United States &
Tamil EELAM Freedom Struggle
Time for Colombo to defeat LTTE with political solution:
U.S. Ambassador Blake's Foray into Tamil Nadu
25 October 2008 - InfoTamil
Comment by
tamilnation.org
Mr.Blake is ofcourse right to point out that the
"greatest failure of the last 25 years has been the
failure of the main Sinhalese parties to reach agreement " though it would
have been better if he had got his history right - it is not simply during
the last 25 years that Sinhala parties have failed to reach agreement. As
long ago as 1957, the
Bandaranaike-Chelvanayagam agreement was torn up because of the
opposition of the UNP led by J.R.Jayawardene - and that was fifty
years ago. And in 1968, the
Dudley-Chelvanayagam Agreement collapsed with the opposition led this
time by the SLFP. And that was 39 years ago.
Said that, Mr.Blake with his depth of
understanding of the conflict in the island of Sri Lanka, does not
explain why it is that Sinhala political parties have failed to reach
agreement during all these many years. Are the Sinhalese political parties
stupid? Or are the Sinhala people who put these parties in power so stupid
that they do not see that which Mr.Blake sees so clearly in his wisdom?
Or is Mr.Blake stupid in failing to see something which Sathasivam
Krishnakumar and the LTTE saw many years ago -
" Sinhala
Buddhist chauvinism has been institutionalised in Sri Lanka and
today it has become more powerful than the politicians themselves.
Indeed even if the Sinhala politicians seek to settle the conflict,
Sinhala Buddhist chauvinism may try to prevent such a settlement. This
is the political reality that those who are aware of the Sri Lankan
situation are well aware of. This is the result of the grievous error
committed by Sinhala politicians. In
1956 for the
first time this 'communalism' was openly put forward for electoral gain.
This Sinhala chauvinism which was nurtured by Sinhala politicians for
their electoral advantage,
has grown into a
Frankenstein monster which now has the power to destroy and make
politicians. This we understand very well..."
Sathasivam
Krishnakumar, June, 1991
Senator S.Nadesan said it all, fifty years ago in the immediate
aftermath of Genocide'58 -
"...Hon. Senators will remember how one of the
present Ministers of this Government went round the countryside saying
that the U.N.P. Government had offered the Sinhalese man's mat to
Suppiah to lie on and allow Nalliah to pluck his eye and Subramaniam to
wring his neck. That is the type of communal propaganda indulged in by
members of the M.E.P. and by their Ministers. We cannot forget
that...The Tamils are the
pawns in a political game. It does not matter to anybody how we
suffer, how we feel, so long as in this game one Sinhala party is the
victor and the other Sinhala party is the vanquished. .... if one party
said, "We will kill the Tamils", the other party could go one better and
say, "We will eat the Tamils." In other words, it was a competition as
to who would hold down the Tamils most. And the party which was going
to hold down the Tamils most was going to have the support of the
Sinhalese masses... That is all. That is why I ask you not to make
us pawns in your game... The suffering of the Tamil man is not a joke. A
man being slapped is not a joke. But when these things were told the
Prime Minister, he laughed it off and said that matters would adjust
themselves. This is no laughing matter... We are willing to go. Every
Tamil man, woman and child is willing to go...We do not want language
rights from you. We will look after our language..... Please have
Sinhalese only. No Tamil worthy of his name is ever going to study
the Sinhalese language. You have stamped it out... We only want
the right to live
in
our areas. We want the right to be able to walk the streets without
being molested. Those are the rights we want. The elementary duty
of a Government is to afford protection to its subjects, and the duty of
the citizens is to be loyal to that Government. The moment that
Government
fails to
afford that protection, it forfeits its right to that loyalty and
affection. This Government has forfeited that right... "
Again Mr.Blake who was addressing the
University of Madras may also want to attend to the words
of Sinhala academic, historian K. M. de
Silva in 1996 -
"...In the Sinhala language, the words for nation,
race and people are practically synonymous, and a
multiethnic or multicommunal nation or state is incomprehensible to
the popular mind. The
emphasis on Sri Lanka as the
land of the Sinhala Buddhists carried an emotional popular appeal,
compared with which the concept of a multiethnic polity was a
meaningless abstraction..." [Sinhala Historian K. M. de Silva in
Religion, Nationalism and the State, USF Monographs in Religion and
Public Policy, No.1 (Tampa, FLA: University of South Florida 1986) at
p31 quoted by David Little in Religion and Self Determination in Self
Determination - International Perspectives, MacMillan Press, 1996]
Mr.Blake may
also gain by reading Stephen
Grossly, Professor of Philosophy and Religion, Clemson University on "The
primordial, kinship and nationality�- �When is the Nation?� -
�The
central place of Buddhism in the constitution of the Singhalese
territorial relation of a nation goes back to the Sinhalese histories of
the fourth and fifth centuries of the Christian era, the Dipavamsa and
the Mahavamsa. There one finds the myth of the visit of the Buddha to
Sri Lanka, during which he freed the Island of its original supernatural
and evil inhabitants, the Yakkas. As a result the Buddha had
sanctified the entire island transforming it into a Buddhist
territory. These histories thus asserted a territorial relation between
Sinhalese and Buddhism, the stability of which was derived from a
perceived order of the universe, that is, the actions of the Buddha. The
reaffirmation of that relation may be observed to-day in the shrines
throughout the island at Mahiyangana, where the supposed collarbone of
the Buddha is kept, at Mount Samantakuta, where the Buddha�s supposed
fossilized footprint may be seen and the most important one at Kandy,
supposedly containing the relic of the Buddha�s tooth."
