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Foreign Policy
Articles

Echoes
from the Barbary Coast
The National Interest
Winter 2001/02 Issue No. 66
Echoes from the Barbary
Coast
by Rand H. Fishbein,
Ph.D.
On the day that United
Airlines flight 175 and American Airlines flight 11 lifted off from Bostons
Logan airport, bound for a fiery collision with the twin towers of New
Yorks World Trade Center, a lone observer watched from below. That
observer was the U.S.S. Constitution, the oldest commissioned ship in
the U.S. Navy and an early witness to the ravages of Middle Eastern terrorism.
Launched in 1797,
the U.S.S. Constitution (Old Ironside) and her sister ship,
the U.S.S. Constellation, were built to wage war on the Muslim pirates
operating along North Africas Barbary coast. It was a wild, untamed
region of petty states and warlords whose reach extended deep into the
Mediterranean Sea, from Gibralter to the borders of Egypt. Each owed his
allegiance to the Ottoman Sultan, who demanded that payment of an annual
tribute be made to his treasury in exchange for the protection afforded
by his Army. It was a tidy arrangement, one that worked well for the Sultan
and those who knew their place in the social order.
That the local rulers
were obliged to share a portion of their meager income with Constantinople
meant that new, more assured opportunities for profit would have to be
found. The solution was piracy.
For nearly four centuries
the Barbary states, and the brigands they employed, prowled the Mediterranean
in search of prey. The lumbering merchant vessels of the time were no
match for the Muslim corsairs, built for speed and lightening strikes.
It was a way of life that took its toll on countless merchant ships, most
of which were only lightly armed and had little capacity to resist capture.
The crews who fell
victim to this banditry were destined, often times, for a miserable fate.
After seizing their cargo and scuttling the vessels, the pirates would
then ransom the ill-fated seamen back to their sovereign or the company
that had chartered them. Usually, though, the victims of these maritime
hijackings would languish in fetid prisons, unsure of when, or even if,
they would ever be rescued. Some were sold into slavery.
It was a lucrative
business, one that yielded great riches not only for the pirates, but
also for the Muslim states that gave them refuge. For many of the rulers,
plunder became a mainstay of their survival. In the parlance of our time
this was state-sponsored terrorism pure and simple -- an extortion racket
in which the pirate, the petty states of North Africa and the Ottoman
Empire were all complicit.
Not surprisingly,
the merchant nations of Europe took a dim view of the Muslim pirates.
Even though many had a long tradition of privateering themselves, times
were changing, and such practices were now deemed incompatible with a
world increasingly dependent on commerce over the high seas. Nowhere was
this sentiment expressed more strongly than in America, where a young
Congress, flush with a sense of invincibility after the war of Independence,
readily took up the challenge.
Having championed
the cause of liberty and free trade during years of struggle, members
were infuriated that the sovereignty of Americas commercial fleet
was not being respected. The Royal Navy no longer patrolled the sea lanes
on behalf of the American colonies. United States shipping was now vulnerable
as never before; as the cost in lives and property mounted, the government
concluded that something had to be done. But what should that something
be?
In an effort at peaceful
diplomacy, missions were dispatched to the Barbary states of Tripoli,
Algiers, Morocco and Tunis with a modest proposal: The U.S. would agree
to pay an annual sum to each of the Muslim warlords if they, in turn,
would agree to protect American vessels traveling in their waters.
To most of the politicians
at the time, this seemed like a perfectly reasonable, if not practical,
solution. In the immediate aftermath of the Revolution, the United States
had neither the stomach nor the ability to conduct another war, particularly
one that would have to be waged so far from American shores. After all,
this was the wily Middle East, a region known only to a few intrepid travelers,
and plied by adventure-seekers and businessmen for whom kidnapping and
ransom was a constant occupational hazard.
Moreover, paying tribute
was a time-honored practice shared by both nation states and petty kingdoms,
alike. A clear, business-like approach that did not require the shedding
of blood also blended well with the rational sensibilities of the 18th-century
mind. Piracy was presumed to be one of the many risks that attended foreign
trade. If one could buy protection, even from the rogues themselves, how
was this so different from insuring a ships cargo against a natural
calamity? So the logic ran: Americas interests could be satisfied,
and its honor assuaged, if common ground could be found between the pirates
and their victims.
And so it happened
that agreements were reached between the United States and rulers of the
Barbary Coast. In exchange for cash payments, the rulers pledged to guarantee
the safe passage of American ships and to put a stop to the practice of
maritime kidnapping. As the 18th-century came to a close, Americans were
cautiously optimistic that they had solved the Barbary problem.
