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Sri Lanka options for Pakistan

There is no doubt that all forms of terrorism should be wiped out. I don't think there could be a second opinion.

However, in so far as tanks are concerned, especially heavy tanks, they are not suitable as the area of where it would have to operate is full of lagoons and soft earth.
 
From what I have heard, the Sri lankans want to use the AK's as faire support vehicals.
 
US crackdown setback for LTTE

- By M.R. Narayan Swamy


New Delhi, Aug.23: The arrest of eight Tamil men in the US on charges of attempting to buy sophisticated weapons marks a new low for Sri Lanka’s Tamil Tigers, now battling the most serious military and diplomatic challenges in its three-decade history.
The arrests were an outcome of cooperation between law enforcing authorities in three countries (the US, Canada and Britain) and followed similar crippling raids in Australia and Canada on supporters of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). It is debatable if these crackdowns are aimed at crushing the LTTE in the long run or simply forcing it to return to peace talks with Colombo.
It is of course a coincidence that the US action, announced by the department of justice, came barely 10 days after a very high-ranking Sri Lankan official said that Western countries were not doing enough to strangle the LTTE’s well-laid overseas network even after banning the group.

But it is significant that they have occurred barely one and a half years after a State Department official visiting New Delhi indicated that the US did not have the resources and time to spare for LTTE’s since Islamist groups were a greater priority. It was said that it costs vast amounts of money even to check suspicious banking transactions. Clearly, the mood has changed, and the Tigers should blame themselves for the mess they are in.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation, following well-crafted sting operations, arrested the eight men on charges of conspiring to provide surface-to-air missiles, missile launchers, AK-47 assault rifles and dual use technology besides raising funds for the Tigers.
They were also accused of trying to bribe US officials to get the LTTE off the list of banned organisations. It was said that all eight were "closely connected with LTTE leadership" and many had met LTTE chief Velupillai Prabhakaran "and other senior leaders of the terrorist group".
Although the US made it clear that these were merely charges and the men would be deemed innocent unless proved otherwise, one strand of the LTTE’s covert international networks, so very crucial for its war efforts, has been neutralised.

The Tigers, who have predictably denied links with the men taken into custody, have been supremely confident of their networks around the world. And while only eight have been charged, in a vast operation of this kind the authorities would have learnt a lot about the networks of the LTTE and the men’s other global contacts. (IANS)

:bunny:
 
AK's as faire support vehicals.

Not understood.

If it means "fire support", then a bogged down tank is more of a liability than
anything else.

Ask the Hizbs who has just finished the latest stuff on how to knock of tanks!
 
One can only hope that Pakistan helps its fellow Asian country rid itself of the Tamil Tigers just like Pakistan has bought down the BLA to its knees. Sri Lankans have had enough of the Tamil Tiger war for a seperate land aligned with the Tamil population of a neighouring country. So i say give them the AL-Khalids and the K-8s and the specific munitions so this beautiful and lush South Asian country can progress peacefully.

Its uncompromising people like you that have turned Sri Lanka into the hell hole it is. You forget how the conflict ignited when thousands of tamils were murdered in the streets.

The solution to Sri Lanka conflict is political, it is a shame that India and Pak. and Bangladesh are sitting on the side line while thousands of civilians are dying. At the very least they should attempt dialouge and pledge peacekeepers and resources if a ceasefire returns. Unfortuanetly all are too selfish to committ to something that will not return quick gains.
 
Its uncompromising people like you that have turned Sri Lanka into the hell hole it is. You forget how the conflict ignited when thousands of tamils were murdered in the streets.

The solution to Sri Lanka conflict is political, it is a shame that India and Pak. and Bangladesh are sitting on the side line while thousands of civilians are dying. At the very least they should attempt dialouge and pledge peacekeepers and resources if a ceasefire returns. Unfortuanetly all are too selfish to committ to something that will not return quick gains.


I agree with you fully. SAARC countries should step in and help Ceylon rid itself of these Tamil Terrorists. Pakistan is doing well in helping them do exactly that. These people have made life a living hell for the people of Ceylon/SriLanka.
 
1.SAARC countries should step in and help Ceylon rid itself of these Tamil Terrorists. Pakistan is doing well in helping them do exactly that.

