Somali pirates jack a Saudi oil tanker

Impressive. Somali pirates have now succesfully hijacked a Saudi oil tanker — their biggest, though apparently not their first, such vessel. A crew of 25 is on board. This is just one of several pirate incidents this week. Even more impressive? All this goes on under the watch of U.S., Russian, NATO, Indian, and now ...

By , International Crisis Group’s senior analyst for Colombia.

Impressive. Somali pirates have now succesfully hijacked a Saudi oil tanker -- their biggest, though apparently not their first, such vessel. A crew of 25 is on board. This is just one of several pirate incidents this week.

Impressive. Somali pirates have now succesfully hijacked a Saudi oil tanker — their biggest, though apparently not their first, such vessel. A crew of 25 is on board. This is just one of several pirate incidents this week.

Even more impressive? All this goes on under the watch of U.S., Russian, NATO, Indian, and now South Korean and EU ships

The world’s largest shipping line, Odfjell SE, owns the ransomed tanker and now says that its shipping route will change — steering around Africa’s cape rather than across the perilous Gulf of Aden. Since 4 percent of the world’s oil supply passes through the pirate-infested route, a change of direction would be no small shift. Two million barrels of oil were lost to pirates today, and now shipping costs — and probably oil prices, to some extent — will go up.

Under normal circumstances, the world would be pressuring the Somali government to reign in the renegade ship-lifters. But that government is no shape to do so. It’s falling apart as Islamic insurgent groups gain terrority.

I can think of a few pirates who are smiling right now.

Elizabeth Dickinson is International Crisis Group’s senior analyst for Colombia.

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