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Gains Urgency as Piracy Escalates off the Horn of Africa' which was 
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United States Government Accountability Office: 
GAO: 

Testimony:

Before the Subcommittee on Coast Guard and Maritime Transportation, 
Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, House of 
Representatives:

For Release on Delivery: 
Expected at 10:00 a.m. EDT:
Tuesday, March 15, 2011:

Maritime Security:

Updating U.S. Counterpiracy Action Plan Gains Urgency as Piracy 
Escalates off the Horn of Africa:

Statement of Stephen L. Caldwell, Director:
Homeland Security and Justice Issues:

and:

John H. Pendleton, Director:
Defense Capabilities and Management:

GAO-11-449T:

GAO Highlights:

Highlights of GAO-11-449T, a testimony before the Subcommittee on 
Coast Guard and Maritime Transportation, Committee on Transportation 
and Infrastructure, House of Representatives. 

Why GAO Did This Study:

Somali pirates have attacked 640 ships and taken more than 3,150 
hostages since 2007. A few U.S.-flagged vessels have been affected—
most recently the SV Quest, a private yacht on which four Americans 
were killed in February 2011. The growing frequency and severity of 
attacks renew the urgency to address the piracy threat. As Somalia is 
unable to repress piracy, the U.S. National Security Council (NSC) 
developed the interagency Countering Piracy off the Horn of Africa: 
Partnership and Action Plan in December 2008 to prevent, disrupt, and 
prosecute piracy in collaboration with international and industry 
partners. In September 2010, GAO issued a report evaluating the extent 
to which U.S. agencies (1) have implemented the plan, and the 
challenges they face, and (2) have collaborated with partners. This 
testimony is based on the September 2010 report and its objectives, 
and work GAO conducted in March 2011 to update report findings. 

What GAO Found:

As GAO reported in September 2010, the U.S. government has made 
progress in implementing its plan for countering piracy, in 
collaboration with industry and international partners. However, 
piracy is an escalating problem, and the U.S. government has not 
updated its plan as GAO recommended. The United States has advised 
industry partners on self-protection measures, contributed leadership 
and assets to an international coalition patrolling pirate-infested 
waters, and concluded a prosecution arrangement with the Seychelles. 
Many stakeholders credit collaborative efforts with reducing the pirates
’ rate of success in boarding ships and hijacking vessels, but since 
2007 the location of attacks has spread from the heavily patrolled 
Gulf of Aden—the focus of the Action Plan—to the vast and much harder 
to patrol Indian Ocean. Also, from 2007 to 2010 the total number of 
reported hijackings increased sevenfold, and, after dropping in 2008 
and 2009, the pirates’ success rate rebounded from 22 percent in 2009 
to almost 30 percent in 2010. In addition, the number of hostages 
captured and the amount of ransom paid increased sharply, and pirate 
attacks have grown more violent. The Action Plan’s objective is to 
repress piracy off the Horn of Africa as effectively as possible, but 
as pirate operations have evolved, changes to the plan have not kept 
pace. The United States has not systematically tracked the costs of 
its counterpiracy efforts and is unable to determine whether 
counterpiracy investments are achieving the desired results. According 
to a statement by an NSS official, the United States is reviewing U.S. 
piracy policy to focus future U.S. efforts. These recent steps are 
encouraging because the growing frequency and severity of piracy off 
the Horn of Africa provides a renewed sense of urgency for taking 
action. 

GAO’s September 2010 report found that U.S. agencies have generally 
collaborated well with international and industry partners to counter 
piracy, but they could take additional steps to enhance and sustain 
interagency collaboration.  According to U.S. and international 
stakeholders, the U.S. government has, among other things, 
collaborated with international partners to support prosecution of 
piracy suspects and worked with industry partners to educate ship 
owners on how to protect their vessels from pirate attack. However, 
agencies have made less progress on several key efforts that involve 
multiple U.S. agencies—such as those to address piracy through 
strategic communications, disrupt pirate finances, and hold pirates 
accountable. For instance, the departments of Defense, Justice, State, 
and the Treasury all collect or examine information on pirate 
finances, but none has lead responsibility for analyzing that 
information to build a case against pirate leaders or financiers. In 
September 2010, GAO recommended that the NSC identify roles and 
responsibilities for implementing these tasks, and develop guidance to 
ensure agency efforts work together efficiently and effectively. In 
March 2011, an NSS official stated that an interagency policy review 
will examine roles and responsibilities and implementation actions to 
focus U.S. efforts for the next several years. It is too early to 
assess this effort’s effectiveness in bolstering interagency 
collaboration in U.S. counterpiracy efforts. 

What GAO Recommends:

GAO is not making new recommendations in this statement. GAO 
previously recommended that the NSC (1) update its Action Plan; (2) 
assess the costs and effectiveness of U.S. counterpiracy activities; 
and (3) clarify agency roles and responsibilities. A National Security 
Staff (NSS) official provided a statement that an interagency group is 
reviewing U.S. piracy policy, costs, metrics, roles, and 
responsibilities. Agencies also commented to clarify information in 
this statement. 

View [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-449T] or key 
components. For more information, contact Stephen Caldwell at (202) 
512-9610 or caldwells@gao.gov, or John Pendleton at (404) 679-1816 or 
pendletonj@gao.gov. 

