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To: coug who wrote (78981)2/22/2009 5:17:54 AM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 89467
 
Obama's 'Seven Days in May' Moment

by Robert Parry

Published on Saturday, February 21, 2009 by ConsortiumNews.com

Only one month into his presidency, Barack Obama is finding himself confronting not only George W. Bush's left-behind crises but an array of influential enemies in the military, financial circles, the political world and the media - determined to thwart Obama's agenda for "change."

Though Obama has maintained his trademark equanimity in the face of this resistance, he appears to be sensing the rising tide of dangers around him. After his failed gestures of bipartisanship on the economic stimulus bill, he pointedly took his case to the country in campaign-style town meetings.

"You know, I am an eternal optimist," Obama told a group of columnists about his rebuffed outreach to Republicans. "That doesn't mean I'm a sap."

Yet even if he's no "sap," Obama must find within himself the toughness of extraordinary leadership and the resourcefulness to defeat or neutralize powerful enemies if he is to succeed. His initial hopes of a "post-partisan" era already have been shown to be naïve, even dangerously so.

Obama faces near-unanimous Republican opposition to his strategy for salvaging the U.S. economy (and a GOP readiness to use the Senate filibuster at every turn); right-wing talk radio and cable-TV personalities are stoking a populist anger against him; Wall Street executives are miffed at limits on their compensation; and key military commanders are resisting his promised drawdown in Iraq.

In addition, former Bush administration officials are making clear that they will fight any effort to hold them accountable for torture and other war crimes, denouncing it as a "witch-hunt" that will be met with an aggressive counterattack accusing Obama of endangering American security.

It is not entirely inconceivable that Obama's powerful enemies could coalesce into a kind of "Seven Days in May" moment, the novel and movie about an incipient coup aimed at a President who was perceived as going too far against the country's political-military power structure.

Far more likely, however, Obama's fate could parallel Jimmy Carter's, a President whose reelection bid in 1980 was opposed by a phalanx of powerful enemies at home and abroad, including disgruntled CIA officers, angry Cold Warriors, and young neoconservatives allied with Israel's right-wing Likud leaders furious over Carter's Middle East peace initiatives.

Carter little understood the breadth, depth and clout of the opposition he faced - and the full story of how his presidency was sabotaged has never been told.

Hobbling Obama

The current Republican strategy appears to be to hobble the Obama administration out of the gate, have it stumble forward through a deteriorating economy and collapse before the 2010 and 2012 elections, enabling the GOP to retake control of the government.

However, Obama is not without resources of his own. A brilliant orator and clever politician, he won a decisive electoral victory in November and drew 1.8 million to his Inauguration on a frigid day in Washington on Jan. 20. The Democrats also have sizable majorities in the House and Senate.

There also are some media voices - like Paul Krugman, Keith Olbermann and Rachel Maddow - and much of the "Net roots" urging Obama to resist the pressures and stick to his guns.

But most of the U.S. news media continues to tilt to the Right - from the Washington Post's neoconservative editorialists and CNBC's millionaire commentators to the right-wing ideologues of Fox News, Rush Limbaugh and the Wall Street Journal.

How this right-wing media infrastructure can stoke a sudden brushfire was displayed Thursday when CNBC reporter Rick Santelli - on the trading floor of the Chicago commodities exchange - fumed about Obama's plan to help up to nine million Americans avoid foreclosure.

Santelli suggested that Obama set up a Web site to get public feedback on whether "we really want to subsidize the losers' mortgages." Then, gesturing to the wealthy traders in the pit, Santelli declared, "this is America" and asked "how many of you people want to pay for your neighbor's mortgage that has an extra bathroom and can't pay their bills, raise their hand."

Amid a cacophony of boos aimed at Obama's housing plan, Santelli turned back to the camera and said, "President Obama, are you listening?"

Though Santelli's behavior in a different context - say, a denunciation of George W. Bush near the start of his presidency - would surely have resulted in a suspension or firing, Santelli's anti-Obama rant was hailed as "the Chicago tea party," made Santelli an instant hero across right-wing talk radio, and was featured proudly on NBC's Nightly News.

One can only imagine the future reaction from CNBC's commentators - and Santelli's rich traders - if Obama decides to nationalize some of America's giant insolvent banks or if his administration imposes stricter limits on Wall Street's executive compensation.

Military Opposition

But Obama's dilemma is not just that he is offending the plutocrats of the U.S. financial sector, or that he faces Republican resistance in Congress, or that he's running headlong into the Right's potent media machine.

