The
[
The Washington Times in an
editorial titled "Cut off the Tigers" on July 12 called upon the
The editorial: "A group
of congressmen is urging the Bush administration to increase its involvement in
Sri Lanka. A recent letter from Reps. David Price and Rush Holt and 48 other
congressional Democrats and Republicans to President Bush calls on the
administration to step up diplomatic engagement in order to help the small
island nation reach a long-term peace with the terrorist rebel group the
Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam. Noting "a pressing need for a more
concerted effort by the international community to bring both sides back to the
negotiating table," the congressmen conclude that the United States "has
the opportunity to serve as a leader of such a renewed international
effort."
" The protracted conflict
dates back more than three decades and has cost more than 60,000 lives. A 2002
ceasefire brokered by Norway fell apart last year, although it became clear
that the Tamil Tigers had used the break from fighting to re-arm. Fighting has
escalated, as the Sri Lankan military claims to have at last beaten the rebels
out of the east, which, along with the north, has been a Tamil Tiger
stronghold.
" Neither side, unfortunately,
can boast a morally impeccable record. The congressional letter also calls on
the Sri Lankan government to end the use of extrajudicial killings and
disappearances in the government controlled areas. To its credit,
" What human-rights
violations the government may have to answer for, however, pale in comparison
to the barbarity of the Tamil Tigers, who pioneered the use of the suicide bomb
and have a track record of kidnapping children and turning them into soldiers.
Human-rights issues will continue to be a concern until a genuine and lasting
peace can be forged, and the United States can play a significant role in
facilitating this by targeting and breaking up Tamil Tiger fund-raising
networks in the United States, and working with Canada and the European Union
to disrupt the Tigers' financial networks there as well. These networks, which
according to Human Rights Watch rely on "intimidation, extortion, and
physical violence," are critical to the Tigers' ability to perpetuate their
terrorist campaign, and disrupting the flow of money to the terrorist group is
an important step toward forcing its leadership back to the negotiating table."