Maritime Insecurity

By Commander Kamal-Deen Ali

Commander Kamal-Deen Ali is the Director of Research at the Ghana Armed Forces Command and Staff College and the Executive Director of the Centre for Maritime Law and Security (CEMLAWS) Africa.  His latest book is Maritime Security in the Gulf of Guinea: Prospects and Challenges (Leiden & Boston: Brill/Nijhoff 2015).

The sea lanes of the Gulf of Guinea (GoG) are endowed with valuable resources and are an important artery of global trade. It connects maritime traffic from multiple continents due to its central location, particularly its proximity to Europe and America. Historically, the geostrategic importance of the GoG made it the center of intense European scramble, expansionism, and colonialism. This has endured, especially in the last two decades, because of increasing global energy dependency on the region’s offshore hydrocarbon reserves. Thus, the maritime profile of the GoG and the larger Atlantic Ocean system are not just global commons, but are equally making enormous contribution to the social-economic development of the littoral (coastal) states, many of which are expanding the economic derivatives of their maritime estate.  

The opportunities of the GoG are, however, being drowned in the waves of multiple insecurities. The maritime environment is epitomized by complexity and uncertainty—making planning, projections, risk assessment, and risk mitigation very difficult.  This reality is often masked or lost in the minds of national and international policy analysts. Of course the shipping community and key interests in the offshore oil and gas industry cannot be oblivious to this incessant insecurity. Yet, the “awareness” tends to be sectorial and bereft of the birds-eye view that should underpin investor decisions and policy responses.

“The Cipher Brief has become the most popular outlet for former intelligence officers; no media outlet is even a close second to The Cipher Brief in terms of the number of articles published by formers.” —Sept. 2018, Studies in Intelligence, Vol. 62

Access all of The Cipher Brief’s national security-focused expert insight by becoming a Cipher Brief Subscriber+ Member.

Subscriber+


Related Articles

How Safe Would We Be Without Section 702?

SUBSCRIBER+EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW — A provision of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act that has generated controversy around fears of the potential for abuse has proven to be crucial […] More

Search

Close