By 1801, however,
it became clear that the policy of appeasement had failed. The Pasha of
Tripoli, who five years earlier had been satisfied with a payment of $56,000,
now demanded increasingly larger sums. When they were not forthcoming,
piracy resumed. The same held true for the other Barbary states. The Algerians
received payments from the U.S. totaling $990,000 plus another $585,000
in 1793 to cover the ransom of 11 American ships. At the same time, the
Bey of Tunis received $50,000. These were extraordinary sums for a nation
with a budget of no more than $7 million, but the appetite of the Muslim
states seemed to grow evermore insatiable.
As America soon learned,
a policy of accommodation only encouraged the brigands of the Barbary
Coast to seize more ships and to take more captives. Far from providing
safe passage to American and other foreign vessels, the North African
rulers remained active accomplices to the crime of piracy, taking protection
money while at the same time permitting the banditry to continue.
Things were to change,
however, with the election of Thomas Jefferson. In addition to his reputation
as an author, scholar and principal architect of the Declaration of Independence,
Jefferson also was an outspoken opponent of the practice of tribute. He
saw it not only as an affront to the nations dignity, but also as
an ineffectual response to an abhorrent practice. He argued that ultimately
the policy of appeasement would fail because, in conveying weakness, it
also encouraged further treachery. He was right.
Jeffersons response
to renewed attacks on American shipping was swift and uncompromising.
He dispatched a squadron of three frigates and one sloop to the region.
They were ordered to observe the deteriorating situation and provide whatever
escort was needed to ensure the safety of American merchant vessels. By
the time the frigates arrived, Yusuf Karamanli, the Bey of Tripoli, had
declared war on the United States.
For the next two years
the U.S. Navy conducted running operations against the Barbary pirates,
attacking their corsairs and bombarding the coastal forts that sheltered
them. The battle cry, millions for defense, but not one cent for
tribute (a slogan first used during the XYZ affair of 1798), resonated
with a public tired of being held hostage to bandits and oriental potentates.
The U.S. made repeated
efforts to bring an honorable end to the fighting, but each was spurned
by a defiant Karamanli, apparently convinced tha the U.S. had neither
the stamina nor the pluck for a prolonged war. This could not have been
farther from the truth.
Before long, Jefferson
ordered the U.S.S. Constitution to the Mediterranean in an effort to force
an end to the conflict. Setting sail in 1803, the ship was soon in the
waters off of Tripoli where its powerful cannon were trained on the fortifications
that protected Tripoli harbor. Buildings housing the Pashas stores,
barracks and powder magazines were razed. His palace was laid waste.
The fighting during
these days saw many acts of heroism that established the U.S. Navy as
a force to be reckoned with. A daring raid by Lieutenant Stephen Decatur
and 74 men led to the destruction of the captured frigate U.S.S. Philadelphia
in Tripoli harbor. In another military action, the U.S.S. Intrepid was
loaded with gunpowder, sailed into Tripoli harbor and exploded amid a
multitude of the Pashas ships.
Then, in 1805, the
Constitution supported the landing of Marines on the shores of Tripoli
in an action that was subsequently immortalized in the Marine Corps hymn.
The Americans and their allies destroyed the harbor citadel at Derna that
served as the headquarters for the pirates.
Ultimately, Karamanli
was brought to heel after a plan was hatched by the American consul in
Tunis, William Eaton, to unseat the Pasha and turn over control of the
country to his older brother, Hemet. Fearing his imminent demise, Karamanli
relented and agreed to a treaty that halted raids on American shipping
and led to the repatriation of captured American sailors. It also ended
all U.S. tribute to the Barbary warlords. The agreement was signed aboard
the deck of the U.S.S. Constitution.
For much of the next
decade, American merchant shipping passed through the Mediterranean relatively
unmolested. A series of raids by the pirates operating out of Algiers
led to some minor naval action in 1815, but, effectively, the harassment
of American and other western shipping was ended. Firm action and a determined
policy had brought an end to Americas first brush with Middle Eastern
terrorism.
As Americans struggle
to make sense of the terrorism that struck New York and Washington on
September 11, 2001, it is instructive to remember the war that first brought
the United States into conflict with the countries of the Middle East.
Much like today, it was a contest between two cultures, two iron wills
and two differing views of the rights of sovereign states. It represented
the clash of old tribal societies with the emerging global perspective
of a modern, democratic nation. Then, there was no Israel to cloud the
picture, oil had yet to be discovered in the Middle East, and there was
no American military presence in the region. Nevertheless, it was impossible
for the Muslim states along the Barbary Coast to ignore the presence of
American merchant vessels innocently plying their way through the Mediterranean.
In the campaign of
1801-1805, it was American technology that proved decisive, allowing the
United States to defeat a poorly armed foe with no real ability to project
and sustain power. Ours was a victory of persistence over defiance, steeled
determination over opportunism. In time these were to become the signature
traits of a newly minted American character, one that is slow to anger,
but unrelenting when aroused. In both war and diplomacy, it is an approach
that has defined this nation ever since its inception.
Now as them, America
has discovered that the appeasement of tyrants never leads to the peaceful
resolution of conflict. It is instead an open invitation to would-be agggressors
to test the waters, probe for vulnerabilities and strikewhen the democratic
world lets down its guard. It can be a costly gamble in both lives and
treasure.
When diplomacy backed
by the payment of tribute no longer satisfied the warlords of the Barbary
Coast, the United States was left with little choice but to go to war.
As Jefferson once observed: Were we to give up half our territory
rather than engage in a just war to preserve it, we should not keep the
other long. And he was right.
Two hundred years
later, the reality facing the U.S. is much the same. Successive Administrations
have worked hard to assuage anti-western feeling in the Middle East, first
with promises of trade and technical assistance and later with offers
of foreign aid and security pacts. For a time, these efforts succeeded,
and Washington found it could cultivate moderate, pro-American regimes
throughout the region.
But as history has
shown, with time these regimes have become less and less representative
of the Muslim street and as a consequence, more vulnerable. In places
like Egypt, Jordan and Pakistan, Islamic orthodoxy is once again on the
rise, while in Saudi Arabia the ruling family has fallen out of favor
with those who believe their opulent lifestyle and close ties to America
have corrupted the traditional Wahabi faith. Popular disaffection and
feelings of resentment against the West have spawned a new Middle Eastern
rage, decidedly more lethal and less localized than that of Karamanli.
For the first time,
Middle East terrorists, armed with chemical, biological and possibly radiological
weapons, can strike the American homeland and inflict mass casualties
on its citizens. Horrific though they were, the attacks on New York and
Washington on September 11th could be just the prelude to a far more grim
future. In a very real sense, the pirates of old have become the terrorists
of today, seeking to score a Lilliputian advantage over an unsuspecting,
vulnerable Gulliver.
Once again, America
has no choice but to act swiftly and decisively against an enemy that
is unwilling to accept coexistence on any plane. In fighting this asymmetrical
threat, gunboat diplomacy, applied preemptively if need be, offers the
only practical solution. With so much at stake, waiting passively for
the next attack is not an option.
Not since Saladin
defeated the Crusader Armies at the Horns of Hattin in 1187 has fundamentalist
Islam felt it has had the ability to drive the infidel from the Middle
East. At its disposal are tools and techniques that once were the exclusive
province of the West. Emboldened by successes in Iran, Afghanistan, the
Sudan and, most recently, Southern Lebanon, radicals within the Muslim
World have had little reason to slow their assault. In fact, they have
viewed the Wests timid response to their agitation as an opportunity
to grow stronger and ever bolder.
For Osama bin Laden
and his cohort, the war in Afghanistan is but the latest in a millennial
struggle against the West. It is a drama that will continue to play out
across the world now that Middle Eastern terrorism has attained a global
reach. In the war now being waged against al-Qaeda and the Taliban, nothing
less is at stake than U.S. standing abroad and peace at home. In the fight
between tradition and modernity in the Middle East, it is Americas
resolve that is being tested.
On the day that American
Airlines flight 77 lifted off from Dulles International Airport, bound
for a fiery crash into the west side of the Pentagon, a venerable Washington
landmark stood quietly against the dawn. Located just a block from the
White House, the residence of Lieutenant Stephen Decatur prepared to welcome
visitors as it has since 1818. Here, amidst the mementos of an adventurous
life, its famed occupant regaled guests with stories of piracy on the
high seas, and the heroic deeds he and his crew had performed long ago.
Nearly two hundred
years later, and just two miles away, another drama was unfolding. Only
this time, Middle Eastern terrorism had come home to America, the pirates
were in the skies above, and the heroes were those racing to save their
co-workers from an all-consuming darkness. Their efforts, too, will prove
not to have been in vain.
Rand Fishbein, Ph.D.
is President of Fishbein Associates, Inc., a public-policy consulting
firm based in Potomac, Maryland (www.fishbeinassociates.com). He is a
former Professional Staff Member (Majority) of both the U.S. Senate Defense
Appropriations and Foreign Operations Appropriations subcommittees. Dr.
Fishbein also served as a Special Assistant for National Security Affairs
to Senator Daniel K. Inouye (D-HI). Dr. Fishbein received his Ph.D. from
the Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies of The Johns
Hopkins University.
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