As I pointed out earlier. So the mutineering officers must have counted on support from the crew once they had disposed of the loyal ones and the captain.
And guess what? They got caught, the system worked and their conspiracy failed before anything could be done. Not a single life lost, and a stern message sent to all these would be Jihadis with these mutineers broken necks.
They were not very smart fellows, that's for sure.
Do you think the renegades made it as far as they did - carrying illegal weapons - with "proper authorization"? Their partial success demonstrates they either could get the authorization they needed or bluster their way through.
How far did they make? They got on a ship that was anchored, and were immediately arrested after that. I wouldn't call that taking far, maybe you need to open the dictionary and learn what partial success means. If they had managed to fire up the engines, and start sailing away from the dock, i would call that partial success.
You're just making a mountain out of a mole, just to suit your agenda my friend. If i do take the scenario you pictured, and admit for a second they had managed to fire up the engines, and were starting to sail away with the ship without any tug boats, either a PN Naval Commando Task Force would be immediately launched or the Ship would have been sunken by PN's Coastal ASM Batteries.
This is not a Hollywood Movie, this is real life. It looks like recently you watched Under Siege, that's why you're thinking on the same lines. Even the Naval Chief cannot board a Vessel and take it out for a spin without proper authorization.
Without specific criticisms that hold water your labeling is worthless, yes?
Not really. The article is not worth replying to, pretty much all the allegations this disgraced journalist makes are based on third party evidence. Besides, the credentials and the authentication of the journalist himself are under doubt.