Off the coast of Somalia, a sailor on board the French ship Sirocco observes two dhows through binoculars, establishing they are both bona fide fishing vessels.
If the coast of the autonomous region of Puntland is still home to pirates, they take to the seas a lot less frequently than they used to.
The presence of an international armada and the deterrents put in place by shipping companies have reduced piracy off the Somali coast and in the Gulf of Aden to practically nothing. But the threat is still very present.
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They have managed to seize a handful of dhows, with the aim of using them as mother ships for launching attacks on other vessels.
The Sirocco has not made any major catches either in its four months as Atalanta's flagship, just five pirates arrested in mid-January on board an Indian dhow which they had seized in a vain attempt to board a tanker.
Since then the ships that make up Atalanta have confined themselves to patrolling, keeping a watchful eye on the zone and helping any vessels in difficulty. A South Korean fisherman, injured in a fishing accident underwent surgery on one of Atalanta's vessels.
"The economic model of piracy has been broken," explained Etienne de Poncins, the head of EUCAP-Nestor, a European Union mission whose aim is to beef up the capacity of the countries in this zone (Somalia, Djibouti, Kenya, Seychelles and Tanzania) and enable them to carry out surveillance of their own territorial waters.
When Somali piracy was at its peak in 2011, the International Maritime Bureau (IMB) counted 237 attacks attributed to Somali pirates in the Indian Ocean, from the Somali coast across the Sea of Oman.
In 2013 the IMB recorded only five attacks, all of which failed.
"At sea the phenomenon is under control. But the pirates are still there. They can be seen on the coast," warned de Poncins.
A raft of measures taken by the shipping sector have also contributed to the decline of piracy: the presence of armed guards on board, the use of barbed wire, an increase in navigation speeds, navigating as far away from the coast as possible.
Indeed experts note that pirates have never managed to seize a vessel protected by armed guards or sailing at a speed of more than 18 knots.
But such measures are expensive. The World Bank noted that "piracy imposed a hidden tax on world trade".
"Piracy costs the global economy roughly 18 billion USD a year in increased trade costs, an amount that dwarfs the estimated 53 million USD average annual ransom paid since 2005," the bank said in a 2013 report.
The fact that Somali pirates control the coast means they can bring their booty ashore, complete with cargo and crew, making rescue operations very difficult.