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: Sri
Lanka
High-level US delegation issues veiled threat to Sri Lankan
separatists
By Nanda Wickremasinghe
28 March 2002
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A high-powered team of US officials, led by Assistant Secretary
for South Asian Affairs Christina Rocca, flew to Sri Lanka in
mid-March for discussions with government ministers and the military
over planned peace talks with the separatist Liberation Tigers
of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). A formal ceasefire was signed last month
between Colombo and the LTTE as the prelude to discussions over
a settlement in May.
To date, the US has left the preparations for negotiations
to Norway, which has formally acted as a facilitator, and to India.
Roccas visit marked a far more active US intervention into
Sri Lankan affairs. Its main purpose was to send a blunt warning
to the LTTE on the eve of talks: toe the line set down by Washington
or face the military consequences.
Arriving on March 14, Rocca declared: We have a much
greater interest this time. The international climate has changed
and there is an ideal opportunity for peace now. The world situation
has changed and there is a real opportunity for a good news story
in South Asia.
The international climate to which she refers is
the Bush administrations global war against terrorism
and its military intervention in Afghanistan. Both Washington
and Colombo are calculating that the threat of US military assistance
to Sri Lanka can be used to pressure the LTTE into making concessions.
Rocca held a meeting with the Sri Lankan military chiefs during
a visit to Jaffna town at the heart of the war-torn northern peninsula.
Accompanied by US Brigadier General Timothy Ghormely and the US
ambassador to Sri Lanka, Ashley Willis, she held a closed-door
conference at the Palaly army camp with Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe,
Defence Minister Tilak Marapana and the armed forces top brass.
Rocca later visited the town of Chavakachcheri.
The meeting at Palaly was of symbolic importance. The base
came under intense attack by the LTTE during its offensive in
May 2000, when it seized the key Elephant Pass army camp and advanced
to the outskirts of Jaffna town. Chavakachcheri was one of a number
of areas that was overrun, trapping over 30,000 Sri Lankan troops
on the northern part of the Jaffna peninsula.
At the time, the Colombo government was seriously considering
evacuating all its forces. The US intervened to force the LTTE
to back off and agree to negotiations. For the first time in years,
a top US officialAssistant Secretary of State for Political
Affairs Thomas Pickeringvisited Sri Lanka to drive home
the point that none of the major powers would agree to the LTTEs
demand for a separate Tamil state.
Speaking to the media in Colombo before her departure, Rocca
reiterated US opposition to a separate Tamil state and expressed
support for the Norway initiative. At present, the US has the
LTTE on its list of terrorist organisations. Rocca said the Bush
administration would only lift the ban if the LTTE responded to
current peace moves by ending hostile activities, showing
respect to humanity and accepting that an independent state is
not a viable solution.
Ambassador Ashley Willis reinforced the warning by stating
there were credible reports that the LTTE was engaged
in activities that could jeopardise the recent ceasefire agreement.
He cited continuing recruitment, the abduction of children, kidnappings
and extortion, re-supply operations and the smuggling of weapons.
In other words, if the LTTE stepped out of line in any way, it
would endanger the ceasefire and risk being dealt with as a terrorist
organisation.
Rocca blandly told the press: General Ghormely is here
to talk about military cooperation ranging from operating C-130s
(Hercules aircraft) and other humanitarian matters. It was
clear that Ghormely, who commands the Marine Expeditionary Brigade,
had more than humanitarian aid on his mind. As well as discussions
with his Sri Lankan counterparts, he visited Trincomalee, a key
strategic harbour on the north-east coast.
Prime Minister Wickremesinghe stated that his government had
asked for US assistance in removing land mines from the Jaffna
peninsula. We are looking for at least four de-mining teams
of 10 each for about four months... The US has told us that they
will try to get us some equipment as soon as possible, he
said.
The only previous US troops on Sri Lankan soil have been Special
Forces trainers who, according to the US embassy, have been involved
in non-combatant training for small army units since
1994. Following the Sri Lankan armys defeats in November
1999, the US provided mortar detection devices and collaborated
more closely in intelligence exchanges.
