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http://www.diva-portal.org

This is the published version of a paper published in e-international relations.

Citation for the original published paper (version of record): Sörenson, K. (2013)

Review – Somali Piracy and Terrorism. e-international relations

Access to the published version may require subscription. N.B. When citing this work, cite the original published paper.

License: CC BY-NC-SA

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e -ir.inf o http://www.e-ir.info /2013/11/20/review-so mali-piracy-and-terro rism/

By Karl Sö renso n

Review – Somali Piracy and Terrorism

Somali Piracy and Terrorism in the Horn of Af rica

By Christopher L. Daniels

Lanham: Scarecrow Press, 2012

The last decade has seen an abundance of books about the state of Somalia, Somali terrorism and the Somali piracy. While some have

provided important contributions of our collective knowledge with regards to Somalia, piracy and terrorism, others take a more popular approach providing anecdotes but little new in terms of f act or theoretical

advances. Prof essor Christopher Daniels has in his book Somali Piracy

and Terrorism in the Horn of Africa tried to deal with three of the more

f requent Somali topics: Piracy, terrorism and the Somali state. As f ar as intellectual challenges f or the social scientists goes this should qualif y as one of the greatest. It requires a good orientation of the state of Somalia and state building as well as awareness of theories of interstate war, a good command of the quantum leap research on international terrorism and international operations has taken the last decade, pared with a kinship to research on maritime security and naval operations. Diverse f ields and needless to say, a gigantic task to set oneself and one can only commend Prof essor Daniels f or trying to connect the dots between various areas of research which of ten is quite particular about its own scopes and limits. Reviewing such a book is also challenging as the f ield of “unknown unknowns” is ever present.

The result of Prof essor Daniels attempt is a curious read since one is f aced with several types of writing; historical overview is contrasted with unprocessed statistics on arms-sales and piracy numbers, reprinted UN-resolutions f igure next to policy advice and a dictionary type of terms and acronyms appear alongside an overview of the Somali clans. In f act, less than half of the book (99 pages out of 215) is dedicated to the three topics Prof essor Daniels attempts to understand. The majority of the book, i.e. the last chapter and the f ollowing six appendixes concern conclusions and policy advise, suggested f urther reading,

timeline, an overview of the Somali clan system, key people and institutions in Somalia, UN-resolutions and international agreements relating to Somalia and in the very end, a def initions of terms and acronyms – as if the author tries to provide as many keys to those interested in the complex Somali society, the terrorism and the piracy as possible.

So f or whom is the book intended? For the scholar there is little new, especially since the author does not attempt to relate the historical background and description of the Somali civil war to actual research. The work of scientists such as Ken Menkhouse and other well-known Somali researchers are f ootnoted, but there is never any attempt to criticize, reconstruct or even describe any of these f indings. On the contrary, the author seems to have the ambition to set the stage f or the two other topics: piracy and terrorism. With regards to the piracy, this chapter is almost research f ree, as most of the ref erences are to online articles. This is problematic since some of recent years of research like that of Stig Jarle-Hansen, questions some popular notions, e.g. that the Somali piracy grew out of disgruntled f ishermen. Maritime security, shipping and the naval operations seems also not to concern the author. The chapter on terrorism is more detailed, but does not connect to any new data or theories regarding al-Shabaab.

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For the civil servant or policy advisor there is also not much in the book in terms of novelties. The policy advices provided are of ten on such a high level that it becomes lof ty and non-applicable. For example, to advice against ransom payments of hijacked ships makes little sense today. First, the Somali piracy is on decline partly as a result of the IMO and EU attempt to coordinate merchant vessels and ship-owners work with the EU, NATO and CMF naval operations (organizations and operations which are barely mentioned), which make it more dif f icult f or the pirates to succeed. Secondly, this sort of advice was discussed in 2007, but since ship-owners would stand to lose much more by ref using payment, the incentives are too powerf ul f or denying an owner to make the payment and get ship and crew back – in spite of the long term ef f ects it might have. The last point is important since the connection between ransom payments and al-Shabaab has been an issue. Here Prof essor Daniels could have connected the two dots, but since the evidence provided by the book is anecdotal – just as all other open source material on the piracy-terrorism

connection – it does not f urther our knowledge. However, f or the layman Somali Piracy and Terrorism in the

Horn of Africa may prove interesting since it takes a bird’s view of a conf lict and its spillover ef f ects that

have eluded the world f or decades. —

Karl Sörenson is a researcher at the Swedish National Defence College, (FHS) War Studies Division. Mr. Sörenson is a PhD-candidate at the Royal Institute of Technology (KTH), Department of Philosophy; his thesis takes a decision and epistemological perspectives of asymmetric conflicts. Before his current position Mr. Sörenson headed the Swedish Defence Research Agency’s (FOI) Africa Team. At the agency Mr. Sörenson monitored the security political and military development in North and Eastern Africa, with a special focus on terrorism and piracy.

References

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