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U.S.-led coalition seeks to block weapon shipments.


The United States and 10 other nations have embarked upon a controversial plan to limit the spread of weapons of mass destruction Weapons that are capable of a high order of destruction and/or of being used in such a manner as to destroy large numbers of people. Weapons of mass destruction can be high explosives or nuclear, biological, chemical, and radiological weapons, but exclude the means of transporting or  by blocking suspect shipments by air, land or sea.

Since May, when President Bush launched the effort--known as the Proliferation Security Initiative--the U.S. Navy and allied forces have conducted five maritime-interdiction exercises in the Pacific Ocean and the Mediterranean Sea. Another one, the first to be led by the United States, is scheduled later this month in the Arabian Sea. Four more are planned in coming weeks.

PSI is "an essential component of the U.S. strategy to combat proliferation," John R. Bolton
"John Bolton" redirects here. For other people named "John Bolton," see John Bolton (disambiguation).


John Robert Bolton (born November 20, 1948), is an American diplomat in several Republican administrations, who served as the Permanent US
, undersecretary of state for arms control and international security, told ,an audience in November, during the American Spectator Dinner in Washington, D.C. With this initiative, he said, the United States plans "to work with other concerned states to develop new methods to disrupt the proliferation trade at sea, in the air and on land."

Cooperating with the United States on PSI, thus far, are Australia, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, Poland, Portugal and the United Kingdom. In all, Bolton said, more than 50 countries have indicated support for PSI "and are ready to participate in interdiction INTERDICTION, civil law. A legal restraint upon a person incapable of managing his estate, because of mental incapacity, from signing any deed or doing any act to his own prejudice, without the consent of his curator or interdictor.
     2.
 efforts."

The cooperation of other nations, he conceded, is important because the right in conduct maritime interdictions is restricted under international law. A country usually can board a ship in one of its own ports or territorial waters without permission. In international waters, however, a country can board a ship forcibly only if it flies that country's flag, claims no nationality at all, or is suspected of piracy or carrying slaves. Thus, the United States is seeking as many countries as possible to participate in PSI, particularly key maritime states.

"PSI has been a fast-moving effort, reflecting the urgency attached to establishing a more coordinated and active basis to prevent proliferation," Bolton said.

The Bush administration claims this initiative is necessary, as potential enemies sock to develop WMD WMD

white muscle disease.
. Sadam Hussein's removal from power in Iraq has "unquestionably un·ques·tion·a·ble  
adj.
Beyond question or doubt. See Synonyms at authentic.



un·question·a·bil
 improved the international situation," Bolton said. But "state sponsors of terrorism--such as Iran, North Korea, Syria and Libya--are aggressively working to acquire weapons of mass destruction and their missile delivery systems."

To block these efforts, the United States and its allies will use diplomatic tactics whenever possible, Bolton said, but they "must be willing to deploy more robust techniques, such as the interdiction and seizure of illicit goods, the disruption of procurement networks, sanctions or other means." No option, he warned, "is off the table."

Properly planned and executed, "interception of critical technologies while en route can prevent hostile states and non-state actors from acquiring these dangerous capabilities," Bolton said. "At a minimum, interdiction can lengthen the time that proliferators will need to acquire new weapons capabilities, increase the cost and demonstrate our resolve to combat proliferation."

In September, the 11 PSI partners met in Paris and agreed on a set of principles laying out practical steps necessary to interdict interdict (ĭn`tərdĭkt), ecclesiastical censure notably used in the Roman Catholic Church, especially in the Middle Ages. When a parish, state, or nation is placed under the interdict no public church ceremony may take place, only certain  shipments of WMD, delivery systems and related materials flowing to and from states and non-state actors of concern.

While participants agreed that North Korea and lean are "states of particular proliferation concern," PSI efforts are not aimed at any one country, but at halting worldwide trafficking in WMD, delivery systems and related materials," Bolton said.

Participants agreed to hold a series of 10 sea, air and ground training exercises that would include both military and law enforcement assets. The first exercise--called Pacific Protector--took place in September in the Coral Sea. Led by Australia, Pacific Protector involved about 800 military and law enforcement personnel from around the globe.

Australia contributed a frigate frigate (frĭg`ĭt), originally a long, narrow nautical vessel used on the Mediterranean, propelled by either oars or sail or both. Later, during the 18th and early 19th cent. , a customs vessel and surveillance aircraft. The United States provided the destroyer USS USS
abbr.
1. United States Senate

2. United States ship

USS abbr (= United States Ship) → Namensteil von Schiffen der Kriegsmarine
 Curtis Wilbur (DDG DDG Guided Missile Destroyer
DDG Deutsche Diabetes Gesellschaft
DDG Deputy Director General
DDG Drop Dead Gorgeous
DDG Deutsche Dermatologische Gesellschaft (German Society of Dermatologists) 
 54), a Coast Guard Law Enforcement Detachment and a cargo ship, the MV Pvt. Franklin J. Phillips (T-AK 3004). Also participating were a Japanese Coast Guard patrol vessel and a French maritime patrol aircraft.

