Iran, Ukraine, North Korea Show Ship Seizures Are the New Normal
....αν και αργά, τα είπαν με τ' όνομα τους. Βέβαια, στις περιπτώσεις των πειρατών, πάνε χαλαρά, για τις όποιες σοβαρές και ασόβαρες παραβιάσεις που γίνονται από πλοία που φέρουν σημαίες κρατών, αλλά και με άλλες στα οποία έχουν συμφέροντα, η αντίδραση είναι άμεση. Σιγά μην τους νοιάζουν οι ναυτικοί...
A
boat of Iranian Revolutionary Guard sails next to Stena Impero, a
British-flagged vessel owned by Stena Bulk, at Bandar Abbas port, July
21, 2019. Iran, Mizan News Agency/WANA Handout via REUTERSBy Leonid Bershidsky (Bloomberg Opinion) –The seizure of a number of
ships in recent months tells an uncomfortable story. In today’s
multi-polar world, countries can grab other nations’ vessels and get
away with it. It’s not just Iran’s detention of the U.K.-flagged Stena Impero in
retaliation for the seizure of one its own tankers by Britain. In recent
months, other incidents have occurred that had nothing to do with
smuggling or fishing disputes, the standard reasons for vessels to be
stopped and held by governments. These detentions are geopolitical in
nature. In November, Russia grabbed three small Ukrainian naval vessels that
tried to break through its de facto blockade of the Kerch Strait, a
barrier intended to defend an expensive bridge Moscow has built to
annexed Crimea. It continues to hold the Berdyansk, Nikopol and Yeni
Kapu and their crews – despite an order from the International Tribunal
for the Law of the Sea to release them. Moscow disputes the tribunal’s
jurisdiction and maintains that the vessels crossed the border
illegally.
On Thursday, Ukraine retaliated by seizing the Nika Spirit, a Russian
oil products tanker. According to Ukrainian intelligence, the same
vessel was used to block the three ships’ passage under the Crimea
bridge. Then there’s the seizure of the North Korean bulk carrier Wise Honest
by the U.S. in May, the first ever over alleged violations of
international sanctions on the dictatorship. Kim Jong Un’s regime hasn’t retaliated because it wants to get the
Wise Honest back rather than escalate the row. The cargo ship is North
Korea’s second biggest, and losing it is a major blow to the country’s
shaky economy. Meanwhile, there has been talk in the U.S. about trading the Wise
Honest for USS Pueblo, the spy ship North Korea captured in 1968. Its
crew was returned to the U.S. after 11 months in captivity; some of it
are now pushing for the swap. And last week, a U.S. federal court
approved the Wise Honest’s sale to pay compensation to the family of
American student Otto Warmbier, who died after being imprisoned in North
Korea. These ship seizures all have something in common: Military or
diplomatic advantages that mean one side feels it can act with impunity. Obviously, Iran could do nothing to prevent the U.K. from grabbing
the Grace 1 near Gibraltar. But Britain, too, simply didn’t have the
naval power in the Persian Gulf to stop Iran from trying to take one its
ships. Its depleted navy has a single frigate in the region, which
cannot be everywhere at the same time. The U.S. theoretically, has the
resources to stop Iran from hunting British ships, but has chosen not to
interfere. Ukraine lacks the naval power to stop Russia from claiming the Kerch
Strait as its own, just as it lacks the military clout to take back
Crimea. While Western countries have loudly demanded that Russia free
the Ukrainian ships and sailors, there’s nothing they can do to force
Moscow to comply without creating an unnecessary escalation and perhaps
harming Ukraine. But then, Russia, for its part, can’t start an all-out war with
Ukraine over a tanker built in 1989. The costs would clearly outweigh
the benefits; besides, just to be on the safe side, Ukraine has let the
crew go after treating it with the utmost politeness. Russia only
threatened “consequences” if its sailors are held hostage. In the U.S.–North Korea case, if the Wise Honest is sold for the
benefit of Otto Warmbier’s family, Kim’s regime conceivably could strike
back. If that were to happen, the U.S.’s options would be limited since
North Korea is a nuclear power now. International rules, such as multilateral sanctions or the Law of the
Sea, are nothing without reliable enforcement. But these seizures
reveal unsteady balances that make enforcement difficult at best. Rogue
actors, such as Iran, North Korea and the Putin regime in Russia, or
merely opportunistic ones, as in the cases of Ukraine and, yes, Trump’s
U.S., can grab others’ property and people, too, in order to set up
trades and bolster their weak diplomatic positions. Exchanges of ships and hostages are too distasteful and too fraught
with consequences to contemplate, as my Bloomberg Opinion colleague
Bobby Ghosh recently wrote in reference to the Iran-U.K. situation. I
would argue, however, that they may be necessary where captured crews
are involved; Ukraine, for example would be entirely justified in
finding Russian prisoners to trade for its sailors. President Volodymyr
Zelenskiy’s reluctance to accept anything but their unconditional
release can only prolong their suffering. In the Iran-U.K. case, the sailors aren’t nationals of the two
countries involved, and they shouldn’t be subject to any horse-trading.
Both sides should just let them go home. In the U.S.-North Korea
dispute, the Wise Honest’s crew wasn’t held. When it comes to the hardware, at least two swaps – between the U.S.
and North Korea and between Ukraine and Russia – would likely create
win-win situations for all sides without creating potential for any
further tit-for-tat seizures. But within a broader global context, they
would send the wrong signal: That the global order is a free-for-all, in
which the only solutions are transactional rather than dictated by
universally accepted rules. In any case, the shipping industry should take note: Without adequate
protection, ships can easily turn into geopolitical chips when they
sail into waters where their countries’ adversaries can use force with
relative impunity.
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