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Conclusion of Operation Ocean Shield[edit]

The conclusion of Operation Ocean Shield occurred on December 16th of 2016. The final operation was lead by Danish pilots in an attempt to map the Somali coastline ad the gulf of Aden. The Danes task was to map the inlets, camps and large cities of the coast for an intelligence report. “The detachment covered 1.800 km of coastline in which intelligence specialists reviewed and disseminated photographs and video files to produce the intelligence picture.” (NavalToday.com)[1]

NATO is reallocating resources to the Mediterranean to deal with the immigrant crisis and human smuggling but believes that the efforts put into the gulf of Aden will help stem the tide of returning piracy or prevent it altogether.[2] As with the change in the political environment and world new problems have arised where NATO has to allocate resources to. Therefore it justifies the funding of the Mediterranean operation.[2]

Piracy During the Operation[edit]

NATO’s vehicles have a specific mandate to provide protection and deterrence of piracy in its territorial waters. All members of NATO help make the operation a success via funding or through ships. NATO Allies provide ships and maritime patrol aircraft to NATO Standing Maritime Groups, which in turn assigns a number of ships, on a rotational basis, to Ocean Shield[3]. “In January 2013, there were no attacks, approaches or disruptions in the area. In comparison, in January 2012, there were four pirate attacks in which all were unsuccessful. Additionally, out of 80 suspected pirates captured by counter piracy forces, 59 were captured by NATO ships. In January 2011, there were 29 attacks and six ships were captured.”[3] Arguably the operation has succeeded in decreasing piracy in the region while the task force was in power.

Allies and other Organizations[edit]

“Pirate attacks off the vast coastline of Somalia declined from 236 in 2011 to two reportedly unsuccessful attacks in 2014, thanks to international counter-piracy cooperation efforts as well as armed guards now stationed on most large ships that traverse the region’s waters. NATO has indicated that while it will be ending its mission in the Indian Ocean, the organization “will remain engaged in the fight against piracy by maintaining maritime situational awareness and continuing close links with other international organization’s counter-piracy actors.” [4]NATO has been supporting international efforts to combat piracy in the Indian Ocean, as well as in the Gulf of Aden and off the Horn of Africa since 2008, at the request of the United Nations. It had been working alongside other missions including the European’s Union’s Operation Atalanta, the US-led Combined Task Force 151 and other individual countries such as China, Japan, and South Korea.”[4]

NATO’s success in the area was due in part to the cooperation of other foreign states with interests in the reason. A lot of these informal connections took place at SHADE meetings.(Shared Awareness and Deconfliction) These meetings allowed for shared tactics among a large of international entities, including China, Indian, Japan, Russia, India and South Korea but is definitely not limited to them. With NATO promoting co-operation amongst these foreign entities, Operation Ocean Shield could effectively protect the area. They also developed this innovative electronic network called Mercury which shared anti-piracy tactics with other task forces and operations. Since this was an informal system, it wasn’t weighed down with bureaucracy and could be spread amongst other coalitions and governmental organizations and could effectively help anyone that needed precise information in the area. [5],

Business Sector Regrowth[edit]

Through the use of the NATO shipping centre and the private sector, the Ocean Shield task force could effectively reduce the response time of counter attacks and warning businesses about potential threats in their shipping lanes. Through this coordination the shipping industry didn’t need to slow down as much by taking in direct routes through other less safe international waters. [5]

Piracy Attacks Since the Ending of Operation Ocean Shield[edit]

Piracy attacks have occurred since Operation Ocean Shield has ended. Gunmen hijacked the Aris 13, a small oil tanker, on March 13, 2017 and have demanded a ransom for the crew. Industrial shipping companies are trying to figure out if piracy is back in the region or this is going to be a rare occurrence,[6] as this the first case of Somali Piracy in a good half decade and of the new year. More and more attempts of cargo theft via piracy has occurred in 2017[7]

References[edit]

Allied Maritime Command - Operation OCEAN SHIELD. (2017). Mc.nato.int. Retrieved 27 March 2017, from http://www.mc.nato.int/missions/operation-ocean-shield.aspx

Maritime-executive.com. Retrieved 27 March 2017, from http://www.maritime-executive.com/blog/ocean-shield-achieved-its-mission

Danish pilots conduct operation Ocean Shield’s final patrol. (2017). Naval Today. Retrieved 27 March 2017, from http://navaltoday.com/2016/11/24/danish-pilots-conduct-operation-ocean-shields-final-patrol/

"Live Piracy Map". Icc-ccs.org. N.p., 2017. Web. 17 Apr. 2017.

Rider, D. (2017). NATO ends Ocean Shield | Maritime Security Review. Marsecreview.com. Retrieved 27 March 2017, from http://www.marsecreview.com/2016/12/nato-ends-ocean-shield/

Somalia pirates: Anger fuels return of ship attacks. (2017). Aljazeera.com. Retrieved 27 March 2017, from http://www.aljazeera.com/news/2017/03/somalia-pirates-anger-fuels-return-ship-attacks-170315191915900.html

  1. ^ "Danish pilots conduct operation Ocean Shield's final patrol". Naval Today. Retrieved 2017-04-10.
  2. ^ a b ""Ocean Shield" Achieved its Mission". www.maritime-executive.com. Retrieved 2017-04-10.
  3. ^ a b "Allied Maritime Command - Operation OCEAN SHIELD". www.mc.nato.int. Retrieved 2017-04-10.
  4. ^ a b "NATO ends Ocean Shield | Maritime Security Review". www.marsecreview.com. Retrieved 2017-04-10.
  5. ^ a b ""Ocean Shield" Achieved its Mission". www.maritime-executive.com. Retrieved 2017-04-10.
  6. ^ "Somalia pirates: Anger fuels return of ship attacks". www.aljazeera.com. Retrieved 2017-04-10.
  7. ^ "Live Piracy Map".