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Lanka
Sri Lankan military launches new offensive in strategic Sampur
area
By Sarath Kumara
30 August 2006
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The Sri Lankan military launched a major new offensive on Sunday
aimed at capturing the Sampur area in the East of the island from
the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). The operation is
another flagrant breach of the 2002 ceasefire agreement and again
exposes the Colombo governments lies that its armed forces
are engaged only in defensive actions.
Sampur is located on the southern side of Trincomalee bay,
directly opposite the major Trincomalee port and naval base. The
military has been warning for years about the dangers of LTTE
positions within easy range of what is a key installation for
patrolling the east coast and for supplying troops based on the
northern Jaffna peninsula. Having provoked the present fighting,
the army has seized the opportunity to move against the LTTEs
bases in the area.
Air force jets supported by naval gunboats have been pounding
Sampur and nearby Muttur east. According to the military, 15 soldiers
have been killed and 92 wounded so far in heavy fighting. The
army admitted that the advance had been slow because of
rebel resistance. Its claims to have killed more than 60
LTTE fighters are almost certainly inflated.
LTTE spokesman Rasiah Illantheriyan stated Monday that the
military had advanced from three points in a massive operation
from Mahindapura, Thopur and Pathanur. The LTTE has declared that
it will retaliate with full strength to defend the
area.
The LTTE claimed that the armed forces had so far killed 20
civilians and injured 26 during the fighting. Military spokesman
Brigadier Prasad Samarasinghe denied the claim, bluntly declaring:
I dont think any civilians live there. In other
words, anyoneman, woman or childin LTTE territory
is regarded as the enemy and treated accordingly. Similarly, the
air force dismissed evidence that it killed up to 61 school girls
in a bombing raid in Mullaitivu district on August 14 by declaring
them to be child soldiers.
The military has attempted to obscure the reasons behind the
latest offensive, by claiming that the operation is necessary
to help refugees from neighbouring Muttur. The LTTE captured parts
of that largely Muslim town in early August in a bid to cut supply
lines to government troops waging an offensive to seize the Mavilaru
irrigation sluice gate inside LTTE territory. The armed forces
responded with a barrage of rocket and artillery fire that killed
scores of civilians and forced tens of thousands to flee.
Now the military is using the results of its own indiscriminate
attacks on Muttur as the justification for a further offensive
against Sampur. The army could use the same threadbare pretext
to justify aggression against any LTTE territory. The claim to
be interested in helping refugees is belied by the fact that an
estimated 200,000 people, who have been internally displaced by
fighting over the past month, have received little or no assistance
from the government.
Army commander Lieutenant General Sarath Fonseka, however,
blurted out the real reasons to Associated Press on Monday, declaring:
The security forces have taken this decision to retake Muttur,
Kaddaiparichchan, Sampur and Thoppur to safeguard Trincomalee
naval base and the harbour... If the [rebels] continue to attack
the harbour it will paralyse the Trincomalee to Jaffna supply
route.
The military fears that, as the war broadens, more than 43,000
military personnel could be trapped in the northern portion of
the Jaffna peninsula. All roads to the area run through LTTE territory
and are already closed. The LTTE has mounted probing attacks on
government defensive positions and repeatedly shelled the runways
at the Palaly air base. If the LTTE were to threaten the main
sea route from Trincomalee to Jaffna, a sizeable portion of the
governments military forces could be cut off.
The Reuters correspondent reported Monday that an air
force transport plan landed at the Palaly air base, offloading
munitions and loading the body bags of five soldiers. He also
reported that the military is preparing for a lengthy war by building
new underground concrete bunkers.
President Mahinda Rajapakse told diplomats in Colombo last
week that any truce would have to include LTTE guarantees not
to pose a threat to the Trincomalee port and naval base. The launching
of a full-scale offensive in the Sampur area makes clear that
the government is simply paying lip service to calls for a ceasefire,
as it escalates the war in the vain hope of achieving a decisive
military victory over the LTTE.
The operation in the Sampur area will almost certainly trigger
LTTE attacks in other areas, as the LTTE seeks to relieve the
pressure on its fighters in the East. The military has concentrated
its offensives in the East, first in Mavilaru and now in Sampur,
calculating that the LTTE was seriously weakened by a debilitating
split in its ranks in the eastern region in 2004. The breakaway
Karuna group has been operating against the LTTE in
collusion with the military for months.
While most fighting is taking place in the Sampur area, clashes
have also been reported in the North at Poowarasakulam, Muhammalai
and the Kachchai lagoon near Jaffna. The LTTE has also intensified
its mortar attacks on the large Vavunathivu army camp near the
eastern town of Batticaloa.
The Rajapakse government plunged the country back to war a
month ago with its bogus humanitarian mission to capture
the Mavilaru sluice gate. The LTTE opened the disputed irrigation
canal, but the military has continued its aggressive operations
against long-planned objectives such at the LTTEs Sampur
bases.
If one were to believe the militarys propagandarepublished
uncritically in the pages of the Colombo pressthe operations
have all been successful. The LTTEs attacks have been repulsed,
hundreds of LTTE fighters have been killed, and the army has succeeded
in advancing into rebel territory. The air force has used Israeli
fighter jets, purchased after the military suffered serious defeats
in 2000, to indiscriminately strafe LTTE-held areas.
In this context, it is significant that a long-time defence
correspondent, Iqbal Athas, warned against excessive euphoria
in his Situation Report in last weekends Sunday
Times. He noted that a similar atmosphere had prevailed in
late 1995 when the army succeeded in retaking Jaffna town from
LTTE control, only to be followed by a huge defeat in mid-1996
when the LTTE overran the Mullaitivu military base, killing over
1,000 soldiers and capturing large quantities of weapons.
Athas, who has close links to the military hierarchy, concluded:
The ongoing offensive on Tiger guerrillas will no doubt
lead to considerable damage and some curtailment of their military
capacity. But there is a formidable challenge for the government.
It would have to beat them not only on the battlefield but on
several other fronts... Hence prolonged military action will not
end the ongoing problem. More war will only mean more damage to
the economy and heaping further hardships on the people.
These comments underscore the fact that the Rajapakse government,
for its own short-sighted political ends, is plunging the country
back into a disastrous civil war that it cannot win militarily
and that will inevitably mean more suffering and hardship for
the vast majority of the population.
See Also:
FBI arrests in US and Canada signal Washington's
backing for war against LTTE
[29 August 2006]
Sri Lankan government negotiates with
JVP ally on program for all-out war
[28 August 2006]
Despite president's denials, Sri Lankan
military continues offensive war
[23 August 2006]
Sri Lankan president demands media toes
the line on the war
[19 August 2006]
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