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Under
the firm
guidance
of
Defense
Secretary
Rajapaksa,
the Sri
Lankan
military
did what
the
Tamil
Tiger
leadership
least
expected
it to
do—double
its
manpower
and
bring
the
fight
direct
to the
enemy
and
inflict
decisive
psychological
wounds.
This was
all-flanks
engaged
warfare
based on
common-sense
and
strategic
insight.
It was
brilliant
as it
was
simple,
making
many
wonder
why it
hadn’t
been
instituted
before.
So
states
the
Manila
Times of
Aug 31,
09 in
its
regular
column
"Open
Notebook"
by
Random
Jottings,
written
by a
senior
correspondent
of the
MT who
was in
Sri
Lanka
recently.
When
asked if
he felt
his work
was now
done,
the
Defense
Secretary
(whose
all
encompassing
brief
also
includes
public
security
and law
and
order)
notes:
“To a
certain
extent
it has.
But now
we have
to put
in place
a good
intelligence
network
to
ensure
that the
security
of our
country
is never
again
compromised
by
internal
fighting
forces.
The
text of
the
article
THE
large
posters
signifying
a tale
of
triumph
against
seemingly
impossible
odds can
hardly
be
missed
by
anyone
traveling
the
length
and
breadth
of Sri
Lanka,
and that
very
much
includes
the
battle
scared
north of
the
country
which
has
equal
reason
to
rejoice
having
been
liberated
from the
evil
grip of
the
bloodthirsty
Tamil
Tigers
after
three
debilitating
decades.
Telling
in
narrative
and
touching
in
effect,
the
posters
depict a
gleeful
Sri
Lankan
President
Mahinda
Rajapaksa
giving
his
somewhat
bashful
looking
younger
brother
Defense
Secretary
Gotabaya
Rajapaksa
a
spontaneous
hug
gushing
with
affection
and
gratitude.
Indeed,
the
Rajapaksa
brothers
Mahinda
and
Gotabaya
have
every
reason
to be
proclaimed
as the
heroic
poster
boys of
the
momentous
victory—an
outcome
no Sri
Lankan
at home
or
abroad
(and
even the
circumspect
international
community)
thought
was ever
possible—over
one of
the
world’s
most
feared
and
brutally
clinical
terrorist
outfits
which
devised
and
subsequently
exported
the
barbarous
knowledge
of
suicide
vests
and
truck
bombs to
its
comrades
in death
in
theaters
of
secessionist
war
worldwide.
For
whilst
the
President
played
political
hardball
and made
anyone
who was
willing
to
listen
realize
that the
country
could
never
defeat
an enemy
it
wasn’t
prepared
to
fight,
his
Defense
Secretary—with
a
seriousness
of
purpose
unmatched
by any
previous
incumbent
in that
key
office—mapped
out and
unwaveringly
directed
the
definitive
final
chapter
of the
long
running
saga.
Under
the firm
guidance
of
Defense
Secretary
Rajapaksa,
the Sri
Lankan
military
did what
the
Tamil
Tiger
leadership
least
expected
it to
do—double
its
manpower
and
bring
the
fight
direct
to the
enemy
and
inflict
decisive
psychological
wounds.
This was
all-flanks
engaged
warfare
based on
common-sense
and
strategic
insight.
It was
brilliant
as it
was
simple,
making
many
wonder
why it
hadn’t
been
instituted
before.
But
to cast
light on
that
quandary
one
needs to
rewind
recent
history.
While
May 2009
was when
the last
remnants
of the
Tamil
Tiger
fighters,
including
its
megalomaniac
leader
Velupillai
Prabhakaran,
were
wiped
out and
the
country’s
freedom
from
terrorism
declared,
one has
to go
back to
a warm
night in
November
2005
when the
path to
attaining
that
freedom
was
laid.
Late on
that
day,
when the
votes in
the
presidential
election
were
being
tallied
and then
presidential
candidate
Rajapaksa
realized
that he
was
almost
home and
dry (and
on the
day of
his 60th
birthday
at that)
he asked
his
brother
Gotabaya—then
domiciled
in the
United
States
and had
taken
three-months
leave
from his
job in
an IT
company
to
travel
to his
homeland
to help
with his
brother’s
campaign—whether
he would
consider
staying
put in
Sri
Lanka
and
taking
up the
post of
Defense
Secretary
and
helping
him end
the war.
In what
turned
out to
be the
perfect
birthday
gift,
Gotabaya
agreed.
Sitting
behind
his desk
which is
flanked
by a
tank
full of
fish
swimming
lazily
and
providing
the
perfect
antidote
to the
stress-laden
demands
of his
office,
the
iron-willed
but
soft-spoken
(though
he is
known to
erupt in
volcanic
rage
when
encountering
mismanagement
and
incompetence)
Defense
Secretary
Rajapaksa—who
rose to
the rank
of
colonel
in the
Sri
Lankan
Army
before
retiring
and
emigrating
to the
USA—acknowledges
that the
chemistry
that
came
about by
his
appointment
was
unprecedented,
and had
a
crucial
bearing
on the
final
outcome.
He
explains:
“For the
first
time
ever in
the
history
of Sri
Lanka we
had the
three
commanders
of the
Army,
Navy and
Air
Force
working
with a
Defense
Secretary
who had
served
alongside
them in
the
battlefield
during
the
early
days of
the
conflict.
And
crucially,
my
brother
was the
President
which
meant I
could
cut out
the
bureaucratic
red-tape
and,
more
importantly,
disregard
the
political
interference
that had
previously
crippled
this
office—and
invariably
the war
effort—and
go
straight
to the
Commander-in
Chief if
and when
the need
arose.”
Needless
to say,
it was a
gilt-edged
connection
that
shaped
the
conclusive
stages
of the
war—especially
when
seeking
the
wherewithal
to
substantially
boost
the
firepower.
But in
the
final
analysis
it was
Defence
Secretary
Rajapaksa’s
depth of
vision
and not
his
scale of
influence
that
mattered.
“What
I was
able to
do, with
the help
of the
commanders,
was to
professionalize
the
three
services
and
change
the
demoralizing
culture
where
promotion
was
based
more on
political
connections
than
merit.
We
instilled
in our
soldiers
the
importance
of
discipline
and
feelings
of pride
in
wearing
the
uniform.
We also
made
them
understand
that the
cause
they
were
fighting
was a
just
one. In
addition,
we paid
special
attention
to their
welfare
and that
of their
families.
I
believe
all
these
aspects
played a
vital
role in
helping
us gain
the
upper
hand
against
the
enemy,”says
the man
who
narrowly
survived
an
assassination
attempt
by a
Tamil
Tiger
suicide
bomber
who
targeted
his
bullet
proof
vehicle
killing
several
of his
bodyguards.
When
asked if
he felt
his work
was now
done,
the
Defense
Secretary
(whose
all
encompassing
brief
also
includes
public
security
and law
and
order)
notes:
“To a
certain
extent
it has.
But now
we have
to put
in place
a good
intelligence
network
to
ensure
that the
security
of our
country
is never
again
compromised
by
internal
fighting
forces.
“And
having
been on
a war
footing
for so
long, we
have to
redefine
the role
of the
Armed
Forces
now that
peace
has been
restored.
Also
much of
the
police
force
will
have to
be
re-trained
and
re-orientated
to the
requirements
of law
and
order in
a
post-war
community
setting.
“Beyond
that, we
also
have to
ensure
peace
and
order in
our
society
by
disarming
the many
factions
and
individuals
who, by
nature
of the
threats
they
faced
from the
Tamil
Tigers,
were
allowed
to carry
arms. We
need to
impress
upon
them
that the
state
can now
offer
them
adequate
protection.
“There
are too
many
firearms
in
circulation,
and if
Sri
Lanka is
to enjoy
the
benefits
of peace
then
it’s an
issue
that has
to be
addressed
with a
sense of
urgency.”
Fittingly,
a
microcosm
of the
peaceful
Sri
Lanka
that
Defense
Secretary
Rajapaksa
helped
pave can
now be
seen on
a daily
basis
just
across
the road
from his
Defense
Ministry
office
where
sits one
of
Colombo’s
most
important
landmarks,
the
Galle
Face
Green.
An
expansive
stretch
of green
that
looks
seductively
over the
Indian
Ocean,
it has
since it
was
built in
1865
been the
place of
choice
for the
capital’s
residents
from
near and
far to
gather
and
relax
late
into the
evening.
Because
of
security
concerns
it has
been
closed
to the
public
for
several
years
and
depicted
an empty
forlorn
picture
that was
symptomatic
of the
depressive
state of
affairs
in the
country.
But
now it
is open
and
buzzing
again,
with
kites
manned
by young
boys
soaring
and
playfully
flirting
with
each
other in
the
evening
breeze.
While on
terra
firma
bowling
arms are
exercised
and
batting
stokes
executed
as
makeshift
cricket
matches
are in
progress.
And all
around
is a
merry
scene of
families
picnicking
and
lovers
promenading.
It’s
a joyful
tableau
neatly
encapsulating
a
remarkable
turnaround
in Sri
Lanka’s
fortunes,
and
something
that for
sure
catches
the eye
of
Defense
Secretary
Rajapaksa
as he
drives
home
from his
office
each
day.
For
that,
and a
lot more
besides
Sri
Lankans
owe him
an
immense
debt of
gratitude.
And
President
Rajapaksa
would do
well to
ensure
his
brother
Gotabaya
stays
around
for a
while
yet to
help
build on
the
dividends
of
peace.
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