Kilinochchi: The Kiss Of Death -
International Terrorism Monitor-Paper No.
483
By B. Raman
(To be read in
continuation of my earlier article of Oct.
21, 2008, titled "Kilinochchi: The Spectre
of Stalingrad "at
http://www.southasiaanalysis.org/papers29/paper2886.html)
"Kilinochchi within
kissing distance".
So said the
disinformation warriors of Lt.Gen.Sarath
Fonseka, the Sri Lankan Army Commander, more
than a week ago.
It has been a long and
fatal kiss----more for the Army than for the
Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). It
has been a long kiss of death for the young
hastily-trained Sinhalese recruits to the
Sri Lankan Army who were rushed to the
battle front by the General in his keenness
to keep his promise of "In Kilinochchi
before the New Year".
Similar to the promise
which Gen.Douglas McArthur, commanding the
allied troops in South Korea during the
Korean war, repeatedly made to the US troops
fighting against the North Korean and
Chinese Armies.
"To home before
Christmas", he used to promise.
Christmas came and
Christmas went, but the North Koreans and
the Chinese fought fiercely. McArthur's
promises were repeatedly belied. “Which
Christmas?" people started asking
sarcastically.
Ultimately, there were
neither victors nor losers in the war. It
ended in a stalemate after the loss of
thousands of lives on both sides.
In bitter fighting on
the outskirts of Kilinochchi since the
beginning of this week, the SL Army and the
LTTE have sustained heavy casualties. As
normally happens in military conflicts, both
sides are playing down their own casualties
and exaggerating those of the adversary.
However, the claims of the LTTE seem to be
nearer the truth than those of the Army.
The LTTE claims to have
killed 170 soldiers of the SL Army, but the
Army insists that only 25 of its soldiers
have been killed. However, the LTTE has been
able to release the photographs of at least
36 soldiers killed, thereby proving that the
fatalities sustained by the Army are many
more than the 25 admitted by it.
Reliable accounts show
that both sides have been fighting fiercely
and losing many young people. The Army has
lost many more arms and ammunition and other
equipment than the LTTE. The fighting has
been a bonanza for the LTTE, which has been
able to replenish its dwindling stocks of
arms and ammunition.
The odds are still
against the LTTE. It has well-trained and
well-motivated cadres, who have been
fighting with great determination, but it is
running short of arms and ammunition despite
the seizures from the Army. It has no air
cover against the repeated air strikes by
the Sri Lankan Air Force.
The SL Army has the
advantage of numbers and arms and ammunition
procured with funds from China and Iran, but
its soldiers are not as well-motivated and
as well-trained as those of the LTTE.
The LTTE had shifted
its offices from Kilinochchi many weeks
ago in anticipation of the battle.
Kilinochchi has now nothing but the death
traps for the SL Army laid by the LTTE. The
LTTE knows where those death-traps are, but
not the Army. This gives an advantage to the
LTTE.
The battle being fought
for Kilinochchi is a combined miniature
version of the battles of Stalingrad in the
erstwhile USSR and El Alamein in North
Africa. At Stalingrad, the Soviet Army beat
back the Nazis after inflicting repeated
heavy casualties on them. At El Alamein, the
allied troops commanded by Gen. Bernard
Montgomery (later a Field Marshal) beat back
the advancing Nazi Army commanded by
Gen.Rommel with heavy casualties. These two
battles marked the turning points in the
Second World War.
Making a statement on
the defeat of Rommel's army at El Alamein,
Sir Winston Churchill, the then British
Prime Minister, told the House of Commons:
"There was no victory before Al Alamein.
There will be no defeat after El Alamein."
He was proved right.
Will Kilinochchi prove
a similar turning point in the battle being
fought between the SL Army and the LTTE? If
the LTTE loses the battle, it could mark
the beginning of its end as an insurgent
force, but not as a terrorist organisation.
If the SL Army wins, it will be a Pyrrhic
victory.
(The writer
is Additional Secretary (retd), Cabinet
Secretariat, Govt. of India, New Delhi, and,
presently, Director, Institute For Topical
Studies, Chennai. E-mail: seventyone2@gmail.com)