The euphoric, exaggerated responses to the attack on the Anuradhapura airbase on October 22 by the pro-LTTE media ignore simple but vitally relevant facts. It was, in fact, a bigger fiasco than that of March 2007
Following the initial success of this commando-style raid, two low-flying light aircraft belonging to the LTTE arrived at the scene, dropped several bombs and returned to their base in the'Vanni'--the forested area about 70 km to the north of Anuradhapura, presently the principal domain of the LTTE. Meanwhile, the Air Force incurred an additional loss in the form of one of its transport helicopters crashing at a spot about 13 km north of the airbase, the reasons for which are yet to be unravelled. The counterattack by the security forces, led evidently by soldiers of the Gajaba Regiment of the Sri Lanka Army, began in earnest soon after sunrise and re-established control of the airbase by mid-morning. The death-toll of this battle, according togovernment sources, was 21 Tigers (all participants in the raid) and 13 persons attached to the Air Force. LTTE statements refer to 21 of its cadres"missing in action".
The attack was widely reported both within and outside Sri Lanka. "Tigers Deal a StunningBlow", "Flying Tigers Fox Lankans", "Tigers Cannot be Vanquished", "LTTE's Anuradhapura Raid: Bravery andPrecision", and "Tamil Tigers in an Audacious Raid" were among the jubilant headlines under which the news on the raid was disseminated by the media sympathetic towards the LTTE cause. That detailed accounts of the attack, based undoubtedly on LTTE sources, were published on websites even while the confrontation was underway, points to the priority placed by the Tiger leadership and its sympathisers on the propaganda objectives of the attack.
The Reuters news agency sensationalised the attack as the "biggest ever suicide operation launched by the BlackTigers" but omitted to mention that it was 'biggest ever' only from the viewpoint of the verified number of Tiger casualties. One Indian claimed that"…it was neither an act of desperation as projected by the embarrassed Sri Lankan military spokesmen nor an attack of needless dramatics as suggested byothers". This hosanna included a strange assertion attributed to unnamed "reliable Westernsources" according to which "… no other terrorist organisation in the world would have been capable of organising such a raid which had been preceded by painstaking intelligence collection, planning andrehearsal" (Surely, there is more "desperation" and "dramatics" in this type of writing than in the LTTE attack?)
Segments of the local media opposed to the Rajapakse regime rushed to publicise blatantly exaggerated accounts of the destruction and damage caused by the Tigers, and demanded the resignation of several persons holding key positions in thecountry's defence establishment. Spokesmen for the government, in turn, were also guilty of false disclosures on the raid and of engaging in the counterproductive task of trivialising the losses. Redeemingly, there have also been several versions of the attack that contained sober assessments of verified facts.
It is now being admitted, at least implicitly, that while at least four aircraft were destroyed beyond repair, about four others suffered varying levels of damage. There is, in addition, wide ranging diversity in the available cost estimates of the overall losses suffered by the air force. The TamilNet placed it at US$ 40 million. A similar estimate (£ 20 million) has been suggested by Peter Foster, the South Asia correspondent of the London Daily Telegraph (for purposes of gauging comparative scale, note that the'Defence, Public Security, Law and Order' expenditure in 2006 was equivalent to about US$ 1.13 billion). Not surprisingly, a spokesman for the United National Party asserted in Parliament that aircraft and other equipment destroyed during the raid was equivalent to a loss of USD 439 million.
The release of the photograph (widely reproduced by the media, and meant to be seen as a group of ardently committed calm men and women being sent by their'larger-than-life' leader to near-certain death), for instance, is likely to have had the objective of publicising the intense loyalty which Prabhakaran still commands and, thus, to quash rumours of dissidence prevailing within the LTTE leadership. The information on the personnel could have been intended to publicise the fact that the group consisted of high-ranking Tiger"officers" (two of 'Lieutenant Colonel' and six of 'Major' rank) drawn from all parts of the claimed LTTE domain, including the eastern lowlands of Sri Lanka which it had lost during the preceding months.
