Analysis & Commentary


Accuracy in Media Radio

Questions about the Ground Zero mosque.

Across America with Spencer Hughes


JFK plot

Across the Nation with Bob Dunning


The president's war-fighting powers

Adam McManus Show

Adam McManus Show


North Korea.

Adler on Line

Afternoon Edition

Enhanced interrogation and its role in killing Osama bin Laden.

22nd March 2012 - Syndicated

Afternoon Edition

Daveed Gartenstein-Ross

The shooting in Toulouse.

Afternoon’s Live With Dave Diamond


Iranian missile tests.

Ag Radio


Energy security.

21st August 2011 - WNYE - New York

AKTINA FM

Sebastian Gorka

U.S.-Israel relations, Israel-Turkey relations, and political developments in Egypt.

Al Gardner & Stacey Simms

Al Jazeera News


Counterterrorism conference in Tunis.

3rd July 2011 - Al Hurra

Al Youm

Clifford D. May

US outreach to the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt. Is this a step that the United States should be taking?

13th April 2012 - NPR

All Things Considered

Mark Dubowitz

This weekend's nuclear negotiations with Iran should provide some indication of whether unprecedented economic pressure can induce a country to reconsider its policies. No country has ever been subject to such sanctions as severe as those currently imposed on Iran.

30th November 2011 - NPR

All Things Considered

Mark Dubowitz

U.S. Weighs Sanctions Targeting Iran's Central Bank

All Things Considered

Most suspected pirates caught around the Horn of Africa are released because there is no clear system for prosecuting them.

2nd March 2012 - NPR

All Things Considered

Mark Dubowitz

U.S. To Israel: Iran is feeling heat from sanctions.

All Things Considered

Should Detroit Suspect Get Military Or Civilian Trial?

All Things Considered

J. Peter Pham at James Madison University says piracy financiers are usually ethnic Somali businessmen who live outside the country and who typically call a relative in Somalia and suggest they launch a piracy business. The investor will offer $250,000 or more in seed money, while the relative goes shopping.

"You'll need some speedboats; you'll need some weapons; you also need some intelligence because you can't troll the Indian Ocean, a million square miles, looking for merchant vessels," says Pham, adding that the pirates also need food for the voyage - "a caterer."

Yes, a caterer.

"Think of it as everything you would need to go into the cruise ship business," Pham says. "Everything that you would need to run a cruise ship line, short of the entertainment, you need to run a piracy operation."

Staffing Is Not A Problem

And like a cruise ship line, a piracy operation needs a crew. Somalia is an impoverished and largely lawless country with high unemployment. As a result, there is a huge work force looking for jobs.

Once the supplies and employees are ready, the piracy start-up is ready to launch.

But, Pham cautions, the pirates must choose their target carefully.

"Does it have any value? Who is the crew? Do they have any security onboard? Who owns the ship? All of those things have to be factored. This is a business decision, to seize a ship. Westerners command a lot more money than poor Filipinos, whose country and families don't have the money to ransom them," Pham says.

"A European is going to fetch you a lot more than a Filipino. No one is going to ransom an African. I'm being brutally frank, but it's true," he says.

 

Read the article and listen to the interview here.

Experts

Khairi Abaza

Senior Fellow

Tony Badran

Research Fellow, Levant

Robert P. Barnidge

Adjunct Fellow

Victoria C. G. Coates

Adjunct Fellow

More Experts...

Events
No results matched your query.

More Events...