Kerry’s message to Colombo
by K. Rathnayake
US Secretary of State John Kerry’s two-day visit to Sri Lanka last
weekend was a further step to reset US ties with Colombo as part of
military preparations against China. Relations between the US and Sri
Lanka were strained under former President Mahinda Rajapaksa, who tilted
toward China and tried to balance between Washington and Beijing. A
regime-change operation, backed by the US, resulted in Maithripala
Sirisena winning a presidential election in January.
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US Secretary of State, John
Kerry greets President Maithripala Sirisena |
Kerry met President Sirisena, Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe,
Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera and Tamil National Alliance (TNA)
leaders during his visit to Colombo last week. He praised Sirisena,
Wickremesinghe and Samaraweera for taking “difficult decisions” and
announced “an annual partnership dialogue between our two governments”
to “deepen our partnership with you.”
Significantly, this was the first visit by one of the highest-ranking
US officials to Sri Lanka since 2005, when Secretary of State Colin
Powell travelled to the island after the devastating December 2004 Asian
tsunami.
Powell visited a number of affected countries, using the catastrophe
to advance US strategic interests.
Pursuing strategic interests
Kerry made hypocritical lectures during his visit about human rights,
democracy and reconciliation. None of these was his real agenda.
His trip was aimed at placing Sri Lanka firmly in line with the Obama
administration’s ‘pivot’ to Asia, which is directed at encircling China
and subordinating it to US hegemony. Kerry’s visit also sent a wider
message that US imperialism is aggressively pursuing its drive against
China.
For almost half a decade, Washington backed the Rajapaksa
Government’s war against the separatist Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam
(LTTE) to the hilt. But it became concerned when China emerged as the
principal supplier of military hardware and funds to the cash-strapped
government.
The Obama administration then cynically raised the alleged human
rights violations committed during the final months of the war, when
tens of thousands of civilians were killed, to press Colombo to distance
itself from Beijing. Last year, Washington backed a UN Human Rights
Council (UNHRC) resolution, threatening an international war crimes
probe. When Rajapaksa called an early presidential election for January
8, State Department officials used long-established connections with
pro-US United National Party (UNP) leader Wickremesinghe and former
President Chandrika Kumaratunga to bring forward Sirisena, one of
Rajapaksa’s senior ministers, as a candidate to oust Rajapaksa.
Kerry personally telephoned Rajapaksa on election day, advising him
to “respect the election outcome.”
Sirisena and his minority Government, led by Wickremesinghe, swiftly
shifted in favour of the Western powers, particularly Washington and its
regional ally, India. It also declared a review of Chinese-funded
projects, with the US$ 1.4 billion Colombo City Port City project still
to be approved.
The message to China is that relations will continue, but not at the
same level as before. Kerry spelled out Washington’s strategic interests
in a lecture at the Kadirgamar Centre in Colombo. He explained that the
US had no problem with Rajapaksa’s war to crush the LTTE.
Speaking in terms that also sought to justify Washington’s ruthless
wars around the globe, Kerry said: “It is sometimes necessary to go to
war, despite the pain it brings. For all of my country’s disagreements
with the previous government in Sri Lanka over how it fought the LTTE,
we clearly understood the necessity of ridding this country of a
murderous terrorist group.”
Strategic location
Without outlining Rajapaksa’s relations with China, Kerry pointed to
Sri Lanka as a geo-strategic asset located near vital trade routes, on
which China depends heavily. He said, “Your country sits at the
crossroads of Africa, South Asia and East Asia. The Indian Ocean is the
world’s most important commercial highway.”
Kerry noted that 40 percent of all seaborne oil passes through the
Strait of Hormuz and half the world’s merchant fleet capacity sails
through the Straits of Malacca. He said, “With its strategic location
near deep-water ports in India and Myanmar, Sri Lanka could serve as the
fulcrum of a modern and dynamic Indo-Pacific region.”
Kerry asserted that the US was already providing leadership on
maritime security in the Indian Ocean in association with “close friends
and allies across the region, including India, Australia, Indonesia and
Japan.”
The Secretary of State said the US and Sri Lanka “are also working
together to oppose the use of intimidation or force to assert a
territorial or maritime claim by anyone.” He asserted the need to defend
“freedom of navigation and over-flight and other lawful uses of the sea
and airspace.”
Freedom of navigation is a slogan with which the US is fomenting
provocations against China, while encouraging Japanese imperialism’s
claims in the East China Sea and claims by the Philippines and Vietnam
in the South China Sea.
The Pentagon is already boosting relations with the Sri Lankan
military. On April 19, US Seventh Fleet commanders invited Samaraweera,
State Minister of Defence Ruwan Wijewardene and a delegation to the USS
Carl Vinson Carrier Strike Group, where they had discussions and viewed
its military might.
Kerry was keen to ensure that the TNA, the main Tamil bourgeois
alliance, backed the government. Washington wants to stop any agitation
over the repression of the island’s Tamil minority that could deepen the
political instability in Sri Lanka, as well as southern India, affecting
Washington’s strategic interests.
Power devolution
In his meeting with TNA delegates, Kerry supported “devolving powers”
— a formula for power-sharing between the Colombo and the Tamil elites
in the island’s north and east. However, he urged the TNA to cooperate
with “the new government’s initiative towards an amicable solution,” TNA
Spokesman, Suresh Premachandran, said.
A considerable section of the Sri Lankan elite is enthusiastic about
the new relations with the US. The Colombo media featured articles on
the importance of Kerry’s visit. A Sunday publication in its editorial
commented: “The dialogue between the US and Sri Lanka completely broke
down. It had to take an election in Sri Lanka to turn the tide — and
Secretary Kerry’s visit is, largely, to pay tribute to the voters of Sri
Lanka who helped oust the Rajapaksa regime, and put back on track US-SL
relations.”
Sri Lankan capitalists were dismayed about losing business with the
US, the country’s largest single destination of exports, worth about
$2.5 billion in 2013. Sirisena’s Government hopes to attract more
investments, using its close relations with the US, the international
finance capital.
Alongside Kerry, Foreign Minister Samaraweera said, “Sri Lanka has
been considered a paradise for tourists for many years but our
government is now also keen to make Sri Lanka an investor’s
paradise.”Kerry said a US Treasury and Commerce Department team would
work with the government on economic measures to achieve “greater
investment and greater growth.” That means deeper attacks on
working-class conditions in the name of economic reform, as well as
exposing workers across the region to the danger of war against China.
- www.wsws.org |