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Pirates and Poverty

It all worked out in Pirate Alley. Or did it?

A brave American captain saves his ship and crew by putting his own life on the line. An untried American President deals with the crisis with wisdom and restraint, negotiating for days even as the standoff risks becoming an international embarrassment for his country. Then a team of skilled Navy snipers kills all the captors in a single burst of fire, knowing that even one wounded pirate would surely kill their American captive. The next day President Obama gives a tough speech vowing to “halt the rise of piracy” off the coast of Africa.

So why do I feel so uneasy about this triumph?

Because it increases a false trust that American military power will always destroy those who attack us. Because shooting pirates solves a short-term problem, but the emotions it generates help blind us to the need for better, longer-term solutions to 21st century security threats.

Piracy off the Somali coast has become a major growth industry for this failed state. While the pirates are hardly Al-Queda, they’ve learned from Al-Queda’s example the enormous power of the clever use of simple weapons.

But there’s a more important parallel here than tactics. Piracy in Somalia, like terrorism, is an act of violence fed not just by ideology or greed, but by the indifference of the developed world to the fate of poor, distant, lawless places where desperation grows unchecked.

Piracy and terrorism do not exist in a vacuum. They grow and thrive in failed states, like Somalia, like Afghanistan under the Taliban, like the border regions of Pakistan and next, perhaps, in parts of Saharan Africa. It’s easy in places like these to convince young men that taking on the US Navy in lifeboats or strapping bombs to their waists is an option.

What’s to lose for a young man in those places? There’s no job and no economy that might create one. Members of your family have died from malnutrition and disease. Your guidance comes not from a school but from the hateful bile of anti-American ideologues or the cunning blandishments of warlords and professional criminals.

America at times has acted with great generosity and far-sightedness in the world. But as a former American diplomat working in developing countries, I know that too often there has been a disconnect between the basic goodness and sense of justice of the American people and the policies enacted in our name.  Given our resources, America does very little to combat global problems of hunger, ignorance, violence and disease, while every day, tens of thousands of lives are lost quietly to these scourges all over the earth, but mostly unseen and unnoted here. The gap between the world's rich and poor grows; television and the Internet make even the most squalid camps and villages aware of that disparity.

And in these camps and villages young men with nothing to lose listen to the ideologues and warlords and criminals, and we become the targets.

President Obama and Secretary of State Clinton have promised a new strategy toward the developing world.

In my view, that strategy should include three things:

First -- take the lead in helping developing countries feed their people and eliminate preventable diseases like dysentery and cholera.

Second--promote global trade, aid and investment policies that help developing countries strengthen and diversify their economies and improve education. Corporations must understand that they exist to serve not only the providers of capital, but also the providers of labor and the communities in which those laborers live.

Third -- strengthen international and regional organizations and push them to take active and effective roles in dealing with regional violence and its causes. Be prepared to act unilaterally if these organizations fail. No more Rwandas.

Bloviating bullies on the right will oppose any of these efforts. And the need to focus on the economic crisis will exert enormous pressure to shove them down the priority list, certainly in Congress.

Americans must understand that a new partnership between America and the developing world flows not just from our collective sense of caring and fair play. It flows from the most level-headed assessment of our national security. Terrorist cells and pirates’ nests feed on the anger generated by despair. And they depend on many other people who share that anger, and as a consequence provide shelter, information, resources and recruits. It’s not enough to hunt down the pirates and terrorists, so long as the conditions that breed them continue to exist.

Comments
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Mary Lou  - piracy is a cry for help   |67.84.197.xxx |2009-04-14 11:27:19
I also bit my lip when I heard how the kidnapping was
resolved. You feel torn between, "yes, we showed
them...crime doesn't pay", but is there a more
humanitarian approach? Also, short-term results may be seen,
but long-term the problems will resurface.
Peter   |192.231.215.xxx |2009-04-14 11:44:38
Yes, I cheered, and praised the luck of the marksmen too.
Now that I've read your commentary I want to cheer your
analysis. Americans love to send in the Marines to save
someone... sending in foreign aid to prevent a worsening one
is so much harder. Are the new politics of hope now going
to make that course easier?
Linda Moore   |66.165.6.xxx |2009-04-14 12:13:51
Well done John. The mandate to eliminate the "breeding
ground of despair' is the right direction. Draining the
swamp in Africa is a big undertaking.
Marilyn Schoeman   |98.247.102.xxx |2009-04-14 12:19:51
Thank you! The last paragraph summarizes a key point of
national security often ignored. It's a wise as well as
humane approach to the poverty of life in the undeveloped
world.
Guest User   |131.191.91.xxx |2009-04-14 13:17:57
"considering our resources, America has done little to
combat global problems"...have you looked at the
national debt lately. What resources?
George   |76.184.49.xxx |2009-04-14 13:57:57
Thanks for your wise observation of what has become a
celebration in heroism. Certainly, taking the situation at
face value there is ample reason to celebrate; but as you
clearly pointed out,it is more than what meets the eye.
Giving previous history between the US and Somalia, this
does not go down too well. It's about time that the US wake
up tothe realization that the world has changed; and, for
most people, the factors that are driving this change are
precisely the concerns you have pointed out. The US will do
well to consider this sober reflection. Thanks!
Guest User   |71.112.67.xxx |2009-04-14 14:37:00
I was thinking myself about what motivates the
pirates...what are the conditions that create this...I
recall that the captain who was captured said initially that
they were hungry. When people are desperate because of a
lack of resources they have nothing to lose and will result
to extreme measures. We do need to look at the root causes
here....and extreme poverty needs to be eradicated. Also, on
a very basic level: too many people...we need to reduce both
our consumption and our numbers of humans so that we have
resourcoes, as well as we need to learn to share what we
have in a more equitable manner.
Dusty Pinkerton  - Older Giraffe-1992     |207.200.116.xxx |2009-04-14 15:14:22
Thank you John!
You did a marvelous analysis of this
situation in Somlia! What most people don't understand is
that the entire country is benefiting from the pirate's
activity! Many of their citizens are eating regularly for
the first time, children are getting medical care, schools
are re-opening and it is all from the piracy taking place
off their coast! None of this is being printed, nor is the
fact that there is no centralized government to deal with,
war lords control virually all of the country, so Yes we
need to approach this situation without the typical
"bullying" American
manner of trying kill off the
bad guys, we need to feed the children, provide medical
supplies, and help their people develope their nation, any
other approach is doomed to failure, just as we have failed
in other countries by trying to throw our weight
around.
Please keep up your efforts John and Ann, maybe if
enough people read, understand and support this idea we can
and will make a difference.
God Bless,
dusty
Guest UserJean Shaw   |66.165.1.xxx |2009-04-14 17:44:09
Thank you, John, for adding an depth thoughtfulness to the
entire problem.
Leo   |98.237.157.xxx |2009-04-14 19:31:33
John, I really appreciate your insight. So much of the
world's people are caught in straits that force them into
desparate activity. We need to be forgiven for our
opulence, and forgiving of their dispair. Our ships may
displace more water than their boats, but one life on their
boat should have about the same value as one life on our
ship.
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