Obama also will have to take on key leaders of the U.S. military. Part of this is his own fault for listening to centrist Democrats who urged him to retain President Bush's Defense Secretary Robert Gates, one of Obama's high-profile gestures of bipartisanship.

Though well-liked in Washington power circles - and possessing a disarming style - Gates has a history as a hawkish policymaker who will undercut a President he sees as going soft. As a young CIA officer, Gates was linked to the behind-the-scenes sabotage of Carter in 1980.

When Bush nominated Gates to replace Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld in November 2006, Official Washington (and many Democrats) assumed that the move meant that Bush was adopting a more pragmatic approach to Iraq and would soon begin a phased withdrawal.

What Washington insiders misunderstood was that Rumsfeld had become a relative dove on Iraq and opposed a troop "surge." Meanwhile, Gates - both as a member of the bipartisan Iraq Study Group and in a meeting with Bush in Crawford, Texas - was supporting an escalation of troops in Iraq.

As Bush told Bob Woodward in an interview for the book, The War Within, Gates "said he thought that [a troop increase] would be a good idea." Bush added: "In November [2006], I'm beginning to think about not fewer troops, but more troops. And, interestingly enough, the man I'm talking to in Crawford feels the same way."

To open the door for the "surge" of about 30,000 additional U.S. troops, Bush also ousted his two field commanders, Gens. John Abizaid and George Casey, replacing them with pro-surge generals, David Petraeus and Ray Odierno, who remain the top two commanders today.

Although Obama ran for President on a platform calling for withdrawal of U.S. combat forces from Iraq within 16 months, his decision to retain Gates - announced in late November 2008 - apparently sent a message to Petraeus and Odierno that the incoming President could be persuaded to slow the withdrawal pace and possibly agree to a permanent U.S. military presence.

Instead of taking Obama's 16-month timetable seriously, Petraeus and Odierno began outlining a scheme for a modest withdrawal of about 7,000 to 8,000 troops in the first six months of 2009 - bringing the total down to levels that still might be higher than those before the surge two years ago - and then keeping the numbers there until at least June 2009 when additional judgments would be made, according to a New York Times report in mid-December 2008.

‘Stay the Course'

Rather than "change you can believe in," the generals seemed to have in mind something closer to Bush's "stay the course." They also appeared to have little respect for the "status of forces agreement" signed with the Iraqi government, calling for U.S. military withdrawal from the cities by June 30, 2009, and a complete American pullout by the end of 2011.

Odierno, top commander of U.S. forces in Iraq, said American combat troops will remain in Iraqi cities after June 30, 2009, though called "transition teams" advising Iraqi forces. Col. James Hutton, a spokesman for Odierno, later amplified on the general's comments, characterizing U.S. troops staying behind in the cities as "enablers to Iraqi security forces."

Iraqi critics of the status-of-forces agreement took note of these American word games of redefining U.S. troops as "transition teams" and "enablers."

"This confirmed our view that U.S. forces will never withdraw from the cities next summer, and they will never leave Iraq by the end of 2011," said Ahmed al-Masoudi, a spokesman for a Shiite parliamentary bloc close to radical Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr.

As for the final pullout deadline of Dec. 31, 2011, Odierno observed that it, too, could be waived. "Three years is a very long time," he told reporters.

Washington Post military writer Thomas E. Ricks picked up a similar message from Odierno and other military leaders during interviews for Ricks's new book, The Gamble.

In an Outlook piece for the Post, Ricks wrote: "The widespread expectation inside the U.S. military is that we will have tens of thousands of troops [in Iraq] for years to come. Indeed, in his last interview with me last November, Gen. Raymond T. Odierno, the top U.S. commander in Iraq, told me that he would like to see about 30,000 troops still there in 2014 or 2015."

Reflecting this consensus within the U.S. military, Ricks wrote, "I worry now that we are once again failing to imagine what we have gotten ourselves into and how much more we will have to pay in blood, treasure, prestige and credibility. I don't think the Iraq war is over, and I worry that there is more to come than any of us suspect."

Ricks quoted Col. Peter Mansoor, a top aide to Gen. Petraeus, as saying: "This is not a campaign that can be won in one or two years. ... The United States has got to be willing to underwrite this effort for many, many years to come. I can't put it in any brighter colors than that."

Resistance to Obama

In other words, some top U.S. field commanders took the measure of the incoming Commander in Chief and concluded that they could roll him. When Petraeus and Gates met with Obama on Jan. 21, they reportedly were surprised when he insisted that they submit a plan that would phase out U.S. combat forces in 16 months.

