The Russian Navy vs Somali pirates: a useful reminder

On May 6, Russian Naval Infantry marines from the destroyer Marshal Shaposhnikov successfully stormed the Russian tanker Moscow University, which had been hijacked by Somali pirates. After a 22-minute operation, the crew (who had barricaded themselves in the engine room) were freed unharmed, one pirate was dead and the other ten captured. The marines apparently suffered no casualties. Controversially, after talk of taking them back to Moscow for trial, the pirates were abandoned on the high seas in one of their boats, stripped of weapons and navigation equipment. They have since disappeared, presumed dead, 300 nautical miles from the shore.

On one level, this is a rare bit of good news in the ongoing struggle against the unpredictable, uncoordinated but undeniably effective pirates of the Somali coast. Given the risks and costs in arming or escorting the vast numbers of ships passing through the waters at risk, such operations at least offer the prospect of some deterrent effect. However, the operation is also noteworthy as a reminder of what it says more generally about Russian forces and approaches: