The bitter endgame
AUSTIN BAY
Every day, Tiger-controlled territory shrinks. The space for
diplomacy is even smaller.
After 26 years of vicious civil war on Sri Lanka the Government has
decided to do what it once sought to avoid: destroy the fanatical LTTE
uprising in a relentless offensive. If the result is an ethnic and
sectarian bloodbath, so be it. After all, ‘suicide attacks’ are a Tiger
trademark.
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Hunting down the terrorists |
In 1983, Liberation Tiger fanatics began a separatist insurgency
against the Sinhalese-dominated Sri Lankan Government. The LTTE’s
leaders demanded a separate State for Sri Lanka’s Tamil ethnic minority.
Religious divisions exacerbated the ethnic cleavage - most Sinhalese are
Buddhist, while the Tamils are Hindu.
United Nations officials believe that the Sri Lankan military has
trapped some 50,000 Tamils in the North. The LTTE says 130,000 are
there. Whatever the figure, the refugees are crammed in a slum of tents.
With people packed so densely, one errant government bomb or artillery
barrage, and the death toll instantly escalates.
Tamil political leaders who are not part of the LTTE call the
situation ‘genocidal.’ Last week, Suresh Premachandran, of the Tamil
National Alliance (TNA), told the Voice of America that the Sri Lankan
military had killed 10,000 civilians and wounded 20,000 since it began
its ‘final offensive’ against the LTTE.
Leaders like Premachandran are attempting to look past the war to the
political aftermath. Premachandran told the VOA that he believes the
LTTE has fought for a ‘just cause,’ but ‘have committed excesses.’ While
the Government’s offensive may destroy the LTTE as a guerrilla army,
Premachandran argues the brutality has bred an embittering distrust
among Tamils that damages prospects for a lasting peace.
As a description of the LTTE’s legacy, ‘excesses’ is gross
understatement. Sinhalese domination of the Tamils is not a subject for
dispute - the Tamils have legitimate political, economic and social
demands.
However, the LTTE’s history of fanatic and exotic violence has not
led to liberation. The LTTE began employing “urban suicide terror bomb
attacks” and suicide assassins against its enemies foreign as well as
domestic before the Palestinians began use of similar homicide tactics
in their intifada.
In a briefing I heard in the late 1990s, an intelligence analyst
‘credited’ the LTTE with ‘inventing modern suicide terrorism.’ The claim
is debatable, but the analyst’s larger point is beyond dispute: The LTTE
used suicide fanaticism as a demonstration of political will.
Terror, however, can backfire. Al-Qaida has learned that. In 1991, an
LTTE suicide bomb assassin killed former Indian Prime Minister Rajiv
Ghandi. India had been torn by Sri Lanka’s strife.
Many Indian Tamils supported the Sri Lankan Tamil cause. Other
Indians, however, were concerned about a violent secessionist movement
establishing a precedent for ethnic separatism in South Asia. Ghandi’s
murder, however, hardened Indian opposition to the LTTE, and it banned
the LTTE as a terrorist organization. In 2006, a senior leader of LTTE
apologized for Ghandi’s murder.
The apology was possibly a diplomatic appeal to New Delhi, with the
goal of involving India in an effort to end the war. The apology sparked
controversy within the LTTE. LTTE hardliners still regard Ghandi’s
murder as justified.
Now the LTTE is calling for ‘external intervention.’ No one seems
interested. In the 1980s, India deployed a peacekeeping force in Sri
Lanka, and it failed.
Jim Dunnigan, editor of StrategyPage.com, has been writing about the
war since it began. According to Dunnigan, the Government has pursued a
‘fight and talk’ strategy with the LTTE, but it is now fed up. Over the
last 20 months, the military has chipped away at LTTE territory, and the
LTTE is losing. “The LTTE has had to use coercion to maintain support
from Tamils,” Dunnigan notes. “It has had to shoot its own fighters to
discourage desertion. People are tired of the violence.”
When the government takes the last patch of LTTE territory, Dunnigan
says, the war will end, but some violence will continue. “The LTTE will
linger as a terrorist organization, but one with little political
support.”
In this aftermath, the Government must act with compassion.Emergency
relief, reconstruction aid and the inclusion of new Tamil leaders in a
unity government are vital.
Townhall Magazine |