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Sun,
2007-09-30
By H. L. D. Mahindapala
Part III
I
first met the Army Commander, Lt-Gen. Sarath Fonseka, in bed.
Don’t get me wrong. He was lying on a bed at the Army Hospital
recovering from the bullets and shrapnesl that had hit him in
the Kilali operations. His one arm was in a sling and he was still
not quite fit to get up from bed when I visited him with the then
Army Commander Cecil Waidyaratne and Lt. Col Lucky Algama. The
successful operation in which the Security Forces advanced as
far as Kilali and burnt the boats of Kilali exposed the hollowness
of the hold the Tigers had even in Jaffna – the heartland
of their political centre.
The
confident Army asked for permission from President D. B. Wijetunga
to cut across to Point Pedro from Kilali. Wijetunga refused. It
was a disappointment to the Forces. Once again the weak political
head was sitting on top of the Security Forces who had a chance
of taking on the Tigers in the north.
If
my memory serves me right, Sarath Fonseka was quite confident
of over-running the Tigers in the north. He was an intrepid soldier.
He has that streak of the dare-devil in him, ever willing to take
calculated risks. So when the Tigers targeted him and missed in
March 2006 they instilled a new determination and a fire in him
to put an end to Tiger terrorism. In this attempt to get the Army
Commander, the highest point of security, Pottu Amman and Prabhakaran
were out to display their lethal fireworks and to impress the
Tamil diaspora and the international community that they were
a military force worth backing because they had the capacity to
strike at will any target of their choice. They were also keen
on impressing the new Mahinda Rajapakse administration that they
were a superior force that can dictate terms to the nation, perhaps
even better than the way they imposed their will on President
Chandrika Kumaratunga and Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe.
Though
Prabhakaran’s violence paid him initial dividends he failed
to realize that his brutalizing and dehumanizing violence was
facing the consequences of diminishing returns. He was, of course,
buoyed by the adulation and the technological toys delivered to
him by ardent loyalists in the Tamil diaspora. But global events
and national trends were running against him. After September
11 every act of terror committed in any part of the globe was
a direct blow to Prabhakaran’s terror tactics. Every act
of terror elsewhere confirmed that his brand of terrorism had
to be put down, one way or other.
For
instance, on December 1, 2006, Prabhakaran tried to get Gotabaya
Rajapakse, the Defence Secretary. He missed again. The backlash
was severe. In a press release issued that morning the United
States, highlighting that “the attack bears all the hallmarks
of an operation by the LTTE…condemned strongly the terrorist
attack on the convoy of Defense Secretary Rajapakse.”
Tiger
rhetoric too had lost its original force. They were labouring
in vain to convince the world that they were “freedom fighters”.
The key players that mattered in the international community were
refusing to buy it. And back home, he was running out of cadres.
The ideology that fired the imagination had lost its original
impetus. Prabhakaran was forced to go from house to house in the
poor villages demanding Tamil sons and daughters for a cause that
had no future.
Tiger
media, which had a reputation for speed and as a guide to Tamil
news, was on the back foot trying to focus on human rights violations
of the GOSL. In the past they were wont to crow about their military
exploits which boosted the morale of the Tamil diaspora. The Tamil
media were no longer projecting the Tigers as the victorious forces
winning over the Security Forces. They were now projecting themselves
as victims of the oppressive and aggressive GOSL. Their sporadic
attacks, in between, were not yielding the victories they expected.
Their denials of terrorist attacks had lost credibility because,
according to their media, the Tigers had never ever committed
any war crime or crimes against humanity. Without such victories
the TamilNet and other allied media outlets were busy focusing
on human rights violations. This was not due to any sincere commitment
to human rights. They were using human rights as a political weapon
to halt the advance of the Security Forces. It was a sure sign
of the Tigers losing on the battlefield.
The
increasing failure of the Tigers to white-wash their crimes was
reflected in the reactions of the international community. From
the 90s the international tide had turned against him, slowly
but surely. It began with Indian ban in 1991 after the assassination
of Rajiv Gandhi. USA banned him 1997. UK followed in 2001. Canada
in April 2006. And EU in May, 2006. But the message still did
not get through to him that terror as a weapon has outlived its
usefulness. Nor was he made with that degree of nuanced thinking
or flexibility to acknowledge that his dogged commitment to an
elusive Eelam was dragging him to a dead-end.
