Well, here's the rub as better writers would say: Some channels are now reporting that those unfortunate pirates have perished after being set adrift. If that was because the Russians set them up so that they couldn't make it home no matter how good their seamanship skills are, then that puts us down the slippery slope - if this type of "justice" is handed out more frequently, what prevents the pirates from becoming more desparate and just killing the crews outright or fighting to the death during boarding or attacks by naval forces?
Remember, a lot of factors are keeping those merchie crews relatively safe right now - one of them is the willingness of the shipping industry to pay the ransoms in return for the vessel, cargo and crew. Another other is that the majority of the naval forces to date have not established an ROE that prejuidices the termination of pirates they encounter. If the Russians dispensed this type of vigilantiism, we may be working our way towards the other end of the lethality index. The more it happens, the more the likelihood of a confrontation.
That may appeal to some, but I posit this thought - which would you prefer more of: Confrontations like Moscow University or M/V Taipan? In both cases, the crews were in basitions/saferooms. Change the equation and intermingle the crew in with the hijackers. Does your appetite as the on-scene commander go up or down for a forced entry? Add to that the kicker that this time, they're not kidding - if you don't clear out your VBSS team or helo from the immediate area, they are in fact going to start shooting the crew out of hand instead of just using it as a posturing tool.
The added complexity is that the Russians, like the Chinese, are independent operators. They're not part of the coalition forces and they have somewhat of a free hand to do as they please. Their motivations could be tactical - they really might have felt that they had a good chance of succeeding in an opposed boarding especially with the crew dispositioned as such. But I fear that this might have been more than a bit of political posturing as well, the Russian Bear showing it's claws are still a force to contend with - part of the larger resurgence of Russian interest and influence in world affairs. The former is understandable, manageable and logical. The latter is not. If it's the latter that's driving the decisions to confront, they're putting the merchie crews and the boarding teams at additional risk.
Lethal comfrontations involving the"coalition" have already occurred. I cite the marine snipers on the fantail of a US warship as they rescued a US merchant skipper. The status quo ante is most certainkly moving to the quid pro quo post and, at some time in the near future, the proverbial balloon is going to go up to a very considerable height.
Is there a member of the aforementioned coalition ready, willing and able to assume long-term responsibility for pirates taken in the act, as it were? Possibly, the practice of handing off pirate prisoners to nearby states will have to cease, and these wannabe ruffians will then become pawns in the great exchange game. Sadly, I rather suspect that their lives are of little value to the true manipulators we discussed earlier. However, it will be the coalition which will then be seen as changing the rules of the game in a humane and positive manner...while just about any counter move by the pirate "bosses" must eiher match the humane approach or shift into the realm of true nastiness.
Russia, of course, will do what Russia does. Ditto China. To what extent this will put the lives of merchant sailors in further jeopardy will have to be seen. Like it or not, though, it may very well encourage more merchantmen to equip themselves for determined responsive action.
In a considerably earlier post, I suggested considering the interdiction of all the on-shore communications on which the pirates rely. This most certainly would involve the destruction of roads and other transportation means as well as intrusion on electronics. An effective embargo on in-shore traffic would also be part of the picture.
Naturally, this would also require the co-operative participation of regional authorities, however fractured their capabilities might be. What bets in that respect?
Loke it or no, the coalition and others would have to guarantee exclusive fishing rights to local Somali fleets within defined zones (which themselves would be patrolled by coalition vessels to prevent and/or punish foreign poaching).
I know, I know. It sounds like handing somebody a band-aid while whacking him over the head with a two-by-four.....so it would be nice to hear some better operational options.