|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
: Sri
Lanka
Sri Lanka to integrate into US regional military plans
By Saman Gunadasa
11 June 2002
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
As part of a growing US military presence on the Indian subcontinent,
the Bush administration is preparing to sign a defence agreement
next month with Sri Lanka to provide extensive access to the islands
ports, airfields and air space for the US armed forces. The agreement
known as the Acquisition and Cross Servicing Agreement (ACSA)
is the first such pact entered into by a Sri Lankan government
with a major Western power since the countrys independence
in 1948.
The negotiations have been held in secret and no details have
been formally released. The US embassy in Sri Lanka only commented
after the weekly Sunday Times in Colombo leaked news of
the deal. A brief embassy statement declared that each party to
the agreement will be able to avail itself of servicing,
repairs, spare parts and equipment of the other in exchange for
payment or through the exchange of identical goods or goods of
equivalent value. So in exchange for refuelling US warships,
for instance, the Sri Lankan armed forces will be able to claim
cash, spare parts or equipment.
According to the Sunday Times, the agreement will go
further. The US will provide military training as well as equipment
and spare parts. The training, which will encompass joint
exercises with United States Armed Forces, will focus on counter
terrorism and related activity... Neither Colombo nor Washington
is willing to confirm the release of two maritime surveillance
aircraft and one patrol ship to intensify surveillance over the
eastern seas of Sri Lanka.
Even before the agreement has been signed, US warships have
begun to dock in Colombo harbour to refuel and to provide shore
leave for sailors. The USS Hopper arrived in April, the
first American navy vessel to dock in Colombo in eight years.
Concerned that the deal may provoke protests by those opposed
to aggressive US interventions in the region, Washington and Colombo
have attempted to play down its significance. Spokesmen in both
countries have described the agreement as routinejust
like those signed by the US with another 56 countries. US embassy
spokesman Stephen Holgate declared: Clearly when you sign
an agreement that implies a certain level of cooperation and closeness,
but this is not a quantum leap.
The defence agreement will, however, have far reaching implications.
Firstly, it will strengthen the hand of Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe
in negotiations with the separatist Liberation Tigers of Tamil
Eelam (LTTE), due to start in Thailand next month. The talks,
which follow a ceasefire reached in February, are over a settlement
to Sri Lankas brutal 19-year civil war. The defence pact
with the US provides Wickremesinghe, who is already under fire
from Sinhala chauvinist groups, with a bargaining chip to extract
concessions from the LTTE.
The obvious threat is: if the LTTE fails to agree, any renewed
fighting will see significant US support for the Sri Lankan armed
forces. Counterterrorism training and surveillance
of the islands eastern seas take on a particular meaning
in that context. The ruling elites in Colombo brand the LTTE and
its operations as terrorist and the eastern
seas are among the main routes through which LTTE boats
smuggle weapons. US aid in these areas would be of direct assistance
to Sri Lankan operations against the LTTE.
For the US, a defence agreement with Sri Lanka offers access
to military facilities on an island that is strategically placed
not only in relation to the Indian subcontinent but also a huge
area of the Indian Ocean from the Middle East to South East Asia.
Bushs global war on terrorism has provided the
pretext for the invasion of Afghanistan, the establishment of
military bases in Central Asia and closer military ties with a
number of countries including India. The deal with Colombo integrates
Sri Lanka into Washingtons broader strategic plans, with
one of the prime goals being domination of Central Asias
huge oil and gas reserves.
Last week the US ambassador to Sri Lanka, Ashley Wills, obliquely
underscored the importance of the islands strategic position
potential to the US. He told a gathering of scholars, diplomats
and journalists in Washington that because of its location
and the talent and entrepreneurial outlook of its
citizens, the 19-million-strong nation stands to evolve into the
Singapore of South Asia and prosper.
Closed door negotiations
According to the Sunday Times, the defence agreement
was drawn up this April in Colombo during discussion with a four-man
team of US military and legal personnel. Preparations had taken
place the previous month during a visit by a high-powered team
of US officials, led by Assistant Secretary for South Asian Affairs
Christina Rocca and including US Brigadier General Timothy Ghormely,
commander of the US Marine Expeditionary Brigade. The group met
with Wickremesinghe, Defence Minister Tilak Marapana and army
top brass at the Palaly army camp in the war-torn north.
