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U.S. Marines Take Ship From Somali Pirates (PHOTOS)

First Posted: 09/10/10 10:06 AM ET   Updated: 05/25/11 06:35 PM ET

(AP) DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — U.S. Marine commandos stormed a pirate-held cargo ship off the Somalia coast Thursday, reclaiming control and taking nine prisoners without firing a shot in the first such boarding raid by the international anti-piracy flotilla, U.S. Navy officials said.

The mission - using small craft to reach the deck of German-owned vessel as the crew huddled in a safe room below - ranks among the most dramatic high seas confrontations with pirates by the task force created to protect shipping lanes off lawless Somalia.

The crew managed to kill the engines before taking refuge in an panic room-style chamber, leaving the ship adrift and the pirates so frustrated they started damaging equipment after hijacking the vessel Wednesday, Navy officials and the ship's operator say.

Lt. John Fage, a spokesman at the U.S. Fifth Fleet headquarters in Bahrain, described the pre-dawn raid as an "air and sea" assault that included Cobra attack helicopters for surveillance and coordination.

Marine Corps officers involved in the raid told reporters in a conference call that the attack involved "overwhelming force" and the element of surprise. Marines were able to separate the pirates and confront them singly or in small groups, while helicopters bore down.

SEE PHOTOS OF THE OPERATION RELEASED BY THE U.S. NAVY, VIA AP AND GETTY:

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Marines assigned to the U.S. Marine Corps 15th Marine Expeditionary Unit, Maritime Raid Force approach the Magellan Star.
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The armed pirates gave up quickly when faced with large numbers of Marines carrying heavier weaponry.

Getting to the crew barricaded behind three walls in a safe room proved to be a quite a challenge, however, and the Marines had to drill through steel walls to reach the suspicious sailors.

Capt. Alexander Martin said the crew was finally persuaded that they were being rescued when a Marine ripped the American flag patch from his uniform and stuffed it through a hole the rescuers had bored in the final steel door.

Martin added that he also spoke to the ship's captain in Russian.

It was the first boarding raid since the multinational task force was formed in January 2009 to patrol off the Horn of Africa, said U.S. Navy Cmdr. Amy Derrick-Frost in Bahrain.

Fage said there were no injuries reported among the Marines or 11-member crew of the Magellan Star. The pirates were armed with AK-47 assault rifles, but "there were no shots fired" on either side, Fage said.

A Turkish frigate on anti-piracy patrols, TCG Gokceada, first responded to a distress call from the ship, which flies the flag of Antigua and Barbuda. Fage said the crew - which include Polish, Russian, Ukrainian and Filipino seamen - was able to maintain contact with maritime officials from their safe room using a satellite phone.

The crew also shut down the engines as the pirates approached, leaving the ship to drift at sea, said Juergen Salamon, the ship's operator based in Dortmund, Germany.

"The pirates had entered a ship that they couldn't steer and there was no crew," he said.

The pirates then hit an emergency button that connected them directly with the ship operators in Germany.

"They asked us where the crew is," he chuckled. "We told them, 'They're on leave.'"

There was no demands for ransom, he said.

The ship was traveling from Bilbao, Spain, to Singapore with a cargo of anchor chains, Salamon said. It is now en route to Dubai for repairs.

"The pirates were angry and vandalized the ship badly," he said.

Salamon said the ship operators were not in direct contact with the U.S. Navy, but were communicating with other maritime security watchdogs in the Horn of Africa.

Then just before dawn Thursday, the U.S. team from the 15th Marine Expeditionary Unit's Maritime Raid Force launched the assault from aboard the USS Dubuque, an amphibious transport ship.

The Dubuque was in the area en route to a joint training exercise with Jordan and received orders from the White House to assist the anti-piracy task force, Brig. Gen. David Berger, the head of Marine Corps operations at the Pentagon.

"It's a great thing that everything ended without any bloodshed," Salamon said.

In a separate case, Bulgarian Prime Minister Boiko Borisov said a cargo ship held for four months by Somali pirates has been freed. He did not say whether ransom was paid for the release of the Bulgarian-flagged chemical tanker Panega, which was hijacked off the Yemeni port of Aden.

Borisov said the 15 Bulgarian crew members were safe.

U.S. warships are part of a 25-nation mission protecting merchant vessels from pirate attacks off the coast of Somalia and into the Gulf of Aden. The task force often opens fire on suspected pirates, but had not previously launched a boarding raid.

In April 2009, a team of Navy Seal sharpshooters positioned on the fantail of a U.S. warship killed a trio of Somali pirates to free an American sea captain who had been taken hostage and was being held at gunpoint onboard a lifeboat.

Last month, Denmark said a helicopter from one of its warships fired warning shots and foiled a pirate attack off Somalia.

At the United Nations, Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said last month options under consideration to prosecute suspected pirates include creating a special international court.

More than 140 piracy-related incidents have been reported off Somalia's coast since January and more than 30 ships have been hijacked, according to U.N. and anti-piracy task force reports.

___

Associated Press Writer Juergen Baetz in Berlin, Anne Gearan and Anne Flaherty in Washington contributed to this report.

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(AP) DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — U.S. Marine commandos stormed a pirate-held cargo ship off the Somalia coast Thursday, reclaiming control and taking nine prisoners without firing a shot in the fi...
(AP) DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — U.S. Marine commandos stormed a pirate-held cargo ship off the Somalia coast Thursday, reclaiming control and taking nine prisoners without firing a shot in the fi...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TheRethuggery
02:00 AM on 10/05/2010
When Somalians steal, and maim and kill in the process, we call them "pirates". When Israel does the same thing, we call them "our ally" .
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This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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horumar
allegory of the cave
04:42 PM on 10/08/2010
Fanned. Thanks for spreading the word about Somalia. While everyone here is sitting on their couch complaining, or arguing about petty things, there are poeple around the world suffering from real problems. Peace.
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12:41 PM on 09/19/2010
Toxic Waste Behind Somali Pirates
http://www.projectcensored.org/top-stories/articles/3-toxic-waste-behind-somali-pirates/

"The international community has come out in force to condemn and declare war on the Somali fishermen pirates, while discreetly protecting the illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU) fleets from around the world that have been poaching and dumping toxic waste in Somali waters since the fall of the Somali government eighteen years ago.

In 1991, when the government of Somalia collapsed, foreign interests seized the opportunity to begin looting the country’s food supply and using the country’s unguarded waters as a dumping ground for nuclear and other toxic waste.

According to the High Seas Task Force (HSTF), there were over 800 IUU fishing vessels in Somali waters at one time in 2005, taking advantage of Somalia’s inability to police and control its own waters and fishing grounds. The IUUs poach an estimated $450 million in seafood from Somali waters annually. In so doing, they steal an invaluable protein source from some of the world’s poorest people and ruin the livelihoods of legitimate fishermen.

Allegations of the dumping of toxic waste, as well as illegal fishing, have circulated since the early 1990s, but hard evidence emerged when the tsunami of 2004 hit the country. The United Nations Environment Program (UNEP) reported that the tsunami washed rusting containers of toxic waste onto the shores of Puntland, northern Somalia."

cont... click above article to read more.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
topachic25
Tryin to get this damn monkey off my back
05:03 PM on 09/12/2010
Something to think about regarding the "Somali Pirates":

http://www.projectcensored.org/top-stories/articles/3-toxic-waste-behind-somali-pirates/
11:42 AM on 09/12/2010
In the snows off far off northern lands and in sunny tropic scenes
you will always find us on the job
The United States Marines
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Aaron Aarons
11:55 PM on 09/22/2010
Here's how Major General Smedley D. Butler, USMC, described, in 1935, the job he had done up until his retirement four years earlier:

"I spent 33 years and four months in active military service and during that period I spent most of my time as a high class thug for Big Business, for Wall Street and the bankers. In short, I was a racketeer, a gangster for capitalism. I helped make Mexico and especially Tampico safe for American oil interests in 1914. I helped make Haiti and Cuba a decent place for the National City Bank boys to collect revenues in. I helped in the raping of half a dozen Central American republics for the benefit of Wall Street. I helped purify Nicaragua for the International Banking House of Brown Brothers in 1902–1912. I brought light to the Dominican Republic for the American sugar interests in 1916. I helped make Honduras right for the American fruit companies in 1903. In China in 1927 I helped see to it that Standard Oil went on its way unmolested. Looking back on it, I might have given Al Capone a few hints. The best he could do was to operate his racket in three districts. I operated on three continents."

So much for the United Snakes Marines!
09:09 PM on 09/27/2010
Historically, this is no surprise. But learned from his experience - many people never see anything except what they are told to see. Capitalism has generated more armies to protect its interests than anything else in the world. Its all about the money. I bet lots of people disagree with it. Still, you should respect people for doing the job they get paid to do. If you disagree with how your tax dollars are spent, you should get involved in government - if you can afford it.
04:48 AM on 10/03/2010
US Marines make it safe for you to post this stuff.  They stand watch so you don't have to.
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Guytar
I'm sorry that I made you cry
04:28 AM on 09/12/2010
Gutless moderator on the job here.
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Guytar
I'm sorry that I made you cry
04:11 AM on 09/12/2010
Sometimes, you come into a HP story about piracy and make a well-considered comment that praises the US Marine Corps, but the moderator cans you anyway.
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11:02 PM on 09/11/2010
Racist marines.
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AllenD
8 years of Obama, deal with it!
08:32 PM on 09/11/2010
Why isn't this on the front page?
05:01 PM on 09/11/2010
Alright, now those damn Somali pirates can go back to eating dirt and living in a mud pile like their fellow countrymen. They don't deserve to have food or shelter or god-forbid health care. They deserve to be forgotten, left without help, starving, hopeless.

As for the US - well we love attacking people - even if we're attacking people trying to survive. Hell, we killed over a million Iraqis - all those terrorists who hated our freedom -

The Somali Pirates are desperate people who have been abandoned by other countries - left to fend for themselves with practically no resources.

Meanwhile, the west wastes resources, throws away enough food every day to feed all the hungry people in Somalia, and thumps their chest at how righteous they are by keeping Somalia starving..
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beauwulff
I'm dyin' last
12:56 AM on 09/12/2010
Yeah maybe instead of aid for Somalia, the west should just load up ships with goodies and sail them close to the Somali shore so the pirates can seize them.
08:39 PM on 09/13/2010
you still dont have the right to steal from others.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sheaintsayin
Is my micro bio winking at me...? ;-)
04:53 PM on 09/11/2010
This is a fantastic outcome; another great deed accomplished at the behest of our great president, Barack Hussein Obama!
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04:03 PM on 09/11/2010
"They're on leave".

That just cracks me up.

I wonder if it would be more or less funny if one is chewing khat.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
racerx577
03:45 PM on 09/11/2010
As I see those young soldiers approach the ship in their boat. Those guys are some very brave men. They were willing to die to accomplish their mission.. And not fire a shot after boarding,,,incredible...you guys are great...lets show the rest of the world that we can end conflict and war without firing a shot. like you heroes just did....you guys have my respect...
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saint bernard mom
and Newfie Gram ♥spay♥neuter♥adopt♥
03:26 PM on 09/11/2010
Way to go troops!!!!!!!!!!!

SEMPER FI

WELCOME HOME to all who have served.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
awlff
biker,photographer,dog lover
02:25 PM on 09/11/2010
See what our military can do when politicians aren't micromanaging? USMC!!
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AllenD
8 years of Obama, deal with it!
08:32 PM on 09/11/2010
You mean like this?

"The Dubuque was in the area en route to a joint training exercise with Jordan and received orders from the White House to assist the anti-piracy task force, Brig. Gen. David Berger, the head of Marine Corps operations at the Pentagon."
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
awlff
biker,photographer,dog lover
10:19 PM on 09/13/2010
Yes! I do not consider search and rescue operations like this to be comparable to wars and engagements with no real purpose or mission statement.Or the engagements that are justified to be inefficiently protracted and mismanaged by the politicians and sometimes career Commanders.Vietnam comes to mind.I respect our military but at times worry about what we put them through and how we as a nation fail them in health care and decent wages. Semper Fi !