He
was trapped inside his own ideological and military cage. Neither
his political goal which was nowhere within sight nor his military
methodology was going to rescue him. Compounded by his intransigence,
which he mistook for courage and vision, he was doomed. He refused
to accept that terror tactics come with its limitations. This
is the lesson that the Tigers, and their financial backers in
the Tamil diaspora, have yet to learn. By the time he targeted
Lt-Gen. Fonseka in March 2006 Prabhakaran was about to fulfill
the Biblical truism that those who live by the sword die by the
sword.
True,
in the past both sides have been see-sawing, winning some and
losing some. But Sarath Fonseka’s forces that began to move
from Mavil Aru carried with them a decisive air of finality, giving
just not the scent of success but an end to the power, the bases
and the hopes of Prabhakaran. After nearly 30 years of waging
war against the Government of Sri Lanka (i.e., counting from 1975,
the year of Prabhakaran’s baptism in human blood) he had
nothing to show except ever expanding graveyards of Tamils.
The
Tigers played their last international drama when they went to
Geneva for the last time in June, 2006. An exasperated Norwegian
government bemoaned publicly saying: “After having accepted
the Norwegian invitation, and after having arrived in Norway,
the LTTE raised objections to the previously communicated intentions
and modalities for the meeting. This was the reason for the meeting
not being held.
“By
this a critical opportunity has been lost for the peoples of Sri
Lanka who so desperately need their leaders on both sides to renew
their obligation to uphold the CFA and other CFA-related commitments
and to improve security,” said Norway.
But
there was no CFA to uphold. A desperate Norwegian government was
writing to both parties asking: “Will the parties stand
committed to the Ceasefire Agreement (CFA) of 22 February 2002?”
The Norwegians were trying pathetically to shore up not the peace
which they had helped to destroy but their own standing in the
international community as “peace-makers”.
What
madness possessed Ranil Wickremesinghe to even contemplate the
draft outline of the Ceasefire Agreement (CFA) – let alone
sign it in its complete form – and what madness possessed
Prabhakaran to tear it up after he got the nearest thing to his
Eelam, is totally incomprehensible. It was a document of total
surrender to international pressure and Tamil Tiger demands. Wickremesinghe
did it on his own without informing the President, parliament,
or people.
The
CFA signed on February 22, 2002 had, inter alia, two major components:
1) tying down the nation to an international commitment and 2)
a commitment to Prabhakaran to hand over power and territory.
Wickremesinghe had no mandate for either. An agreement of that
magnitude had to have the signature of the President and parliament.
As stated by H. L. de Silva, the pre-eminent constitutional lawyers,
it was “illegal and unconstitutional.”
Predictably,
it was hailed by Anton Balasingham and Erik Solheim, his misguided
political ally who thought that the Sri Lankan sun came out of
Balasingham’s nostrils. Anyone with commonsense would have
concluded that if these two jointly approved then it must be counter-productive
to Sri Lanka for the simple reason that it is not in their politics
to approve anything that benefits the nation which they are bent
on destroying.
Elated
by what he thought was his great achievement Wickremesinghe removed
the barriers and lifted the embargoes to create the illusion of
peace. He then proceeded to make endless concessions in the name
of “confidence-building”, an NGO fiction actively
pursued by Wickremesinghe’s obedient factotum, “Badman”
Weerakoon. Wickremesinghe and Solheim were crowing that the killings
had lessened – note not ceased.
The
CFA was by definition to end the firing and killing. But neither
was evident. True, the war had moved down from high intensity
gear into low intensity gear. That was no consolation to the victims
of the war going on unabated – a war that was adequate for
Prabhakaran to pursue his military and political objectives.
Both
Solheim and Wickremesinghe, however, refused to acknowledge that
Prabhakaran, the co-signatory to the CFA, was chipping away at
every vestige of credibility left in the CFA. Solheim was turning
a blind eye to the violations of the CFA and was more concerned
about taming the para-militaries (i.e., anti-Tigers Tamils and
Muslims) – a demand made vociferously by Anton Balasingham.
Oblivious
to the new turn of events, Wickremesinghe, who was completing
a two-week fellowship at MIT's Center for International Studies
(CIS) addressed expatriate Tamils at the Boston Tamil Center,
even as late as May 2006, on the subject that he was promoting
doggedly: "Beyond a militarized approach to terrorism: Experience
from Sri Lanka." He told the Boston Tamils that only concerted
action by co-chairs or India will be able to able to arrest the
collapse of the peace process. He said that the issue of para-militaries
is one of the major causes for the deterioration of the ceasefire,
and added that paramilitaries should be disarmed. [TamilNet, May
14, 2006 03:12 GMT]
As
for Solheim, he was flying every week to London to sit with his
pal, Balasingham, and get the political line from him for his
next move against the GOSL. "For a long period of time,”
Solheim told the Tamils gathered at Alexandra Palace to say farewell
to Balasingham, “I came to London every week, speaking with
Bala, having his point of view about how the peace process could
be moved forward; having his analysis of the situation in Sri
Lanka; also exchanging my view and also what we have heard from
the Government of Sri Lanka about their positions.” (TamilNet
– December 20, 2006).
The
Tigers were relying on Solheim to pull their chestnuts out of
the fire and he was leaning over backwards to give them the advantages
only he could in the diplomatic field, the negotiating table and
even with financial backing, as revealed by Karuna. The Norwegian
role was so pernicious, counter-productive and blatantly partisan.
Questions were asked even in the House of Commons of the behind-the-scene
manoeuvres of the Nordic interventionist to pull and push on behalf
of the Tigers.
Labour
MP, Chris Mullins (Sunderland, South): “Would I be right
in thinking that the Norwegian general who was based in Sri Lanka
advised the EU against declaring the LTTE a terrorist organisation
and said that that would lead to the breakdown of the ceasefire?”
(May 2, 2007 House of Commons).
Dr.
Kim Howells, the Minister of state and for the Middle East, who
opened the adjournment debate, said, in the course of making his
statement that “the ceasefire is in trouble, if not shot
to pieces” and added that he will write to Mullins and inform
him of his inquiries on the issue of Norwegian intervening on
behalf of the Tigers.
For
his part, Vidar Helgesen, the head of the delegation for peace
talks at Phuket, Thailand, was even insisting that Balasingham
should be addressed as “His Excellency”.
The
Norwegians were playing their partisan role without any inhibitions.
They overstepped their mark and in their anxiety to appease the
Tigers they were ready to overlook the aspirations of the other
communities. Their assumption was that if they could appease the
Tigers they could win peace. The Tigers, in the meantime, had
appointed themselves as “the sole representatives of the
Tamils” – the implication being that they alone held
the monopoly of war and peace in their hands and to dictate terms.
It
was this obsession with power concentrated exclusively in the
hands of Prabhakaran, with no checks and balances, which degraded
and debased the lives of the Tamils kept under the jackboots of
the one-man regime. This was the first time that the Tamils had
the power to exercise considerable amount of power, almost that
of a quasi-state. But they proved to be utterly incapable of ruling
themselves with dignity and respect for their fellow-man. Though
the craze among the Tamils was to wield political power their
first experiment in handling power proved to be a disaster mostly
to the Tamils. The Tamils have never been humiliated nor made
to suffer so perversely as under Prabhakaran. The man who claimed
to be the liberator turned into the most ignominious and ruthless
oppressor of the Tamils.
This
aside, the Tigers, despite some of their spectacular military
exploits, were never a force that could compare itself with other
movements like those of the Palestinians, Afghans or Kashmiris.
The backbone of the Tigers was not at home. It was invariably
located abroad -- in the Tamil disapora which is primarily responsible
for keeping the Tigers going. The Tigers would collapse almost
instantly if the diaspora withdraws its support. Besides, except
for the brief period during which India backed them the
Tigers had no committed international states backing them like
the way the Palestinians are supported.
