USNS Lewis and Clark (Photo from Navysite.de)
Civilian Ship Repurposed To Help Anti-Piracy Effort -- Stars And Stripes
A civilian cargo ship drafted by the U.S. Navy to fight high-seas piracy has been equipped as the first U.S. vessel that can temporarily hold captured suspects, officials said.
The USNS Lewis and Clark, usually used to haul cargo and ammunition, has been reconfigured to hold as many as 26 suspected pirates — signaling a paradigm shift in the Navy’s counterpiracy missions, which previously did not allow for the capture of such suspects.
An agreement between the U.S. State Department and the Kenyan government signed in mid-January supplied "the missing link" that now lets U.S. military and coalition nations capture suspected pirates and then turn them over to Kenya for prosecution, said Lt. Nathan Christensen, a spokesman with U.S. Naval Forces Central Command/5th Fleet.
The Lewis and Clark joined Combined Task Force 151 as "a staging platform," from which the Navy can launch either of the SH-60 Navy helicopters now assigned to the ship, or serve as a temporary holding center for suspected pirates.
Currently, no one is being held onboard.
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U.S. Navy Apprehends Somali Pirates for the First Time -- ABC News
US Navy arrests 7 suspected pirates in Gulf of Aden -- AFP
Taking on Somalia's pirates -- BBC
Somali 'pirates' face Dutch court -- BBC
Dutch extradite five Somali pirates -- AFP