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Column One: Civilization walks the plank
Nov. 20, 2008
Caroline Glick , THE JERUSALEM POST
On Tuesday, Somali pirates, sailing in little more than motorized bathtubs, armed with automatic rifles and rocket-propelled grenades, and sustained by raw fish and narcotics, successfully hijacked the Sirius Star, a Saudi-owned oil tanker the size of a US aircraft carrier. The tanker was carrying some $100 million worth of crude oil. News of its capture caused global oil prices to rise by a dollar a barrel. The next day, Somali pirates attempted to hijack the Trafalgar, a British frigate, but were forced to flee by a German naval helicopter dispatched to the scene. They did manage to hijack a Chinese trawler and a cargo ship from Hong Kong. They nearly got control of an Ethiopian ship, but it, too, was saved by the German Navy that heeded its call for help in time. Piracy is fast emerging as the newest old threat to stage a comeback in recent years. Over the past week and a half alone, 12 vessels have been hijacked. And according to the International Maritime Bureau, in the three months that ended on September 30, Somali pirates attacked 26 vessels, capturing 576 crew members. Britain\'s Chatham House (the Royal Institute of International Affairs) assesses the ransoms they netted at between $18m. and $30m. And with financial strength comes increased military sophistication. The US Navy expressed shock at the pirates\' successful hijacking of the Sirius Star. The pirates staged the hijacking much farther from shore than they had ever done previously. Beyond the personal suffering incurred by thousands of crew members taken hostage in recent years, piracy\'s potential impact on global economic stability is enormous. In the Gulf of Aden, where the Somali pirates operate, US shippers alone transport more than $1.5 trillion in cargo annually. One of the unique characteristics of pirates is that they appear to be equal opportunity aggressors. They don\'t care who owns the ships they attack. On August 21, Somali pirates hijacked the Iran Deyanat, a ship owned and operated by the Iranian Revolutionary Guards-linked Islamic Republic of Iran Shipping Line (IRISL). In September, the US Treasury Department designated IRISL as a company that assists Iran\'s nuclear weapons program and placed it under stiff financial sanctions. Iran Deyanat\'s
manifest asserted that its cargo included minerals. Yet shortly after
the pirates went on board they began developing symptoms such as hair
loss that experts claim are more in line with radiation exposure.
According to reports, some 16 pirates died shortly after being exposed
to the cargo. Just this week, a second Iranian ship - this one
apparently carrying wheat - was similarly captured.
THE
INTERNATIONAL community is at a loss for what to do about the emerging
danger of piracy. This is not due to lack of capacity to fight the
pirate ships. On Monday an Indian naval frigate, the INS Tabar, sank a pirate "mother ship" whose fleet members were attacking the Tabar in
the Gulf of Aden. NATO has deployed a naval task force while the
American, French, German and other navies have aggressively worked to
free merchant ships under attack by pirates.
As David Rivkin and Lee Casey explained in The Wall Street Journal on
Wednesday, the problem with contending with piracy is not so much
military, as legal and political. Whereas customary international law
defined piracy as a threat against all nations and therefore a crime
for which universal jurisdiction must be applied to perpetrators, in
today\'s world, states are unwilling to apprehend pirates or to contend
with them because they are likely to find themselves in a sticky legal
mess.
In
centuries past, in accordance with established international law, it
was standard practice for naval captains to hang pirates after
capturing them. Today, when Europe has outlawed capital punishment,
when criminal defendants throughout the West are given more civil
rights than their victims, and when irregular combatants picked off of
battlefields or intercepted before they attack are given - at a minimum
- the same rights as those accorded to legal prisoners of war, states
lack the political will and the moral clarity to prosecute offenders.
As Casey and Rivkin note, last April the British Foreign Office
instructed the British Navy not to apprehend pirates lest they claim
that their human rights were harmed, and request and receive asylum in
Britain.
Similarly,
in the wake of the September 11 attacks on the US, the UN Security
Council passed binding Resolution 1373, which also compelled member
states not only to treat terrorists as illegal combatants who must be
universally denied any support of any kind, but to take action against
anyone involved with or supporting terrorists in any way. That is, as
in piracy, the tendency of states contending with terrorism has been to
view it as an act requiring universal jurisdiction, compelling all UN
member states to prosecute offenders.
