|
Liberation Tigers attack Anuradhapura air base
22 October 2007
[see also
Katunayake Military Airbase Bombed by LTTE Air Wing, 25 March 2007 and
Tamil Tiger planes bomb
Colombo power station and Mannar army camp, 29 October 2008]
"..We
are not chauvinists.
Neither are we lovers of violence enchanted with war. We recognise the
Sinhala nation. We accord a place of dignity for the culture and
heritage of the Sinhala people. We have no desire to interfere in any way
with the national life of the Sinhala people or with their freedom and
independence. We, the Tamil people, desire to live in
our own
historic homeland as an independent nation,
in
peace,
in freedom and
with
dignity." -
Velupilllai
Pirabaharan, Leader of Tamil Eelam
LTTE's Anuradhapura Raid: Bravery & Precision - B.
Raman, South Asia Analysis Group, New Delhi, 23 October 2007
" Reliable details of the combined air
and land attack launched by the Liberation Tigers of
Tamil Eelam (LTTE) on the Anuradhapura air base of the
Sri Lankan Air Force early in the morning of October 22,
2007, indicate that it was neither an act of desperation
as projected by the embarrassed Sri Lankan military
spokesmen nor an act of needless dramatics as suggested
by others. It was an act of unbelievable determination,
bravery and precision successfully carried out by a
21-member suicide commando group of the Black
Tigers---significantly led by a Tamil from the Eastern
Province--- with the back-up support of two planes of
the so-called Tamil Eelam Air Force."
Ram! O
Ram! - The Chennai based Hindu shows its hand, yet again in
its editorial titled "LTTE attack in military context",
24 October 2007
"..Pushed into the Vanni jungles and
denied vital supplies as a result of a relentless
year-long campaign by the Sri Lankan military, a
desperate LTTE has scored a hit of modest military
significance..."
TamilNet Report, 22 October 2007
LTTE releases names of Black Tigers in airbase raid
Flying Tigers' fox Lankans - P.K.Balachandran in Hindustan
Times
"The fledgling air arm of the
Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) comprising two
to five single engine, propeller driven Zlin-143s, is up
against Sri Lanka's formidable air force
comprising MIG-27 and Kfir fighter bombers, K-8 jet
trainers, MI-24 helicopter gun ships, Bell-212s
choppers, and Antonov troop and material carriers. And
yet, the Lankan Goliath has been unable to tame the
Tamil David, who has hit and run with impunity four
times since March 26 this year... It is also feared that
the government has gone in for US$ 500 million five year
sovereign bond issue at a whopping 8.25% interest to
finance the rising defense expenditure. Therefore, the
Flying Tigers may well be contributing to the parlous
state of Sri Lanka's finances."
Sri Lanka aircraft could not take off from damaged airport
to intercept LTTE air craft - Sri Lanka State Controlled
Daily News, 23 October 2007
Sri Lanka orders shake up of military command and puts naked
corpses of Tamil rebels on public display - AFP
Report, 23 October 2007
"In Anuradhapura, the authorities put
the naked rebel corpses on public display on Tuesday,
residents said. Two farm tractors pulled around trailers
loaded with the dead. "The tractors stopped outside the
hospital where there was a large gathering of people,"
one journalist said. "People took pictures while others
were even filming.""
"Sri Lanka military abuse conventions on the treatment of
war dead" - Reuter Report, 24 October 2007
The
Exhibitionism of Necrophilia: The Subhuman in the
Sinhala-Buddhist Psyche - Giuseppe. C. Luciani, 24
October 2007
Sinhala Opposition UNP says 18 aircraft worth more than 439
million dollars damaged in Anuradhapura attack -
Sinhala owned Sri Lanka Daily Mirror, 23 October 2007
Tamil Tiger suicide squad in audacious strike -
Peter
Foster, South Asia Correspondent, London Daily
Telegraph, 23 October 2007
"Tamil Tiger rebels staged a
spectacular pre-dawn raid on a Sri Lankan air force base
on Monday, using light aircraft and suicide-bombers to
destroy military planes and equipment worth more than
�20 million....
The military said that
nine Sri Lankan troops and 20 Tiger guerrillas had been
killed in the attack... However the military routinely
plays down the scale of Tiger attacks and well-placed
sources in Colombo said the damage was on a far greater
scale than had admitted. Among the planes allegedly
damaged or destroyed was a Beechcraft surveillance plane
worth �14 million, two Mi17 helicopters, two Mi24
helicopters, three unmanned aerial vehicles, a K-8 jet
and eight PD6 propeller trainer aircraft. "
Rebel suicide squad, planes smash Sri Lanka air base - AFP
"An elite Tamil Tiger suicide squad
Monday attacked a key Sri Lankan military base in an
unprecedented ground and air assault, leaving at least
34 dead on both sides....Military sources said 13
servicemen, including two pilots, were killed and 22
others wounded in the assault, which is seen as the
worst against the airforce
since the July 2001 attack that destroyed over a
dozen fighter planes....Military sources said the bigger
loss for the security forces apart from the fatalities
was the destruction of a Beechcraft aircraft fitted with
advanced electronic spy devices. Three other smaller spy
planes were also believed to have been damaged. The
attack was the first Tiger aerial strike
since
they attacked oil installations in the capital on April
28..."
Sri Lanka Tiger rebel planes bomb air force base - Reuters
" Five servicemen were killed inside
the base and 22 others were wounded in the attack, while
four crew aboard a helicopter gunship, scrambled to
search the area, were killed when it crash-landed
several kilometres away, the military said..."
Tamil Tiger rebels launch deadly land and air attack on Sri
Lankan air base - CNN
"The
attack at the air
base at Anuradhapura
began at 3:10 a.m.
with rebels
infiltrating the
base in the
country's north
central province.
Residents in the
area, who spoke by
telephone, said they
heard loud
explosions and heavy
gunfire. Shortly
after the ground
attack began, a
rebel aircraft
bombed the base, the
sources added."
LTTE bombs Lanka Air Force base, 4 killed
- Sify
"A group of LTTE rebels infiltrated
the Anuradhapura SLAF Base and launched the initial
attack around 3.20 am local time. A few minutes later at
least two LTTE light aircrafts bombed the base,
destroying two MI-24 helicopters, military spokesman
Brig Udaya Nanayakkara told UNI over the phone."