[End of section]

Chairman LoBiondo, Ranking Member Larsen, and Members of the 
Subcommittee:

I am pleased to be here today to discuss the U.S. response to piracy 
off the coast of Somalia. The killing of four Americans in February 
2011 by Somali pirates has renewed a sense of urgency to address the 
growing frequency and severity of piracy off the Horn of Africa. 
Piracy threatens ships and mariners transiting one of the world's 
busiest shipping lanes near key energy corridors and the route through 
the Suez Canal. Since 2007, 640 ships have reported pirate attacks in 
this area, and Somali pirates have taken more than 3,150 hostages and, 
according to the Department of Defense (DOD), received over $180 
million in ransom payments. While few U.S.-flagged vessels have been 
attacked-- notably the MV Maersk Alabama in April 2009, and the SV 
Quest in February 2011--pirates have attacked or attempted attacks on 
chemical and oil tankers, freighters, cruise ships, fishing vessels, 
and even warships. In addition to jeopardizing the lives and welfare 
of the citizens of many nations, piracy contributes to regional 
instability and creates challenges for shipping and freedom of 
navigation. This illicit but profitable activity has raised concerns 
that piracy ransom proceeds may undermine regional security and 
contribute to other threats, including terrorism. See figure 2 in 
appendix I for a map depicting the vast area in which incidents of 
Somali piracy are occurring.

Since 2008, the international community has taken steps to respond to 
the growing piracy problem, including patrols by the United States, 
the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, the European Union, and others 
in waters near Somalia; the establishment of a multinational naval 
task force with a specific mandate to conduct counterpiracy 
operations; and several United Nations Security Council resolutions 
such as the one that led to the formation of a multilateral Contact 
Group to coordinate international counterpiracy efforts.[Footnote 1] 
Recognizing that vibrant maritime commerce underpins global economic 
security and is a vital national security issue, the United States has 
also developed policies and plans to collaborate with its 
international partners and to mobilize an interagency U.S. response. 
In December 2008, the National Security Council (NSC) published the 
Countering Piracy off the Horn of Africa: Partnership & Action Plan. 
[Footnote 2] The Action Plan seeks to involve all nations, 
international organizations, industry, and other entities with an 
interest in maritime security in taking steps to repress piracy off 
the Horn of Africa. The interagency initiatives of the Action Plan are 
to be coordinated and undertaken by DOD, as well as the U.S. 
Departments of Homeland Security, Justice, State, Transportation, and 
the Treasury, and the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, 
subject to the availability of resources. The international community, 
shipping industry, and international military forces also have been 
instrumental in efforts to prevent and disrupt acts of piracy off the 
Horn of Africa and facilitate prosecutions of suspected pirates. Our 
recent report on this subject, published in September 2010, includes 
more information on the U.S. agencies and many of the key 
international and industry partners involved in the response to piracy 
off the Horn of Africa with whom the United States collaborates and 
coordinates.[Footnote 3]

My statement today is based largely on our September 2010 report, in 
addition to more recent work we conducted in March 2011 to update the 
findings in that report. Today, as with our report, I would like to 
focus on two issues: first, the extent to which U.S. agencies have 
implemented the Action Plan and challenges they face in doing so, and 
second, the extent to which U.S. agencies have collaborated among 
partners in counterpiracy efforts. For our September 2010 report, we 
examined counterpiracy plans, activities, collaborative practices, and 
data; met with officials at six U.S. agencies and the Combined 
Maritime Forces in Bahrain; and interviewed industry and international 
partners. Details on the scope and methodology used for that review 
can be found in appendix I of the report. Selected updates for my 
statement today include a review of data on the nature and extent of 
pirate attacks, hostages taken, and ransom payments made since our 
published report. We assessed the reliability of the attack and 
hostage data by reviewing the data and interviewing knowledgeable 
officials as well as relevant subject matter experts; though the 
sources and methods used to develop the ransom data are classified, we 
compared it to information provided by other sources. We found these 
data to be sufficiently reliable for providing a context for piracy 
off the Horn of Africa. We also contacted officials from Coast Guard, 
DOD, Justice, State, Transportation, and the Treasury on actions taken 
since our last report. We also provided a copy of this testimony to 
the NSS for comment. We conducted this work in accordance with 
generally accepted government auditing standards.

Since the publication of our report, the piracy situation off the 
coast of Somalia has continued to deteriorate. According to a variety 
of sources,[Footnote 4] pirates are expanding their area of 
operations--north toward the straits of Hormuz, east toward the coast 
of India, and south to the coasts of Mozambique and Madagascar--
principally through the increasing use of larger vessels known as 
"mother ships." In addition, the total number of reported pirate 
attacks has increased from 30 in 2007 to 219 in 2010. In addition, 
pirates are taking an increasing number of hostages and escalating the 
level of violence and abuse toward those captives. Officials also have 
cited reports of pirates using seafarers on the hijacked mother ships 
as "human shields" to fend off attacks from naval vessels. Pirates 
also are holding out for higher ransoms, which is leading to longer 
negotiations and, hence, longer periods of captivity for those taken 
hostage. Finally, officials report that pirates continue to show 
evidence of organization, with well-defined networks and hierarchies 
of financiers, senior leaders, and seagoing pirate crews. Appendix I 
provides maps and graphics demonstrating several of these trends.

The United States Has Taken Steps to Implement Its Counterpiracy Plan 
but Needs to Evaluate Its Efforts and Update Its Plan:

As we reported in September 2010, the U.S. government has made 
progress implementing its Action Plan for countering piracy, in 
collaboration with international and industry partners. However, the 
effort faces several implementation challenges, and piracy remains a 
persistent problem. At the time of our September 2010 review, U.S. 
agencies had not evaluated the costs or effectiveness of their 
counterpiracy efforts or updated the Action Plan. In commenting on our 
testimony statement, the NSS told us that an ongoing interagency 
review is examining the U.S. piracy policy needed to guide U.S. 
efforts. We continue to believe that actions are needed to update the 
Action Plan to respond to the evolving pirate threat, and enhance and 
sustain interagency collaboration in U.S. efforts, but currently it is 
too early to assess the interagency effort.

In collaboration with their international and industry partners, U.S. 
agencies have taken steps across the three lines of action established 
in the Action Plan to: (1) prevent attacks by reducing the 
vulnerability of the maritime domain, (2) disrupt acts of piracy in 
ways consistent with international law and the rights and 
responsibilities of coastal and flag states, and (3) ensure that those 
who commit acts of piracy are held accountable for their actions by 
facilitating the prosecution of suspected pirates. [Footnote 5] The 
Action Plan establishes the U.S. role in countering piracy as a 
collaborative one, seeking to involve all countries and shipping- 
industry partners with an interest in maritime security. The NSC also 
establishes some limits to the scope of the plan by focusing on 
immediate measures to reduce the incidents of Somali piracy, rather 
than longer-term stabilization of Somalia that the Action Plan asserts 
is needed to fully repress piracy.

The United States has advised industry partners on self-protection 
measures, contributed leadership and assets to an international 
coalition patrolling pirate-infested waters, and concluded a 
prosecution arrangement with the Seychelles.[Footnote 6] However, the 
U.S. government has made less progress on tasks related to seizing and 
destroying pirate vessels and equipment and delivering suspected 
pirates for prosecution, and disrupting pirate revenue and bases 
ashore. Figure 1 summarizes the results of our assessment. For more 
detailed information about U.S. agencies' efforts to implement the 
Action Plan and our analysis of their progress, see appendix II of our 
September 2010 report.

Figure 1: Interagency Progress in Implementing the National Security 
Council's Countering Piracy off the Horn of Africa: Partnership and 
Action Plan:

[Refer to PDF for image: illustrated table] 


Prevent pirate attacks by reducing the vulnerability of the maritime 
domain to piracy: 

Task: Establish and maintain a Contact Group; 
GAO assessment[A]: Substantial progress; 
Status: U.S. government helped establish in January 2009; Coast Guard 
and Maritime Administration lead working group on industry self-
protection. 

Task: Strengthen and encourage the use of the Maritime Security Patrol 
Area; 
GAO assessment[A]: Substantial progress; 
Status: U.S. government has made progress working with international 
and industry partners, but has limited influence on commercial vessels 
that are not flagged with the United States. 

Task: Updating ships’ security plans; 
GAO assessment[A]: Substantial progress; 
Status: Coast Guard has approved piracy annexes to ship security plans 
for 100 percent of U.S.-flagged vessels over 500 gross tons identified 
as transiting high-risk waters off the Horn of Africa. 

Task: Strategic communication; 
GAO assessment[A]: Some progress; 
Status: U.S. government has issued counterpiracy statements and 
supported international efforts; however, governmentwide plan not 
finalized and lack of U.S. presence on land in Somalia inhibits full 
implementation. 

Disrupt acts of piracy consistent with international law and the 
rights and responsibilities of coastal and flag states: 

Task: Support a regionally based Counter-Piracy Coordination Center 
(CPCC); 
GAO assessment[A]: Not applicable[B]; 
Status: U.S. government has no plans to support the establishment of a 
CPCC since it would duplicate the reporting and monitoring functions 
performed by other organizations. 

Task: Seize and destroy pirate vessels and related equipment, and 
deliver suspected pirates to prosecuting states; 
GAO assessment[A]: Some progress; 
Status: U.S. and international forces have seized more than 100 pirate 
vessels and their related equipment but only delivered 39 percent of 
captured suspects for reasons including difficulties in meeting 
evidence standards and/or securing prosecution venues. 

Task: Provide interdiction-capable presence; 
GAO assessment[A]: Substantial progress; 
Status: U.S. Navy and Coast Guard contribute assets and leadership to 
coalition forces patrolling off the Horn of Africa with an average of 
four to five ships in the region each day. 

Task: Support shiprider programs and other agreements; 
GAO assessment[A]: Some progress; 
Status: The United States has supported an arrangement to bolster 
regional capabilities to counter piracy, but U.S. agencies have not 
established shiprider programs because they question the benefits to 
facilitating prosecutions. 

Task: Disrupt and dismantle pirate bases ashore; 
GAO assessment[A]: Little or no progress; 
Status: Action not authorized by the President at this time; lack of 
U.S. presence in Somalia hinders implementation. 

Task: Disrupt pirate revenue; 
GAO assessment[A]: Some progress; 
Status: In April 2010, President Obama signed an executive order that 
blocks assets of certain designated individuals, including two 
suspected pirates.[C] But, U.S. efforts to track financial assets or 
transactions are hampered by a lack of government and financial 
institutions in Somalia. 

Facilitate the prosecution of suspected pirates by flag, victim, and 
coastal states, and, in appropriate cases, the United States to ensure 
that those who commit acts of piracy are held accountable for their 
actions: 

Task: Conclude prosecution agreements; 
GAO assessment[A]: Some progress; 
Status: U.S. government concluded an arrangement with the Seychelles 
and is attempting to conclude others; but faces challenges in finding 
additional regional partners that are willing and able to prosecute.[D] 

Task: Support the exercise of jurisdiction under the Convention for 
the Suppression of Unlawful Acts against the Safety of Maritime 
Navigation; 
GAO assessment[A]: Some progress; 
Status: The United States exercised jurisdiction under the Convention 
for the Suppression of Unlawful Acts against the Safety of Maritime 
Navigation to prosecute one pirate in the United States. 

Task: Support the use of other applicable international conventions 
and laws; 
GAO assessment[A]: Some progress; 
Status: The United States is using other laws to exercise jurisdiction 
and prosecute 25 suspected pirates for attacks on U.S. vessels. 

Task: Enhance regional states’ capacity to prosecute; 
GAO assessment[A]: Some progress; 
Status: U.S. agencies provide assistance to countries in the region 
for law enforcement and judicial capacity building and reform, the 
focus of which includes, but is not limited to, piracy. Naval Criminal 
Investigative Service special agents have testified in Kenyan courts, 
and provided training and operational support to officials in the 
Seychelles. 

Source: GAO. 

[A] We assessed "substantial progress" for those tasks where all 
components specified by the NSC were implemented; "some progress" for 
tasks where components were partially implemented or agencies had 
taken steps toward implementation; and "little or no progress" where 
agencies had made minimal or no effort toward implementing the 
components of the task.

[B] We did not rate U.S. government progress on this task because, 
according to DOD officials, there are no plans to establish a Counter- 
Piracy Coordination Center since it would duplicate existing 
international efforts.

[C] Executive Order 13536 blocks all property and property interests 
within U.S. jurisdiction of persons listed in the Annex to the order 
and provides the authority for the Secretary of the Treasury, in 
consultation with the Secretary of State, to designate additional 
persons that threaten the peace, security, or stability of Somalia, 
including those who support or engage in acts of piracy off the coast 
of Somalia. Property and property interests within U.S. jurisdiction 
include property in the possession or control of any United States 
person in the United States or overseas. United States person is 
defined as "any United States citizen, permanent resident alien, 
entity organized under the laws of the United States or any 
jurisdiction within the United States (including foreign branches), or 
any person in the United States." According to Treasury officials, as 
of March 2011 this order listed two individuals connected to pirate 
activity. 

[End of figure] 

Many stakeholders anecdotally credit international, industry, and U.S. 
government efforts with preventing and disrupting piracy off the Horn 
of Africa, but despite these efforts from 2007 through 2010 pirates 
greatly expanded their area of operations, the number of pirate 
attacks increased, the number of hostages captured rose substantially, 
and the size of ransom payments grew. Appendix I includes graphics 
illustrating the following developments:

* Area of Operations. Pirates have expanded their area of operations-- 
north toward the straits of Hormuz, east toward the coast of India, 
and south to the coasts of Mozambique and Madagascar--and now threaten 
an area of approximately 2 million square miles, an area much larger 
and harder to patrol than the Gulf of Aden alone. (See figure 3 in 
appendix I.) Pirates are expanding their reach principally through the 
increasing use of vessels known as "mother ships." Mother ships are 
often acquired or commandeered by acts of piracy and are used to store 
fuel and supplies and to tow skiffs. These mother ships enable pirates 
to launch attacks farther off shore and to operate in rougher seas. A 
year after the NSC issued its Action Plan, reported pirate attacks in 
the Gulf of Aden dropped from approximately 83 percent of the 111 
reported pirate attacks in the region to 53 percent as Somali pirates 
expanded their area of operations to the broader Indian Ocean. We 
reported in September 2010 that countering piracy in the Indian Ocean 
is more challenging due to the great expanse of water, and it requires 
a different approach than that used in the Gulf of Aden. One U.S. Navy 
analysis estimated that 1,000 ships equipped with helicopters would be 
required to provide the same level of coverage in the Indian Ocean 
that is currently provided in the Gulf of Aden--an approach that is 
clearly infeasible.

* Pirate Attacks. The total number of reported pirate attacks 
increased from 30 in 2007 to 219 in 2010. (See figure 4 in appendix 
I.) Since 2007, there have been at least eight reported attempted 
attacks on U.S.-flagged vessels, two of which involved pirates 
successfully boarding or hijacking vessels--the attacks on the MV 
Maersk Alabama and SV Quest. Although we reported in September 2010 
that total attacks in the first half of 2010 had declined as compared 
with the same period in 2009, since the issuance of our report, total 
attacks in 2010 reached levels similar to 2009. Additionally, while we 
previously reported the rate of successful attacks had dropped from 40 
percent in 2007 to 22 percent in 2009, the rate had rebounded to 
almost 30 percent at the end of 2010. Pirates have maintained the same 
success rate of attacks for January and February 2011.

* Hostages Captured. Somali pirates captured more than six times the 
number of hostages in 2010 than in 2007. (See figure 5 in appendix I.) 
Such data show that piracy remains a persistent problem. Moreover, in 
a February 2011 meeting of agency and international partners, 
officials stated that, since the time of our report, the level of 
violence has increased, the average length of time hostages spend in 
captivity has grown, and more incidents of hostage abuse have been 
reported. Officials have also cited reports of pirates using seafarers 
on the hijacked mother ships as "human shields" to fend off attacks 
from naval vessels.

* Ransom Payments. From 2007 to 2010 the estimated amount of total 
ransom payments paid to pirates each year by the shipping industry 
grew from about $3 million to more than $75 million, with the average 
amount of ransoms paid per vessel increasing from $300,000 in 2007 to 
more than $4 million in 2010, according to DOD. As ransoms continue to 
rise, pirates continue to have an incentive to carry out attacks. 
Furthermore, negotiation periods are lengthening, and hostages are 
being held for greater lengths of time. Officials now report the 
average length of time needed to negotiate ransoms has increased from 
2 to 6 months. In addition, pirates have shown evidence of 
organization--with well-defined networks and hierarchies of 
financiers, senior leaders, and seagoing pirate crews--leading some 
U.S. officials to express concerns that funds generated by piracy may 
attract extremists or terrorists located in the region. However, as of 
July 2010, U.S. agencies monitoring piracy had found no credible link 
between pirates and extremist or terrorist organizations.