Target Vessel

In this exercise, the Phillips--a.k.a. MV Tokyo Summer for this drill--served as the target vessel. The exercise began when the Japanese patrol vessel got word that Tokyo Summer was suspected of carrying WMD-related items. She was pursued, surrounded and ordered to stop.

A Japanese boarding team rappelled from helicopters onto the suspicious vessel, which was then searched for weapons, and the weapons were seized.

"This was a very rudimentary, very simple operation just to go through the numbers as to how--if we were asked by our governments--we could collaborate to do interdiction of shipping," said Adm. Walter F. Doran, commander of the U.S. Pacific Fleet.

"We know how to do this," Doran told a group of defense writers in Washington. "We've done maritime interdiction in the [Persian] Gulf for the last 12 years or so.

"But this is a different situation, because now you are on the high seas, the scope is larger and you are not dealing with smugglers breaking U.N. sanctions," Doran said. "You could be dealing with a whole host of other things."

The next even--Sanso 2003--was more complex. This 10-part exercise took place in October in the Mediterranean, with Spain taking the lead. The United States contributed the guided missile frigate USS Nicholas (FFG FFG Forschungsförderungsgesellschaft (German: Austrian research promotion agency)
FFG Flash Flood Guidance
FFG Guided Missile Frigate
FFG Fall from Grace (band)
FFG Fast Frigates
FFG Freeware Flight Group
 47) and a P-3 Orion surveillance aircraft. Five other nations provided naval assets.

Sanso was patterned after a December 2002 operation in the Arabian Sea when elements of the Spanish Navy, with U.S. help, boarded a Yemen-bound ship carrying North Korean Scud missiles.

During Sanso, which lasted four days, vessels from several nations played the part of merchant ships suspected of carrying WMD-related materials. In a series of drills, the target ships were boarded and inspected by teams from other countries.

In one drill, the Nicholas acted as the target vessel. In another, the French Frigate FS Jacouvet did so. In yet another, two Spanish Navy auxiliary ships served as targets.

The commanding officer of the Nicholas, Cmdr. Chris Swallow, said in a statement that the exercise was "very successful," proving the participants "are ready to execute joint interdiction operations at a moments notice."

France was scheduled to lead the next maritime exercise in the Mediterranean in late November. Italy was to follow with an air-interdiction drill in December. Other exercises are planned for the months ahead.

U.S. experiences with maritime interdiction operations Maritime Interdiction Operations were operations that took place in the Persian Gulf, during Operation Southern Watch. They took place between the end of Operation Desert Storm in 1991, until the beginning of the Iraq War in 2003.  date to the Navy's birth in Revolutionary War, when Capt. John Paul Jones conducted raids against British shipping. During the American Civil War American Civil War
 or Civil War or War Between the States

(1861–65) Conflict between the U.S. federal government and 11 Southern states that fought to secede from the Union.
, U.S. Navy MIOs played a major role in blockading Southern ports.

In recent times, the U.S. Navy and Coast Guard--often in cooperation--have employed MIOs against smugglers of drugs, illegal migrants, contraband oil and terrorists.

Since 1980, the Coast Guard has interdicted an estimated 305,000 undocumented migrants headed from 62 countries toward the U.S. shoreline. In 2001 alone--the most recent year with available figures--the Coast Guard seized more than 135,000 pounds of cocaine, setting a maritime cocaine seizure record for the third consecutive year. Most of the drug interdictions took place in the Caribbean Sea, the Gulf of Mexico Noun 1. Gulf of Mexico - an arm of the Atlantic to the south of the United States and to the east of Mexico
Golfo de Mexico

Atlantic, Atlantic Ocean - the 2nd largest ocean; separates North and South America on the west from Europe and Africa on the east
 and the eastern Pacific Ocean.

First Gulf War

On the far side of the world, in the Arabian Sea, the Red Sea and the western Indian Ocean, the United States and its allies have conducted MIOs for years. Since the first Persian Gulf War Persian Gulf War
 or Gulf War

(1990–91) International conflict triggered by Iraq's invasion of Kuwait in August 1990. Though justified by Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein on grounds that Kuwait was historically part of Iraq, the invasion was presumed to be
, 42,409 vessels have been queried, 2,917 have been boarded, and 2,299 have been diverted for further investigation, said a Navy, spokesman.

The percentage of boardings picked up with the invasions of Afghanistan Afghanistan has been invaded many times, its boundaries and legitimate government have almost always been in dispute. Invaders include: the Mughal rulers of South Asia, Russian Tsars, Soviet Union, British Empire, and currently a coalition force of NATO troops with UN-backing led by US  and Iraq. In 2002, there were 4,995 queries, 2,917 boardings and 887 ships diverted. In 2003, at last count, them were 4,334 queries, 2,582 boardings and 427 ships diverted.