Stephen Grossly, Professor of Philosophy and Religion,
Clemson University on The primordial, kinship and nationality�. �When is
the Nation?� Edited by Atsuko Ichijo and Gordana Uzelac Routledge (2005)
p 68
Mr.Blake may
then begin to understand that what we have in the island of Sri Lanka is a
Sinhala Buddhist ethno nation which dares not speak its name and which
seeks to masquerade as a Sri Lankan multi ethnic 'civic' nation, albeit with
a Sinhala Lion
flag, an unrepealed
Sinhala only Act,
with
Buddhism
as the state religion and with a Sinhala Sri Lanka name which it gave
itself
unilaterally in 1972. Mr.Blake may then
begin to understand that if you are serious about defeating the LTTE
politically, then you will need to face upto the political reality on
the ground that gave rise to the armed resistance of the people of
Tamil Eelam and the LTTE. And that political reality is that there are two
nations in the island; that two nations
may agree to
associate with one another in equality and in freedom; but that they
cannot be compelled to live together by force of arms. Political
solutions directed to resolve the conflict on the ground must address the
political reality on the ground and not the other way round. And it is this
that US Congressman Mario Baggio seems to have recognised when
he
declared
eloquently in the US House of Representatives in May 1980 -
"To understand the problems that exist in Sri
Lanka - formerly known as Ceylon - it is essential that we
review its history. Located in South Asia, the island of Sri
Lanka has been composed of two distinct populations for
centuries - the Tamils and the Sinhalese.
They lived not as one, but as two nations, with separate
languages, religions, cultures, and
clearly demarcated geographic territories...
My colleagues and I have introduced the
following resolution because we believe it is essential to
express the concern of the Congress about the army occupation in
the Tamil areas of Sri Lanka: the denial of basic rights,
including freedom of expression, freedom of religion, equal
citizenship and educational opportunities; and the freedom to
exercise the
right of political self-determination."
Again, the
resolution of US Massachusetts House of Representatives in June 1981
calling for the Restoration of the Separate Sovereign State of Tamil
Eelam suggests that the country which Ambassador Blake represents is
not without an understanding of the political solution that is
needed to end the conflict in the island.
"Resolved, that the Massachusetts
House of Representatives hereby urges the President and the Congress of
the United States to support the
struggle for freedom
by the Tamil nation for the
restoration and reconstitution the separate sovereign
state of Tamil Eelam and to recognize publicly the
right of self determination by the Tamil people of Tamil Eelam, and
be it further resolved,
that copies of these resolutions be
forwarded to the President of the United States, to the Presiding
Officer of each branch of Congress, to the members thereof from this
Commonwealth, to the Secretary of State, to the Director of the World
Bank and to the Secretary General of the United Nations."
Resolution of US
Massachusetts House of Representatives 18 June 1981
But then again, it may be that it is not that
Mr.Blake does not know all that we have said here, but that he is simply
concerned to secure the perceived geo strategic interests of the United
States in the
Indian Ocean and
is moved by that which US Rear Admiral Alfred Thayer Mahan said many years
ago -
"Whoever controls the Indian Ocean
dominates Asia. This ocean is the key to the seven seas in the
twenty-first century, the destiny of the world will be decided in
these waters."
