police (which
in turn, even though Venezuela has abolished the death penalty, could raise
serious human rights abuse concerns if they are put into prison and potentially
left without trial for many years).
Much of the
work done by the Royal Navy in counter piracy operations in the Southern Red
Sea has involved this sort of throny issue. Its not as simple as just putting a
gunboat into local waters and steaming about, you need to know who your
potential pirates are, and how you can legally act against them and do so in a
manner that ensures a conviction in a court of law, not summary execution at
the hands of a Royal Navy boarding team.
Issues like
handling captured suspected pirates are legally very complex, and not something
that can just be handled overnight by a punchy CO with a desire to dispense justice.
It takes a lot of international co-operation and agreement to resolve these
cases – for instance here, any action would involve trilateral work between the
UK, Trinidad and Tobago and Venezuela to agree on how to handle these cases.
How do you co-ordinate this?
Sticking a ship
on patrol isn’t enough to make the problem go away by itself. Warships have
finite endurance and need to come alongside regularly. At best you may be able
to do 3-4 weeks at sea patrolling local waters before needing to come into
harbour, at which point the presence is gone and its open season again for pirates,
who will be able to know that the RN frigate is in port.
This means to co-ordinate
effectively, you’d require multiple warships to be certain of patrolling the waters
and maintaining a sufficiently visible presence to deter pirates from attacking.
You’d need 2-3 ships, potentially drawn from different nations, to keep a 24/7
presence at sea constantly. This is a big operational commitment to meet the
challenge of reducing a very small number of pirate attacks.
In turn it will
require probably a multi-national HQ of some form to co-ordinate the patrols,
share intelligence and pool assets to get the best out of the force. Looking at
the example of Somalia, this is realistically going to require a 1* led HQ,
standing up and supported by the full set N1-9 desks and supporting IT, infrastructure
and accommodation, and an appropriate set of rules of engagement. These sort of
HQ capabilities are in relatively short supply across Western nations, so to
set one up would reduce the ability of countries to deploy elsewhere instead.
Suddenly we’ve
gone from the fairly simple suggestion of ‘sending a gunboat’ to realising that
to tackle localised piracy properly in the region is a long-term piece of work
that would require multiple ships, personnel and assets. It also requires a large
amount of complex legal and policy work too, all the time working in support of
wider HMG efforts to generate a peaceful long term solution to the problem.
From an RN
perspective, this task is likely to suck up several ships and detract resources
away from other critical tasks. This isn’t to say it can’t be done – of course
it could be done if the will and direction were there. But there is a real danger
of advocating ‘sending a gunboat’ unless you have the will and determination to
see the problem through to the end.
UK efforts in
the Horn of Africa to reduce the risk of piracy have been ongoing for years now
and the work of the RN is just one part of this puzzle. If you look at the
wider MOD/HMG piece, its also involved capacity building and security sector
reform, helping bring about societal change, generating the conditions for
locals to be able to grow food and earn a legitimate income, but also not feel
that they need to go to sea for money or to pay debts. It has seen the UK work
hard too in distributing aid, working with regional partners like Kenya to strengthen
the security environment, but also spend time trying to ensure society changes.
A good list of reasons as to why Somalia matters, and what the UK government is
doing about it can be found HERE
– it is well worth a read to understand the enormous difficulties faced in really
tackling the root causes of piracy.
In the case of
Trinidad and Tobago, stopping piracy emanating from Venezuela would require a substantial
multi-year commitment of aid, resources and finance to strengthen a chaotic
situation and prevent the locals from engaging in piracy. This is not something
that can be fixed with a quick deployment of HMS NONSUCH to wave the flag and
reassure people that the Brits are back in town.
Such a solution
will need to be international in nature, and probably require, assuming the increasing
likelihood of outright regime collapse, an international peacekeeping force to
deliver stability and support the rule of law at some point soon. The question
is whether this is something that is in the UK’s national interest to actively
work for, or if it is another nations responsibility.
The reality is
that we live in a world where military resources are constrained, and the ability
of most countries to deploy capability at distance is limited. The UK is one of
a tiny number of nations able to sustain multiple operations across the globe,
but even then there is a limit and tough choices need to be made about what is
in the national interest. Good national security policy making relies on clear
headed assessments of where the UK’s national interests lie, and where our
resources could, and should, be deployed. Given this, it is hard to see what positive
effect a short term frigate deployment could have, nor is there the threat to
really warrant or justify a long term multi-national deployment to stamp out an
issue that is at best criminal activity.
There is no
wider threat to UK economic or energy security, as there was in the Horn of
Africa, nor is there a risk of regime collapse threatening the UK or its
overseas territories. Instead arguing that the UK should step in to solve the very
low level piracy issue in a country far from home, with hugely limited UK
economic and security interests, primarily because it used to be a British
colony seems to be the height of vanity. There are plenty of other measures
that can be taken, but sometimes the
best thing you can possibly do is not send a gunboat at all…
Where do these pirates, if caught and subsequently prosecuted, end up being tried? Is it under British or international law? If in RN custody, do they come back to the UK? Sorry for the string of questions and thank you for the interesting article.
ReplyDeleteThat would be the thorny issue, one that leaves law and enters politics
DeleteTheres nothing stopping T&T arresting them and hanging then after a drumhead trial
Except Venezuela might consider armed men entering its territory an act of war and respond as such.
I dont have time to put my westphalian hat on properly
I see. Thank you.
Deleteawesome, I like this post very informative. I learned about the new thing by reading your post.and i agreed with thee suggestions.
ReplyDeletemeet and greet at heathrow
I agree with idea of adding value to affected states in the region, in this case it seems surveillance and intelligence together with technical support for the Trinidad and Tobago military and police forces. Interestingly it ties in well with this https://warisboring.com/britains-new-spy-planes-are-practically-spacecraft/
ReplyDelete. In these low intensity missions constant viewing linked to big data is a powerful difference between how we were able to pursue missions in the past.
With regard to Trinidad, we did build patrol vessels for the government there which they then cancelled, of course.
ReplyDeleteInternational law provides a basis to act against pirates in places outside the jurisdiction of other states (i.e. the high seas). If the acts occur in the territorial seas of T&T or Venezuela, then they are armed robbery to be prosecuted under domestic law. Once arrested, pirates may actually be prosecuted in the courts of any state as seen by the piracy courts set up in Kenya and the Seychelles. Of course, such states would have to have a local statute covering piracy which allows for the prosecution of persons arrested outside that state and by third parties.
ReplyDeleteHas the government of Trinidad and Tobago indicated they need help. They are a relatively affluent nation.
ReplyDeleteIdeally the UK should encourage he Caribbean Commonwealth members and the self-governing British colonies to cooperate in both security and disaster relief, building up assets for mutual aid.
Having said which, robust action rather than HR hand wringing is required to deal with what is clearly maritime crime. So as Sir H says we should if asked assist he T&T government but not take a lead role.
Hi, Thank you for sharing useful information
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