"These numbers represent MIOs in the Central Command Area of Responsibility only," the spokesman added.

Before the invasions, U.S. and coalition MIOs focused on enforcing U.N. sanctions against Iraq's smuggling smuggling, illegal transport across state or national boundaries of goods or persons liable to customs or to prohibition. Smuggling has been carried on in nearly all nations and has occasionally been adopted as an instrument of national policy, as by Great Britain  of contraband goods, such as oil. In May, after the fall of Saddam's regime, the U.N. Security Council passed Resolution 1483, calling for U.S. and coalition forces to provide law enforcement and peacekeeping functions in Iraq until that country can fend for itself.

Under Resolution 1483, "all vessels entering or leaving Iraq are subject to inspection by coalition naval forces," the spokesman explained. "If a vessel is carrying illegal oil or other prohibited cargo, [such as weapons and explosives], it will be detained and may be subject to confiscation confiscation

In law, the act of seizing property without compensation and submitting it to the public treasury. Illegal items such as narcotics or firearms, or profits from the sale of illegal items, may be confiscated by the police. Additionally, government action (e.g.
 under the Iraqi judicial process."

U.S. and coalition forces in the Arabian Sea and nearby waters also are on the lookout for in search of; looking for.

See also: Lookout
 vessels carrying terrorists or weapons. "The purpose of these operations is to widen the net to capture Osama Bin Laden Osama bin Laden: see bin Laden, Osama. ; members oral Qaeda, the Taliban and other terrorist groups, and their weapons," the spokesman said.

To conduct MIOs, the United States can bring to bear a variety of maritime assets, including:

* U.S. carrier strike groups, consisting of aircraft carriers and their 75 fixed-wing aircraft and helicopters, cruisers, frigates, destroyers, submarines and support ships.

* Expeditionary strike groups, which are built around amphibious assault ships, rather than carriers. They embark a Marine expeditionary unit A Marine air-ground task force (MAGTF) that is constructed around an infantry battalion reinforced, a helicopter squadron reinforced, and a task-organized combat service support element. It normally fulfills Marine Corps forward sea-based deployment requirements.  with 2,200 combat-ready Marines, their equipment and aircraft, both fixed-wing and helicopters.

* Coast Guard cutters, Navy coastal patrol ships and the Naval Special Warfare Noun 1. Naval Special Warfare - the agency that provides units to conduct unconventional and counter-guerilla warfare
NSW

United States Navy, US Navy, USN, Navy - the navy of the United States of America; the agency that maintains and trains and equips
 Command's Mark V Special Operations Craft The Mark V SOC (Special Operations Craft) is a small marine security/patrol/transport boat manufactured by Halter Marine Inc (Gulfport, Mississippi). The Mark V is one of the newest additions to the U.S naval special warfare command. , which can deliver boarding teams quickly to suspect vessels.

* Land-based P-3C Orion and carrier-based S-3B Viking aircraft, which can provide long-range maritime surveillance.

Interdiction operations are considered sensitive, because some nations do not approve of the forcible boarding of merchant ships on the high seas, no matter what their cargo. Also, the Navy is not eager for enemies to learn details of U.S. tactics in such operations. For these reasons, Navy officials declined to talk about MIOs for the record. How ever, a Navy officer with MIO (Modular I/O) A hardware interface for HP printers that is primarily used to plug in an internal print server and network adapter. MIO has been superseded by EIO. See EIO.  experience agreed to discuss the subject in general terms on a background basis.

The interdiction effort, he said, begins as soon as U.S. and allied commanders receive an intelligence report that a ship thought to be bearing weapons of mass destruction is leaving a foreign port. The vessel can be tracked, from the time it leaves port, by satellite, radar, aircraft, surface ship or submarine.

The ship can be intercepted at any time, by a single Navy vessel or squadron of them strung out in a long picket line to prevent escape. The ship can be queried by radio about its cargo and destination. If the responses are not satisfactory, the ship can be ordered: "Heave to, kill all engines and stand by for boarders."

Navy boarding teams are trained in tactics known as visit, board, search and seizure search and seizure

In law enforcement, an exploratory investigation of a premises or a person and the taking into custody of property or an individual in the interest of gaining evidence of unlawful activity or guilt.
. They learn how to embark and debark de·bark  
v. de·barked, de·bark·ing, de·barks

v.tr.
To unload, as from a ship or an airplane.

v.intr.
To disembark.
 foreign vessels, to review documents and inspect the ship, its cargo and personnel. They are taught to identity and control threats and hazards, collect evidence and intelligence information, and manage medical emergencies.