Sri Lankan Tamil Rebels Raid Airbase North of Colombo -
Bloomberg
"..Lankan Tamil rebels used aircraft
and ground forces to attack an air force base north of
the capital, Colombo, early today, killing five
servicemen and injuring 22, the military said...The
Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam began a ground assault
on the base at Anuradhapura at about 3 a.m. Sri Lankan
time and dropped two bombs, the army said. ``Clearing is
going on'' at the site, said Brigadier Udaya
Nanayakkara, a military spokesman."
சிறிலங்கா வான்படைத் தளம் மீதான தாக்குதலில் 8 வானூர்திகள்
முற்றாக தாக்கியழிப்பு: விடுதலைப் புலிகள்
Tributes to Black Tigers at
Puthukkudiyiruppu,
25 October 2007
Tigers ruin Lankan military plans say observers AFP,
Colombo, 26 October 2007
Tamil Tiger rebels have dealt a
serious blow to Sri Lanka's intelligence gathering
capabilities with a devastating suicide attack that
destroyed its entire fleet of spy planes, observers said
yesterday. Tiger guerrillas, who were widely regarded as
being on the defensive, turned the tables Monday with a
suicide strike that eliminated the fleet of surveillance
aircraft, which included four Israeli-made drones. Sri
Lanka's air force, after initially denying that any
damage was caused to their multi-million-dollar spy
fleet, admitted that it lost eight aircraft, including a
twin-turbo prop Beechcraft surveillance plane. The
aircraft had been the secret behind the military's
success in attacking a fleet of Tamil Tiger boats and
gun-running ships, military sources said.
Who's
writing the script of the war? - J.S. Tissainayagam, 28
October 2007
"...by compelling the security forces
to look to strengthening their defence capabilities for
resisting further attacks rather than going on the
offensive in the Wanni, the Tigers have forced the
government to respond to a plan they have scripted,
rather than advance the programme the government would
wish implemented..."
more
LTTE had 'inside information' for raid on spy plane
base, AFP and AP, Colombo, 29 October 2007
|
LTTE's Anuradhapura Raid: Bravery & Precision- B. Raman, South
Asia Analysis Group, New Delhi, 23 October 2007
together with
Comment by tamilnation.org
Reliable details of the combined air and land attack launched by the
Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) on the Anuradhapura air base of the
Sri Lankan Air Force early in the morning of October 22, 2007, indicate that
it was neither an act of desperation as projected by the embarrassed Sri
Lankan military spokesmen nor an act of needless dramatics as suggested by
others. It was an act of unbelievable determination, bravery and precision
successfully carried out by a 21-member suicide commando group of the Black
Tigers - significantly led by a Tamil from the Eastern Province - with the
back-up support of two planes of the so-called Tamil Eelam Air Force.
2. Reliable Western sources say that no other terrorist organisation in the
world would have been capable of organising such a raid, which had been
preceded by painstaking intelligence collection, planning and rehearsal. The
commandos, divided into groups, infiltrated into the air base from two
directions and, within 20 minutes, took the security guards by surprise,
overwhelmed them, seized their weapons and communication equipment,
neutralised a radar and an anti-aircraft gun position and then intimated
their headquarters that they were in effective control of the air base. Only
then the two aircraft of the LTTE's air wing flew to Anuradhapura and
dropped two bombs on the base and flew back safely to their hide-out.
3. The commandos remained in effective occupation of the base from 3 AM to
at least 9 AM. During this period, they blew up three helicopters, two
fixed-wing aircraft - one of them a trainer - and three unmanned drones.
After losing communication with the air base, the Sri Lankan Air Force base
at Vavuniya sent one of its helicopters to Anuradhapura to find out what had
happened. As it was approaching the air base, it was shot down by the LTTE
commandos manning the anti-aircraft gun in the air base.
4. The commandos also blew up an ammunition storage depot in the air base
and damaged its runway. It is learnt that the Black Tiger commandos remained
in communication with their headquarters till 9 AM. Thereafter, all
communications ceased, indicating thereby that all of them had either been
killed by the Sri Lankan Security Forces or had committed suicide to avoid
falling into the hands of the Sri Lankan security forces, who had
counter-attacked the base. Thirteen SLAF personnel were killed, nine inside
the base and four in the helicopter crash.
5. The LTTE has been silent on the fate of the commandos. However, it has
released their personal particulars. Two Lieutenant-Colonels, six
Majors, 12 Captains and one Lieutenant rank Black Tiger members took part in
the operation. A Lieutenant-Colonel who led an attack team was from
Trincomalee, two of the members, a Major and a Captain, were from
Batticaloa, one from Mullaiththeevu, one from Mannaar, three from
Ki'linochchi and eleven members from Jaffna .Three Captains were women.
6. Initial reports of the raid had indicated that the raid started with an
air attack by the LTTE's aircraft and that it was only thereafter that the
commandos had infiltrated into the air base by taking advantage of the
confusion. Subsequent reports, however, indicate that the Black Tigers
initially infiltrated the base and took control of it and that it was then
that the air raid was launched more to test the capability for co-ordination
between the air wing and the Black Tigers than to cause damage to the base.
Since the Black Tigers were already in effective control of the base, they
did not need any air support.
7. Embarrassed by the spectacular display of the LTTE's prowess, the Sri
Lankan authorities have been trying to play down the successes of the LTTE
operation. They claim that only two helicopters and one fixed wing aircraft
were damaged and another helicopter was destroyed when it crash-landed due
to technical reasons. The Colombo
correspondent of the "Daily Telegraph" of London has reported that the
Black Tigers destroyed an expensive Beechcraft surveillance plane worth �14
million, two Mi17 helicopters, two Mi24 helicopters, three unmanned aerial
vehicles, a K-8 jet and eight PD6 propeller trainer aircraft.
8. The Anuradhapura air base was essentially used by the SLAF as a training
base. The training command of the SLAF was located there. In addition, it
was also providing intelligence support to the SLAF and the Navy through the
sophisticated Beechcraft plane fitted with equipment for aerial photography
and the collection of electronic and technical intelligence and the unmanned
drones. Instructors from Pakistan, China and Israel were periodically
attached to the base.