U.S. agencies have reported taking some steps to respond to the 
changing methods and location of pirate attacks, including weekly 
updates on piracy incidents to mariners and naval forces, and efforts 
among coalition partners to improve coordination in the Somali Basin. 
At the time we published our September 2010 report, the Action Plan 
did not specifically address certain aspects of pirate operations, 
such as the expansion to the broader Indian Ocean or how to apprehend 
leaders of pirate organizations and their financiers, and U.S. 
government officials told us that there were no plans to reassess or 
revise the Action Plan. As a result, we recommended that the Special 
Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs, in 
collaboration with the Secretaries of Defense, Homeland Security, 
Justice, State, Transportation, and the Treasury re-assess and revise 
the Action Plan to better address evolving conditions off the Horn of 
Africa and their effect on priorities and plans. In following up with 
cognizant departments on the current status of their counterpiracy 
efforts, all of the departments provided comments to clarify 
information in this statement, and an NSS official provided the 
following information:

As part of a broader U.S. approach toward the region, the Maritime 
Security Interagency Policy Committee (MSIPC) is conducting an ongoing 
review of U.S. piracy policy.[Footnote 7] During this review, the 
MSIPC is focusing on the Countering Piracy off the Horn of Africa: 
Partnership and Action Plan and as part of this effort, departments 
and agencies are examining and developing metrics, roles and 
responsibilities, and implementation actions to serve as the focus of 
U.S. efforts for the next several years. In addition, the level of 
effort and opportunity costs associated with counterpiracy work is 
continuously monitored. The MSIPC has been focused, most recently, on 
addressing the costs associated with bringing suspected pirates either 
to the United States for prosecution or transferring them to third 
party nations.

We also reported in September 2010 that as pirates operations had 
evolved, the U.S. government had not systematically tracked the cost 
or effectiveness of its counterpiracy activities to determine whether 
its investment had achieved the desired results or should be revised. 
Specifically, we found that government agencies were not tracking:

* Costs of Counterpiracy Efforts. The Action Plan did not specifically 
charge the interagency group responsible for monitoring implementation 
with tracking the cost of U.S. activities and neither the interagency 
steering group nor the federal agencies involved were performing these 
tasks. We also reported that DOD provided a partial estimate of 
counterpiracy operations undertaken by the U.S. Central Command which 
totaled about $64 million in fiscal year 2009[Footnote 8] and that a 
key cost of counterpiracy operations was the diversion of ships, crew, 
aircraft, intelligence assets, and other forces from other global 
missions such as counterterrorism and counternarcotics efforts. (See 
our September 2010 report for a list of selected types of costs 
incurred by the U.S. government to counter piracy.):

* Measures of Effectiveness. The Action Plan did not define measures 
of effectiveness that could be used to evaluate progress toward 
reaching its objectives or to assess the relative effectiveness of the 
Action Plan's tasks to prevent, disrupt, and prosecute acts of piracy. 
Agency officials have cited several challenges associated with 
measuring the effectiveness of U.S. efforts, including the complexity 
of the piracy problem, difficulty in establishing a desired end-state 
for counterpiracy efforts, and difficulty in distinguishing the effect 
of U.S. efforts from those of its international and industry partners. 
Nevertheless, we reported that identifying measures of effectiveness 
and systematically evaluating agency efforts could assist the U.S. 
government in ensuring resources are being targeted most effectively, 
weighing its investment of resources against its other interests in 
the region, and determining whether adjustments to plans are required.

As a result, in our September 2010 report, we also recommended that 
the NSC, in collaboration with the same federal departments, identify 
measures of effectiveness to use in evaluating U.S. counterpiracy 
efforts; and direct the Counter-Piracy Steering Group to identify the 
costs of U.S. counterpiracy efforts including operational, support, 
and personnel costs; and assess the effectiveness of U.S. 
counterpiracy activities. In commenting on the draft of our September 
2010 report, DOD stated that the interagency group charged with 
monitoring implementation of the Action Plan was not tracking costs 
and effectiveness because it was not specifically charged to do so in 
the Action Plan. Officials from Coast Guard, Justice, State, and the 
Treasury also were not aware of any systematic efforts to perform 
these functions. When preparing for this hearing, State officials 
informed us that the Secretary of State has since directed an internal 
review and re-evaluation of State's approaches and actions to counter 
piracy to determine the options for more effectively addressing this 
regional threat and its widespread consequences. According to State 
officials, identifying costs and effectiveness, as we recommended, is 
to be a critical component of this evaluation. Similarly, the NSS 
statement indicated that the policy review underway by the MSIPC is 
examining and developing metrics, and addressing the costs associated 
with U.S. action toward prosecuting suspected pirates. While recent 
steps to begin implementing our recommendations are encouraging, it is 
too early to tell what impact, if any, these efforts will have on the 
United States' ability to respond to the dynamic nature of piracy. We 
continue to believe that with continual evaluation of U.S. efforts the 
United States may be in a better position to achieve its ultimate goal 
of repressing piracy.

U.S. Agencies Have Worked Collaboratively with Partners but Could Take 
Key Steps to Enhance and Sustain Collaboration in Counterpiracy Efforts:

As we reported in September 2010, U.S. agencies have generally 
collaborated well with international and industry partners to counter 
piracy; however, U.S. agencies could implement other key practices to 
further enhance and sustain collaboration among U.S. interagency 
partners. Industry partners play an important role in preventing and 
deterring pirate attacks because they are responsible for implementing 
self-protection measures on commercial vessels. Our September 2010 
report includes more detail on the extent of this collaboration, but 
we will highlight a few examples here:

* Collaboration with International Partners. U.S. agencies, primarily 
State and DOD, have collaborated with international partners through 
two organizations established to counter piracy off the Horn of 
Africa. First, the Contact Group on Piracy off the Coast of Somalia 
(Contact Group) serves as an international forum for countries 
contributing to the counterpiracy effort to share information that has 
facilitated international, military coordination and established a 
trust fund to support prosecution efforts. As part of the Contact 
Group's efforts, the Coast Guard and the Maritime Administration co-
chair a working group on shipping industry coordination, which has 
reviewed and updated best management practices for industry self-
protection, and is developing guidance for seafarer training regarding 
pirate attacks. Second, in 2008, as the leader of the Combined 
Maritime Forces, the U.S. Navy, along with other international 
partners, established Shared Awareness and Deconfliction meetings that 
are intended to provide military coordination and information sharing 
for naval patrols of pirate-infested waters.

* Partnering with Industry. U.S. agencies, primarily the Coast Guard 
and the Maritime Administration, have worked with industry partners to 
facilitate collaborative forums, share information, and develop joint 
guidance for implementing counterpiracy efforts. Most recently, the 
Coast Guard issued an updated version of Maritime Security Directive 
104-6 in January 2011 amending the area at high risk of piracy and the 
Maritime Administration issued an advisory in February 2011 that 
addressed the piracy threat to yachts and recreational craft. For 
those ship owners who choose or are required to carry armed security 
teams, the Coast Guard and State have worked to identify viable 
methods for doing so in accordance with applicable U.S., 
international, and port- state laws.[Footnote 9] In addition, the 
Maritime Administration has developed training courses to inform 
vessel crews about how to help prevent piracy and steps to take if 
taken hostage.

U.S. government agencies have incorporated other key collaborative 
practices, including developing an overarching strategy and 
establishing mechanisms to share information with partners. As we 
reported in September 2010, the NSC's Action Plan serves an 
overarching strategy to guide U.S. interagency efforts and provides a 
framework for interagency collaboration.[Footnote 10] Furthermore, in 
certain circumstances, such as a pirate attack on a U.S.-flagged 
vessel, the U.S. government uses the existing Maritime Operational 
Threat Response process[Footnote 11]--part of the National Strategy 
for Maritime Security--to facilitate a discussion among U.S. agencies 
and decide on courses of action. For example, this response process 
was activated for both the MV Maersk Alabama and SV Quest incidents.

Although the NSC and U.S. agencies have taken these collaborative 
steps, we reported in September 2010 that the NSC could incorporate 
two other key practices--assigning roles and responsibilities and 
developing joint implementation guidance--to further enhance 
interagency collaboration in counterpiracy efforts.[Footnote 12] As of 
July 2010, the NSC had assigned roles and responsibilities for 
implementing one of the 14 Action Plan tasks, providing persistent 
interdiction to be performed by the U.S. Navy and Coast Guard. 
Establishing roles and responsibilities can help agencies clarify 
which agencies will lead or participate in activities, help organize 
their joint and individual efforts, and facilitate decision making. 
Agencies could enhance collaboration by developing joint guidance to 
implement and coordinate actions on several Action Plan tasks. 
Effective joint guidance also addresses how agency activities and 
resources will be aligned to achieve goals. In the absence of clearly 
identified roles and responsibilities and joint implementation 
guidance, agencies involved in countering piracy have made 
comparatively more progress in implementing those Action Plan tasks 
that fall firmly within one agency's area of expertise, such as Coast 
Guard's enforcement of U.S.- regulated commercial-vessel compliance 
with maritime security requirements and DOD's interdiction efforts.

In contrast, there are several tasks in the Action Plan for which 
multiple agencies have relevant authorities, capabilities, or 
interests, and on which less progress has been made. The NSC has not 
identified roles and responsibilities for implementing these tasks, 
and officials have acknowledged that the agencies have not developed 
joint guidance to ensure their efforts work together efficiently and 
effectively. For example:

* Strategic Communication. Multiple agencies are responsible for 
communicating with various audiences about piracy, but there is no 
governmentwide strategic communication plan in place to guide agency 
efforts. According to State officials, State has drafted a 
governmentwide counterpiracy strategic communication plan for 
interagency review but as of March 2011, the department had not 
finalized this plan.

* Disrupting Pirate Revenue. Multiple agencies collect or examine 
information on pirates' financial activities, including DOD, Justice, 
State, and the Treasury. However, officials agree that information 
their agencies gather on pirate finances is not being systematically 
analyzed, and it is unclear if any agency is using it to identify and 
apprehend pirate leaders or financiers. U.S. efforts to track and 
block pirates' finances in Somalia are hampered by the lack of 
government and formal banking institutions there. According to Justice 
officials, as of July 2010, the United States had not apprehended or 
prosecuted any pirate leaders or enablers as provided for in the 
Action Plan.

* Facilitating Prosecution of Suspected Pirates. Agencies face 
challenges facilitating prosecution of suspected pirates without 
defined roles and joint guidance. For example, after pirate attacks on 
the USS Ashland and USS Nicholas, which resulted in the apprehension 
of suspects, the U.S. government lacked interagency procedures for 
transferring suspects and sharing costs among the agencies involved, 
according to U.S. officials.

