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European leaders back naval mission to stem Mediterranean migration

The European Union is seeking UN approval for using military force against human traffickers in Libya. Critics say targeting vessels isn't a comprehensive response to the tide of asylum seekers. 

By Michael Holtz, Staff writer

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European leaders agreed on Monday to use naval forces to go after human trafficking networks that are sending tens of thousands of migrants across the Mediterranean from North Africa.

EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini said she expected the naval operation to begin next month ahead of the summer high season for migrant sailings.

"As summer comes, more people are traveling and I'd like to have the operation in place as soon as possible," Ms. Mogherini said, according to The Associated Press.

The program is intended to stop smugglers before or shortly after they leave the shores of Libya for southern Italy and Malta. EU forces would then return migrants to their ports of departure and destroy the boats used to transport them.

Ensuring widespread support for the strategy involved 鈥渄elicate packaging and diplomacy,鈥 given the sensitivity in some countries toward the use of military force, according to The New York Times.聽The 28-nation bloc is still seeking a United Nations Security Council resolution that would provide a legal basis for destroying the smugglers鈥 boats.

"The fundamental point is not so much the destruction of the vessels but it is the destruction of the business model of the traffickers," Mogherini said.

While Mogherini stressed the need to cooperate with officials in Libya 鈥 especially if European navies are to operate within its territorial waters 鈥 the collapse of its government makes that a difficult proposition.

Chris Morris, a Europe correspondent for BBC News, writes that 鈥渢here will need to be an effort to disrupt the onshore operations of the smuggling gangs if the mission is to achieve its objectives.鈥 He continues:

The tougher stand against human smuggling comes amid a sharp spike in migration to Europe. The International Organization for Migration estimates that nearly 1,830 migrants 鈥 many from the war-torn Middle East and parts of Africa 鈥 have died on the sea route this year compared to 207 in the same period last year. More than 10,000 have been rescued alive from the deadly waters.

Critics argue that the new plan does little to address the underlying causes of mass migration.

鈥淚t鈥檚 not clear to me that the ministers understand the complexities of migration dynamics involved,鈥 Elizabeth Collett, the director of the Migration Policy Institute Europe, told the Times. 鈥淢ilitary operations in the Mediterranean are only really likely to have any impact as one very small piece in a far more comprehensive strategy to address smuggling.鈥

Julia O鈥機onnell Davidson, a research fellow on modern slavery at the University of Nottingham, writes in an opinion article for The Guardian that any collateral damage caused by naval intervention would be inexcusable.