Tigers on the retreat - Arab News
The following editorial appeared in the Arab News, Saudi Arabia of
November16
The conventional wisdom has long been that the Tamil insurrection in
Sri Lanka cannot be brought to an end by military means. Events in
recent weeks culminating with the capture yesterday of a key town would
seem to be proving this wrong. The retaking of Pooneryn which has been
occupied by the rebels for 15 years is significant because it means that
there is now a direct link northward with the Government-held city of
Jaffna.
The Sri Lankan military does not permit independent reporters in the
conflict zone.
They admitted that though Pooneryn had been taken, the Tamil Tigers
were putting up fierce resistance outside the town.
The strategy now seems to be to push eastward toward Kilinochchi,
said to be the key administrative centre for the Tamil rebels.
Government Forces have clearly been buoyed up by a growing list of
successes against the rebels in the past months. Diplomatic observers
say that better trained troops using more suitable tactics against
seasoned Tiger fighters have partly been responsible for the successes.
There have not been reports of the suicidal front assaults that were
once tried by unimaginative commanders with the consequential heavy
losses and damage to morale. But there may be a sense in which the Tamil
Tigers are contributing to their own defeat.
More than 30 years of conflict have not gained the rebels the
separatist state they want.
The rebellion that began after the Tamil minority felt they were
being marginalized by the Buddhist Sinhalese majority, has seen periods
of stability and relative peace but Tamil society has struggled in
isolation.
Even though Tamil schoolchildren emerge highly politicised and eager
to continue what they have been taught is a righteous struggle, wiser
Tamil heads are fed up with the violence and lack of opportunity.
They have also had enough of the dominance of Tiger commanders who
run a society constantly on a war footing. There was considerable hope
on both sides of the divide following the 2002 signing of a cease-fire
after long and patient mediation by the Norwegians.
That agreement should have turned into a peace deal in which the
Tamils would have obtained a degree of autonomy within a united Sri
Lanka.
That it did not was largely due to the intransigence of Tamil
leaders.
If the Government is indeed on the verge of victory, it should be
thinking now of how it will handle the peace.
This has been a terrible war. The defeat of the Tigers' conventional
forces will probably lead to low-level guerrilla violence. Guerrillas
must rely of locals to survive.
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