Sunday, April 12, 2009

Imperial Impotence

The captain of the Maersk Alabama is safe, but it took the the world's most powerful Navy four days to get him out of a lifeboat manned by a handful of fishermen turned kidnappers.

As grateful as Americans have to be over the rescue of Richard Phillips, his travail adds a punctuation mark to what the military experts call asymmetrical warfare but looks very much like impotence in the face of lawless attacks by those who have nothing to lose in a world of asymmetrical power and wealth.

On all sides, 21st century sophistication is beset by crazed criminals--Taliban thugs who live in caves, Pakistani gunmen who terrorize India's most upscale city, drug dealers who make a shooting gallery out of America's Mexican border--and there seem to be no answers to what is more like the gang warfare of the Roaring Twenties than the high-tech world of today.

Afghanistan, Iraq et al are treated as military and diplomatic dilemmas, but the world is looking more and more like one big crime scene.

Where is Eliot Ness when we need him now?

3 comments:

  1. Geez, it was a hostage situation. Would you rather the U.S. follow the example of Russia at the Beslan school? Having the most powerful navy doesn't make you omnipotent.

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  2. Yellow Dog Don9:07 PM

    We move a step closer to war in Africa.

    By the time it begins, it will seem inevitable.

    And so it goes...

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  3. Anonymous10:47 PM

    Yeah, what the hell are you talking about? Sure, we could have had the corpse of the captain back in 15 seconds, and lots of dead pirates too.
    We decided we would like to try to get the captain out alive. And we did. Thats impotence?
    What is your problem?
    Oh, maybe that is your problem...

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