Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam
LTTE's Suicide Bombers
Sabil Francis, Jawarhalal Nehru
University
Institute of
Peace and Conflict Studies, Article 321, 4 February
2000
see
also
see also Peter Schalk On the sacrificial ideology
of the Liberation Tigers, 1993
and
"My feeling is that people have
been barking up the wrong tree completely in
dealing with this. They are often thinking these
people are crazed, which they are not. They have
no suicidal tendencies, no split families," he
added. Many suicide bombers were relatively
affluent and well-educated, and so could not be
seen to be acting out of desperation "There is no
evidence whatsoever of poverty. On the contrary,
they are usually better off than the surrounding
population. Suicide bombers were not "crazed,"
but had been indoctrinated..." (This...) creates
a sincere commitment equal to the one a mother
feels when she sacrifices herself for her child.
... " Suicide bombers made, not born says
Scott Atran of CNRS-Institut Jean Nicod in Paris,
France and the University of Michigan in Ann
Arbor writing in the journal Science. (From a
Reuters Report, 7 March 2003)
|
It is an irony that those on death row
for the Rajiv Gandhi assassination had a peripheral
role in the act. It was carried out by the Black
Tigers, the suicide squads of the LTTE, a shadowy group
within the terrorist organisation. Other organisations,
like Hamas, which is fighting Israel, have indulged in
suicide bombings; but the LTTE has made suicide bombing
an article of faith, with the Black Tigers (Karim
Puligal) the most honoured members of the organisation,
entitled to one last meal with Pirabaharan himself
before setting out on their missions.
On May 21, 1991, the LTTE adopted suicide bombing to
assassinate Rajiv Gandhi, at an election rally in
Sriperumbudur near Madras. Since then suicide bombers
have killed Sri Lankan president Ranasinghe Premadasa
(May 1, 1993) and Presidential candidate Gamini
Dissanayake (October 23, 1995). This tactic has also
been used to attack army convoys and to overrun army
bases. For example, in the assault on the Jaffna Fort
in the early 90s, the LTTE used 14-year-old cadre
wrapped in explosives to defeat a 200-strong garrison
and capture the fort. The LTTE also used this tactic to
indiscriminately truck bomb of the Central Bank on
President's street in Jaffna in January 1996. Over a
100 innocent civilians were killed and more than 1,000
injured.
Though the LTTE was founded in 1974, suicide bombing
was only accepted as a tactic in the late 1980s. The
first instance of a suicide bombing was on July 5,
1987, when Captain Miller of the LTTE Black Tigers
drove a van full of explosives into a military camp at
Nelliaddy. More than 128 soldiers were killed.
What are the motivations of the Black Tigers, who
regularly indulge in "Dry Runs" that could terrify
normal person? None of the classical theorists on
guerrilla warfare like Mao, Lenin, or Che have
advocated suicide bombing. The only comparable instance
are Islamic militants in the Middle East. Their
ideology believes that they will go straight to heaven.
The LTTE is officially atheist and the cadre, being
Hindus, believe in reincarnation of the soul. The LTTE
ideologue Anton Balasingham made a speech in Jaffna in
November 1995, claiming that "karma" was the reason for
the untimely and unnatural deaths of Sinhala leaders
who had "tormented the Tamils."
In the LTTE's case, the motivation for suicide attacks
seems to be a kind of en masse cult hysteria that the
LTTE consciously cultivates by rituals like Martyr's
Week promoting, a cult of martyrdom, building of
special cemeteries, naming of weapons after Black
Tigers and, in short, the promise of honour after
death. In fact, the "dry runs", of the Black Tigers,
recorded on videotape are enough to terrify the most
courageous. Clearly, something more than courage is
involved and the promise of honour beyond death is
attractive to those who have nothing to gain in this
life. This becomes significant as most of the LTTE
cadre now, come from lower middle class backgrounds and
easily accept such propaganda.
