April 16, 2007:
Whatever happened to the time-honored soldier's creed of refusing to
cooperate with the enemy and, if captured, giving them only your name rank and
serial number? In light of the recent incident involving the kidnapping of 15 British Royal Marines and sailors by
Iran, military commanders may need to reevaluate their training procedures to
make it clear what is expected of personnel if they are in danger of being
captured, and if captured, how they should conduct themselves. Many people
especially, in Great Britain have expressed concern about the actions of the
kidnapped marines and sailors during their 13-day captivity and the inaction
that lead to their capture in the first place. It seems apparent to most that
the marines and sailors were clearly within their right to defend themselves,
as they were performing a lawful search of a suspicious vessel in international
waters. They, however, chose to surrender without a fight while their mother
ship the HMS Cornwall was ordered to stand by and do nothing. British
authorities justified the actions of ship and the boarding party bu pointing
out that a state of war does not exist between Great Britain and Iran.
Therefore, defending themselves by instigating a firefight with the Iranians
would have been inappropriate. The British seemingly decided to surrender now
and live to fight, or surrender again, another day.
In defense of the kidnapped sailors and marines,
the Iranians did subject them to significant psychological pressure including a
mock execution. However they clearly cooperated with the Iranians before the
camera and in one case with a written "apology". This leads to the conclusion
that the British commanders and government leaders failed these sailors and
marines. No one involved seemed prepared for the possibility that the Iranians
might attempt a kidnapping, even though in July of 2004 eight other marines and
sailors were taken and held for three days. It is also obvious that the
captured personnel had woefully inadequate training on how to conduct
themselves in captivity.
A U. S. Navy Admiral recently indicated that if the
incident had involved American sailors and Marines it would have had a very
different ending. That is, Americans
would have died fighting died rather than be captured. The Admiral may want to
reflect on the incident in April of 2001 when a U. S. Navy EP-3 Aries spy plane
was accidentally rammed by a Chinese F-8 fighter plane off the Chinese coast in
international airspace. The heavily damaged plane made an emergency landing on
the Chinese island of Hainan. Some people suggest that the pilot and crew of
that aircraft should have bailed out or ditched in the sea to avoid the
aircraft and some of its secret electronic spy gear from falling into the hand on a
potential enemy. And then there's the Pueblo incident in 1968, where North
Koreans seized a U.S. spy ship in indisputably international waters, and held
the crew of 82 for ten months. They
still have the ship. And, like the Iranians, the North Koreans forced some of
the American sailors to perform for the media. Then again, because of the
Pueblo incident, the U.S. Navy has vowed never to let it happen again. -- Tim
Spencer