It may be that he is also be moved by the
analysis of US Lt.Col. Christopher J. Pehrson in 2006 -
" Militarily, the United States must bear
the cost of maintaining superior military power to guarantee security
and serve as a hedge against a possible future China threat. In the
�String of Pearls� region, U.S. efforts should be aimed at broadening
and deepening American influence in ways that have wide appeal among the
various regional states."
String of Pearls:Meeting the Challenge of China�s Rising Power Across
the Asian Littoral - Lt.Col. Christopher J. Pehrson, July, 2006
It may be that Ambassador
Blake is concerned to secure for his country the effective implementation of
the ten year Acquisition and Cross-Servicing Agreement (ACSA) signed by the
United States and Sri Lanka on 5 March 2007 �
�The ten year Acquisition and Cross-Servicing Agreement
(ACSA) signed by the United States and Sri Lanka on March 5, which provides
for among other things logistics supplies and re-fuelling facilities, has
major ramifications for the region, particularly India. For all the
sophistry and spin by the Americans, the ACSA is a military deal and, on the
face of it, is loaded in Washington's favour �
B. Muralidhar Reddy in the Hindu, 9 March 2007
Again, though Ambassador Blake, pointed out
that India and the United States
could
use their 'strategic partnership to good effect in Sri Lanka.'
he made no reference to the 'strategic partnership' that the US seeks to
build with Sri Lanka. He did not for instance, explain how the
'ten year Acquisition and Cross-Servicing Agreement (ACSA)
signed by the United States and Sri Lanka in 2007' squared with the
recent statement by
India's External Affairs Minister, Pranab Mukherji that
Colombo had been told that India would 'look after
your security requirements, provided you do not look around' and that India
'cannot have a playground of
international players in our backyard.'
Neither did Ambassador Blake in his foray
into Tamil Nadu, spell out the details of the 'strategic partnership'
that the US seeks with India - and whether that included the recent US-India
nuclear deal which has drawn widespread opposition from Indian political
parties and evoked concern that the US foreign policy was directed not
to building 'partnerships' but to building 'clients and dependencies'
-
"..In the background of the Indo-US
nuclear deal now going into 'overdrive', as well as the increasing
economic co-operation and (most importantly) the joint military
exercises and interoperability efforts and acquisitions made by India,
there is a geopolitical notion: that the US is building India's military
capacity in order to counter potential rivals China and Russia in the
region... (But) Empires don't build great powers. They build clients and
dependencies..."
Justin
Podur, 5 August 2005
It is unfortunate that Ambassador Blake was
not as forthcoming as India's
Jyotindra Nath Dixit was
about India's foreign policy objectives in 1998 -
"...Tamil militancy received (India's)
support ...as a response to (Sri Lanka's).. concrete and expanded
military and intelligence cooperation with the United States, Israel and
Pakistan. ...The assessment was that these presences would pose a
strategic threat to India and they would encourage fissiparous movements
in the southern states of India. .. a process which could have found
encouragement from Pakistan and the US, given India's experience
regarding their policies in relation to Kashmir and the Punjab...."
It would have been helpful if Ambassador
Blake had explained to his Tamil audience at the University of Madras the
extent to which 'military and intelligence cooperation' of the US with
Pakistan may impact on that which he called the US-India 'strategic
partnership'.
It is unfortunate that Ambassador Blake was
not more transparent about US strategic interests and the motivations for US
actions in relation to the conflict in the island of Sri Lanka. Unfortunate,
because apart from anything else, transparency is a first step towards an
open evaluation of that which US may 'perceive' to be its
strategic interests - and as we
have said elsewhere, GNP is not necessarily a measure of wisdom. The
recent
financial crisis in the United States is proof enough of that.
Sacked Sri Lanka Foreign Minister Mangala
Samaraweera did ofcourse help the Tamil people to further their
own understanding of
international relations in this age
of empire, when
he said on 14
February 2007 -
".... two days after the vote (on
Israel), US Undersecretary of State Nicholas Burns telephoned me. The
decision taken by us regarding the vote went a long way in building
trust and strengthening US-Sri Lanka ties. Few days afterwards,
at the Co-Chairs Meeting in Washington DC, Nicholas Burns expressed
America's fullest support to the Government of Sri Lanka in defeating
the menace of LTTE terrorism. After the meeting
he also held a press conference that was very encouraging to the
Government and the people of Sri Lanka..."