Citing two sources familiar with the meeting, investigative reporter Gareth Porter wrote that the Pentagon brass was upset with Obama's refusal to back down, but they still saw the meeting as essentially an opening skirmish in the battle to reverse the 16-month withdrawal pledge.

"The decision to override Petraeus's recommendation [for a longer stay in Iraq] has not ended the conflict between the President and senior military officers over troop withdrawal," Porter wrote. "There are indications that Petraeus and his allies in the military and the Pentagon, including Gen. Ray Odierno, now the top commander in Iraq, have already begun to try to pressure Obama to change his withdrawal policy.

"A network of senior military officers is also reported to be preparing to support Petraeus and Odierno by mobilizing public opinion against Obama's decision."

According to Porter, that group includes retired Gen. Jack Keane, who was a leading proponent of the Iraq troop "surge" and a longtime friend of Petraeus.

Obama also can expect fierce resistance from the Right if he pushes ahead with plans to rein in Pentagon spending. Already, Washington Post columnist Robert Kagan, a prominent neocon, has written a column entitled, "No Time to Cut Defense."

And the defenders of the Bush administration are gearing up for a full-scale political war if Obama's Justice Department moves forward on criminal investigations relating to Bush's authorization of torture and other crimes committed under the umbrella of the "war on terror."

So, just one month into his presidency, Obama finds himself surrounded by a growing A-list of powerful enemies.

This may not become his "Seven Days in May" moment, but he can be sure that his adversaries want him - like Jimmy Carter - to be a one-term President.



To: coug who wrote (78981)3/11/2009 7:28:52 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 89467
 
Living in Motels, the Hidden Homeless
_______________________________________________________________

By ERIK ECKHOLM
The New York Times
March 11, 2009

COSTA MESA, Calif. — Greg Hayworth, 44, graduated from Syracuse University and made a good living in his home state, California, from real estate and mortgage finance. Then that business crashed, and early last year the bank foreclosed on the house his family was renting, forcing their eviction.

Now the Hayworths and their three children represent a new face of homelessness in Orange County: formerly middle income, living week to week in a cramped motel room.

“I owe it to my kids to get out of here,” Mr. Hayworth said, recalling the night they saw their motel neighbor drag a half-naked woman out the door while he beat her.

As the recession has deepened, longtime workers who lost their jobs are facing the terror and stigma of homelessness for the first time, including those who have owned or rented for years. Some show up in shelters and on the streets, but others, like the Hayworths, are the hidden homeless — living doubled up in apartments, in garages or in motels, uncounted in federal homeless data and often receiving little public aid.

The Hayworths tried staying with relatives but ended up last September at the Costa Mesa Motor Inn, one of more than 1,000 families estimated to be living in motels in Orange County alone. They are among a lucky few: a charity pays part of the $800-a-month charge while he tries to recreate a career.

The family, including their 15-year-old daughter, share a single room and sleep on two beds. With most possessions in storage, they eat in two shifts, on three borrowed plates. His wife has health problems and, like many others, they cannot muster the security deposit and other upfront costs of renting a new place.

Motel families exist by the hundreds in Denver, along freeway-bypassed Route 1 on the Eastern Seaboard, and in other cities from Chattanooga, Tenn., to Portland, Ore. But they are especially prevalent in Orange County, which has high rents, a shortage of public housing and a surplus of older motels that once housed Disneyland visitors.

“The motels have become the de facto low-income housing of Orange County,” said Wally Gonzales, director of Project Dignity, one of dozens of small charities and church groups that have emerged to assist families, usually helping a few dozen each and relying on donations of food, clothing and toys.

In the past, motel families here were mainly drawn from the chronically struggling. In 1998, an expose by The Orange County Register of neglected motel children spurred creation of city task forces and vows of help. But in recent months, schools, churches and charities report a different sort of family showing up. “People asking for help are from a wider demographic range than we’ve seen in the past, middle-income families,” said Terry Lowe, director of community services in Anaheim, Calif.

The motels range from those with tattered rugs and residents who abuse alcohol and drugs to newer places with playgrounds and kitchenettes With names like the Covered Wagon Motel and the El Dorado Inn, they look like any other modestly priced stopover inland from the ritzy beach towns. But walk inside and the perception immediately changes.

