quote from tombogan,...
Somalia is not a "rogue Regime" that indicates a government, even if composed of crooks. Somalia has not had a government for 20 years. It is the total anarchy that the dems are trying to turn America into. (That is not their intention, but it is what will result from their policies. )
I stand corrected, you are correct, it is a lawless part of Africa that was not turned to dust years ago, we as a nation were given a "black eye" by Somalia, and "ran away", for lack of a better term, it wasn't the military that wanted to carpet bomb the freakin wasteland, it was the POLITICIANS.
Now the UN has regulated piracy laws, how's that gonna work?
Ports don;t allow armed vessels, than they don't get the commerce.
Ports lie elsewhere, Kuwait, Qatar, Oman, they are (believe it or not), are Pro-American. US Navy needs some good backup here.
As far as maritime law,...
http://blog.wired.com/defense/2008/10/blackwater.htmlBlackwater 2.0: Hired Guns on the High Seas
By Nathan Hodge EmailOctober 27, 2008 | 8:58:00 AMCategories: Mercs
Blackwater3_2 Blackwater Worldwide President and CEO Erik Prince hit the talk show circuit yesterday to pitch his company's pirate-fighting expertise. The waters off the coast of Somalia have seen a surge in piracy, and Prince said Blackwater is now in 'active discussions' to provide hired muscle for over a dozen commercial shipping lines.
Earlier this month, the company announced that the McArthur, a former oceanographic research ship, was on call to fight piracy in the Gulf of Aden
Open seas, in International Waters have different reg's regarding firearms, the ports of call, however, can regulate known firearm laden vessels, customs and International Trade, Free Trade Zones, and of course the United Nations, have "made the waters murky"
regarding entry.
That;s why its better to get them in the open ocean.