Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

On the foreign front

-

The new President made the politicall­y correct statement when it came to announcing his Government’s foreign policy. ‘We will be neutral,’ he said, and added for good measure that Sri Lanka would not want to get dragged into global geopolitic­s playing out in this neck of the woods.

The big powers today, be it the resurgent India- United States- Japan- Australia axis or China that has arrived ( of course with the caveat that India wants the US only to counter- balance China and no further), are trying to woo Sri Lanka into their orbit or at the least, to ensure it does not get sucked in to the others.

In recent times, Sri Lankan leaders after an election have made it a practice to pay homage first at the Temple of the Tooth in Kandy, and then do pooja in New Delhi.

New Delhi took no chances by dispatchin­g its Foreign Minister to meet the new President within 24 hours of the latter sitting on his chair. That the visiting FM carried an invitation to Sri Lanka’s President, hopefully is not to be read as a summons to New Delhi. Hopefully too, the diplomatic world will not view this as the new President, the former military man that he is, being frogmarche­d to Delhi to listen to certain red lines on where Sri Lanka’s relations with China should be.

Seemingly upstaged by New Delhi, Beijing has also invited the new President and rubbed it in by saying there’s no hurry, and to come when he is more settled in his job.

India has reason to be wary of President Rajapaksa’s leanings towards China. During the last stages of the military operations against the LTTE, as Defence Secretary he was part of a troika along with his brother Basil and the then President’s Secretary Lalith Weeratunge who were engaged in back channel diplomacy to win the crucial support of the then Congress Government in New Delhi and neutralise the vociferous Tamil Nadu lobby. However, soon after the defeat of the LTTE, and Mr. Rajapaksa taking charge of rebuilding cities, he was confronted, and often frustrated by the slowness of the Indian bureaucrac­y in approving projects and impressed by the speed with which Chinese government- backed companies got his blueprints financed and operationa­l.

The President’s position would be that there was nothing anti- Indian or pro- Chinese in what he was doing; he just wanted the job done, and done quickly. Internatio­nal relations, however, are not the same as getting building projects accelerate­d. In India, one would hope he would not come empty-handed, merely lectured to, and would ensure that issues like poaching in Sri Lanka’s northern waters and inter-alia, the futility of Provincial Councils are conveyed to the Indian hierarchy.

The new President will, no doubt, be haunted by the United Nations Human Rights Council probe into the conduct of Sri Lanka’s Armed Forces in the defeat of the LTTE under his watch.

The original co- sponsor of the resolution against Sri Lanka, the US and now the UK which had been cherry-picking on Sri Lanka’s war against terrorism are themselves now embroiled in a huge controvers­y over pardons of their own soldiers accused of war crimes in Iraq and Afghanista­n.

Honing Sri Lanka’s diplomatic skills with the required political backing, pushing the country’s national interests among the comity of nations in multilater­al and bilateral matters, especially in free trade agreements and negotiatin­g loans, and in security and strategic matters should be of critical importance to the new Government.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Sri Lanka