It has also transpired that the brief and logistically unproductive foray of the'Air Tigers' which several pro-LTTE writers portrayed as an act of bravery comparable to David defying the mighty Goliath (represented by the Sri Lanka Air Force) took place after the commandos, maintaining constant communication with the Vanni high-command, had taken effective control of the airbase and its anti-aircraft gun emplacements in the first two hours of their surprise attack. It thus appears that the aerial bombardment was staged for whatever intimidatory and propaganda benefit which the impression of a"two-pronged ground cum air attack" could entail. The aerial attack was, in fact, a bigger fiasco than that of March 2007, for, while three of the bombs had exploded harmlessly over open space within the airbase, a fourth, dropped near a school on the outskirts of Anuradhapura, had caused minor damage to a school wall. So much for"coordinated precision bombing".
From perspectives of destruction inflicted on the enemy and inculcation of its own aparājito (indestructible) image, the LTTE leadership probably considers as'partial successes' the attempted assassination of Sri Lanka's Army Commander on April 25, 2006, the amphibious offensive on the naval base in Galle harbour by a 15-member Tiger squad on October 18, 2006, at which all attackers perished but two vessels berthed along the Navy pier were damaged, the bombing of the motorcade of the High Commissioner for Pakistan on August 14, 2006, the much publicised aerial raid on the Air Force base at Katunayake on March 26, 2007, the bomb attack at Ratmalana (southern suburb of Colombo) on May 27, 2007, in which eight soldiers were killed, and several explosions inside public omnibuses (on January5, April 2, and April 6, 2007) achieving an aggregate death-toll of about 50 civilians.
As distinct from these were, of course, the ignominious failures that include the detection at highway checkpoints of several large consignments of explosives (each of over 1,000 kilograms) being conveyed to Greater Colombo; the abortive attempt at an attack on ships berthed in Colombo Harbour on June 19, 2006, several thwarted attempts at destroying economic infrastructure, and, above all, the massive debacle in the Eastern Province, which began in July 2006 in an attempted disruption of the irrigation channel system at Mavil Aru in the Mahaveli Delta and ended with the fall of the supposedly impregnable Tiger base in the forested area of Toppigala almost an year later during which the LTTE losses included 718 confirmed battle-field deaths, about 700 who surrendered to the Army, several hundreds seriously wounded, and the entire arsenal at its military bases in the'East'. These 'terrestrial' losses were paralleled by equally severe 'maritime' losses. A rough impression of their magnitude is conveyed by the fact that, from January 2006 to early October 2007, the Sri Lanka Navy (SLN) had destroyed and/or intercepted ten transoceanic arms shipments of the LTTE, in addition to many smaller vessels engaged in carrying contraband across the Palk Strait.
It would, moreover, be presumptuous to comment here on the probable lapses and loopholes that made it possible for about twenty commandos to cross the twin perimeter fences of the airbase (at a spot where some of the installed security safeguards had evidently been cleared for an abandoned plan to extend the runway), capture raised bunkers, watch-huts and gun emplacements scattered throughout the base without causing alarm or retaliatory action, and then remain in control of the base over several hours with only the ill-fated helicopter making a surveillance attempt from outside. These too may be left for those with the required expertise.
That the Rajapakse-led government has succeeded in weakening secessionist military capability to an extent which no previous Colombo-basedgovernment had done since the commencement of the Eelam campaign almost three decades ago cannot be denied. Yet, as confrontational experiences since mid-2006 along the'Forward Defence Lines' of the LTTE stronghold in Vanni demonstrate, there still remains a long and arduous way to go before the Tiger capacity for random terrorist attacks ceases to pose a serious threat to the survival of Sri Lanka.
G.H. Peiris is Professor Emeritus of the University of Peradeniya, Sri Lanka.Courtesy, the South Asia Intelligence Review of the South Asia Terrorism Portal