The visit of the three most powerful
bureaucratic Brahmins of New Delhi to Sri
Lanka last weekend did not attract much
attention in the outside world but political
analysts in both countries attached much
significance to it.
The official reason given by the Sri Lanka
government spokesmen that it was a routine
visit in connection with the oncoming SAARC
Summit seems hardly credible in view of the
standing of the three officials - National
Security Adviser M.K. Narayanan, Foreign
Secretary Shiv Shanker Menon and Defence
Secretary R. Vijay Singh.
Dj vu
As a keen student of Indo-Sri Lankan
relations for more than 25 years this visit
caused an eerie feeling of - as the French
say - Dj vu (it happened before) in us. Was
the history of July 1987 repeating itself
again as when our powerful neighbour
intervened at first with Tamil Nadu
riff-raff attempting a bum boat invasion,
followed by Indian Air Force planes dropping
bread and parippu on Jaffna and Indian
troops landing in our country?
Intervention need not take place in the same
form of intervention as in 1987 but it could
take many other forms in these times when
the Right to Protect (Really Intervene) -
R2P - has become a fashionable doctrine in
international relations among big powers.
And India indeed, if not yet a Global Power,
is rubbing shoulders with them. There are
parallels of the causes that led to
intervention in 1987 in the prevailing
situation today on both sides of the Palk
Strait.
In the 1980s India was unhappy with Sri
Lanka's efforts to crush northern terrorism
even though they had organised armed Sri
Lankan Tamil groups, financed and had
trained them for reasons best known to New
Delhi. They wanted devolution of power to
the north and east where at that time the
pro-Indian TULF held sway.
Hundreds if not thousands of Tamils had fled
across the Palk Strait to Tamil Nadu
following clashes between Tamil terrorist
groups and the Sri Lankan armed forces as it
has happened once again. President J.R.
Jayewardene decided to wipe out northern
terrorism with a massive military operation
code named 'Operation Liberation' as the
ongoing military operations now taking
place.
There was unrest in Tamil Nadu then as there
is now on the Sri Lankan situation with
supporters of the Tamil groups beating their
war drums and pressurising New Delhi. Citing
all these reasons - 'South Indian
compulsions' - New Delhi declared that India
will not permit Sri Lankan troops to take
over Jaffna where terrorist leaders,
particularly Velupillai Pirapaharan, were
directing operations. President Jayewardene
ignored Indian admonitions and went ahead
and then India moved in.
Indira Doctrine
There are other parallels as well. India
under Indira Gandhi and later Rajiv Gandhi
did not want powers outside the region and
even within it, Pakistan, being involved in
the Sri Lankan conflict. Indira Gandhi at
that time pronounced what came to be known
as the Indira Doctrine - no power inside or
outside the region can go to the help of a
country within the region, if India
considers it inimical to her interests.
At that time India viewed America with great
suspicion and considered it as a 'hidden
hand' attempting to destabilise India.
Indira Gandhi suspected Jayewardene of
intending to give Trincomalee harbour for
use as an American base.
Chinese bogey
Now the Indian Defence Advisor Narayanan has
been saying it loud and clear on many
occasions that Sri Lankan should not
purchase armaments from China and Pakistan.
Reports from New Delhi say that the Indian
government is perturbed at Sri Lanka's tilt
toward China, Pakistan and Iran - more so
about China.
Chinese assistance has been secured to build
a harbour at Hambantota which would be just
a few kilometres away from the world's main
shipping lines stretching from Europe to
South and South East Asia which includes
India. Other Chinese projects have been
preferred to Indian offers such as the
Norochcholai coal power generating plant and
other Chinese investments and the growing
influence in Sri Lanka is being viewed with
alarm.
Having refused to sell arms and offered only
'humanitarian assistance' New Delhi now
wants Sri Lankan to purchase only Indian
arms. An IANS (an Indian news service)
report on the visit of the New Delhi triad
quoted an Indian official saying that India
hopes Sri Lanka can find a peaceful solution
to the ethnic conflict within the framework
of a united Sri Lanka, acceptable to all
communities and that there was no military
solution.
This is the same manthram that has been
repeated since the 1980s and the Mahinda
Rajapakse government contrary to Indian
expectations claims that it is steaming
ahead for a military victory.
Indian woes
Meanwhile the Congress government of Sonia
Gandhi is teetering on the brink with a
general election close at hand. The Indian
Marxist parties are threatening to pull out
of the Congress led government coalition if
India goes through the civilian nuclear deal
with America and Prime Minister Manmohan
Singh who had worked hard at forging the
nuclear deal last week was threatening not
to attend the G-8 Summit to be held soon
because it would be embarrassing for him to
meet President George Bush if India goes
back on its word.
Such moves would result in the Congress
coalition losing its parliamentary majority
and the government collapsing. Meanwhile
the Congress Party has lost many elections
to state assemblies, the last being
Karnataka.
Now LTTE supporters in Tamil Nadu such as
Vaiko and Karunanidhi are beating their war
drums pressurising New Delhi to make the
Rajapakse government call off the military
offensive. Even if the Congress government
falls, it will still need Tamil Nadu support
to win an election and return to power.
Thus, Indian intervention in some form or
the other is not merely hypothetical but
quite plausible.
There is also a vital difference in the
situation then and now. America and Western
powers even though they did not back Sri
Lanka against India then were yet
sympathetic towards Sri Lanka. But now India
is almost an ally with America and other
Western powers who are looking at Sri Lanka
with a jaundiced eye, the Rajapakse regime
having antagonised them on many counts.
Thus, will history repeat itself in one form
or the other?