Comment by
tamilnation.org
It will be understandable if New Delhi (and Mr.Raman)
found the discomfiture of
Pakistan, China and Israel not entirely unwelcome. See also
International Dimensions of the Conflict in Sri Lanka - Nadesan
Satyendra
- �The
balance of power in the Indian Ocean region is not a simple black and
white matter. And it is not static. The frame is multilateral and the
interactions are nuanced � and calibrated...
The record shows that Sinhala Sri Lanka seeks to engage in a 'balance
of power' exercise
of its own by handing over parts of the island (and the
surrounding seas) to India, US and China."
9. The helicopters destroyed by the Black Tigers were being used as
helicopter gun ships or for VIP transport. While the damage sustained by the
SLAF is considerable in money terms and reduces its capability for
intelligence collection for air and naval operations, its impact on the
SLAF's capability for air strikes over the LTTE controlled areas would be
limited.
10. The successful operation would seem to have been
launched by the LTTE in retaliation for the recent operations of the Sri
Lankan Navy against the transport ships of the LTTE and the air strikes of
the SLAF over LTTE positions in the Northern Province. It once again
underlines the LTTE's reputation as an organisation with a tremendous
tenacity of purpose, grit and sophistication in thinking and planning. Its
recent set-backs have not weakened its morale. They have only redoubled its
determination to keep fighting for its political objective unmindful of the
losses in the Eastern Province. |
N.Ram - Editor in Chief, The Hindu |
Ram! O Ram! -
Chennai based Hindu
shows its hand, yet again - in its
editorial titled "LTTE attack in military context", 24 October
[see also
The
�Death� and �Rebirth� of Prabhakaran - S.Sivanayagam 5 December
2002;
Where is Prabakaran? - Hindu Editorial, 11 January 2005;
Pirabhakaran Mystery; a Response to the Hindu Editorial - Sachi Sri
Kantha, 12 January 2005;
A Low-Down on Narasimhan Ram - Sachi Sri Kantha, 9 December 2005;
and
What Narasimhan Ram Should Understand - Sachi Sri Kantha 11 July
2006]
Pushed into the Vanni jungles and denied vital supplies as a result of a
relentless year-long campaign by the Sri Lankan military, a desperate LTTE
has scored a hit of modest military significance.
Comment by tamilnation.org
'An act of desperation?'
- The Hindu is presumably not a Sri Lankan military spokesmen but it
appears that it is as embarrassed as the Sri Lanka military at the LTTE
attack on the Anuradhapura air base. "Reliable details of the combined
air and land attack launched by the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam
(LTTE) on the Anuradhapura air base ... indicate that it was neither
an act of desperation as projected by the embarrassed Sri Lankan
military spokesmen nor an act of needless dramatics as suggested by
others...It
was an act of unbelievable determination, bravery and precision
successfully carried out by a 21-member suicide commando group of the
Black Tigers -significantly led by a Tamil from the Eastern Province -
with the back-up support of two planes of the so-called Tamil Eelam Air
Force."
LTTE's Anuradhapura Raid: Bravery & Precision
- B. Raman, South Asia Analysis Group, New Delhi, 23 October 2007
The October 22 pre-dawn ground-and-air attack on the Anuradhapura air
base in the North Central Province, leaving four military helicopters
destroyed and 14 soldiers dead, was in reality a suicide operation by an
organisation on the run.
Comment by tamilnation.org
'An
organisation on the run?'
"..Military sources said 13 servicemen, including two
pilots, were killed and 22 others wounded in the assault, which is seen
as the worst against the airforce
since the July 2001 attack that destroyed over a
dozen fighter planes....Military sources said the bigger loss for the
security forces apart from the fatalities was the destruction of a
Beechcraft aircraft fitted with advanced electronic spy devices. Three
other smaller spy planes were also believed to have been damaged."
Rebel suicide squad, planes smash Sri Lanka
air base - AFP
"....the military routinely plays down the scale of Tiger
attacks and well-placed sources in Colombo said the damage was on a far
greater scale than had admitted. Among the planes allegedly damaged or
destroyed was a Beechcraft surveillance plane worth �14 million, two Mi17
helicopters, two Mi24 helicopters, three unmanned aerial vehicles, a K-8 jet
and eight PD6 propeller trainer aircraft. "
Tamil Tiger suicide squad in audacious strike
-
Peter
Foster, South Asia Correspondent, London Daily Telegraph, 23 October
2007
The modus operandi is typical of the LTTE. A 21-member suicide squad, in
two formations, was let loose on the air base, wrecking everything in sight.
Two light aircraft of the nascent �Tiger Air Force,� which surfaced 70
minutes after the suicide offensive, appear to be of mere symbolic
significance.
Comment by tamilnation.org
'Symbolic significance' - but what does it symbolise?
"The
successful operation... once again underlines the LTTE's reputation as
an organisation with a tremendous tenacity of purpose, grit and
sophistication in thinking and planning. Its recent set-backs have not
weakened its morale. They have only redoubled its determination to keep
fighting for its political objective unmindful of the losses in the
Eastern Province."
LTTE's Anuradhapura Raid: Bravery & Precision
- B. Raman, South Asia Analysis Group, New Delhi, 23 October 2007
It was the fifth aerial foray since the Tigers made their debut in the
skies in March 2007 targeting the air base near the only international
airport of the country at Katunayaka; and the first after the Sri Lanka
government put in place a revamped air defence system. By demonstrating its
�air power,� in the melee of the suicide attack at Anuradhapura, the LTTE
hopes to bolster the sagging morale of its cadres.
Comment by tamilnation.org
"..reports...indicate
that the Black Tigers initially infiltrated the base and took control of
it and that it was then that the air raid was launched more to test
the capability for co-ordination between the air wing and the Black
Tigers
than to cause damage to the base. Since the Black Tigers were already
in effective control of the base, they did not need any air support."
LTTE's Anuradhapura Raid: Bravery & Precision
- B. Raman, South Asia Analysis Group, New Delhi, 23 October 2007
Militarily and politically, the LTTE has been in dire need of an
Anuradhapura-type attack � as in the last several months it has taken a
severe beating from the Sri Lankan armed forces.