Strategic interests
Top-level US involvement in Sri Lanka has been relatively rarea
reflection of how Washington regards the small island. But in
1998, as the Clinton administration began to orient to the Indian
subcontinent, the Assistant Secretary for South Asia Karl Inderfurth
and the US representative to the UN Bill Richardson visited Colombo
to back the Norwegian peace process. Inderfurth made another trip
to Sri Lanka in November 2000 in the wake of the armys disastrous
loss of Elephant Pass.
Washingtons new focus on Sri Lanka coincides with the
deployment of US troops, under the guise of its war against terrorism,
to a number of countries where the US has strategic interests.
These include the Philippines, Yemen, Georgia and several Central
Asian republics as well as Afghanistan and Pakistan.
Sri Lanka is centrally located in the Indian Ocean with access
to both the Arabian Sea and the Bay of Bengal and provides a convenient
base of operations for the Indian subcontinent. The US already
has a communication centre at Iranawila on Sri Lankas west
coast, which reportedly beams US propaganda to a number of countries,
including China, Burma and North Korea.
The US wants an end to the long-running war, which has not
only destabilised the island but also has the potential to heighten
tensions in southern Indiahome to around 50 million Tamils,
many of whom sympathise with the plight of Tamils in Sri Lanka.
The war threatens Washingtons efforts to establish closer
economic and defence ties with the Vajpayee government in New
Delhi.
A United National Party (UNP)-led coalition won a snap national
election last December by appealing to a widespread sentiment
for an end to the war. It was backed by sections of big business
that regard the war as a disaster for the economy.
At the same time, however, Sinhala chauvinist organisations
oppose the peace negotiations, regarding any concessions to the
countrys Tamil minority as a betrayal. While the ceasefire
agreement effectively commits the LTTE to giving up its demand
for a separate Tamil state, the document nevertheless accepts
the LTTE control of certain areas. Moreover, its ambiguous terms
allow for the LTTE to import arms, collect funds and engage in
recruitment. It also implies a certain degree of recognition to
the banned organisation by allowing it to conduct political activity
in areas presently under the control of the Colombo government.
The US team arrived as the chauvinist opposition against the
ceasefire Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) has been building.
President Chandrika Kumaratunga and sections of the opposition
Peoples Alliance (PA) objected to the fact that she had not been
shown the documents prior to their signing as constitutionally
required. She pointedly did not meet with the US delegation during
the visit, offering the lame excuse that her schedule was too
busy.
Other extremist groups have been more aggressive, accusing
the government of dividing the motherland through
a secret agreement with the LTTE. Significantly Roccas warnings
to the LTTE were welcomed by some of these organisations.
The fascistic Sinhala Urumaya (Sinhala Heritage) praised the
US government for castigating the LTTE. The American ambassador
has confirmed that the LTTE was taking advantage of the truce
to expand recruitment of its guerilla strength and extort money
from the civilians... We should also kindly urge the US government
to look into the pathetic situation of the Sinhala people in the
east which is worse than the plight of the Muslims.
The Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP), which falsely claims to
be Marxist, would in the past have organised protests and railed
demagogically against the evils of US imperialism. But the organisation
maintained a studied silence about the Rocca visitin line
with other chauvinist organisations.
As for the LTTE, its response to the implied threats of Rocca
and Willis was to assure Washington once again that it will obediently
implement the conditions of the ceasefire. Spokesman Anton Balasingham
said the LTTE was sincerely and seriously committed to peace
and to a peace process aimed at a negotiated political settlement.
Balasingham added a feeble protest, confessing surprise
and dismay at the US threat and pointing out that an international
team was present to monitor ceasefire violations. Yet, we
are encouraged by the fact that the US government is seriously
concerned about the establishment of peace and stability in the
island and had appealed to both parties in conflict to observe
the terms of the accord, he said.
The Bush administration has directly intervened in Sri Lanka
not to establish peace and stability but to assert US interests
in the region. If the LTTE cannot be pressured into a deal with
Colombo, the US is making clear it will support other meansincluding
the intensification of the war.
See Also:
Sri Lankan government and LTTE
sign a tentative ceasefire agreement
[27 February 2002]
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