US to announce significant assistance in Japan meet - Armitage
[TamilNet, Saturday, 15 February 2003, 02:59 GMT]
In a conference on "Srilanka: Prospects for Peace," held at the Center of Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) in Washington D.C Friday, Richard Armitage, Deputy U.S Secretary of State, in his Keynote address said that, "..it is my intention to return to the follow-on meeting [to Oslo] of donors" in June in Japan and "I will be able to announce significant further assistance to Sri Lanka for both humanitarian and economic aid," sources said.
Full transcript of Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage's Keynote address follows:
 |
Richard Armitage, Deputy U.S. Secretary of State (Photo: PBS)
|
"Thank you, Ambassador Schaffer [Director, Center for Strategic and
International Studies South Asia Program]. As a diplomat and a
scholar, you are a role model. Your actions and your efforts and your
care and your devotion to all things South Asia are well known, and
well respected. And I am delighted also to see here the Ambassador
[Subasinghe, Ambassador of Sri Lanka to the United States]. It seems
as though it was just last month that you were visiting us to present
your credentials. Come to think of it, it was only a month ago. It
looks like you're settling in pretty well.
I have to tell you, Tezi [Schaffer], of course I would come here for
this occasion. I wouldn't miss it. Twenty years, as far as I'm
concerned, between my visits to Sri Lanka, was too long. And I have a
feeling it won't be that long again. I suspect I will be out there
again in the not too distant future. I am also delighted to be with
all of you here today in such a reflective setting. You know, one of
the things that is most, sort of, uncomfortable and unpleasant about
government service is there is no time for reflection. You rarely have
the luxury of sitting back and actually thinking about something. And
I am delighted to have a few minutes here.
The last couple of months -- and indeed weeks – have been a busy time
of high-stakes diplomacy for our Department of State. Secretary [of
State Colin] Powell and I have been to Capitol Hill six times together
in the last two weeks – three testimonies apiece. Of course, we've
been talking about such things as Iraq and its biological and chemical
weapons and its nuclear intentions; about North Korea's self-inflicted
deprivation and desperation, as millions of people are in danger of
starving to death from mismanagement and bad luck; and about the high
risk of terrorist attacks over this next week. But we've also been
talking about the horrible terrorist bombing in downtown Bogota over
the last weekend and the implications for the counter-narcotics
efforts in the region, as well as the rockets fired at international
forces in Kabul on Monday, which narrowly missed the visiting Defense
Minister of Germany. It certainly did underscore the importance of our
reconstruction efforts in that blighted land.
 |
Teresita Schaffer, U.S. ambassador to Sri Lanka, 1992-1995, and currently Director of the CSIS South Asia Program (Photo: CSIS)
|
Given these priorities, I think it is important to start today's
discussion on Sri Lanka with a baseline question: why should the
United States invest significant attention and resources to Sri Lanka,
especially at a time when we have such overwhelming competing
interests? Should the United States play a role in this peace process?
Now, I believe the right answer is that the United States should play
a role. And there are many credible explanations as to why. There is
the pull of opportunity, of ending years of death and years of
destruction and bolstering a multiethnic democracy. In the more direct
bilateral sense, Sri Lanka is already a solid exporter to the United
States and has the potential with peace and the right reforms to
become a significant trade partner. And then there is the push of
danger. As we have found out far too often, terror and human misery
generally will not ebb away on their own or stay neatly within borders
if we look at them as someone else's problem.
I have no doubt that the many experts Tezi [Schaffer] has assembled in
this audience could provide more answers to my baseline questions. And
when taken together, these answers may even add up to a compelling
justification. But the problem is that these answers do not really
constitute a clear strategic impetus for the United States or for
other nations outside of Sri Lanka's immediate neighborhood,
particularly in a time of war and economic uncertainty. It would be
tough to make a truly convincing case by sticking to the terms of
strict self-interest.
For me, the bottom line in this instance is simple. The United States
should be playing a role, in concert with other nations, committing
our human and financial resources to settling this conflict because it
can be done. And because it's the right thing to do. Because the
parties to the conflict appear to be ready to reach a resolution, more
so than at any other time in the past twenty years. And because it may
well be that it is a resolution that can only be reached with the help
of multilateral resources, both moral and material.
Indeed, this may be a key moment, when an infusion of such
international support can add momentum to the peace process, helping
to stop 20 years of abject human suffering and to smooth the ripples
of grief and terror that have spread from this tiny island nation
through the region and even around the world. This may be the moment
when international support can help to spring this country into
prominence as a recovering victim of conflict, terrorism, and human
rights abuses, but also as a respected participant in the global
community. And while I wouldn't want to oversell Sri Lanka as a model
-- this brew of caste, class, religion and race has its own unique
flavor -- perhaps this is a nation with lessons to offer the world
about how to move from despair to hope, from intractable conflict to
workable concord, and, indeed, about how the international community
can engage and support such conflict resolution.