In September 2010, we reported that by enhancing interagency 
collaboration, the NSC can reduce the risk of leaving gaps in its 
counterpiracy efforts or the risk that agency efforts may overlap, 
which could waste resources that could be applied to combat other 
threats to national security, such as terrorism. We also recommended 
that the NSC, in collaboration with the same federal departments, 
clarify agency roles and responsibilities and develop joint guidance, 
information sharing mechanisms, and other means to operate across 
agency boundaries for implementing key efforts such as strategic 
communication, disrupting pirate revenue, and facilitating 
prosecution. Doing so could also help agency officials--who must 
balance their time and resources among many competing priorities--more 
fully and effectively carry out their roles in helping to repress 
piracy and avoid duplication of effort. Agency officials we contacted 
to prepare for this hearing were unaware of efforts to clarify agency 
roles and responsibilities or develop joint guidance for implementing 
key efforts. Commenting on our testimony statement, however, the NSS 
provided a statement indicating that an ongoing MSIPC policy review is 
examining roles and responsibilities and other implementation actions 
to guide U.S. counterpiracy efforts. The recent statement from the NSS 
official is encouraging and we continue to believe that actions are 
needed to enhance and sustain interagency collaboration in U.S. 
counterpiracy efforts, but currently it is too soon to know the impact 
of the MSIPC review.

In closing, Mr. Chairman and Members of the Subcommittee, while U.S. 
agencies have taken a collaborative approach in counterpiracy planning 
and have taken many steps, the U.S. government faces escalating 
challenges to meeting its objective of repressing piracy. These 
challenges include inherent limits on the United States' ability to 
influence industry and international partners and to encourage other 
states to prosecute suspected pirates. In addition, the United States 
must address the problem of piracy in an environment in which 
counterpiracy efforts compete with other high-priority U.S. interests 
in the region, and, as the NSC has acknowledged, longer-term efforts 
to stabilize Somalia are needed to fully address the root causes of 
piracy. Such challenges, along with the growing frequency and severity 
of piracy off the Horn of Africa, provide a renewed a sense of urgency 
to implement our recommendations to update the counterpiracy Action 
Plan and take other steps to prevent, disrupt, and prosecute acts of 
piracy.

Mr. Chairman, this completes my prepared statement. I would be happy 
to respond to any questions you or other Members of the Subcommittee 
may have at this time.

GAO Contacts and Staff Acknowledgments:

For questions about this statement, please contact Stephen L. Caldwell 
at 202-512-9610 or caldwells@gao.gov, or John H. Pendleton at 404-679- 
1816 or pendletonj@gao.gov. Contact points for our Offices of 
Congressional Relations and Public Affairs may be found on the last 
page of this statement. In addition to the contacts named above, Susan 
Ditto, Geoffrey Hamilton, Dawn Hoff, Brandon L. Hunt, Farhanaz 
Kermalli, Ronald La Due Lake, Patricia Lentini, John Mingus, Amie 
Steele, and Suzanne Wren made key contributions to this report. A full 
list of staff acknowledgements for the September 2010 report can be 
found in appendix VI of that report.

[End of section]

Appendix I: Maps and Statistics on Piracy off the Coast of Somalia:

This appendix provides several examples of the vast area in which 
pirates operate and how piracy off the coast of Somalia has continued 
to escalate. Pirate attacks have expanded from being close to the 
eastern Somali shoreline in 2007, to targeting ships in the Gulf of 
Aden in 2008, and since 2009 expanding east into the Indian Ocean, 
south toward Madagascar, and north toward Oman. In addition, pirates 
have captured more ships and taken more hostages each year from 2007 
through 2010.

Figure 2: Somalia and a Comparison to the Eastern Coast of the United 
States:

[Refer to PDF for image: map] 

Map depicts areas in the Indian Ocean including the following: 
Somalian coast line: approximately 1,880 coast miles; 
Internationally Recommended Transit Corridor: between Yeman and 
Somalia; 
Line representing approximately 1,000 nautical miles from Somalia; 
Comparison map of the East Coast of the U.S., showing approximately 
1,880 coast miles. 

Source: GAO (data), Map Resources (map). 

[End of figure]

Figure 3: Successful and Attempted Pirate Attacks off the Coast of 
Somalia, January 2007 to February 2011:

[Refer to PDF for image: illustrated map] 

The map is interactive, as follows: 

Interactivity instructions: 

This map is interactive and uses color to distinguish years in the 
electronic version of this report. For the print version, the map is 
supplemented by a set of black and white maps that break out the data 
by year, see figure 6. 

Roll your mouse over the year in the legend box to see the data by 
year. 

Each dot represents a successful or attempted attack. The color of the 
dot indicates the year of the incident. 

Source: GAO analysis of International Maritime Bureau data (data); Map 
Resources (map). 

[End of figure]

Figure 4: Successful and Attempted Pirate Attacks off the Horn of 
Africa, 2007 to 2010:

[Refer to PDF for image: horizontal bar graph] 

Year: 2007; 
Number of attempted attacks[A]: 19; 
Number of successful attacks[A,B]: 11. 

Year: 2008; 
Number of attempted attacks[A]: 67; 
Number of successful attacks[A,B]: 44. 

Year: 2009; 
Number of attempted attacks[A]: 170; 
Number of successful attacks[A,B]: 48. 

Year: 2010; 
Number of attempted attacks[A]: 154; 
Number of successful attacks[A,B]: 65. 

Source: GAO analysis of International Maritime Bureau data. 

Note: Successful attacks include those that resulted in vessel 
boardings or hijackings. The types of vessels attacked included: bulk 
carriers, container ships, fishing vessels, passenger ships, research 
vessels, roll-on roll-off ships, supply ships, tankers, tugs, and 
yachts. These numbers are based on information provided by individual 
vessels and therefore may be understated. 

[End of figure] 

Figure 5: Total Hostages Captured by Somali Pirates, 2007 to 2010:

[Refer to PDF for image: illustration] 

Year: 2007; 
Total number of hostages: 163. 

Year: 2008; 
Total number of hostages: 815. 