Said all this, the US may want to rethink as
to where its true strategic interests in the Indian Ocean region may lie and
here Ambassador Blake may help his country by revisiting
the words of Hilary Clinton
in October 2007
-
"..I believe that terrorism is a tool
that has been utilized throughout history to achieve certain objectives.
Some have been ideological, others territorial. There are
personality-driven terroristic objectives. The bottom line is, you can't
lump all terrorists together. And I think we've got to do a much better
job of clarifying what are the motivations, the raisons d'�tre of
terrorists. I mean, what the
Tamil Tigers
are fighting for in Sri Lanka, or the
Basque separatists in Spain, or the insurgents in
al-Anbar province may only be connected by tactics. They may not
share all that much in terms of what is the philosophical or ideological
underpinning. And I think one of our mistakes has been painting with
such a broad brush, which has not been particularly helpful in
understanding what it is we were up against when it comes to those who
pursue terrorism for whichever ends they're seeking... (US) can
have an approach that tries to project power and authority in an
appropriate way that draws on all aspects of American power, that
inspires and attracts as much as coerces."
We ourselves believe that a
principle centered approach which will 'inspire and attract'
will also need to draw a
distinction between violence and terrorism. The two
words are not synonymous and much confusion arises by
conflating the two. All violence is not terrorism and an US
approach which liberates political language will also help
liberate peoples who have
taken up arms as
a last resort in their
struggle for freedom from oppressive alien rule. We
believe that the long term strategic interests of the US,
whether in the Indian Ocean region or elsewhere will
benefit by a foreign policy which 'inspires and attracts
as much as coerces'. If the US aspires to play a lead role
in an emergent multi lateral (though
asymmetric) world, we believe that that leadership will
not come simply by the display of military might and
economic power. There is a need to defend the very real
values that a people stand for and speak from the heart to
their hearts.
Mr.Blake will hopefully take heart from the
fact that whoever may be stupid, the Tamils at the University of Madras as
well as those in Tamil Eelam are not stupid.
[see also
We won�t stop military cooperation with Lanka
says Indian External
Affairs Minister Pranab Mukherjee]
Time for Colombo to defeat LTTE with political solution:
U.S. Ambassador Blake, 25 October 2008 - InfoTamil
"The U.S. view is that the [Sri Lankan] government could further
isolate and weaken the LTTE if it articulates now its vision for a political
solution," said U.S. Ambassador to Sri Lanka Robert Blake while addressing an
interactive session at the University of Madras on Friday, 24 October 2008, The
Hindu reported. While ruling out the military option, Mr. Blake has alluded that
the U.S. position was to militarily weaken the LTTE, to defeat it
politically. The United States has been a key player of the Co-Chairs for the
Sri Lankan process, which has been managed by the facilitation of Norway till
Sri Lanka unilaterally withdrew from the ceasefire.
The U.S. ban on the LTTE, which was followed by several other countries, has cut
the flow of money and weapons to the Tigers, the U.S. Ambassador observed adding
that the "result of which could be seen in their recent military defeats."
Refusing to comment on the rising voice in Tamil Nadu for
Indian pressure on Sri Lanka, the U.S. Ambassador has said India and the
United States could use their "strategic partnership to good effect in Sri
Lanka."
"The greatest failure of the last 25 years has been the failure
of the main Sinhalese parties to reach agreement," the paper quoted Mr. Blake as
saying.
The Hindu report summarised the U.S. view expressed by Mr. Blake in following
words:
"Moving forward on a political solution would have
three-fold benefits - to reassure 2,00,000 refugees in the Vanni region that
they can move south and aspire to a better future; to disprove the LTTE's
claim of being the sole representative of Sri Lanka's Tamils; and to
persuade Tamils overseas to stop funding the LTTE."
However, the U.S. Ambassador, who admitted that his government
earlier helped the Sri Lankan military, said the U.S. has recently effected a
complete freeze on all military assistance to Sri Lanka.
As pressure mounted from Tamil Nadu against India's military assistance to Sri
Lanka, the LTTE Political Head B. Nadesan, in his recent interviews to Indian
media, has urged the Indian Central Government to objectively reconsider its
stand on who, whether the Tamil people or the Sri Lankan government, are India's
friends in the island of Sri Lanka, not opposed to India's strategic interests
in the region and urged to lift the ban on the LTTE hinting that the Tigers were
prepared to enter negotiations if Colombo announced a ceasefire.
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