2. These people have made life a living hell for the people of Ceylon/SriLanka.

1. What about the Tamil peoples political griviences? Tamil Tigers will not lay down their arms unless there is iron clad guarantees that govt. instituted riots/massacres that killed 3000 in the streets doesnt happen again, how will SAARC nations barging in with guns blazing be anything but petrol on fire?

2. The conflict can only be resolved by a political settlement which includes the government being bound to not engage in retribution and abuses (that they have too readily engaged in the past). SAARC nations can create "incentives" for both parties to go back to the ceasefire to eventual peace agreement. Barging in with guns is what cost the lives of thousand of Indian troops.
 
1. What about the Tamil peoples political griviences? Tamil Tigers will not lay down their arms unless there is iron clad guarantees that govt. instituted riots/massacres that killed 3000 in the streets doesnt happen again, how will SAARC nations barging in with guns blazing be anything but petrol on fire?

2. The conflict can only be resolved by a political settlement which includes the government being bound to not engage in retribution and abuses (that they have too readily engaged in the past). SAARC nations can create "incentives" for both parties to go back to the ceasefire to eventual peace agreement. Barging in with guns is what cost the lives of thousand of Indian troops.


I think the Oslo agreement brokered by Norway takes care of that . A cease fire along the lines of Israel and Hezbollah could be applied here as well.
 
No armed intervention by foreign forces can help the situation.

The good offices of friendly countries will surely be of help.

Training: In the early 1970s, the LTTE began establishing training camps and secret arms caches under the cover of a chain of Refugee and Rehabilitation Farms of the Gandhian Society. Funds for the farms came from Oxfam (Oxford Famine). British intelligence organizations acting under non-governmental organization cover.

A number of State and private organizations in Lebanon, Libya, and Syria provided training to the Tamil groups. Ex-French legionnaires, dissident sects within the Palestine Liberation Organization, and a few South American groups were also involved in this. John Glover, a British feature writer, wrote to Western Mail in Wales about the ongoing and future training programs for Tamil youth by British mercenaries. "A band of mercenary soldiers recruited in South Wales is training a Tamil army to fight for a separate state in Sri Lanka. About 20 mercenaries were signed up after a meeting in Cardiff and have spent the last two months in southern India preparing a secret army to fight the majority Sinhalas, in the cause of a separate Tamil state in Sri Lanka," he said.

Russian Gen. Mikhail Barsukov reported in February 1990 that the LTTE had undergone special training in Lebanon and received combat experience there.

According to accounts by retired officials of the Israeli secret service, the Mossad, the Israelis were simultaneously training the Sri Lanka Army and the Tigers, and providing arms to each. Victor Ostrovsky, author of By Way of Deception, told Indian Abroad news service in 1991 that the Tigers were trained in Israel in 1985. "These groups kept coming and going. It was part of our routine job to take them to training camps and make sure that they were getting training worth what they paid for, not more and not less." The groups paid in cash.

Ostrovsky said that the arrangement for the training was made by the Mossad liaison in India, who lived there under a British passport.

A December 1983 Sunday Mail article reported that the Mossad was arming and training the Tigers, as well as the Sri Lankan Armed Forces.

One of the main figures involved in these operations, according to other reports, was Rafi Eytan, the former head of the Israeli intelligence agency LEKEM, which had been caught running spy Jonathan Pollard in the United States. Following the 1985 scandal, Eytan was transferred to become the head of Israeli Chemical Industries, in which capacity he spent time in Sri Lanka.

The British Special Air Services (SAS) firm Keenie Meenie Services, was simultaneously training the Sri Lankan Army and the LTTE.

Therefore, there are too many fingers in the pie! ;)
 
The British Special Air Services (SAS) firm Keenie Meenie Services, was simultaneously training the Sri Lankan Army and the LTTE.

Therefore, there are too many fingers in the pie! ;)


Yes one from the neighbours also consoling Srilankan Govt and LTTE at the same time ;)

Sir whats the reason for outsiders' intrest in Sri Lanka ?/
 
Yes one from the neighbours also consoling Srilankan Govt and LTTE at the same time ;)

Sir whats the reason for outsiders' intrest in Sri Lanka ?/

"Outsiders interest" is very simple to understand.

The control of the seaways in the Indian Ocean from Bab el Mandeb to the Straits of Malacca!

The Indian intervention in Sri Lanka was nothing but to prevent US gaining a listening post and a naval base in Trincomalee.

Trinco is one of the finest deep sea harbours of the world where huge flotillas can take shelter including a huge submarine fleet.

Diego Gracia and Trinco would have made the US the masters of the Indian Ocean!
 
1. What about the Tamil peoples political griviences? Tamil Tigers will not lay down their arms unless there is iron clad guarantees that govt. instituted riots/massacres that killed 3000 in the streets doesnt happen again, how will SAARC nations barging in with guns blazing be anything but petrol on fire?

2. The conflict can only be resolved by a political settlement which includes the government being bound to not engage in retribution and abuses (that they have too readily engaged in the past). SAARC nations can create "incentives" for both parties to go back to the ceasefire to eventual peace agreement. Barging in with guns is what cost the lives of thousand of Indian troops.

One sane voice. The problem in Srilkanka was not created by India over night. Even if you manage to crush LTTE, there would be another group. So only a political solution would end the problem, not a military one.

I dont think Raptor is worth replying.
 
Pakistan's increased role against Tamil Tigers angers India: Both set for a proxy war in Sri Lanka?



Sat, 2006-08-26 04:08 By H. L. D. Mahindapala

Pakistan is playing an increased role in Sri Lanka's counter-insurgency operations against the Tamil Tigers -- and this new development is worrying India.
Indian intelligence sources claim that a group of Pakistani officers were drawing up plans jointly with the Sri Lankan Air Force for "a decapitation strike from the air, with bunker-buster bombs, to kill Tiger leader Velupillai Prabhakaran."
This explains why the Tamil Tigers aimed to assassinate Col (retd) Bashir Wali Mohammed, the last High Commissioner (ambassador) to Sri Lanka, when he was on his way back to his residence in Colombo on August 14, 2006 The bomb planted in a trishaw killed four commandos escorting Mohammed who narrowly escaped the explosion. Col. Wali Mohammed is a former Director of the Pakistan Intelligence Bureau. He is the first diplomat to be targeted by the Tamil Tigers in Sri Lanka.

Col. Mohammed was also reported to be working closely with the Muslims of the east who were being targeted ruthlessly by the Tamil Tigers. In the latest attack launched in Mutur the Tamil Tigers succeeded in ethnically cleansing the area by driving out the Muslims, accusing them of being anti-LTTE and pro-government.
Pakistani newspapers reported that the unseen hand of India was behind this attack.
Analysts are concerned that Eelam IV, which was postponed by Prabhakaran due to the unexpected tsunami that hit the eastern coast, would develop into a proxy war between India and Pakistan.

The Tamil Tigers are now whipping up the humanitarian issue as a sympathy card to drag India on to their side. India which has been dithering on this issue may not enter into it openly but could play its hand discreetly by supplying arms and ammunition as a counter-weight to Pakistan's open support to Sri Lanka.
India also views Col. Mohammed's successor Air Vice-Marshal Shehzad Azlam Chaudhry of the Pakistani Air Force suspiciously.
This new appointment is significant in the light of the Sri Lankan Air Force playing a critical role in attacking key Tamil Tiger targets. B. Raman, former additional secretary at the Research and Analysis Wing (RAW) - the Indian intelligence agency that trained, armed, financed and provided diplomatic cover to the Tamil Tigers – states in an article written on August 18, 2006: "About 12 to 15 members of the Pakistani Armed Forces, including four or five from the Pakistan Air Force, are stationed in Colombo to guide the Sri Lankan security forces in their counter-insurgency operations.
"The Pakistan Air Force officers have reportedly been guiding the SLAF officers in effectively carrying out air-mounted operations against the LTTE," he said.

He added: "Pakistan, which has already been playing a discreet role in assisting the Sri Lankan security forces in their operations against the LTTE even before Mr. [Mahinda] Rajapakse became the President, has further increased its involvement in the counter-insurgency operations" [since November 2005].
"Of all the three [Sri Lankan] services, the SLAF has the closest relations with its Pakistani counterpart," Raman says.
Technical personnel of the PAF play an important role in the repairs and maintenance of the aircraft and other equipment of the SLAF. Sri Lankan aircraft have been sent to Pakistan for overhauling.
"The posting of Air Vice-Marshal Shehzad Chaudhry, who had in the past handled air-mounted operations against the Baloch freedom-fighters, is expected to further step up the Pakistani involvement in [Sri Lanka's] use of air strikes to subdue the LTTE and intimidate the Tamil population," Mr. Raman says.
"While India cannot justifiably object to it, the increasing involvement of Pakistan in the counter-insurgency operations is a matter of serious concern from the point of view of India's national security," Mr. Raman says.
"The clandestine co-operation between the armed forces of Sri Lanka and Pakistan, which has been there even in the past, picked up momentum after an unpublicised visit by Gen. Mohammed Aziz Khan, then Chairman, Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee, to Colombo in September 2003.

India had never objected in the past to the close military-military relations between Sri Lanka and Pakistan, but Gen. Aziz Khan's secret visit upset Delhi, according to Raman.
Analysts conclude that India is concerned because Gen. Aziz Khan had been instrumental in Pakistan's clandestine operations to occupy the disputed territory in Kargil.
India destabilised Sri Lanka when Mrs. Indira Gandhi was allied to the Soviet Union. She opposed Sri Lanka moving closer to USA under J. R. Jayewardene. Will India do it once again because Sri Lanka is getting closer to its old enemy, Pakistan? Is all this going to take the Sri Lankan crisis to a new level? Above all, is South Asia about to burst into a huge conflagration with the two nuclear giants of the region testing their nerves and strengths in Sri Lanka?
Analysts believe that India will not make the same mistake twice of tying up with the Tamil Tigers, particularly with the Indian mood running against the Tigers who has admitted to the killing of Rajiv Gandhi. At the same time, if India feels threatened by Pakistan getting closer to Sri Lanka then there is a possibility of India using the Tigers to beat Pakistan in Sri Lanka.
"Looking at the new development from any angle there is no doubt that India has to take the blame for Sri Lanka's slide towards Pakistan," said a leading sociologist. "It is India's failure to take a firm stand against separatist terrorism in Sri Lanka that has opened the space for Pakistan to enter. India's interventions in the region -- from Bangladesh to Sri Lanka -- have been a disaster for India in particular and SAARC in general. If India decides to go with the Tamil Tigers the repercussions will be disastrous. India can afford to lose the support of the last remaining 4% Tamils in Sri Lanka. But it can't afford to lose the 80% Sinhalese who are there to stay unlike the Tamils prefer to run away from the raging violence," he added.

- Asian Tribune -
 
Sri Lankan government drafts new Patriotic Act in preparation for war
By Nanda Wickremasinghe and K. Ratnayake
25 May 2006

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One of the clearest indications that the Sri Lankan government is preparing to launch a renewed civil war against the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) is its plans for wide ranging legislation to impose compulsory military conscription, tough media censorship and other anti-democratic measures.

Despite the efforts of President Mahinda Rajapakse and his chauvinist allies to stir up a climate of communal fear and anxiety, there is no significant support for a conflict that has claimed more than 65,000 lives since 1983. The new legislation is aimed against working people: forcing young people into the ranks of the military, stifling any media criticism and suppressing opposition to a deeply unpopular war.

Details of the legislation have yet to be released but aspects of the new laws have been leaked to the media. Presidential secretary Dallas Alahapperuma confirmed to the WSWS last Thursday that the legislation would be tabled in parliament in a couple of weeks. Obviously sensitive about public reaction, he sidestepped questions about the contents of the laws.

According to the Colombo Page website on May 13, the new bill will be called the Patriotic Act, recalling the far-reaching anti-democratic legislation enacted by the Bush administration in the aftermath of September 11, 2001. Based on unnamed Sri Lankan presidential sources, the article reported that initially a civilian brigade of 3,000 would be recruited for security tasks in the south to free regular troops for deployment to the war zones of the North and East.

The legislation will have more far reaching implications, however. Citing a top official from the legal draftsman’s department, the Sinhala-language weekly Ravaya reported that the legislation would include regulations for compulsory military training for 18-50 year olds. While the article gave no details about the purpose of such training, it is clearly a step towards wholesale conscription.

The Colombo Page article pointed out that the new laws would strengthen existing legislation that provides for compulsory enlistment. Under the Mobilisation and Supplementary Forces Act of 1985, the president has wide powers to appoint a competent authority to “enlist any citizen in Sri Lanka... not below the age of eighteen years” and enrol them in supplementary forces under a “national service order.”

Conscripts can already be required to serve in various auxiliary forces to “augment” the armed forces and the police. Such forces can be mobilised “in the defence of Sri Lanka at a time of war” or “in the prevention or suppression of any rebellion or insurrection or any other civil disobedience”. The 1985 legislation was enacted in the midst of intensifying civil war and mounting opposition to the government’s attacks on living standards, jobs and democratic rights.

But President J.R. Jayawardene was unable to implement compulsory conscription, fearing that such a move would provoke mass opposition. Until now, the government has relied on the economic conscription of impoverished youth to fill out the ranks of the military and various auxiliary units. The home guard was established as an auxiliary police force by recruiting unemployed “volunteers”. Paramilitary units to supplement the military were raised in the same way.

Prior to the 2002 truce, however, the Sri Lankan military suffered a series of serious defeats, including the loss of its strategic Elephant Pass base. The desertion rate accelerated and the army ran into difficulties in recruiting sufficient replacements. Overall, it is estimated that the military has suffered around 50,000 desertions over the two decades of war.

Since 1983, the armed forces expanded massively to become, per capita, the largest military apparatus in the region. Currently the combined strength of the army, navy and air force stands at around 157,000 personnel. But as it prepares to launch a new war, the United Peoples Freedom Alliance (UPFA) government is clearly concerned that it will not be able to replace the inevitable casualties with economic conscripts.

Fear and opposition to a return to war is widespread. According to an opinion poll conducted by the Centre for Policy Alternatives earlier this year, the vast majority of the population—95 percent of Sinhalese, 84.7 percent of Muslims and 90.6 percent of Tamils from the plantation areas—believe that there should be a negotiated end to the war.

Already there have been a series of open clashes between the army and the LTTE, the most recent being a pitched naval battle on May 11 in which up to 50 died on both sides. At the same time, there is a clandestine war underway in which the military and allied Tamil paramilitaries have provocatively murdered LTTE members and supporters, prompting retaliation and reprisals. Hundreds, including many civilians, have been killed since the beginning of the year.

As the conflict escalates, opposition to the war will also harden. President Rajapakse is preparing his Patriotic Act not only to dragoon youth into the armed forces, but to suppress any criticism of the war. Details leaked to the press indicate that the new legislation will further strengthen the president’s emergency powers to censor the media, including blocking any reports “hindering investigations into terrorism”. The laws will also strengthen the government’s ability to curb banking and financial activities, again in the name of fighting terrorism.

What is being prepared is most clearly indicated by the statements of Rajapakse’s Sinhala chauvinist allies—the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) and the Jathika Hela Urumaya (JHU)—both of which are agitating for war.

In a special statement to parliament on March 7, JVP leader Wimal Weerawansa attacked the media over its reporting of military’s activities and declared his party “respects the motherland more than media freedom.” Notwithstanding his party’s past anti-imperialist demagogy, Weerawansa hailed the Bush administration’s Patriot Act as the appropriate model for Sri Lanka. “Even that country [the US]... has taken steps to control every other thing on the basis of its national ambitions,” he blurted out.

Following press reports of the new laws this month, JHU secretary Omalpe Sobhitha told the Irida Lakbima that the government should ignore the criticisms from the media and non-government organisations and implement its Patriotic Act. Targetting the press, he declared: “It is more important to defend a country’s national security and sovereignty than the media freedom and the right [of people] to know information.”

The military top brass launched its own political campaign against antiwar films last year, denouncing the directors for undermining the morale of soldiers. Rear Admiral Sarath Weerasekera armed forces spokesman Brigadier Daya Ratanayke and a senior air force officer, met with several directors, telling them to make “pro-army films” and menacingly warning that they would face “the consequences if the war breaks out again”.

The working class must oppose these anti-democratic measures, which are not directed against “terrorism” but against any opposition to the war and working people more generally. The agitation for war is itself a product of the failure of the Sri Lankan ruling elites to arrest the country’s deepening social and economic crisis. Unable to provide decent living conditions for the majority of the population, the Rajapakse government, along with the JVP and JHU, are once again whipping up communal fears and hatreds to divide the working class along ethnic and religious lines.

http://www.wsws.org/articles/2006/may2006/sril-m25.shtml
 
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