In the evening, the smell of pasta sauce cooked on hotplates drifts through half-open doors; in the morning, children leave to catch school buses. Families of three, six or more are squeezed into a room, one child doing homework on a bed, jostled by another watching television. Children rotate at bedtime, taking their turns on the floor. Some, like the Malpicas, in a motel in Anaheim, commandeer a closet for baby cribs.

The Garza family moved to the Costa Mesa Inn in October, after the husband, Johnny, lost his job at Target, his wife, Tamara, lost her job at Petco, and they were evicted from their two-bedroom rental. Their 9-year-old daughter now shares a bed with two younger brothers, toys and schoolbooks piled on the floor.

Rental aid from federal and county programs reach only a small fraction of needy families, said Bob Cerince, coordinator for homeless and motel residents services in Anaheim.

President Obama’s stimulus package may give hope to more people and blunt the projected rise of families who could end up in motels and shelters, said Nan Roman, president of the National Alliance to End Homelessness in Washington. The package allows $1.5 billion for homeless prevention, including help with rent and security deposits. Schools have made special efforts to help children in displaced families stay in class, and some send social workers to connect families with counseling services and food aid.

Wendy Dallin, the liaison for the homeless in one of Anaheim’s seven school districts, said that in the last three months she had learned of 38 newly homeless families, bringing the total she knows of in her district to 376. About 48 of those families are living in motels, she said, with the rest in shelters, renting a room or garage, staying with relatives or living in cars. At the same time, in California’s budget crisis, some school social workers are being laid off.

By necessity, most cities here have been lax in enforcing occupancy codes. Still, a source of turmoil for motel families is a California rule that after 28 days, residents are considered tenants, gaining legal rights of occupancy. Some motels force families to move every month, while others make families stay in a different room for a day or two.

Many motel residents have at least one working parent and pay $800 to $1,200 a month for a room. Yet even those with jobs can become mired in motel life for years because of bad credit ratings and the difficulty of saving the extra months’ rent and security deposits to secure an apartment.

Paris Andre Navarro, 47, knows how hard it can be to climb back. She and her husband used to have good jobs and an apartment in Garden Grove, near Anaheim. But they have spent the last three years with their 11-year-old daughter in the El Dorado Inn.

The bottom fell out when her husband’s medical problems forced him to leave his job as a computer technician and her home-care job ended. They were evicted and moved into the motel, and she started working the night shift at Target.

Last year, when her husband started a telemarketing job, they thought they might escape. That hope evaporated when her hours at Target were cut in half. Between the $241 weekly rent, the cost of essentials and a $380 car payment, they cannot save.

“Now we’re just living paycheck to paycheck,” Ms. Navarro said.

Their daughter, Crystal, tries to sound stoical. “What I miss most is having a pet,” she said. The motel does not allow pets, so she gave away her cat and kittens.

Greg Hayworth, whose family has spent six dispiriting months in the Costa Mesa Inn, tried working in sales but has had trouble finding a lasting job. Paul Leon, a former nurse who formed the Illumination Foundation to aid motel families, has promised to help with a security deposit when the Hayworths feel ready to move out.

Mr. Hayworth’s teenage daughter has had the roughest time because of the lack of privacy. She is too embarrassed to bring friends home, and is uncomfortable dressing in front of her brothers, who are 10 and 11. Not long ago, she was jumped at school by classmates who mocked her for living in a motel.

“I’d promised my daughter that we’d be out of here by her birthday,” Mr. Hayworth said. “But that came last week, and we’re still here.”

“It really hurt me the other day,” he added. “My son came home and asked, ‘Are we homeless’? I didn’t know what to say.”

Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company



To: coug who wrote (78981)3/12/2009 10:45:42 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 89467
 
Fighting Back in America's 30-Year Class War

by Jim Hightower /

Published on Thursday, March 12, 2009 by Creators Syndicate

David Brooks was upset. You can tell when this conservative and rather-professorial columnist for The New York Times gets upset, because his words almost sag with disappointment - you can practically hear the tsk-tsks and the heavy sighs in each paragraph. When most commentators on the right see things that offend them, they get snarling mad; Brooks gets sad.

What saddened Brother Brooks this time was Barack Obama's budget. In a recent column, he noted that the $3.6 trillion total is "gargantuan" (we columnists are paid to make keen observations like that), but what really upset him was that the tax burden to finance universal health care, energy independence and other big initiatives in Obama's budget "is predicated on a class divide."

With heavy sighs, Brooks expressed great despair that "no new burdens will fall on 95 percent of the American people," adding with a tsk-tsk that "all the costs will be borne by the rich and all benefits redistributed downward."

