By Peter Hannaford on 4.14.09 @ 6:06AM
May it not be the last time the President says nothing.
During the tense days when ship captain Richard Phillips was held
hostage by Somali pirates, President Obama wisely kept his mouth
shut, letting operational people do what needed to be done.
Much less wise was his declaration the weekend before that,
"Should North Korea decide to take this action [launch a
long-range rocket], we will work with all interested partners in
the international community to take appropriate steps to let
North Korea know that they cannot threaten the safety and
stability of other countries with impunity." The action? None. We
did not let the Japanese shoot down the rocket when it passed
through their airspace. Predictably, the United Nations Security
Council has done nothing either. Lesson: Don't huff and puff
unless you intend to blow the house down.
Many Americans were left scratching their heads when Obama said,
during a speech in Turkey that "America is not a Christian
nation." How's that? It was founded by Christians and the
majority of its people continue to profess to be Christians. If
he had said that, along with the important stipulation that our
constitution prohibits the establishment of a state religion and
that all its citizens have complete religious freedom, he would
have been on solid ground. As it was, a good many people
interpreted his mark as being anti-Christian.
Then, last Friday, he declared that he saw "glimmers of hope" in
the economy. Everyone hopes he's right, but this came on the
heels of news the day before that Federal Reserve experts were
predicting a recession well into 2010.
While the Obama wordsmiths and Teleprompter need to tune up his
rhetoric so it takes note of the sensibilities of more than one
target group at a time, we can all celebrate the fact this public
silence concluded during the hostage standoff concluded with the
successful rescue of Captain Phillips.
The message to would-be pirates is clear: Don't mess with
American ships and crews. This should be expanded to all
commercial shipping in the Gulf of Aden region. We should seek
the cooperation of the other nations supplying naval ships to the
effort, as well as to international shipowners and shippers.
Unified word should go out to the latter groups that they should
hire well-trained security details to sail aboard their ships. On
sighting pirate boats about to toss lines aboard with which to
climb up for a hijacking, the security men should fire on the
boats and sink them.
It won't take more than a few pirates facing a 100-mile swim back
to Somalia to put "paid" to the whole pirate enterprise. Even the
nervous insurance companies should cheer that outcome, for it
will bring down both risks and rates.
Mr. Hannaford is a member of the Committee on the
Present Danger.