Boarding teams often include members of Coast Guard Law Enforcement Detachments, which are deployed on many Navy ships to help conduct MIOs. Under the Post Civil War-era Posse Comitatus Act Posse Comitatus Act, 1878, U.S. federal law that makes it a crime to use the military as a domestic police force in the United States under most circumstances. , U.S. military personnel have limited powers to arrest civilians suspected of breaking the law. Because the Coast Guard is not part of the Defense Department and has law-enforcement responsibilities, LEDETs, at they are called, have full arrest powers.

If U.S. commanders suspect that a target vessel will resist boarding, they have the option of dispatching a team from one of the Navy's Sea, Air and Land (SEAL) commando units or a Marine Corps Maritime Special Purpose Force A task-organized force formed from elements of a Marine expeditionary unit (special operations capable) and naval special warfare forces that can be quickly tailored to a specific mission. . An MSPF MSPF Maritime Special Purpose Force (USMC)  is a part of every deployed MEU MEU Marine Expeditionary Unit
MEU Mobile Expansion Unit
MEU Maximum Expected Utility (philosophy, economics)
MEU Municipal Employees Union
MEU Modern English Usage
MEU Main Electronics Unit
.

SEAL and MSPF teams train to fast rope from helicopters to the deck of a foreign ship, engage hostile forces and gain control of the vessel. During the entire operation, the helicopters--with snipers aboard--hover overhead, providing cover.

Once the foreign ship is brought under control and searched, if contraband is found, the vessel can be ordered to a friendly port, where its cargo can be impounded and the crew interrogated and, if warranted, arrested.

The Chief of Naval Operations chief of naval operations
n. pl. chiefs of naval operations Abbr. CNO
The ranking officer of the U.S. Navy, responsible to the secretary of the Navy and to the President.
, Adm. Vern Clark would like to see more nations help in conducting such searches. Speaking in October to navy and coast guard leaders from 75 countries at the 16th International Seapower Symposium in Newport, R.I., Clark called for "a worldwide coalition of military and law enforcement organizations" to police the world's oceans.

"This coalition would share information to track shipping around the world to end the illegal exploitation of our sea lines of communication Sea lines of communication (abbreviated as SLOC) is a term describing the primary maritime routes between ports, used for trade, logistics and naval forces.[1]  and stop terrorism at its root," Clark said.

It is imperative to protect the world's sea lanes, Clark said. "Thirty percent of the world's economy depends on trade. [A total of] 99.7 percent of all intercontinental trade travels by sea, carried by [more than] 46,000 vessels, servicing nearly 4,000 ports."

Attacks against these shipments are on the rise. "During the first half of [2003], there was a record of 234 reported attacks against seafarers
For Seafarers International Union and affiliates, see Seafarers International Union of North America.
''Note: This article title may be easily confused with The Seafarer.
," Clark said. "This was the worst six-month period since the International Maritime Bureau The International Maritime Bureau is a specialised bureau of the International Chamber of Commerce.

The IMB's responsibilities lie in fighting crimes related to maritime trade and transportation, particularly piracy and commercial fraud, and in protecting the crews of
 started compiling piracy statistics in 1991, and a full 34 percent increase over the same period last year."

Piracy is a form of terrorism, Clark said. "It's clear that we, as leaders of the navies and coast guards of the world, have the shared responsibility to keep our oceans free from terror and allow our nations to prosper."

The North Atlantic Treaty Organization North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), established under the North Atlantic Treaty (Apr. 4, 1949) by Belgium, Canada, Denmark, France, Great Britain, Iceland, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, and the United States. , which has been carrying out maritime interdictions in the eastern Mediterranean for more than a decade, is sharpening its focus on such operations. The NATO's Allied Command Transformation Allied Command Transformation is a military command, which was originally formed in 1952 as part of the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation. Background
Allied Command Transformation was initially formed as Allied Command Atlantic at Norfolk, Virginia, in 1952.
, which was established in last year's reorganization, is planning a Maritime Interdiction Operations Training Center, to be located in Greece.
2004  WMD Interdiction Exercises

Date         Type       Leader          Location

January      Maritime   United States   Arabian Sea
Early 2004   Ground     Poland          TBA
Spring       Maritime   Italy           Mediterranean
Spring       Air        France          TBA
Spring       TEA        Germany         TBA

International Piracy Incidents Surge

During the first half of 2003, seafarers reported a
record number of 234 attacks by pirates, according to
the International Maritime Bureau, in London. The
regions with the highest number of attacks are shown
below:

Indonesia          64
Bangladesh         23
India              18
Nigeria            18
Malacca Straits    15
Gulf of Aden       14

Source: International Maritime Bureau
COPYRIGHT 2004 National Defense Industrial Association
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2004, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Kennedy, Harold
Publication:National Defense
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jan 1, 2004
Words:2398
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