Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Archive for September 12th, 2007

Sri Lanka’s navy on Tuesday claimed its biggest success against the Tamil Tiger rebels, saying it had virtually wiped out the separatist group’s ability to smuggle arms into the country.

The navy said it had destroyed three rebel gun-running vessels offshore in separate battles, killing up to 45 guerrillas and eliminating all but one of the Tigers’ sea fleet, which had included 10 ships.

Navy chief Wasantha Karannagoda said the rebel ships were detected 600 kilometres (375 miles) off the island’s southeastern coast early Tuesday and engaged by naval craft.

“Each vessel had between 12 to 15 cadres… and we think up to about 45 may have been killed,” Karannagoda told reporters here, adding that the navy had not suffered any casualties.

“This is our biggest single attack against the Tigers,” Karannagoda said.

The navy chief said the Tigers had fired 120-millimetre mortar bombs from the three vessels which were located about 40 to 50 kilometres apart.

Asked where the rebels may have purchased their arms, Karannagoda said: “We have a rough idea as to from where the supplies are coming, but we don’t want to go public as it might have other implications.”

“But we know it has come from the southeastern direction,” he said, suggesting the shipments may have come from southeast Asia.

The military said it believed the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) — who are fighting for a separate state for minority Tamils — were transporting three light aircraft, artillery and a bullet-proof vehicle by sea.

The rebels were not immediately available for comment.

Sri Lanka’s navy has carried out several attacks against suspected Tamil Tiger gun-running ships in recent months.

The Tigers have said they smuggle supplies from southeast Asia as well as from former Soviet states, according to analysts. The guerrillas say they also operate a merchant shipping business using front organizations.

Clashes between suspected Tamil Tiger ships and the Sri Lankan navy have escalated in recent months amid heavy fighting in the island’s northern and eastern regions.

More than 5,400 people have been killed in a new wave of fighting since December 2005 when a Norwegian-brokered truce began to unravel.

Read Full Post »

Sri Lanka’s navy sank at least three suspected Tamil Tiger gun running vessels off the island’s southeastern sea board, navy officials said Tuesday.

Naval craft intercepted the three craft off Sri Lanka’s coast late Monday and carried out the attack, said a navy official who declined to be named.

He said each vessel was about 70 metres (91 yards) long.

There were no immediate reports of casualties. Tiger rebels were not immediately available for comment.

Sri Lanka’s navy has carried out similar attacks against suspected Tamil Tiger gun running craft in recent months.

In March, the navy sank two cargo vessels believed to be smuggling weapons and explosives for Tamil Tiger rebels, according to the defence ministry.

It staged a similar attack on February 28 and sank an identical craft off the island’s southern coast, according to defence authorities here.

There have been stepped-up clashes between suspected Tamil Tiger ships and the Sri Lankan navy in recent months amid heavy fighting in the island’s northern and eastern regions.

Read Full Post »

r86158452.jpg

r2079894804.jpg

r4088623371.jpg

 

 

 

LTTE vessels burns in the southeastern sea of Sri Lanka in this picture released by the Media Centre of National Security, September 11, 2007. Sri Lankan forces sank three Tamil Tiger arms vessels, authorities said on Tuesday. REUTERS/Handout (SRI LANKA).

Read Full Post »

September 7, 2007: In the last week, the army moved to chase LTTE gunmen out of a area in the northeast. This was to make it possible to get food to about 7,000 civilians who were being starved out by an LTTE blockade. The LTTE have thousands of gunmen blocking the main road to the northeastern Jaffna peninsula, forcing the government to use ships to feed several hundred thousand civilians. Moving along the northeastern coast, troops seized the coastal town of Silawathurai, south of Jaffna, and captured an LTTE naval base (including three boats and a large quantity of mines.) About twenty people were killed in the several days this  took. Most of the dead were rebels. Further searching uncovered twenty inflatable boats, with outboard engines, and more weapons (nearly a ton of ammo and explosives). 

