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"Pirate Alley." Topic


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931 hits since 17 Oct 2012
©1994-2026 Bill Armintrout
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Tango01 Supporting Member of TMP17 Oct 2012 12:08 p.m. PST

Very interesting for Modern Navy/Army wargames.

"On April 8, 2009, four pirates armed with AK-47s clambered up the side of the U.S.-flagged container ship Maersk Alabama, sailing off the coast of Somalia. But after a brief scuffle with some of the 20 crewmembers, the pirates opted to abandon the 508-foot long ship, sailing off in one of its motorized lifeboats. They may not have captured the Maersk Alabama, nor looted its millions of dollars' worth of food and humanitarian aid bound for Kenya, but they didn't leave empty handed. The pirates had a captive: Maersk Alabama‘s captain, Richard Phillips.

Four days later, three of the four pirates were dead — each from a single .30-caliber rifle bullet to his brain, courtesy of the U.S. Navy's SEAL Team Six. The fourth pirate, just 16 years old, was in Navy custody. And Phillips was on his way home, unharmed but for the psychological strain from four days in captivity in a sweltering lifeboat, unsure whether he would live or die.

The precision killing of the three pirates by six members of SEAL Team Six, the same unit that would later kill Osama bin Laden in his Pakistan hideout, has never been been described in detail — until now. Retired Rear Adm. Terry McKnight, who commanded U.S. naval forces off Somalia during the Maersk Alabama standoff, devotes 45 pages of his new book Pirate Alley to the people, methods, equipment and even politics behind Phillips' daring rescue.

McKnight's book, published by the Naval Institute Press, shines new light on the SEALs' role — and, by extension, the rarely mentioned skills the secretive and lethal warriors bring to bear on battlefields across the globe. We knew the SEALs fired the shots that ended the standoff, but before Pirate Alley, we didn't know how the snipers reached the crisis zone. Nor did we know there might actually have been two separate SEAL teams involved. And McKnight's book also reveals new information about the vital role that intelligence specialists — and particularly a Somali interpreter — played in the raid…"
Full article 4 pages.
link

picture

Book here
link

Hope you enjoy!.

Amicalement
Armand

Thorfin1117 Oct 2012 2:21 p.m. PST

Interesting, thanks for the link.

Tango01 Supporting Member of TMP17 Oct 2012 9:39 p.m. PST

Glad you had enjoy it my friend!.

Amicalement
Armand

Howler18 Oct 2012 5:11 p.m. PST

That was an interesting read.

Pontius19 Oct 2012 5:22 a.m. PST

Now that could inspire some modern, small unit wargames.

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