PARIS
– The Tamil Tigers fought to the last ditch – or, more precisely,
a section of swampy beach along Sri Lanka’s Northeast coast.
The bloody end of Sri Lanka’s 26-year-old civil war is tragic
and appalling. But it may also have been the only way to end
that nation’s bitter civil war.
Large numbers
of sick, starving, shell-shocked Tamil refugees are being herded
into government security compounds. Some estimates put the number
at 100,000. The number of civilian dead caused by the government’s
final offensive against the last Tamil Tiger redoubt is unknown,
but estimates run 6,000–10,000. The government in Colombo blocks
all journalists and human rights group from the region.
It seems
clear this struggle, which has cost 80,000–100,000 lives since
the early 1980’s, is over – at least for now. The Liberation
Tigers of Tamil Eelam have been totally defeated.
Standard
wisdom has it that conventional armies can’t win guerilla wars.
But last week’s defeat of the Tamil Tigers shows there are important
exceptions to this general rule.
Three other
examples: Russia finally managed to crush the life out of the
Chechen independence movement after eighteen years of the most
cruel repression in which at least 100,000 Chechen civilians
were killed by Russian forces and thousands tortured or "disappeared."
Totally isolated and ignored by the world, Muslim Chechnya’s
valiant battle for independence was finally snuffed out after
almost all of its mujahidin fighters were hunted down and killed,
and its population terrorized into silence by a thuggish regime
of Moscow’s Quislings.
The US
shamefully joined Russia in branding the Chechen independence
fighters, "terrorists."
Angola’s
anti-Communist UNITA movement fought for 27 years, as I saw
myself while covering the bush wars in southern Africa. But
after Washington decided that Angola’s Communist regime would
be a reliable supplier of oil, it abandoned old ally UNITA.
Savimbi was betrayed and assassinated in an ambush by foreign
mercenaries (reportedly Israeli). UNITA, isolated in Angola’s
remotest regions, collapsed.
The third
example was Ukraine in the 1950’s. Its national liberation movement,
isolated and unsupported, was ground down and finally exterminated
by the Soviet KGB using the most brutal methods.
I’ve followed
Sri Lanka’s bitter civil war between majority Sinhalese and
minority Tamils since it began 26 years ago. As with those endless
disputes between Israelis and Arabs, Indians and Pakistanis,
Turks and Armenians, I have great sympathy for both sides and
watch these conflicts with deep sorrow.
Oppression
of the island’s 3.8 million Hindu Tamils by extremists from
the 17-million-strong Sinhalese Buddhist majority, and Tamil
demands for a separate Tamil state, sparked civil war. Britain
planted the seeds of this conflict by favoring minority Tamils
and putting many into plum positions, part of its standard divide
and rule policy that has caused so many troubles to our day.
Just look, for example, at Afghanistan, India, Pakistan or Sudan.
Sri Lanka’s
Tamils are part of the ancient Dravidian race that once dominated
India before being driven south by lighter-skinned Indo-European
invaders. They are part of a rich, 2,000-year-old culture; Tamil
is one of India’s classical languages.
Sixty-six
million Tamils live in the Indian state of Tamil Nadu, and six
million across southern India. Tamils are found from Southeast
Asia to the Caribbean. Canada has one of the world’s largest
expatriate Tamil communities.
A portly
Tamil militant with no military experience, Vellupillai Prabhakaran,
founded and led a guerilla force, the Liberation Tigers of Tamil
Eelam, in a struggle for an independent homeland in eastern
Sri Lanka. He soon became a renowned military leader and a powerful
cult leader. Tamil moderates seeking peace were caught in a
crossfire between government forces and the ferocious Tigers.
Prabhakaran ruthlessly wiped out all rivals and those Tamils
seeking compromise.
The Tigers,
drawn from poor peasants and tea pickers, became one of the
world’s most formidable fighting forces, repeatedly defeating
the heavily-armed Sri Lankan Army.
The Tigers
were originally armed and financed by India, which sought to
turn Sri Lanka into a protectorate. But Delhi finally turned
against the Tigers and sent 80,000 troops to fight them. To
everyone’s amazement, the Tigers whipped the mighty Indian Army
and forced it to humiliatingly withdraw from Sri Lanka.
As a former
soldier and war correspondent, I marveled at the courage, determination
and tactical proficiency of the Tigers, who even had their own
tiny navy.
Their reckless
courage, use of suicide bombers, and attacks on civilian targets
led them to be branded terrorists by many nations, including
the US and Canada. Tamil Tiger expatriates became notorious
for extortion and heroin dealing to finance their war. In 1991,
India’s late prime minister, Rajiv Gandhi, was blown to pieces
by a female Tamil Tiger suicide bomber in the Indian state of
Tamil Nadu.
Tamils
are not "terrorists," as Western governments and Colombo
claimed. Nor are their opponents, the Sinhalese. The propaganda
term "terrorist" in no way describes this war.
Charges
by Tamils that Sri Lanka’s government is practicing genocide
are untrue, though its armed forces have caused high civilian
casualties. This has been an ugly civil war with constant atrocities
committed by both sides. Aside from small arms, the Tamil’s
primary weapons were often bombs strapped on their bodies. This
was a poor man’s struggle against massive fire power and modern
weapons. Civilians were targeted by both sides, or ended up
in the crossfire.
As the
old saying goes, "war is the rich man’s terrorism; terrorism
is the poor man’s war."
This week,
the US and Britain piously criticized the Colombo government
and demanded it cease military operations in civilian areas.
The same US and Britain that just encouraged Pakistan’s brutal
attack on the Swat Valley that has so far created 2.3 million
refugees.
The Tigers
were relentlessly hemmed in by superior forces. Government forces
finally cornered the Tigers on the northeast coast and ground
them down with heavy artillery, tanks and air strikes. The Tigers
fought to the bitter end until leader Prabhakaran was killed.
The Tigers
were finally defeated because they ran out of maneuver space.
Money, men and arms for the Tigers from the outside world had
to run a Sri Lankan and Indian naval blockade. The world turned
against Sri Lanka’s Tamils.
History
teaches it’s imperative that Sri Lanka’s government in Colombo
avoid triumphalism or revenge and be magnanimous in victory.
Tamil should be afforded a high level of autonomy – as in India
– and ample power sharing in Colombo. There should be no prosecutions
of Tiger leaders.
The bitter
civil wars in El Salvador and Nicaragua that I also covered
were eventually settled by wise and generous political concessions.
Sri Lanka needs a similar process.
Unless
Colombo is magnanimous in victory, it risks rekindling a low-level
insurrection. India’s 70 million plus Tamils are angry at the
defeat and suffering of their cousins in Sri Lanka. Many are
calling for Indian military intervention.
If Sri
Lanka’s Tamils are subjected to a Carthaginian Peace, there
is a risk that India’s millions of sympathetic Tamils could
become the source of new woes on the beautiful island of Sri
Lanka.