As
for the local base, it is a highly exaggerated force. He does
not have a people’s movement behind him to back him up like
the intifada, for instance. From time to time, Tamil media hype
announced the "Upsurging People's Force (UPF) of Jaffna District"
which issued thundering notices of the forthcoming wrath of their
force. One notice signed by the UPF leaders of Jaffna said: "Days
are numbered for the traitors who sell our Mother land,"
The final sentence in the press release, "We will meet again
on the battle ground," hinting that the suspended offensives
against the SLA forces by the "Upsurgence People's Force
of Jaffna District", may resume soon. (TamilNet, March 30,
2006 19:54 GMT).
The
fevered rhetoric was running high though there was no follow up
action to back up the explosive verbiage. Earlier, S. Elilan,
Trincomalee district political head of the Liberation Tigers of
Tamil Eelam commenting on the situation in Muttur east around
April 2006 said: "We are in a state of readiness and are
awaiting for the instruction from our leadership to respond with
a force that will be catastrophically disabling and devastating
to the enemy."
From
these expressions of hellfire and brimstones the Tamil Tiger verbal
fire came down to a “defensive war”, in the words
of S. Thamilselvam. Even the American Ambassador, Robert Blake,
was commending the impressive naval and land victories of the
Security Forces.
The
writing on the wall is clear, particularly when Ranil Wickremesinghe
announces that (1) federalism is no longer a viable proposition
and (2) that the CFA is dead. To cut along story short, this mean
the end of an era. There was, as stated earlier, an air of finality
about the new turn of events. There seems to no option available
for Prabhakaran now except to come to the negotiating table or
to take the pill he hangs ceremoniously on the neck of his suicide
bombers.
The
violence unleashed by the Tamil leadership in the Vaddukoddai
Resolution of 1976 is nearing its end. It has misled Tamil people
like the children who followed the Pied Piper of Hamlyn to their
premature deaths. The Tamil leadership wrote the script for the
nightmarish end of the Tamil people who would have been immeasurably
better off if they were guided to co-exist in harmony and peace
with the other communities. But they were led to crave for a disproportionate
share of power, over and above all other considerations of peaceful
co-existence. It is rather difficult to find another intelligent
community writing, directing, financing and acting out their funeral
march to obscurity as the Tamils of Jaffna.
Wobbling
on their last legs, the Tamil Tigers are now hastily backtracking
pleading with the international community to save them. Balasingham
began it with an unconditional apology to India. On June 27, 2006
Balasingham told an Indian TV station that the assassination of
Rajiv Gandhi was “a monumental historical blunder”
and appealed to India to put the past behind to reconsider the
ethnic question from a different perspective.
But
the past is not forgiving. It was catching up fast with Prabhakaran.
He had killed all his potential allies both abroad and at home.
He is now fighting with his back to the wall. As pointed out by
Lt.-Gen Fonseka, when Prabhakaran appeals to the international
community to rescue him it is a clear sign of a fast developing
crisis in the LTTE-held Vanni. "They have taken a bloody
beating and now are seeking an international lifeline," Fonseka
told The Island,(September 27, 2006). "They are unable to
resist the growing military pressure on their positions on a wide
front."
Reports claim that he has passed the baton to his son, Charles
Anthony, which is likely to sow further seeds of dissension within
the Tiger ranks.
If
there is a lesson in all the twists and turns of history it is
this: What history and geography had put together from time immemorial
no man can put asunder. The Tamils and Sinhalese were born to
share their lives together. Their lives are so inextricably intertwined
that, despite all the differences, the commonalities and bonds
that weave in a symbiotic relationship are much stronger than
the forces that strive to separate them. Their destiny is to co-exist
as historical partners, neighbours and even as mothers and fathers
or husbands and wives. It is a destiny that has been re-written
once again with the blood of those who carried this historical
burden on their shoulders. They have sacrificed their lives to
affirm it – and let not the bogus theoreticians, intellectual
hypocrites, political opportunists and even churchmen cooking
up theological fictions come between the people and their common
and historical destiny.
Concluded
Courtesy
- Asian Tribune
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