General Ghormely also visited Trincomalee, a key harbour on
Sri Lankas eastern coast. The deep-water port was developed
as a major naval base by the British military, which retained
access after independence in 1948, up to 1956. US-based oil companies
have shown interest in gaining control over a large oil storage
facility at nearby China Bay, built by the British during World
War II.
The leasing of the oil facility has been a highly controversial
issue because of Sri Lankas strategic location. In the late
1980s, protests by the Indian government compelled Sri Lanka to
abandon plans to allow the US to use oil storage. The Sri Lankan
government is now preparing to lease some of the oil tanks at
China Bay to the Indian Oil Corporation, which will be allowed
to provide its own security to protect them. India
has agreed to allow US interests to use other oil tanks, if requested.
During the past decade and a half, successive Sri Lankan governments
have built up ties with the US in return for support in the war
against the LTTE. In the early 1980s, Colombo allowed the establishment
of a Voice of America radio transmitter at Iranawila on Sri Lankas
west coast to beam propaganda to China, Burma and North Korea.
Critics in India insisted the controversial facility would be
used for military communications.
The US has also helped train and equip the Sri Lankan military
over nearly two decades. Since 1994, US Special Forces have been
involved in training for small army units. The US has provided
mortar detection devices and engaged in intelligence exchanges,
particularly after the Sri Lankan armys disastrous defeats
at the hands of the LTTE in 1999 and 2000. But this relatively
limited military cooperation will be significantly boosted under
the proposed defence agreement.
Recognising it will strengthen the Sri Lankan military, various
Sinhala chauvinist groups have immediately hailed the deal with
the US. An article in the Island, referring to the Sri
Lankan armys loss of the key Elephant Pass base in 2000,
declared: If, countries in the region [a reference to India]
are unable to help us with military support... we must be free
to enter into agreements with any country that would help us...
There should be no dragging of feet on the matter of signing the
agreement with the US, which should be entirely in our national
interest.
Joseph Pararajasingham, a senior MP of the Tamil National Alliance
(a coalition of bourgeois Tamil parties), expressed fears that
the defence agreement was aimed against the LTTE. He told the
head of the political section of US embassy in Colombo, Joseph
Novak, that Tamils were very much concerned and suspicious
about this pact. It could be used as a tool to support the
Sri Lankan militarys war against the LTTE. Signing the agreement
would mean that you support the majority community (Sinhalese)
to continue the discrimination and subjugation of the Tamil people,
he said.
But the LTTE itself has made no objections. LTTE leader Thamilchelvan
told the Sunday Times: We are group of freedom fighters
fighting for the sovereignty and integrity of Tamil nation. The
sovereignty of Sri Lanka vis-à-vis other countries, in
this instance the United States, is a matter for concern for the
state of Sri Lanka. The comment reveals once again that
the LTTE, far from challenging imperialist designs in Sri Lanka,
is looking to establish its own relations with the major powers.
The opposition Peoples Alliance (PA) has remained completely
silent. In the aftermath of the September 11 terrorist attacks
on the US, Sri Lankan President Chandrika Kumaratunga, who heads
the Sri Lankan Freedom Party (SLFP), immediately offered Washington
full access to the countrys port, airfields and other facilities.
She has avoided any comment on the proposed deal, as have her
PA alliesthe Lanka Sama Samaja Party (LSSP) and the Sri
Lankan Communist Party.
The defence arrangement with the US does, however, have serious
consequences for the working class. The Wickremesinghe government,
with the tacit support of opposition, is integrating Sri Lanka
with the US military right at the point where the Bush administration
has aggressively intervened on the Indian subcontinent with potentially
explosive results.
See Also:
An uneasy cease fire in Sri
Lanka
[23 May 2002]
Tamil separatist leader confirms
readiness for deal with Sri Lankan regime
[17 April 2002]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |