Lessons from Sri Lanka

Robert Kaplan, recently returned from Sri Lanka, has a great post at The Atlantic on what should and shouldn’t be learned from the government’s defeat of the Tamil Tiger insurgency: The ruthlessness and brutality to which the Sri Lankan government was reduced in order to defeat the Tigers points up just how nasty and intractable ...

By , a former associate editor at Foreign Policy.

Robert Kaplan, recently returned from Sri Lanka, has a great post at The Atlantic on what should and shouldn't be learned from the government's defeat of the Tamil Tiger insurgency:

Robert Kaplan, recently returned from Sri Lanka, has a great post at The Atlantic on what should and shouldn’t be learned from the government’s defeat of the Tamil Tiger insurgency:

The ruthlessness and brutality to which the Sri Lankan government was reduced in order to defeat the Tigers points up just how nasty and intractable the problem of insurgency is. The Sri Lankan government made no progress against the insurgents for nearly a quarter century, until they turned to extreme and unsavory methods. Could they have won without terrorizing the media and killing large numbers of civilians? Perhaps, but probably not without help from the Chinese, who, in addition to their military aid, gave the Sri Lankan government diplomatic cover at the UN Security Council.

These are methods the U.S. should never use. But the fact that this is what it took for the Sri Lankan government to subdue the Tamil Tigers makes clear just what a hard grind lies ahead for the U.S. in Afghanistan.

Hat tip: Andrew Sullivan

Joshua Keating was an associate editor at Foreign Policy. Twitter: @joshuakeating

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