|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
: Sri
Lanka
Sri Lankan military bogged down in northern offensives against
the LTTE
By Sarath Kumara
6 March 2008
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
The euphoria in the Sri Lankan government and military over
the prospects of a quick victory over the Liberation Tigers of
Tamil Eelam (LTTE) is beginning to fade. While the security forces
regularly report the killing of LTTE members, little progress
appears to have been made in seizing the LTTEs major northern
strongholds in the Kilinochchi and Mullaithivu districts.
Open warfare erupted in July 2006 when President Mahinda Rajapakse
ordered the army to capture the LTTE-held area of Mavilaru in
open breach of the 2002 ceasefire agreement. In the space of a
year, the military quickly overran the remaining LTTE bases in
the East and turned its attention to the LTTEs northern
territory. Last July, the Rajapakse government celebrated the
victory in the East with jingoistic speeches and a parade through
the capital of Colombo.
In January, Rajapakse finally dropped the pretence of adhering
to the ceasefire. The decision to pull out of the truce was accompanied
by a series of statements declaring that the LTTE would be defeated
militarily by the end of the year. On December 30, Army Commander,
Lieutenant General Sarath Fonseka, bragged to the Sunday
Observer that the LTTE could not prevent losing their
remaining 3,000 cadres and there is no assurance that the LTTE
Leader V. Prabhakaran would survive for the next six months.
Fonseka, who is expected to retire in December, told foreign
journalists on January 11 that he would not hand the war to the
next army chief. Government leaders enthusiastically repeated
the statement, even declaring that Prabhakaran would be captured
and sent to India for trial over the murder of former Indian Prime
Minister Rajiv Gandhi by a LTTE suicide bomber.
A month later, however, the military high command is not so
confident. On February 10, Fonseka explained in Irida Lakbima
that he was not committed to a deadline for winning the war.
They [the LTTE] are an organised force with a lot of experience...
I dont conduct the war looking at deadlines and timeframes.
Expressing a degree of frustration, he added: Can a war
that has been going on for more than 25 years be completed by
March? But, what I say isgive us a chance.
On February 23, military spokesman Brigadier Udaya Nanayakkara
echoed the army commanders comments. As reported by Agence
France Presse, he declared that the military was winning
the war...but we have never said that we will finish them off.
We have never set deadlines.
Military operations in the North were always going to be more
difficult than in the East, where the LTTE had been seriously
weakened by a devastating split in its ranks in 2004. The breakaway
group, initially headed by V. Muralitharan or Karuna, took an
estimated one third of the LTTEs total fighting force. It
has since collaborated closely with the military in conducting
operations in the East against the LTTE, and terrorising the Tamil
population.
The course of the war is difficult to follow in detail. The
only sources of information are the security forces and the LTTE,
which both distort reports to suit their own propaganda. The army
allows no correspondents into the war zones. The Colombo media
functions under the threat of censorship and physical violence.
Anyone publishing negative reports on the military is quickly
branded a traitor.
The militarys basic strategy appears to be one of attritionthe
use of superior firepower, including air strikes and artillery
bombardments, to sow panic among the population, wear down the
LTTEs defences and kill its fighters. The high command is
only too well aware of the failure of previous broad scale offensives.
In 2000, the LTTE inflicted a devastating series of defeats on
the army, capturing its key strategic base at Elephant Pass, in
a sharp counteroffensive against an overextended military operation.
In the North, the military is seeking to slowly advance on
the LTTE strongholds from all sidesfrom Mannar in the west,
Vavuniya in the south, Welioya in the east and Muhamalai in the
north. While there have been numerous reports of small victories
and LTTE casualtiesall undoubtedly exaggeratedthe
military has failed to gain a great deal of ground.
The Mannar operations started last July. The army captured
the fishing village of Silavathurai last year and has since seized
several other areas but the gains remain small. The main aim in
present operations is to secure the Madhu area then Viduthalaithivu.
The area is crucial to the LTTEs main supply routes from
the neighbouring southern Indian state of Tamil Nadu.