Leaving aside the fact that such things as health-care coverage for every American and a booming green energy economy will benefit the rich as well as the rest of us, Brooks' column was echoing a prevalent theme in all of the right's attacks on Obama's economic proposals: Class War! Indeed, the Times' columnist even suggested (sadly) that Obama's budget was fundamentally un-American: "The U.S. has never been a society riven by class resentment," he sniffed.

Whoa, professor, get a grip! Better yet, get a good history book (Howard Zinn's "A People's History of the United States" would be an eye-opening place to start). While our schools, media and politicians rarely mention it, America's history is replete with class rebellions against various moneyed elites who act as though they're the top dogs and ordinary folks are just a bunch of fire hydrants.

Check out the Tenant Uprisings of 1766, Shay's Rebellion in the 1780s, the Workingmen's Movement of the 1830s ... on into the post-Civil War populist movement that confronted the robber barons, the bloody labor battles at Haymarket and Homestead in the late 1800s, Coxey's Army in 1894, the Bonus March of 1932, the Penny Auctions by farmers in the 1920s and '30s, the rise of the CIO in the Depression years ...and right into modern-day fights involving environmental justice, fair trade, women's pay, workplace safety, tenant rights, janitors, farmworkers, union-busting, bank redlining, consumer gouging, clean elections and so forth.

If Brooks & Co. are so isolated as to imagine that our citizenry harbors no class resentment, they should go to any Chat & Chew Cafe across the land and listen to the locals express their innermost feelings about today's greedheaded Wall Streeters who wrecked our economy for their own enrichment. There is a fury in the countryside toward these plutocratic purse-snatchers who are being allowed to keep their exalted executive positions, draw fat paychecks and get trillions of dollars in bailout money from common taxpayers. People don't merely resent them, they yearn for the legalization of tar-and-feathering!

Yet, Brooks and his political brethren are now bemoaning the plight of the plutocrats, assailing the "redistributionists" who talk of spreading America's wealth. In his column, Brooks cried out for a conservative vision of "a nation in which we're all in it together - in which burdens are shared broadly, rather than simply inflicted on a small minority."

Do we look like we have suckerwrappers around our heads? Where were these tender-hearted champions of sharing throughout the last 30 years, when that same "small minority" was absolutely giddy with redistributionist fervor - redistributing upward, that is?

With the full support of their political hirelings from both parties, this minority created tax dodges, trade scams, corporate subsidies, deregulation fantasies, financial hustles, de-unionization schemes, bankruptcy loopholes and other mechanisms that turned government into a redistributionist bulldozer, shoving wealth from the workaday majority into their own pockets.

Brooks might have missed this 30-year class war, but most folks have been right in the thick of it and are not the least bit squeamish about supporting a national effort to right those wrongs. After all, even a dog knows the difference between being stumbled over - and being kicked.

© 2009 Creators Syndicate

National radio commentator, writer, public speaker, and author of the book, Swim Against The Current: Even A Dead Fish Can Go With The Flow, Jim Hightower has spent three decades battling the Powers That Be on behalf of the Powers That Ought To Be - consumers, working families, environmentalists, small businesses, and just-plain-folks.



To: coug who wrote (78981)4/13/2009 1:54:30 AM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 89467
 
Snipers Kill Somali Pirates, Free American Captain

By Todd Shields and Jeff Bliss

April 13 (Bloomberg) -- Snipers firing from the fantail of a U.S. destroyer shot dead three pirates holding captive an American cargo-ship captain and ended a five-day ordeal that unfolded amid a surge in piracy near Somalia.

Richard Phillips, 53, master of the Maersk Alabama, was untied, pulled from a lifeboat in the Indian Ocean off the coast of East Africa yesterday and brought unharmed aboard the USS Bainbridge, said Vice Admiral Bill Gortney, the commander of U.S. Naval Forces Central Command.

The Maersk Alabama was the first American-operated ship to be seized in a spate of hijackings in the waters off Somalia, which has not had a central government for more than 17 years. Pirates attacked 165 ships last year between Yemen and Somalia, seizing 43 of them for ransom.

The Navy acted because Phillips’s life was threatened by pirates who were aiming weapons at him, Gortney said. The on- scene commander “had seconds” to make a decision, he said.

“The captain’s life was in immediate danger,” said Gortney, who spoke by teleconference from his headquarters in Bahrain. “The pirates were armed with AK-47s and had small- caliber pistols, and they were pointing the AK-47 at the captain.”

