28.5.2008
Nothing
worries a person more than the feeling that he has no chance
of succeeding in life. One may come to terms with a bad
hair day or two, but what about two decades of failure?
That is too much for one to resign oneself to. What one
is in for finally when an enterprise one has invested one's
whole life in teeters on the verge of collapse is frustration.
This has been Prabhakaran's predicament. His two-and-a-half
decade long struggle has taken him nowhere near his goal.
The dark empire for the establishment of which he destroyed
so many lives is crumbling before his own eyes. Its eastern
wing is already gone and there has emerged a popularly elected
new leader! The LTTE is being encircled on several fronts
in the Wanni with his trusted lieutenants falling one by
one. He is getting beaten at his own game, something he
may have considered impossible in the heyday of his terror.
A
wick is said to burn brighter the closer it gets to its
end. So, a high incidence of savage terror strikes on civilian
targets at the behest of Prabhakaran is something to be
expected at this juncture. He may step up attacks like the
one at Dehiwala on Monday in a desperate bid to prevent
his slide towards disaster. He is scared, frustrated and
confused. Such men are capable of anything.
Prabhakaran
knows there is a limit to his holding out against the military
in the Wanni. He cannot go on fooling his cadres forever.
They will realise the truth when they begin to buckle under
pressure sooner or later.
This
country has proved to be extremely resilient vis-`Eo-vis
terrorism. It has learnt to live with it thanks to inoculation
against terrorism courtesy of Prabhakaran who keeps administering
booster doses from time to time. Even if he were to blast
one thousand more civilian targets, he wouldn't get his
Eelam.
His
barbarism only steels this country to fight back. Else,
he would have achieved his goal a long time ago. There are
no new targets for him to take. He has attacked almost all
nerve centres and killed a large number of political and
military leaders including a President, a foreign minister,
a Navy Commander and an umpteen number of high ranking military
officers. He has bombed economic and military facilities
even from the air. But nothing worked for him!
Security
forces suffered many debacles in the past. They lost camps,
fleets of planes and ships, men and material. But, they
have bounced back and turned the tables on the LTTE. Prabhakaran,
who was once able to get thousands of volunteers for his
call to arms is hard put to recruit combatants. Today, he
is forcibly recruiting children, men, women and even the
elderly people as cannon fodder. He is creating conditions
for a mass uprising against LTTE terrorism in the Wanni.
The
military and the police are never short of recruits. There
are thousands of youth willing to enlist and serve in the
conflict zone. The national economy is far from ruined.
It is capable of absorbing defence expenditure and shocks.
So,
what has Prabhakaran achieved all these years? His organisation
is on the defensive clutching at the straw of human rights
and hoping and praying for a deus ex machina. Unless help
comes from abroad in the form of foreign pressure on the
government to call off the military operations-which is
very unlikely, given India's stand-he will be done for.
Yesterday,
addressing a meeting of editors and electronic media heads
President Mahinda Rajapaksa vowed to go ahead with his military
campaign at any cost until the LTTE was defeated, according
to a report in this newspaper today. He must be having reasons
for being so confident. His pronouncement demonstrates that
Prabhakaran's terror strikes have not had the desired impact
on the State.
The
President also asked Prabhakaran to target him and not innocent
people. (His words hark back to the late President Premadasa's
plea to the JVP at the height of its violence in the late
1980s.) But, Prabhakaran will never be weaned away from
turning to soft targets as he is hooked on bloodletting.
What
Prabhakaran is doing at present could be likened, as we
have said in these columns previously, to a university graduate
going back to kindergarten to start education all over again.
Having started his struggle by killing civilians and blasting
trains and buses, he has had to resort to the same tactics
to keep his movement going even after one quarter of a century!
Many
were the opportunities he missed because of his hubris along
the path of terror he has trekked. He used to be India's
blue-eyed boy and was in a position to be the chief minister
of the North and East or to reign supreme in the North,
which former President Kumaratunga offered him for ten years
without elections.
Attempts
are being made in some quarters to prop him up. But, that
is an exercise in futility. He is no longer capable of achieving
his Eelam. He can only kill civilians in the name of liberation.
What
a comedown for a 'liberator'!
Courtesy
- The Island
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