And
yet, over the years, states have managed to ignore or invert
international laws on terrorism to the point where today terrorists are
among the most protected groups of individuals in the world. Due to
political sympathy for terrorists, hostility toward their victims, or
fear of terrorist reprisals against a state that dares to prosecute
terrorists found on its territory, states have managed to avoid not
only applying existing laws against terrorists. They have also
refrained from updating laws to meet the growing challenges of
terrorism. Instead, international institutions and "enlightened"
Western states have devoted their time to condemning and threatening to
prosecute the few states that have taken action against terrorists.
The
inversion of international law from an institution geared toward
protecting states and civilians from international lawbreakers to one
devoted to protecting international menaces from states and their
citizens is nowhere more evident than in the international community\'s
treatment of Hamas-controlled Gaza.
One
of the reasons the international community has failed so abjectly to
take reasonable measures to combat terrorism is because international
terrorism as presently constituted is the creation of Palestinian Arabs
and their Arab brethren. Since the 1960s, and particularly since the
mid-1970s, Europe, and to varying degrees the US, have been averse to
contending with terrorism because their hostility toward Israel leads
them to condone Palestinian Arab terrorism against the Jewish state.
THE
INTERNATIONAL community\'s treatment of Hamas-controlled Gaza epitomizes
this victory of politics over law. Both the US and the EU have labeled
Hamas a terror group. That designation places Gaza, which is controlled
by Hamas, under the regime of UN Security Council Resolution 1373.
That is, the resolution requires UN member states to end all financial and other support for Hamas-controlled Gaza.
The
resolution also requires UN member states to "cooperate [with other
states] to prevent and suppress terrorist attacks and take action
against perpetrators of such acts."
This
means that states are required to assist one another - and in the case
of Hamas, to assist Israel - in combating Hamas and punishing its
members and supporters.
While
it can be argued that given the absence of a binding legal definition
of terrorism, states that do not designate Hamas as a terrorist
organization are not required to abide by the terms of 1373 in dealing
with Hamas, it is quite clear that for states that do recognize Hamas
as a terror group, 1373\'s provisions must be upheld.
And
yet, the EU and the US have willfully ignored its provisions. They have
steadily increased their budgetary support for the Palestinian
Authority while knowing full well that the Fatah-led PA in Judea and
Samaria is transferring money to Hamas-controlled Gaza to pay the
salaries of Hamas employees.
More
disturbingly, the US and the EU as well as the UN demand that Israel
itself sustain Hamas-controlled Gaza economically. The UN, EU and the
US have consistently demanded that Israel provide Gaza with fuel, food,
water, medicine, electricity, telephone service, port services and
access to Israeli markets, in spite of the fact that international law
actually prohibits Israel from providing such assistance, and in fact
arguably requires Israel to deny it.
Recently,
supported by the UN, and in connivance with Hamas, European leaders
began supporting illegal moves to end Israel\'s maritime blockade of
Gaza, which was established to block weapons and terror personnel from
entering and exiting the area. Expanding this trend, this week
Navanethem Pillay, the UN\'s High Commissioner for Human Rights, called
for Israel to end its blockade of the Gaza Strip, perversely calling
the blockade a breach of international and humanitarian law.
This
inversion of the aims of international law - from protecting states and
innocent civilians from attack to protecting aggressors from
retaliation - has brought about the absurd situation where terrorist
ideologues and commanders such as Sheikh Yusuf Qaradawi are feted in
Britain while retired Israeli and American generals are threatened with
arrest. Germany welcomed Iranian President and genocide proponent
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to visit and indicted former US defense secretary
Donald Rumsfeld for crimes against humanity. Belgium allows Hamas and
Hizbullah supporters like Dyab Abu Jahjah, who calls for attacks
against Jews, to operate freely, but indicted former prime minister
Ariel Sharon for crimes against humanity.
The consequence of this absurd state of affairs is obvious. The
international law champions who argue that international humanitarian
law provides a nonviolent means for nations to defend themselves
against aggressors have perverted the purpose and meaning of
international humanitarian law to such a degree that the only way for
nations to protect themselves against pirates, terrorists and other
international rogues is to ignore international law aficionados and
secure their interests by force.
caroline@carolineglick.com
This article can also be read at http://www.jpost.com /servlet/Satellite?cid=1226404794131&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull |
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