Comment by tamilnation.org
Severe beating?
"...the Lankan Goliath has been unable to tame the Tamil
David, who has hit and run with impunity four times since March 26 this
year... It is also feared that the government has gone in for US$ 500
million five year sovereign bond issue at a whopping 8.25% interest to
finance the rising defense expenditure. Therefore, the Flying Tigers
may well be contributing to the parlous state of Sri Lanka's finances."
Flying Tigers' fox Lankans - P.K.Balachandran in
Hindustan Times
Since
its
ouster from the east in August, the terrorist organisation has failed to
conduct any military operation of significance notwithstanding
the fissures within the Karuna group and general unrest in the east.
Contrary to predictions from several quarters, Colombo has been safe.
According to the Sri Lankan Navy, the
LTTE has lost all of its ten ships, ferrying supplies from various
clandestine sources, in one-sided sea battles. Eight of these losses were in
2007 and the other two ships were sunk in Indonesian waters. According to
informed estimates, which are not contested by the LTTE, 200 of its cadres
were killed in the past one month. For the first time in years, the Sri
Lankan army made territorial gains in the north by capturing a Tiger base in
Mannar.
Comment by tamilnation.org
That the Hindu is
concerned to prop up Sinhala Sri Lanka's rule of the people of Tamil
Eelam may be understandable - understandable, that is, in the context of
the support that the Hindi has given during the past several decades to
perpetuate alien Sinhala rule of the people of Tamil Eelam, in the same
way as in the 1930s, the Hindu gave its support for alien British rule
of India. But the Hindu may also want to pay heed to
the words of Mahatma Gandhi in Transvaal more than a hundred years ago
"..If
someone asks me when and how the struggle may end, I may say that, if
the entire community manfully stands the test, the end will be near. If
many of us fall back under storm and stress, the struggle will be
prolonged. But I can boldly declare, and with certainty, that so long as
there is even a handful of men true to their pledge, there can
only be one end to the struggle, and that is victory..."
However, the armed forces face a few troubling questions. The new radar
detected the intruding aircraft, yet they were able to operate in the air
space for at least 30 minutes and return to their base. And what explains
the failure of the armed forces to detect the infiltration of a large
suicide squad right into the compound of a vital air base? The LTTE
operation shows up continuing weaknesses in Sri Lanka�s intelligence
machinery and in the capability of the armed forces to secure the air space
even against sub-military threats.
Comment by tamilnation.org
The really troubling question that the Hindu and the Sri
Lanka military may want to confront is the moral legitimacy of the
continued attempt by an alien Sinhala majority to impose their rule on
the people of Tamil Eelam. All else is secondary.
|
LiberationTigers launch combined air, ground attack
on Anuradhapura air base - 8 SLAF aircraft destroyed - Tamil Net Report, 22
October 2007
Twenty-one elite
Black Tiger commandos penetrated into the heart of the Sri Lanka
Air Force (SLAF) air base in Anuradhapura at 3:20 a.m. Monday and
destroyed and set ablaze eight SLAF aircrafts, including helicopter
gunships, reconnaissance aircraft and a training aircraft,
Liberation Tigers of Tamileelam (LTTE) military spokesman Irasiah
Ilanthirayan told TamilNet.
The military base in Anuradhapura is the largest military
installation in the military supply route between Colombo and
Vavunniyaa. It is situated in the North Central Province, 46 km
south of Vavuniyaa and 168 km northeast of Colombo.
Air Tiger aircrafts joined the attack at 4:30 a.m., providing
support fire in the destruction of the SLAF base and safely returned
to their bases in Vanni, the Tigers said. Sri Lankan military has
sustained heavy losses in the attack, according to the Tigers. At 5
a.m. (GMT) Black Tigers were still in control of the main complex.
Continuous explosions were heard inside the airbase from 3:30 a.m.
according to Sinhala civilians in the area. The attack was
continuing, after 5:00 a.m.
The Tigers, in their first combined air and ground attack have
targeted the largest military installation in the Main Supply Route
between Colombo and Vavunniyaa, at Saliyapura in Anuradhapura, in
the early hours of Monday.
Helicopters including two
MI-24 gunships, one
MI-17, one
PT6, one
Bell 212, a CTH 748, and a reconnaissance aircraft were
destroyed in the attack, according to the Tigers. In addition, a
Bell helicopter has crashed with its 4-member crew.
Destroyed Bell Helicopter
"The Sri Lanka Air Force has sustained heavy losses", Mr.
Ilanthirayan said. AFP quoted military sources as saying the bigger
loss for the Sri Lankan forces apart from the fatalities was the
destruction of a
Beechcraft aircraft
fitted with advanced electronic spy devices.
|
|
Beechcraft - 40 million US$ |
MI-24 - 5 million US$ |
|
|
BELL 212 - 550 thousand US$ |
MI-17 - 5 million US$ |
|
|
Unmanned Aerial Vehicle
- One million US$ |
KT8 Advanced Jet Trainer
- 3.5 million US$ |
|
|
PT6 Trainer
- 350 thousand US$ |
Cessna Trainer
- 150 thousand US$ |
The LTTE has released photos of the 21-member Black Tiger attack
team that included female Black Tigers and the photos of the Air
Tiger personnel who took part in the attack. The photos were taken
when LTTE leader V. Pirapaharan sent the commandos on their mission,
the Tigers said. [LTTE
releases names of Black Tigers in Air Base raid]
21-member Black Tiger elite commandos with LTTE
leader V. Pirapaharan, before embarking on their mission towards
Anuradhapura [Photo: LTTE]
Sri Lankan military sources remained tight-lipped over the details
of the destruction, but said two Russian built
MI-24 air crafts had sustained damages when the Tigers dropped
"two aerial shells" from their aircraft and a pilot, his co-pilot
and two engineers who took off from the air base, were killed when
their
Bell 212 helicopter crashed at Doramadalawa, 13 km east of
Anuradhapura, in Mihintale area. 13 SLAF airmen were killed, 9
inside the base and four in the helicopter crash, and 18 wounded in
the attack, according to Sri Lankan military spokesman Keheliya
Rambukwela.
Sri Lankan police urged all residents to stay indoors as the Sri
Lankan military prepared to launch a search operation in the area
after imposing an indefinite curfew in Anuradhapura District
Secretariat division.
14 wounded Sri Lankan military personnel have been admitted at the
Anuradhapura hospital, according to medical sources.
Meanwhile, a SLAF reconnaissance aircraft was observed circling over
K'linochchi. Three
Kfir fighter jets
of the SLAF were also flown over Vanni around 5:00 a.m.
|
LTTE releases names of Black Tigers in airbase raid
[TamilNet, Monday, 22 October 2007, 19:15 GMT]
"...நான் உயிருக்குயிராக நேசித்த தோழர்கள்,.. நான்
பல்லாண்டு காலமாக வளர்த்தெடுத்த போரளிகள் களத்தில் வீழும் போதெல்லாம்
எனது இதயம் வெடிக்கும். ஆயினும் சோகத்தால் நான் சோர்ந்து போவதில்லை.
இந்த இழப்புக்கள் எனது இலட்சிய உறுதிக்கு மேலும்
உரமூட்டியிருக்கின்றன."
Velupillai Pirabakaran
Liberation Tigers Monday night released the details of Black Tiger
commandos who took part in the raid on Anuradhapura air base. Two
Lieutenant Colonels, six Majors, 12 Captains and one Lieutenant rank
Black Tiger members have taken part in the operation. A Lieutenant
Colonel who led an attack team was from Trincomalee, two of the members,
a Major and a Captain were from Batticaloa, one from Mullaiththeevu, one
from Mannaar, three from Ki'linochchi and eleven members from Jaffna
which has been under the Sri Lanka Army (SLA) control since 1995. Three
Captains were female Black Tigers.
21-member Black Tiger elite
commandos with LTTE leader V. Pirapaharan, before embarking on their
mission towards Anuradhapura
The Tigers released the names of
the commandos who took part in the biggest Black Tiger operation:
Lt. Col. Veeman (K. Pratheepan) from Trincomalee
Lt. Col. Ilangko (R. Paheerathan) from Jaffna Major
Mathivathanan (B. Thayaaseelan) from Jaffna
Captain Tharmini (K. Nirmala) from Ki'linochchi Captain Puradchi
(S. Thanushan) from Jaffna
Major Supan (K. Jeevakanthan) from Jaffna Major Ilampuli (T.
Kalairaj) from Jaffna
Major Kaavalan (S. Saththiyan) from Ki'linochchi Captain
Karuveanthan (M. Satheeskumaar) from Ki'linochchi
Captain Pukazhmani (T. Puvaneasvaran) from Jaffna Captain
Eezhaththeavan (T. Moasikaran) from Jaffna
Major Ezhilinpan (V. Pirapaharan) from Jaffna Captain Pulimannan
(K. Nanthakumar) from Jaffna
Captain Anpukkathir (V. Thileepkumar) from Mullaiththeevu
Captain Subesan (N. Maharaj) from Mannaar
Captain Senthooran (K. Thinesh) from Jaffna Lt. Arun (P.
Thivaakaran) from Jaffna
Captain Panchaseelan (S. Kajendran) from Batticaloa Major
Kanikkeethan (R. Kandasamy) from Batticaloa
Captain Eezhappiriya (K. Keethanchali) from Jaffna Captain
Arivumalar (S. Uthaya) from Jaffna
"...நீங்கள்
வீழ்ந்ததனால்
நாங்கள் வாழ்ந்து கொண்டிருக்கிறோம்.. உங்கள் உடல்கள் சாய்ந்ததால்
எங்கள் தலைகள் நிமிர்ந்தன.. இன்று.. நாங்கள் வெறும்
கவிதை பாடிக் கொண்டிருக்கிறோம்.. நீங்களோ.. காவியமாகி
விட்டீர்கள்.. காலம் வரும்.. உங்கள் கனவுகள் நனவாகும்..."
ManNin Maintharkal, Raj Swarnan
|
"Because you gave your lives
We continue to live...
Because your bodies have fallen
We stand perpendicular...
Today...
We...
We are simply singing poems
You...
You have become the song itself...
The time will come...
When your dreams,
Your dreams for the freedom of your people,
Will become an enduring reality...
The time will come..."
Children of Our Soil
- English Version by Nadesan Satyendra
|
|
Flying Tigers' fox
Lankans
-
P.K.Balachandran in Hindustan Times, 22 October 2007
The fledgling air arm of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam
(LTTE) comprising two to five single engine, propeller driven
Zlin-143s, is up against Sri Lanka's formidable air force
comprising MIG-27 and Kfir fighter bombers, K-8 jet trainers,
MI-24 helicopter gun ships, Bell-212s choppers, and Antonov
troop and material carriers. And yet, the Lankan Goliath has
been unable to tame the Tamil David, who has hit and run with
impunity four times since March 26 this year.
It was on the
night of March 26, that the LTTE first sprung a surprise on
the Sri Lankans, and indeed the world, when two locally
converted Zlin-143 bombers flew over hundreds of kilometers of
government-held territory from Iranamadu in the Wanni, dropped
two bombs on an engineering facility at the Sri Lankan Air
Force's main base at Katunayake, 30 km north of Colombo, and
flew back without being detected and challenged.
This set off a blame game, in which many Sri Lankans pointed
an accusing finger at India. The radars supplied by India were
not working at that time and it was also said that while Sri
Lanka wanted 3D radars, India had given only 2D radars which did
not indicate the height of intruding aircraft. But India pointed
out that the radars were shut for routine maintenance and
insisted that for Sri Lanka's purpose, 2D was enough.
However, the Sri Lankans soon acknowledged that their
aircraft had no night flying capability, their pilots had no
night vision goggles, and that the MIGs were too fast for the
low flying Zlin 143s.
LTTE'S abilities
In
South Asia Analysis Group's Paper No 2193 dated April 3, 2007,
Commodore RS Vasan IN, said that the LTTE knew about the night
vision incapability of the SLAF and had trained its pilots to
fly at night. Given the fact that the Zlin 143 could land and
take off even on a rough jungle patch, training could have taken
place anywhere and not necessarily in a well made, well
recognizable and detectable airfield.
Com.Vasan pointed out that the Tiger aircraft had been
re-designed by the LTTE's engineers in such a way that it could
carry four bombs without infringing its aerodynamic qualities so
critically needed for safe flying. They would have had to
compromise on the fuel load, and therefore, the aircraft would
have had to fly in and fly out using the shortest possible time
and route.
"The LTTE definitely owes this to
Colonel
Shanker alias Sornalingam who ensured that that the seeds of
sound aeronautical practices were imbibed by the team that he
headed," Com.Vasan, who is himself an aviator, said.
As regards the accuracy of the bombing, he said that the LTTE
had hand-held Global Positioning Systems (GPS). The GPS also
aided accurate navigation, preventing loss of precious time.
On the question of the alleged inadequacy of the Indian 2D
radars, Com Vasan said that while 3D radars were better, Sri
Lanka could go in for Mobile Observation Posts (MOP) rather than
expensive fixtures which advanced countries had. IGLA or
Russian-made hand held missiles, would also be of help, once the
attacker became visible. However, it should be noted that the
intruding Tiger aircraft had been spotted by the Vavuniya
police, and Katunayake was told about it, but no action was
taken!
Second raid
Emboldened by the success of the first raid, the
LTTE attacked
Palaly in the far north on April 24, but it could not strike
the intended target, the airfield. It dropped its bombs on an
adjacent army camp and fled, but not before killing six
soldiers. This time too, the SLAF failed to go in hot pursuit.
Then, on the
night of April 28 and 29, while Sri Lankans were glued to
their TV sets watching Sri Lanka play at the World Cup Cricket
finals in Barbados, two Zlin 143s again attacked Colombo, this
time, the oil storage tanks at Muthurajawela and Kolonnawa.
This time too, the SLAF and the air defense systems were
caught napping. Though only minimum damage was inflicted, the
intruders managed to escape while tones of anti-aircraft shells
were wasted in aimless firing over a 40 km stretch from
Katunayake to Ratmalana. The defense mechanism showed the utter
weakness of the Anti-Aircraft gun handling capability of the
ground forces. The media also reported that LTTE aircraft had
tried to bomb the hangars used by the MIGs at Katunayake, but
failed. Again the attackers had gone Scot free.
Forced to hike defense spending
The LTTE's air strikes had made the government go in for
MIG 29s in a big way, as the strategic thinking was that the air
assets of the LTTE had to be destroyed on the ground itself. But
the multi-million dollar deal is mired in controversy. The
military budget has gone up from SLRs.139 billion (US$ 1.23
billion ) in 2007 to an estimated SLRs.166 billion (US$ 1.47
billion) in 2008.
It is also feared that the government has gone in for US$ 500
million five year sovereign bond issue at a whopping 8.25%
interest to finance the rising defense expenditure. Therefore,
the Flying Tigers may well be contributing to the parlous state
of Sri Lanka's finances.
|
சிறிலங்கா வான்படைத் தளம் மீதான தாக்குதலில் 8 வானூர்திகள் முற்றாக
தாக்கியழிப்பு: விடுதலைப் புலிகள்
[திங்கட்கிழமை, 22 ஒக்ரோபர் 2007, 11:25 AM ஈழம்] [தாயக செய்தியாளர்]
அனுராதபுரம் சிறிலங்கா வான்படைத் தளம் மீது தமிழீழ விடுதலைப் புலிகளின்
சிறப்புக் கரும்புலி அணியினர் இன்று அதிகாலை நடத்திய தாக்குதலில் 8 வானூர்திகள்
முற்றாக தகர்த்து எரியூட்டி அழிக்கப்பட்டுள்ளதாக தமிழீழ விடுதலைப் புலிகள்
தெரிவித்துள்ளனர்.
இச்சம்பவம் தொடர்பில் தமிழீழ விடுதலைப் புலிகள் வெளியிட்டுள்ள அதிகாரபூர்வ
செய்தியறிக்கை:
"எல்லாளன் நடவடிக்கை" எனப் பெயரிட்டு இன்று திங்கட்கிழமை அதிகாலை 3:20
மணியளவில் 21 பேர் கொண்ட சிறப்புக் கரும்புலி அணியினர் அனுராதபுரம் சிறிலங்கா
வான்படைத் தளத்திற்குள் உள்நுழைத்து தாக்குதல் தொடுத்தனர்.
இதனைத் தொடர்ந்து அதிகாலை 4:30 மணியளவில் தமிழீழ விடுதலைப் புலிகளின்
வான்படையினர் தளத்தின் மீது குண்டுகளை வீசித் தாக்கியுள்ளனர்.
இன்றைய தாக்குதலில் சிறிலங்கா வான்படைக்குச் சொந்தமான
பயிற்சி வானூர்தி - 01
எம்.ஐ - 24 ரக உலங்கு வானூர்திகள் - 02
PT6 ரக - 01
பெல் 212 - 01
வேவு வானூர்தி - 01
செஸ்னா CTH - 748 - 01
கே-8 ரக வானூர்தி - 01
ஆகியன முற்றாக அழிக்கப்பட்டுள்ளன.
தற்போது வரை தமிழீழ விடுதலைப் புலிகளின் கரும்புலி அணியினர் அனுராதபுரம்
வான்படைத் தளத்திற்குள் தீவிர தாக்குதல்களை மேற்கொண்ட வண்ணம் உள்ளனர்.
கரும்புலி அணியினரின் தாக்குதலுக்கு உதவியாக தமிழீழ வான்படையினரும் அனுராதபுரம்
தளம் மீது தாக்குதல் நடத்திவிட்டு வெற்றிகரமாகத் தளம் திரும்பியிருப்பதாக வான்
புலிகளின் தளபதி தெரிவித்துள்ளார்.
மேலும் வவுனியாவிலிருந்து உதவிக்குச் சென்ற பெல் - 212 ரக உலங்கு
வானூர்தியொன்றும் வீழ்ந்து நொருங்கியுள்ளது என்று அச்செய்தியறிக்கையில்
தெரிவிக்கப்பட்டுள்ளது.
|
Sri
Lanka aircraft could not take off from damaged airport to intercept LTTE
air craft - Sri Lanka State Controlled Daily News, 23 October 2007
Air Force troops backed by the Army Special Forces killed 21 Tiger cadres
who launched a pre-dawn ground attack coupled with an air raid destroying a
number of Air Force aircraft and killing at least 13 Security Forces
personnel at the Anuradhapura Air Force Base.
The cordon and search operation carried out inside the SLAF Base
Anuradhapura continued till yesterday afternoon to flush out the Tiger
cadres who infiltrated the Air Base with a Police curfew imposed in the area
restricting movements that may deter the search operations.
"Twenty bodies of the highly trained Tiger cadres who carried out the attack
on the Air Force Base were recovered by this noon (Monday)," Air Force
Spokesman Group Captain Ajantha de Silva said.
Nine Security Forces personnel including eight Air Force men including two
officers, and a soldier were killed in the LTTE attack on the Air Base
carried after neutralising the gun positions, the spokesman added. Twenty
airmen were injured.
Two MI-24 helicopters and one K-8 jet trainer aircraft were badly damaged in
the Tiger fire targeting the hangar of the Air Base around 3.15 a.m, Group
Captain Ajantha Silva added.
According to Group Captain Silva, the LTTE had initially moved into the Air
Force Base from the Eastern side of the Air Base and carried out the attack
on the hanger of Air Base from different directions causing explosions
inside the Air Base.
"They have initially launched a small arms attack on the Air Base," the
spokesman added.
As the LTTE launched the ground attack, two light aircraft that headed
towards the Air Base dropped two bombs but returned to Wanni short of their
target, the Air Force spokesman added.
Two light aircraft had returned to the Wanni as the Air Force was taking
measures to intercept the two aircraft.
Fighter jets of the Air Force engaged the Iranamadu airstrip around 5.30 am
as the Tiger aircraft were returning to Wanni.
According to Defence authorities the two light aircraft were detected by
radar as they were heading towards Anuradhapura but failed to destroy them
as all the aircraft that were to be taken off to destroy them could not be
moved out of the Air Base.
Two pilots and two gunners who were heading towards the Anuradhapura Air
Base to neutralise the LTTE air attack in a Bell 212 Helicopter fitted with
guns were also killed as the helicopter crashed into a thicket in
Doramadalawa, in Mihintale.
The Bell helicopter, according to Air Force, crashed as it had developed a
technical problem while it was heading towards Anuradhapura in support of
the men at the Air Force Base. "Full investigations are now on to ascertain
what happened to the Bell helicopter that headed towards Anuradhapura from
Vavuniya to destroy the LTTE light aircraft," Rambukwella added.
|
Sri Lanka orders shake up of military command and puts naked corpses of
Tamil rebels on public display- AFP Report, 23 October
2007
COLOMBO (AFP) - Sri Lanka ordered a shake up in its military command a day
after Tamil Tiger rebels launched a devastating attack on a key air base
during the screening of a hugely popular TV talent contest.
President Mahinda Rajapakse appointed Major General Sanath Karunaratne
overall operations commander in the north-central region of the Anuradhapura
area, where Tamil Tiger rebels destroyed a fleet of aircraft on Monday. "He
will be in charge of all security forces as well as police, including
intelligence units in Anuradhapura," a government official said.
Karunaratne, 53, has previously served as chief military spokesman and was
credited with defending the army's Elephant Pass garrison in the far north
of the island against a prolonged Tiger attack in 1991.
The government also transferred the responsibility for outer perimeter
security at all airports to the army after the air force failed to secure
the Anuradhapura base, officials said.
A rebel "Black Tiger" suicide squad of 21 on Monday infiltrated the
Anuradhapura base north of Colombo, killing 13 servicemen and
crippling the military's air surveillance capability.
Military officials said the commando-style attack began in the early hours
of Monday, meaning the rebels would have had to be at the perimeter fence at
least three to four hours earlier to get into position.
"That takes us to the time when Sirasa Super Star was shown on TV," a
military official said, referring to a hugely popular talent show inspired
by "American Idol." "There are no TVs at sentry points, but the alertness of
sentries and whether all positions were properly manned is being probed,"
said the official, who asked not to be named.
Three layers of razor wire protect what was considered one of the island's
most secure bases. The installation serves as a key logistics hub for
operations against the rebel-held north.
Military officials said the Tamil Tiger suicide squad, including three women
who all died, were wearing camouflage uniforms similar to government
soldiers and may have even just strolled in unchallenged.
In Anuradhapura, the authorities put the naked
rebel corpses on public display on Tuesday, residents said. Two farm
tractors pulled around trailers loaded with the dead. "The tractors
stopped outside the hospital where there was a large gathering of
people," one journalist said. "People took pictures while others were
even filming."
Police and military chiefs in the area said a probe would be launched
into the gruesome show.
[comment
by
tamilnation.org
See, however, the 'gruesome show' at the official website of
the Sri Lanka Ministry of Defence, Public
Security, Law & Order ]
The base is 210 kilometres (130 miles) from the capital and 60 kilometres
from the front line separating government-held territory and the mini-state
controlled by the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).
The
military had previously moved its spy planes to Anuradhapura from an air
base at Vavuniya, a tense town closer to the front line, for safety reasons.
Hours before the attack, the military in the area hosted a cross-country
motor sporting event followed by a spirited party. The attack also came on
the eve of the change of command at the base.
"Was it a happy
coincidence for the Tigers or did they know all that in advance? This is
something that will be covered by the investigations," a senior defence
official close to the probe said.
"Defence top brass have already
visited Anuradhapura, and are taking stock of the situation and looking at
possible lapses. The question is how the Tigers managed to get in
unnoticed."
The Tigers also sent in light aircraft to bomb the base
from overhead, making the assault their first ever coordinated land and air
strike. It also featured the largest number of suicide cadres for a single
attack.
The latest attack came after a string of setbacks for the
rebels, who in July were ejected from their last stronghold in the east of
the island amid a breakdown in a Norwegian-brokered 2002 truce.
|
"Sri
Lanka military abuse conventions on the treatment of war dead" -
Reuter Report, 24 October 2007
COLOMBO (Reuters) - Sri Lanka's Tamil Tigers on Wednesday accused the
military of abusing conventions on the treatment of war dead but the
military denied it had behaved wrongly and said photos showing naked bodies
had been doctored.
The Defence Ministry on Tuesday posted pictures on its Web site of clothed
rebels slain in the Tigers' biggest ever suicide operation sprawled on
tarmac, some charred, one with eyes wide-open and one with a gaping hole in
his head.
Witnesses said that after the photos were taken some of the dead were
stripped, however, and their naked bodies piled into the back of a tractor
trailer to be driven to a mortuary in the northern district of Anuradhapura.
Several journalists saw the bodies on the way to the mortuary after hearing
rumours, and the photographs were widely circulated on Web sites on Tuesday
and published in one local newspaper on Wednesday.
The military denied any of the bodies were naked, and said the pictures had
been doctored.
"Somebody has taken (those photographs) to tarnish the image of the (armed
forces)," military spokesman Brigadier Udaya Nanayakkara said on Wednesday,
without specifying who. "We are professional soldiers. We do not want to do
(things) like that.
"I can assure you we wrapped all those bodies in black polythene bags ...
and sent it to the hospital," he added. "Some photographer who is interested
in tarnishing the image of the army has done this purposely. It's not a real
photo. It's a made up one."
The Tigers sent out a statement on Wednesday condemning the incident as a
violation of the Geneva Convention.
"They have broken not only the Geneva Convention, but also norms observed by
decent militaries all over the world," Tiger military spokesman Rasiah
Ilanthiraiyan said by telephone from the northern rebel stronghold of
Kilinochchi.
The rebels say 21 Tiger suicide fighters were killed in Monday's pre-dawn
assault.
Fourteen military personnel were killed, and the government said on
Wednesday eight aircraft, including helicopters, a spy plane and training
aircraft were destroyed -- far more damage than the military initially
reported.
Witnesses said the tractor trailers, used normally to collect garbage, were
accompanied by military personnel and stopped for several minutes at a
junction where a crowd of dozens of people had gathered in the rain as word
of the trip to the mortuary got around.
The hospital mortuary, where the bodies were being taken, was just 100
metres away. There was no traffic.
"The bodies were taken from the camp to the mortuary. One tractor trailer
contained naked bodies, bodies in the other were in plastic bags," said a
journalist known to Reuters who was at the scene and asked to remain unnamed
for fear of retribution.
"I came to a spot along the route where people had congregated to wait for
the bodies, and the tractors then came and stopped so the crowd could look,"
the journalist added.
Another journalist witness said: "There were some civilians and other
journalists about 500 metres from the mortuary. Two tractors came, one with
naked bodies and (the) other with black plastic bags. I presume those are
the blown up bodies of suicide cadres."
Monday's attack in the north, where renewed civil war is now concentrated
after troops captured swathes of Tiger territory in the east of the island,
comes after a series of clashes that have killed around 5,000 people since
early 2006.
Nearly 70,000 people have been killed since the war began in 1983, and while
the military has had the upper hand in recent months, analysts see no clear
winner on the horizon and say the conflict could rumble on for years.
|
Sinhala Opposition UNP says 18 aircraft worth more than 439 million
dollars damaged in Anuradhapura attack - Sinhala owned Sri Lanka Daily
Mirror, 23 October 2007
The main opposition UNP yesterday told Parliament that 18 aircraft worth
more than 439 million US dollars had been damaged in Monday�s predawn LTTE
attack on the Anuradhapura airbase, despite the government claiming
otherwise.
Speaking during the debate on the Local Government and Provincial Councils
(Amendment) Bill, UNP Anuradhapura District MP P. Harrison said he was
making the disclosure to the House with responsibility and challenged the
government to prove him wrong.
He said the Tigers launched three air strikes against military bases, and
returned to the Wanni without being intercepted.
�When the LTTE attacked the Katunayake base for the first time, the
government blamed it on the poor radar system,� he said accusing defence
authorities of not taking proper defensive measures against LTTE attacks.
�The LTTE cadres hid behind gravel mounds within the airbase premises to
attack. The Airforce chief should resign under these circumstances. If
security provided to a city like Anuradapura with its religious and
historical significance is thus, can you imagine the situation in other
areas?� he asked.
Puttalam District UNP MP Palitha Range Bandara said the estimated loss of
aircraft was more than 439 million US dollars. He said the Tigers might have
taken advantage of the mega party organized the previous night after the
Gajaba Super Cross. The event was attended by top defence officials
including Defence Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa.(KB/GdeC)
|
LTTE had 'inside information' for raid on spy plane base
AFP and AP, Colombo, Monday, 29 October 2007Tamil Tiger rebels had
clear "inside information" ahead of a devastating attack that virtually
wiped out the Sri Lankan government's fleet of spy planes, a report said
yesterday.
In a report in the Sunday Times newspaper, defense analyst Iqbal Athas said
up to 27 elite rebel fighters were able to stroll into the Anuradhapura base
unchallenged before unleashing their assault. Authorities had previously
said the rebels had sneaked into the base by cutting through the barbed wire
perimeter.
"Up to 27 Black Tiger suicide cadres were able to go unchecked right up to
the aircraft hangar," the report said, adding that the guerrilla strike
force had camped at a nearby abandoned house before entering the base.
"There is no doubt that the guerrillas have been receiving up-to-date
intelligence on the lay out and goings on at the air base," the report said.
"There was inside information."
The report said base security could have been compromised due to the use of
casual laborers hired to carry out runway expansion work.
Athas said the government may have also played down the damage inflicted
during last Monday's attack.
Officials have said eight aircraft, including a twin-turbo prop Beechcraft
plane equipped with advanced surveillance equipment and Israeli-made drones,
were destroyed at Anuradhapura.
But Athas said he compiled a list of 27 aircraft at the base, and added that
only three of them had been spared.
Defense officials have said they believed 20 Tigers took part in the attack,
three of whom were shot dead. The others blew themselves up using explosives
strapped to their waists.
Fourteen military personnel killed and another 22 wounded in the attack.
Meanwhile, troops and separatist Tamil Tiger rebels clashed in in the
Muhamalai area of Jaffna Peninsula yesterday, leaving four guerrillas dead,
an official at the Defense Ministry information center said. The violence
came a day after the military reported killing 11 guerrillas in four
separate incidents in Vavuniya district, south of Muhamalai. |