Another powerful motivation for the LTTE's suicide
cadre is that the LTTE connects its ideology with a
judicious use of symbols rooted in Tamil myth such as
the tiger, the symbol of one of the most favourite
Tamil gods, Murugan. It was the emblem of the ancient
Chola emperors, the concept of maram (wrath), the
concept of the brave mother (vira tayar) and the vira
pen (brave woman) who sacrifice their loved ones for
the war. This is a recurring theme in Purananuru poetry
of the Sangam period between 500 B.C. and 200 A.D. The
LTTE cadre is expected to conform to the ideals of the
past. A failure is not that of an individual, letting
down the organisation, it is failure to live up to the
ideals of a glorious past.
The motivation of the LTTE Black Tiger cadre is similar
to that of the Kamikaze pilots of the Japanese air
force in the Second World War. They would crash their
explosive laden planes against American warships crying
"I die for the Emperor." They were deluded into
believing that they were carrying on the ancient
Samurai tradition, that they were living up to ancient
warrior ideals, that they were fulfilling a sacrifice
demanded by the Emperor, and would face tremendous
shame and humiliation if they surrendered. The same is
true for the LTTE.
Suicide bombers made, not born:
Study
REUTERS[ FRIDAY, MARCH 07, 2003 03:30:43 AM ]
WASHINGTON: Suicide bombers were not born to kill and
die for their causes, but were instead manipulated by
trainers who knew how to trigger basic drives and
emotions, a US anthropologist said on Thursday.
He said that the US was "barking up the wrong tree"
with its war on terrorism and in making threats against
Iraq, and would in the end only make things worse.
Scott Atran of CNRS-Institut Jean Nicod in Paris,
France and the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor said
groups such as al-Qaeda use sophisticated techniques to
create suicide bombers such as the 19 men who killed
nearly 3,000 people in the September 11, 2001, attacks
against New York and Washington.
Writing in the journal Science, he said that suicide
bombers were not "crazed," but had been indoctrinated.
"I think these groups are able to manipulate innate
emotions... in much the way the fast food and porn
industry manipulate innate desires," Atran said in a
telephone interview. "(This manipulation) creates a
sincere commitment equal to the one a mother feels when
she sacrifices herself for her child." Atran, who has
lived in Jerusalem and who did his own research as well
as reviewed the work of others, noted that many suicide
bombers were relatively affluent and well-educated, and
so could not be seen to be acting out of desperation.
Instead, they were manipulated by leaders who knew how
to tap into instincts on par with the need to eat and
reproduce. "They do so very effectively," Atran said.
"My feeling is that people have been barking up the
wrong tree completely in dealing with this. They are
often thinking these people are crazed, which they are
not. They have no suicidal tendencies, no split
families," he added. "There is no evidence whatsoever
of poverty. On the contrary, they are usually better
off than the surrounding population. (President George
W) Bush has been saying the way to fight terrorism is
by raising education and fighting illiteracy but he is
just whistling in the wind."
It is also impossible to "sell"
American values to these groups, Atran maintained. He
called "harebrained" an idea to create a "Radio Free
Arabia" akin to the highly successful "Radio Free
Europe" of the Cold War. "If people are already
convinced of an ideological position that is
antagonistic to your own, then bombarding them with
information relating to your own only increases their
antagonism," he said. Eastern Europe during the 1960s
was very different from modern-day Islamic countries,
he said. Atran believed that a better approach would be
to sideline the extremists. "I think the US and its
allies should try to empower moderates from within the
community," he said. Helping achieve an equitable
solution between Israel and the Palestinians would also
help, he said.
Atran, who addresses these issues in a recent book
entitled In Gods We Trust: The Evolutionary Landscape
of Religion, said attacking Iraq would only worsen
ill-feelings against the US. "We know from polls in
Israel and Lebanon that when force is used to go after
what people consider to be Arab terrorists, and usually
miss the mark, that increases support (for those
groups)," he said.
|