http://www.asiantribune.com/index.php?q=node/4275
Sri Lankan military captures strategic eastern town from LTTE
Fri, 2007-01-26 01:10 
By Sarath Kumara - World Socialist Web Site 

After imposing a siege lasting months, the Sri Lankan security forces finally 
took the key eastern coastal town of Vaharai last Friday in what is a 
significant blow to the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). Vaharai is the 
latest in a series of LTTE strongholds that have fallen to government troops 
since July.

The army entered the town without much resistance. Faced with the prospect of 
being trapped between government troops to the north and south, the LTTE 
withdrew. By Sunday, the security forces had extended their control to the 
adjoining areas of Verugal and Kathirvelu. An LTTE spokesman acknowledged the 
loss saying that its fighters had "readjusted" their positions.

Fighting appears to have been sporadic. The military claimed on Sunday to have 
killed 18 LTTE fighters fleeing from the area. Four soldiers were killed in an 
LTTE attack on the Kajuwatta military camp and another two soldiers died in a 
clash at Vavunathivu. According to the defence ministry, government forces have 
lost 35 soldiers since October and killed 331 LTTE fighters.

The protracted military offensive to seize Vaharai makes a mockery of 
government claims to be adhering to the 2002 ceasefire agreement. President 
Mahinda Rajapakse has repeatedly claimed that the army has only engaged in 
"defensive" actions. Since July, however, the military has seized the eastern 
areas of Mavilaru, Sampur and now Vaharai. Earlier this month, army commander 
Lieutenant General Sarath Fonseka dropped the pretence and bluntly declared 
that his aim was to drive the LTTE from the East, then launch an offensive to 
take control of the north.

The LTTE captured Vaharai eleven years ago and have used it as the landing site 
for fighters and supplies from the northern coastal base of Mullaitivu. Vaharai 
lies on the major road running between the port of Trincomalee and Batticaloa 
to the south. Its loss effectively cuts the LTTE's forces in the East in two, 
leaving them vulnerable to the military's continuing offensives.

Far from reacting "defensively", the Sri Lankan army is following the advice of 
the US military, which sent a team from US Pacific Command (PACOM) in 2002 to 
make a strategic assessment. PACOM described Trincomalee harbour as "without 
question" the most important base for the Sri Lankan navy and pointed to its 
vulnerability to attack from LTTE bases in the Sampur area to the south of the 
port. It bluntly advised the army to secure the area.

Sunday Times defence correspondent Iqbal Athas, who cited the PACOM report in 
his column last weekend, commented: "Now that Vaharai and adjoining areas have 
been re-captured, it provides greater depth in protecting Trincomalee harbour. 
More importantly, it denies to the guerrillas the opportunity of directing 
artillery and mortar fire at the neighbouring Kajuwatte and Mankerni 
detachments. The army regaining control of Vaharai denies to the guerrillas a 
contiguous land-based route from the Trincomalee to the Batticaloa district."

In a statement on Sunday reeking of hypocrisy, Rajapakse hailed the capture of 
Vaharai as "a victory for all peace loving people". He boasted that "the 
security forces have been able to liberate 95 percent of the East from the grip 
of the LTTE with valour and determination".

The "liberation" of Vaharai has been at a terrible human cost. The military 
sealed the main access roads, prohibiting local and international aid agencies 
and denying access to journalists. Even the Sri Lanka Monitoring Mission 
(SLMM), which is responsible for overseeing the 2002 ceasefire, was barred from 
the area. The security forces strictly controlled the entry of basic 
supplies-the last dispatch being on November 29.

The siege was coupled with indiscriminate air raids and artillery attacks, 
inflicting heavy casualties. At least 90 civilians were killed, according to 
the estimates of the SLMM and other agencies. Several hundred have been 
injured. The government and military justified the attacks on civilian 
locations, including refugee camps, claiming that the LTTE was using civilians 
as "human shields." An artillery attack on the Vaharai hospital on January 17 
injured 11 people, seven seriously.

Civilians fled the area last week by any means available. UN spokeswoman Orla 
Clinton described the scene: "Thousands of people are streaming out... food has 
been very short... these people are obviously weak and afraid and we are 
looking for assurances their protection will be assured." On Saturday, after 
the army had seized the town, another 7,000 people left the area.

Long queues of people waited at army checkpoints to be allowed out of the area. 
Heavily armed soldiers hunting for LTTE members arbitrarily detained a number 
of young people. According to the UNCHR, about 60,000 people have been 
displaced from the coastal belt between Sampur and Vaharai since the latest 
round of fighting began. In all, about 205,000 people throughout the island 
have been displaced since April.

The capture of Vaharai has intensified chauvinist exaltations in Colombo. The 
right-wing Island proclaimed that the war has now entered "a decisive phase." 
The Sinhala daily Lakbima proudly pointed to the "Lion [national] flag 
glittering in the [Vaharai] hospital premises."

In fact, for all his talk of "peace", Rajapakse has made clear that the 
military offensive will continue. On Saturday, army commander Fonseka outlined 
his plans to "clear the Thoppigala and Kokkadicholai areas of the LTTE." They 
"will soon be chased out of the Eastern Province," he boasted.

On Monday, defence spokesman Keheliya Rambukwella declared: "If tomorrow the 
LTTE says we are ready to stop hostilities and get back to the negotiating 
table we will stop immediately. If they do not, then we we'll have to liberate 
the Tamil civilians in the East and call for negotiations." Given that the army 
has initiated every major act of aggression since July, the statement was not 
an offer, but an ultimatum to the LTTE to return to the negotiating table on 
the government's terms.

The mood of elation in ruling circles in Colombo is palpable. Buoyed by its 
recent successes, the military clearly feels that it is just a matter of time 
before it defeats the LTTE militarily-something that it has failed to do in 
more than two decades. The government, which enjoys the tacit support of the US 
and other major powers, obviously thinks that it can proceed with its reckless 
war of aggression without provoking political opposition at home or 
internationally.

Even Sunday Times correspondent Athas, who has close ties to military circles, 
sounded a note of caution. In last weekend's column, he warned against "overt 
euphoria or jubilance", noting that the LTTE forces had withdrawn largely 
intact. Athas recalled the government's triumphal reaction to the recapture of 
the Jaffna peninsula in 1995 and pointed out that barely seven months later the 
armed forces had suffered one of their worst-ever defeats when the LTTE 
launched a major attack on the Mullaitivu military base.

Athas also noted that the military was relying on the support of the so-called 
Karuna group-an armed militia based in the East that broke from the LTTE in 
2004. In return for supporting the war against the LTTE, V. Muralitharan, also 
known as Karuna, was permitted to build up his armed forces and extend the 
influence of his political wing-the Thamil Makkal Viduthalai Pulihal (TVMP).

According to Athas, sections of the military hierarchy were "deeply concerned" 
that the government "was encouraging and even building another monster".

It is highly unlikely that Athas's warnings will cause the government to pull 
back from its reactionary course. Since narrowly winning office in November 
2005, Rajapakse has relaunched the communal civil war as a means of dividing 
working people and distracting public attention from his failure to resolve the 
island's deepening economic and social crisis. Increasingly his government has 
resorted to open repression to suppress opposition to the war and to the 
government's economic policies. In doing so, however, he is laying the basis 
for social and political upheavals in the not too distant future.

- World Socialist Web Site - 



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No matter what the
Submitted by sandman on Fri, 2007-01-26 07:13.
No matter what the competitive activity is, it is the most committed who always 
wins.

Until now, Sri Lanka did not fight the war the way it needed to be faught; with 
absolute commitment. The present government changed that attitude, brought 
effective leadership into the armed forces, empowered the decision making 
process and most importantly, refrained from politically motivated interference 
in military strategies and operations.

It is beyond argument that the historic and international events of the 
preceding years attributed to the success of the present campaign. We have old 
friends, who have come to terms with the true dimensions of an old problem with 
a new and profound realization. The present govt has not hesitated to optimize 
opportunities arising from this new global perspective.

As a result, the Sri Lankan military establishment has become invigorated with 
a morale and a commitment that easily surpasses that of the tamil terrorists.

The most committed always wins.

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