Recent fighting has taken place around the Madhu church area,
including Admapan and Pandivirichchan, in preparation for a push
on Viduthalaithivu. The Sunday Times reported last weekend
that the military had announced the capture of the Pandivirichchaan
area and the killing of 20 LTTE members. The pro-LTTE Tamilnet
reported the recapture of the area on the evening of the same
day, with the killing of 11 soldiers.
On Sunday, the LTTE claimed to have repelled the militarys
advance from Palaikushi. This week, the defence ministry claimed
the army had penetrated deeper into LTTE-held area in Mannar,
killing 83 LTTE cadres and wounding many more. It admitted the
military had lost 9 soldiers with 40 injured. Whatever the true
figures and territory gained or lost, the fighting is obviously
heavy.
On the Welioya front, the results are similarly inconclusive.
The military reported that it gained control of some areas previously
in no-mans land under the ceasefire arrangements.
On February 26, the army handed over the bodies of 14 LTTE fighters
to the International Red Cross. This week, however, the LTTE claimed
to have thwarted the militarys advances, killed six soldiers
and taken ammunition. The seizure of Welioya would open the way
for an advance on Mullaithivu, a major LTTE basing area.
The aerial bombardment of LTTE-held areas continues unabated.
Earlier this week, the air force bombed Poonakari close to Muhamalai,
claiming its fighter jets were targetting an LTTE sea base. On
February 22, warplanes bombed the same area. According to the
LTTE, that attack resulted in deaths of nine civilians, including
an infant and two children. On Monday, the air force bombed what
it claimed was a communication centre in Kilinochchi where the
LTTE headquarters are based.
Another sign of the militarys difficulties is its turn
to India for assistance. General Fonseka began a six-day tour
to India on Sunday to further strengthen the military ties.
He will meet Indias defence minister, A.K. Anthony, as well
as top military and civilian officials in a bid to obtain weapons
and light aircraft. However, Fonseka is unlikely to get all that
he wants from India, which to date has provided limited assistance
and training. While wanting to prevent an LTTE victory, New Delhi
is concerned that the ongoing war will inflame opposition in Tamil
Nadu.
The Sri Lankan military is under pressure from Rajapakse to
deliver a quick victory. His government, an unstable coalition
of 13 parties, confronts growing popular discontent over the economic
impact of the war, which is helping to fuel inflation and undermine
living standards. Rajapakse needs success stories to boost his
chauvinist appeals and to dispel fears in ruling circles of an
inconclusive and protracted war that will inevitably fuel an economic
and political crisis.
Speaking on Sunday at a rally in Ratnapura organised by his
Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP), Rajapakse declared that the government
would carry out liberation operations against the
LTTE until every inch of land is captured and the last terrorist
is completely destroyed. He insisted it was the bounden
duty of people to support the war.
The government is not conducting a war for liberation
or against terrorism but to maintain the economic
and political dominance of the countrys Sinhala Buddhist
elite. For six decades, Colombo governments have whipped up communal
politics to divide working people and prop up their rule. Rajapakses
decision to plunge the country back to war was bound up with his
governments inability to deal with growing unrest over declining
living standards.
The return to war has only compounded the economic burdens
on working people. The military has purchased new weapons and
boosted its strength to 150,000, recruiting 34,000 last year.
Another 15,000 are to be recruited this year. Along with rising
oil prices, military expenditure is a major factor fuelling inflation.
The annualised inflation rate hit 24 percent in February. Rajapakse
has responded to any opposition, including strikes and protests,
by demonising critics as pro-LTTE.
These social and political tensions will inevitably sharpen
if the military operations against the LTTE slow, or if the army
suffers reverses. That accounts for the shrill tone of Rajapakses
speech at Ratnapurait is a sign of growing desperation.
See Also:
Sri Lanka: Escalating war
fuels rising prices
[29 February 2008]
Communalism and militarism
on display at Sri Lanka's independence day celebrations
[9 February 2008]
Sri Lankan independence: 60
years of communalism, social decay and war
[4 February 2008]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |