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Repelled With Small Arms Fire: Pirates Attack Maersk-Alabama Again



Nov 18, 2009 3 Comments ›› Pat Dollard

maersk_ship

NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) – Somali pirates attacked the Maersk Alabama on Wednesday for the second time in seven months, though private guards on board the U.S.-flagged ship repelled the attack with gunfire and a high-decibel noise device.

A U.S. surveillance plane was monitoring the cargo ship as it steamed on to its destination.

Pirates hijacked the Maersk Alabama last April and took ship captain Richard Phillips hostage, holding him at gunpoint in a lifeboat for five days. Navy SEAL sharpshooters freed Phillips while killing three pirates in a daring nighttime attack.

Somali pirates attacked the ship with automatic weapons early Wednesday about 350 nautical miles east of the Somali coast, but guards on board the craft fired back and thwarted the attempted hijacking.

Cmdr. John Harbour, a spokesman for the EU Naval Force, called it “pure chance” that the Maersk Alabama had been targeted a second time.

“It’s not the first vessel to have been attacked twice, and it’s a chance that every single ship takes as it passes through the area,” Harbour said. “At least this time they had a vessel protection detachment on board who were able to repel the attack.”

An EU patrol aircraft from the Horn of Africa nation Djibouti was called in to investigate, and the closest EU Naval Force vessel was tasked with searching for the pirate attack group, the EU Naval Force said in a statement.

Phillips’ ordeal last spring galvanized the attention of the U.S. public to the dangers of operating merchant ships in the Horn of Africa, one of the busiest and most precarious sea lanes in the world.

Pirates have greatly increased their attacks in recent weeks after seasonal rains subsided. On Monday, a self-proclaimed pirate said that Somali hijackers had been paid $3.3 million for the release of 36 crew members from a Spanish vessel held for more than six weeks—a clear demonstration of how lucrative the trade can be for impoverished Somalis.

Phillips told The Associated Press last month from his farmhouse in Vermont that he was contemplating retiring from sea life after his ordeal. He’s been given a book deal and a movie could be in the works.

Phillips was hailed as a hero for helping his crew thwart April’s hijacking before he was taken hostage, but he says he never volunteered, as crew members and his family reported at the time.


  • http://renegadeknows.blogspot.com elise

    that is great! they stopped the stupid pirates and most likely sunk their trashcan of a boat! :grin:
    and some idiot “think-tank” in europe whines about american ships being armed? there was once a time when all ships had cannons, and that was to fend off pirates, why is it suddenly bad to have armed guards on board? they can’t really think that an armed gaurd is incapable of maritime training, can they? commies are trying to get us all killed by negroid pirates.

  • solomonpal

    If they make a movie they can go to the Seattle airport and hire all the extras (skinnies) they want. HINT. You will find them loading cargo on passenger aircraft, serving coffee in Starpukes, driving hotel shuttles, working at Burger King and other food franchises.

  • Sully0811

    “They can’t really think that anarmed gaurd is incapable of maritime training?” People forget how the Marine Corps came into existence (Naval Infantry turned out to be damned useful, even the Romans knew this). Or why we fought two Barbary Pirates wars.