Year: 2009; 
Total number of hostages: 867. 

Year: 2010; 
Total number of hostages: 1,065. 

Source: GAO analysis of International Maritime Bureau data. 

[End of figure]

Figure 6: Successful and Attempted Pirate Attacks off the Coast of 
Somalia, January 2007 to February 2011:

[Refer to PDF for image: 4 illustrated maps] 

Maps for each year, 2007; 2008; 2009; 2010-11. 

Maps depict the location of each attack occurring during the designated 
time period. 

Source: GAO analysis of International Maritime Bureau data (data); Map 
Resources (map). 

[End of figure]

[End of section] 

Related GAO Products:

GAO, Results-Oriented Government: Practices That Can Help Enhance and 
Sustain Collaboration among Federal Agencies, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-06-15] (Washington, D.C.: Oct. 21, 
2005), and [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-904SP].

Maritime Security: Actions Needed to Assess and Update Plan and 
Enhance Collaboration among Partners Involved in Countering Piracy off 
the Horn of Africa. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-856]. Washington, D.C.: September 
24, 2010.

Coast Guard: Deployable Operations Group Achieving Organizational 
Benefits, but Challenges Remain. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-433R]. Washington, D.C.: April 7, 
2010.

Interagency Collaboration: Key Issues for Congressional Oversight of 
National Security Strategies, Organizations, Workforce, and 
Information Sharing. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-904SP]. Washington, D.C.: September 
25, 2009.

Combating Illicit Financing: Treasury's Office of Terrorism and 
Financial Intelligence Could Manage More Effectively to Achieve Its 
Mission. [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-794]. 
Washington, D.C.: September 24, 2009.

Maritime Security: Vessel Tracking Systems Provide Key Information, 
but the Need for Duplicate Data Should Be Reviewed. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-337]. Washington, D.C.: March 17, 
2009.

Maritime Security: National Strategy and Supporting Plans Were 
Generally Well-Developed and Are Being Implemented. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-672]. Washington, D.C.: June 20, 
2008.

Somalia: Several Challenges Limit U.S. and International 
Stabilization, Humanitarian, and Development Efforts. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-351]. Washington, D.C.: February 
19, 2008.

Maritime Security: Federal Efforts Needed to Address Challenges in 
Preventing and Responding to Terrorist Attacks on Energy Commodity 
Tankers. [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-141]. 
Washington, D.C.: December 10, 2007.

Maritime Security: Public Safety Consequences of a Terrorist Attack on 
a Tanker Carrying Liquefied Natural Gas Need Clarification. 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-316]. Washington, D.C.: 
February 22, 2007.

Maritime Security: Information-Sharing Efforts Are Improving. 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-06-933T]. Washington, 
D.C.: July 10, 2006.

Results-Oriented Government: Practices That Can Help Enhance and 
Sustain Collaboration among Federal Agencies. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-06-15]. Washington, D.C.: October 21, 
2005.

[End of section] 

Footnotes: 

[1] See, for example, S.C. Res. 1851, U.N. Doc. S/RES/1851 (Dec. 16, 
2008). 

[2] The White House NSC is the principal forum used by the President 
of the United States for considering national security and foreign 
policy matters with his senior national security advisors and cabinet 
officials and is part of the Executive Office of the President of the 
United States. The function of the NSC is to advise and assist the 
president on national security and foreign policies. The NSC also 
serves as the president's principal arm for coordinating these 
policies among various government agencies. On May 26, 2009, President 
Obama merged the White House staff supporting the Homeland Security 
Council (HSC) and the National Security Council into one National 
Security Staff (NSS). The HSC and NSC each continue to exist in 
statute as bodies supporting the president. 

[3] GAO, Maritime Security: Actions Needed to Assess and Update Plan 
and Enhance Collaboration among Partners Involved in Countering Piracy 
off the Horn of Africa, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-856] (Washington, D.C.: Sept. 24, 
2010).

[4] Sources include documents and statements from U.S. government and 
foreign officials, international organizations, and shipping industry 
representatives involved in counterpiracy operations and analysis. For 
a listing of such sources, see appendix I of our September 2010 report. 

[5] The flag state is the country in which the vessel is registered. 

[6] The U.S. government previously had concluded a prosecution 
arrangement with Kenya to accept transfers of suspected pirates. 
According to officials at State, Kenya terminated its arrangement with 
the United States and other partners in September 2010, but continues 
to consider accepting transfers of suspects on a case-by-case basis. 

[7] The Maritime Security Interagency Policy Committee (MSIPC) is a 
high-level interagency group that is focused on maritime issues.

[8] We did not independently verify the data that support DOD's $64 
million estimate. 

[9] According to Maritime Administration officials and shipping 
industry representatives, challenges remain that have made it 
difficult to for U.S. vessels to transit the area with security teams 
carrying weapons onboard, including restrictions in national or port-
state laws in the region. 

[10] GAO, Interagency Collaboration: Key Issues for Congressional 
Oversight of National Security Strategies, Organizations, Workforce, 
and Information Sharing, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-904SP] (Washington, D.C.: Sept. 25, 
2009). 

[11] The Maritime Operational Threat Response is an interagency 
process used during maritime security incidents. The response is 
coordinated by a Global Maritime Operational Threat Response 
Coordination Cell, a Department of Homeland Security office located at 
the U.S. Coast Guard headquarters, and follows documented protocols 
that, among other things, provide guidance on conducting coordination 
activities.

[12] GAO, Results-Oriented Government: Practices That Can Help Enhance 
and Sustain Collaboration among Federal Agencies, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-06-15] (Washington, D.C.: Oct. 21, 
2005), and [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-904SP]. 

[End of section] 

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