Only international pressure – the Americans made a not-so-veiled threat inColombo that they would assist the government in the event that hostilitieserupted again – and doggedness on the part of the Norwegian peace brokerssalvaged the situation and reopened negotiations. However, when the two sideswere making last minute preparations for talks in Geneva, Norwegian SpecialPeace Envoy Erik Solheim cautioned against entertaining high expectations. Hisanxiety was partly influenced by the violence of the last two months, as also bythe fissures that had erupted between the two sides since they last met. Infact, other than the Norwegians, only three of the 2003 representatives had madeit back to negotiating table. Consecutive government changes in Colomboguaranteed that the entire government delegation was new. From the Tigers’side, only chief negotiator Anton Balasingham, Political Wing Head S.P.Tamilselvan and Balasingham’s wife, Adele, who acts as a secretary at talks,remained. Crucially, one of their former co-negotiators, VinayagamoorthiMuralitharan alias Karuna, had broken ranks in early 2004 and launched arebellion against Prabhakaran’s leadership in the eastern parts of Sri Lanka.The Karuna rebellion constitutes a serious headache for the Tigers, and was oneof its main complaints at the Geneva talks.