The government was quick to point out that this was not a “major offensive.” Only a few thousand troops were involved, and most of them didn’t move very far. While the government is apparently going to try and nibble the LTTE to death up north, the rebels are relying more on increased terror operations. These are not going so well. LTTE terrorists in the east and around the capital are being turned in, or simply detected, and arrested. Bomb making materials are being captured, and it’s feared that eventually one of the LTTE attack plans will get carried out.

 

The LTTE is also trying to use food shortages up north, where LTTE gunmen block many roads, to elicit international sympathy. This hasn’t worked very well, but the tactic of using human shields has had some success. The LTTE are increasingly putting military bases in the middle of residential areas. Thus government artillery or air attacks will cause lots of civilian casualties, which the LTTE will publicize as an example of government war crimes. Meanwhile, the government is making a greater effort to gather accurate information on LTTE activities. This includes more long range patrols (deep into LTTE controlled territory), more electronic listening devices (for radio and cell phones) and more regular patrols by army troops on the front line.

 

September 4, 2007: The LTTE campaign to drive Moslems out of eastern Sri Lanka had a noxious side effect. Islamic radical groups formed to fight back. These groups grew out of Wahhabi missionary efforts (funded by Saudi Arabian religious charities). The Wahhabi preach a very conservative form of Islam, and the need to fight non-Moslems. The Islamic radicals formed a coalition with Moslem gangsters, so that when the army pushed the LTTE out of the east, they found armed Moslem groups, that don’t want to disarm.

(http://www.strategypage.com/qnd/srilank/articles/20070907.aspx)

Read Full Post »

Sri Lankan forces on Friday claimed that at least four Tamil Tigers were killed and a soldier died in clashes along the Wanni Forward Defence Line (FDL) even as a non-governmental organisation (NGO) urged both sides to ensure that lives of civilians are not put to unnecessary risk.According to Defence Ministry, the LTTE casualties occurred in retaliatory attacks on Thursday afternoon. It said the Tigers launched two attacks at the soldiers deployed in Kuduruvitankulam forcing them to retaliate.

Separately, the military said the Tiger cadres fired heavy mortars at troops deployed in Thampanai killing one soldier and injuring another. “Troops retaliated to the attack using heavy guns and took the situation under control.”

Quoting intelligence sources, the Ministry said the LTTE was using civilians in Illupakadaveli and Periyamadu areas as “human shield” to protect its heavy weapons.

Acess to shrine blocked

 

“The sources further said that the terrorists have blocked all the accesses to the Madhu shrine in order to prevent civilians taking refuge at the Church. Information obtained form the civilian sources had revealed that a large number of civilians in the Vattakandal, Adampan, Andankulam, Prappakadaththan and Papamodai areas are trying to seek the refuge in the Madhu shrine.”

In another development, the National Peace Council of Sri Lanka, an NGO, in a statement said the high cost paid by the civilian population due to the confrontations is highlighted by the recent incidents in Silavathurai in the northern Mannar district. It said that over 4000 persons had been displaced and 20 killed, including women and children fleeing the area, in a roadside claymore mine explosion.

(http://www.hindu.com/2007/09/08/stories/2007090856291600.htm)

Read Full Post »

In his memoirs Maj Gen. Harkirat Singh has reproduced contemporary documents that reveal a lot that was not known about the IPKF in Sri Lanka.

MAJOR General Harkirat Singh (Retd.) is an upright gentleman and a fine soldier; altogether a man of integrity. He was Divisional Commander of 54 Infantry Division when, on July 29-30, 1987, he was sent to Sri Lanka as General-Officer-Commanding (GOC) of the Indian Peace-Keeping Force (IPKF). In January 1988, he got orders “posting me out of Sri Lanka”. The Overall Force Commander (OFC) of the IPKF was the GOC-in-C Southern Command, Lt. Gen. Depinder Singh, who praised him in his memoirs The IPKF in Sri Lanka (Trishul Publications, Noida, 1991).

The “cheerful and enthusiastic” soldier had the misfortune of having to work with two egotistic and flamboyant figures, the Army Chief Gen. K. Sundarji and the High Commissioner J.N. Dixit. On retirement as Foreign Secretary in 1994, Dixit lost no time in setting a unique and disgraceful record as the first officer to denounce his successor publicly in a press interview.

Harkirat Singh paid the price for uprightness: an early ouster in January 1988. Depinder Singh wrote: “All I could do at that stage was to suggest to Harry that he could represent against the posting as the change [and his transfer] were not at my instance. He did and though I recommended his case, it was some months before he was posted from the staff assignment he was on to command Maharashtra and Gujarat Area. Later, I was to question the COAS as to why we had been unfair to Harry; he agreed that we had been unfair but stated that redressal could only come from his successor (Sundarji was to retire on April 30, 1988, and General V.M. Sharma’s name had been announced as the next COAS).” (Emphasis added, throughout.) The wrong was done by Sundarji himself. He passed the buck of redress to his successor, cynically enough.

Depinder Singh’s book contained a damning indictment of the political decision-making process in New Delhi; of the material help the LTTE received in Tamil Nadu even while its men were killing the IPKF’s jawans; of the Research and Analysis Wing’s incompetence and of much else. The IPKF knew that the LTTE remained powerful even after the surrender of arms pursuant to the Indo-Sri Lanka Accord of July 29, 1987. It is unnecessary to recount here the fallout between the Government of India and the LTTE on October 7, 1987, when the IPKF was obliged to go to war.

Depinder Singh writes: “Regrettably, the view taken in New Delhi was that these feelers [from the LTTE] indicated that the end was close and, therefore, the requirement was to stop talking and turn the screw some more. It was quite apparent that Ministry of External Affairs and RAW were recommending a contrary course of action to what the Army was; the tragedy was that their view was prevailing. I remember a telegram the High Commissioner sent from Colombo to Delhi stating inter alia that, according to information available to him, the LTTE collapse was imminent… The reason why the Army view did not or could not prevail, perhaps, can be ascribed to the lack of rapport between the COAS and the Prime Minister – undesirable in normal times, completely fatal in an emergency. I am not aware of why such a situation developed; perhaps it was a fallout of the days preceding Exercise Brasstacks in early 1987 when we almost went to war with Pakistan. Be it as it may, what I do know is that when I queried the COAS as to why our point of view was not being projected, his revealing reply was, ‘Woh Sunta Nahi Hai’ (he does not listen).”

Harkirat Singh was replaced by Lt. Gen. S.C. Sardeshpande whose memoirs, Assignment (Lancer Publishers, 1991), record the same story of ineptness and confusion. Harkirat Singh’s memoirs are different. He has reproduced whole t exts of contemporary documents that fully support his version and reveal a lot we did not know despite all that was written.

“The only orders received by the Commander of 54 Infantry Division in Sri Lanka were the contents of the Indo-Sri Lanka Accord sent at midnight on 29/30 July 1987 from the COAS” with instructions to read out that document “to all ranks prior to their departure” for Jaffna. The chiefs of the Indian Air Force and the Indian Navy “had their reservations” about the despatch of troops.

“The OFC had no operational control over the IAF and the IN, or on the employment of the Indian Army Para Commandos based at Colombo and Palaly. The OFC acted as a link between 54 Infantry Division, and through the Army Headquarters with Air and Naval Headquarters. Unfortunately, Lt. Gen. Depinder Singh believed in giving only verbal instructions. His staff officers, under Maj. Gen. A.S. Kalkat, the MGGS [Major General, General Staff] who headed the Operational and Intelligence Staff at Headquarters OFC, took full advantage of this situation by holding the formation and unit commanders responsible for any act or omission, instead of shouldering the responsibility themselves. The responsibility for issuing written orders was that of the staff who unfortunately never bothered to issue confirmatory orders directive…. It is sad that Maj. Gen. A.S. Kalkat and Brig. Manjit Singh, Commander 41 Infantry Brigade, did not stand by their formation and unit commanders. This can be attributed to the greed for personal benefits. Gen. V.N. Sharma, who took over as COAS after Sundarji, bluntly told me, ‘The Commanders who initially launched the campaign have to pay the price for it and in this scenario, Harry, you had become the prime target.’” Palaly was the headquarters of the IPKF; Chennai of the OFC whose base as Commander, Southern Command, was Secunderabad.

The author writes: “I am unsure of what prompted the Army Chief, Sundarji, to shift me out of Sri Lanka, but one of the factors must have been the letter that India’s High Commissioner J.N. Dixit reportedly wrote to Sundarji in September 1987 since I did not accept his order to shoot/arrest the LTTE supremo. Moreover, someone in the governments of India and Sri Lanka took exception to my remarks to the media in December 1987, that the IPKF took its orders from the Indian government and no one else, and that Indian troops would not leave the island ‘until the Tamils are satisfied and their aspirations are met’. It was probably the turning point which eventually led to my transfer out of Sri Lanka.”

This brings us to three important disclosures. First, RAW began rearming other Tamil groups even while the LTTE was being disarmed in August 1987. The author gave Dixit the damning videotapes which the LTTE had given him. Secondly, on September 11, 1987, he met Dixit. “According to Dixit, the ultimate objective of the IPKF was to discredit the LTTE in the eyes of the local Tamil population. In short, the IPKF was expected to play a double game. I realised that these tactics would not work since the Tamils had already understood that their aspirations for Eelam could be met only by the LTTE. Dixit then turned towards me and said, ‘General, please ensure that the actions of the IPKF are in line with my discussions with the Prime Minister at Delhi. You should adopt a posture of gradual change from negotiations to coercion. The junior commanders during their contact should ascertain the view of the Tamils on the above approach.’”

The last one is shocking: “On the night of 14/15 September 1987, I received a telephone call from Dixit, directing me to arrest or shoot Pirabakaran when he came for the meeting. Telling Dixit that I would get back to him I placed a call to the OFC. Lt. Gen. Depinder Singh directed me to tell Dixit that we, as an orthodox Army, did not shoot people in the back when they were coming for a meeting under the white flag. I then spoke to Dixit in Colombo and conveyed the message, emphasising that I would not obey his directive. I pointed out that the LTTE supremo had been invited by the IPKF in order to find a solution to the problems in the implementation of the Accord. Dixit replied, ‘He [Rajiv Gandhi] has given those instructions to me and the Army should not drag its feet, and you as the GOC, IPKF will be responsible for it.’ The next morning I received a call from Lt. Gen. B.C. Joshi, the then Director General Military Operations, who supported my stand on Dixit’s directive. However, the COAS, Gen. Sundarji, expressed his annoyance.” In fairness to Rajiv Gandhi, Dixit’s claim that he spoke on his behalf must be rejected. Dixit was prone to bragging and braggadocio.

A meeting was fixed at which Depinder Singh, Dixit and Prabakaran were present. “The talks took place and were very successful and most of us concluded that the IPKF would be out of Sri Lanka by December 1987. All those who attended the meeting felt that the deadlock had at last been broken and that peace was in sight.”

That was not to be. The boat tragedy in October and the suicides by the captured LTTE men led to the break. Dixit and Sundarji thought that Harkirat Singh was soft on the LTTE. The texts of his assessments on September 17 and 20 and on December 5, 1987, show him to be far more perceptive and realistic than Dixit. The Army lost 1,155 men when the IPKF withdrew.

Harkirat Singh paid the price for his uprightness and for being right. The book confirms the need for clear directives to the armed forces at all times. On October 8, 1987, Sundarji ordered him “to launch operations that night itself. I could have prevented the COAS from leaving the Palaly airfield and demanded his orders in writing. Brig. Naveen Rawlley (later Lt. Gen.) did this at Salong airstrip to Lt. Gen. B.M. Kaul, General Officer commanding IV Corps, during the Indo-Chinese conflict in 1962. Headquarters 2 Mountain Division produced this document, written in green ink, with the Division’s War Diary before Lt. Gen. Henderson Brooks during his investigations into the Indian Army debacle.”

If that report had been published many a blunder might have been avoided. It is time to invoke the Right to Information Act to secure publication of the Henderson Brooks Report, 43 years after its submission to the government.

(http://www.hinduonnet.com/fline/stories/20070921505807900.htm)

 

 

 

Read Full Post »