A fourth pirate who had been aboard the Bainbridge conducting negotiations may be taken to Kenya or the U.S. for trial, Gortney said.

Phillips had been held aboard the lifeboat since April 8, when he persuaded his reluctant crew to abandon him to the pirates. The Maersk Alabama steamed on to the Kenyan port of Mombasa, where its crew celebrated upon hearing of Phillips’s release. Phillips, who was taken to another U.S. vessel, had a shower, a change of clothes and a conversation with his family in Vermont, according to Gortney and a Navy statement.

Model for Americans

President Barack Obama said in a statement, “I share the country’s admiration for the bravery of Captain Phillips and his selfless concern for his crew. His courage is a model for all Americans.”

Obama had given standing orders for a rescue effort if Phillips’s life was in danger, Gortney said. After the rescue, Obama called Phillips, his wife and several top military officials, according to the White House press office.

During Phillips’s captivity, the Navy sent a small boat to and from the lifeboat to supply food, water and medicine, Gortney said. He said officials conducted “hostage negotiations” rather than discussions over a possible ransom.

Threatened With Death

“They were threatening throughout to kill the captain,” Gortney said.

The Bainbridge had the lifeboat under tow shortly after 7 p.m. local time, about an hour after sunset, according to Gortney and a Navy press release. The vessel was 25 to 30 meters away when special-forces commandos opened fire, Gortney said.

“We pay a lot for their training,” he said of the snipers. “We got a good return on their investment.”

Phillips was untied, put into a lifejacket, taken by small craft first to the Bainbridge and then flown to the amphibious assault ship USS Boxer, Gortney said.

On April 8, the Maersk Alabama’s crew managed to repulse the pirates, who spirited the captain away onto the lifeboat. Phillips jumped overboard two days ago in an effort to escape, only to be recaptured after being shot at, Gortney said.

The Maersk Alabama is operated by the Maersk Line, a Norfolk, Virginia-based U.S. unit of A.P. Moeller-Maersk A/S, which is based in Copenhagen.

Pumping Fists

After hearing of their captain’s release, some of the Maersk Alabama’s crew came out on the ship’s deck in Mombasa cheering, pumping fists into the air and waving American flags.

“It’s a big relief,” William Rios, a crew member from New York City, said as he spoke with his wife by cell phone.

Maersk Chief Executive Officer John Reinhart called the rescue a “good moment.” He said he spoke with Phillips, who told him, “John, I’m just a byline. The real heroes are the Navy, the SEALs who have brought me home.” SEALs are the Navy’s special-warfare commandos.

Reinhart also spoke earlier with the captain’s wife, Andrea, and said she was relieved and thankful for her husband’s safe return. Reinhart made the comments in a televised news conference from Norfolk, Virginia.

Phillips lives with his family in Underhill, Vermont. He graduated from the Massachusetts Maritime Academy in 1979.

Easter Egg

Gortney said a message from home told Phillips that “your family is saving a chocolate Easter egg for you, unless your son eats it first.”

Gortney added: “Well, Mrs. Phillips, keep your son away from those Easter eggs. His dad’s headed home.”

In a separate incident, an Italian tugboat was hijacked by pirates in the Gulf of Aden two days ago. The Buccaneer, a tugboat with a crew of 16, was seized as it was towing two barges, said Shona Lowe, a spokeswoman for NATO’s Northwood Maritime Command Center near London. Ten of the crew are Italian nationals, she said.

The Alabama is the first U.S.-flagged vessel hijacked since a maritime protection corridor was set up in the region in August, according to the U.S. Navy.

“We remain resolved to halt the rise of piracy in this region,” Obama said in a statement. “To achieve that goal, we must continue to work with our partners to prevent future attacks, be prepared to interdict acts of piracy and ensure that those who commit acts of piracy are held accountable for their crimes.”

The Bainbridge was 300 nautical miles (560 kilometers) from the Maersk Alabama when the cargo ship was assaulted, Gortney said.

“It’s such a vast area,” he added. “We simply do not have enough resources” to prevent all attacks. There have been “18 or 19” attempts on ships in the past three weeks, he said.

Somalia has lacked a functioning central government since the ouster of Mohamed Said Barre in 1991.

To contact the reporters on this story: Jeff Bliss in Washington at jbliss@bloomberg.net; Todd Shields in Washington at tshields3@bloomberg.net

Last Updated: April 12, 2009 22:39 EDT