So, with your permission, I'll share with you a few thoughts about the
direction I see Sri Lanka heading in, and the more promising
developments as well as the more problematic challenges, and how I
believe the United States and the international community can most
usefully participate.
Sadly, I have had the chance to see the costs of war up close. Last
summer, I traveled to the Jaffna Peninsula. We first flew over the
area in a helicopter and saw below us a blasted landscape, pockmarked
with thousands of bomb craters and shell craters. For me, that view
reminded me strongly of my time in the service in Vietnam. I really
don't think I've seen anything quite like it since. And I'm talking
both about the physical devastation and the sense of futility that was
unmistakable on the ground.
We ventured into one of the cities that had been largely destroyed,
where people were nonetheless starting to return, trying to reclaim
lives many may have hardly remembered. Today, some 300,000 internally
displaced people have returned to the northern and eastern parts of
the country, even though these areas lack sanitation, clean water, and
other basic amenities. This is, to some extent, a demonstration of
confidence in the current cease-fire, but it also confirms something
else I saw when I was there. We spoke with a cross-section of Tamil
society in the area and the mixture of hope and wariness in their
words was an unmistakable reminder that in Jaffna, and across Sri
Lanka, a whole generation has grown up knowing little other than war,
but is now ready for a change.
It was clear to me at the time that the solution had to start there,
in the shattered people and bombed-out villages, in the universal
longing for a better life. Because while it is clearly taking a firm
decision from the parties to this fight to be partners and to act in
the interests of peace, it is also going to take a commitment from all
the people of Sri Lanka -- Muslims and Buddhists, Christians and
Hindus, Sinhalese and Tamils -- from all parts of the country, if
agreements made around the negotiating table are going to take hold on
the ground.
Now, the challenge for the government of Sri Lanka and the LTTE is
going to be taking that universal longing and that national commitment
and giving people tangible signs of progress and a way to participate
in the process. I think they have done a good job to date. First, they
have set a powerful foundation. Keeping to the cease-fire for the past
year has, as I noted, allowed the public to reach a basic level of
confidence. And it is critical that both parties continue to honor and
keep this cease-fire. From my point of view, a loss of confidence at
this point would be extraordinarily devastating.
December was also a watershed. The negotiators issued a common
statement that called for "internal self-determination based on a
federal structure within a united Sri Lanka," which created a shared
vision for the future of the state, and dealt with many disagreements
that destroyed past efforts at a negotiated solution. And in this
latest round of talks, which just concluded last week in Berlin, the
negotiators turned to concrete issues of humanitarian relief and human
rights, including the LTTE's pledge to end child recruitment.
To me, this is all very encouraging. Indeed, two years ago, no one
would have believed so much could happen so quickly. But to some
extent, the steps taken to date have been the easy ones. And so the
negotiations have entered a critical stage, a point at which both
sides will have to show the courage to stay the course as they address
more difficult issues and make real compromises.
Although the apprehension of an arms-laden trawler during the last
round of negotiations and the self immolation by its LTTE crew were
most remarkable for failing to derail peace talks, it also called into
question the LTTE's commitment to the process. The LTTE is going to
have to take a number of difficult steps to demonstrate that it
remains committed to a political solution. The Tigers need to honor
the restrictions and conditions that the cease-fire -- and future
negotiations -- set on their arms supply. Logically, down the road,
this is going to include disarmament issues themselves. Internal
self-determination, within the framework of one Sri Lanka, is not
going to be consistent with separate armies and navies for different
parts of the country. For that matter, the LTTE has often pledged to
stop the recruitment of child soldiers, but this time, they will have
to prove they can carry through and will carry through on the pledge.
The LTTE will also have to respect the rights of Muslims and Sinhalese
living in areas under its control. And if the Tigers really want to
join Sri Lanka's democratic society on a federal basis, they will also
have to accept pluralism within the Tamil community.
Finally, the United States government is encouraged by the vision of
the LTTE as a genuine political entity. But for that to happen, we
believe the LTTE must publicly and unequivocally renounce terrorism
and prove that its days of violence are over. The US will never accept
the tactics of terror, regardless of any legitimate Tamil aspirations.
But if the LTTE can move beyond the terror tactics of the past and
make a convincing case through its conduct and its actual actions that
it is committed to a political solution and to peace, the United
States will certainly consider removing the LTTE from the list of
Foreign Terrorist Organizations, as well as any other
terrorism-related designations.
At the same time, the Government of Sri Lanka must institute reforms
that address the legitimate aspirations of the Tamil people. This
means allowing Tamils the simple right to stay in their own homes and
to pursue a living, such as fishing in coastal waters, without
prejudice or harassment. But it also means protecting the full range
of human rights for all the people of Sri Lanka. In particular, the
burden will be on the government, military and civilian officials
alike, to prove that they can accord these rights to residents of the
northern and the eastern parts of the nation, including the refugees
returning to the area. And that they will hold officials accountable
for their conduct.
The government obviously also must tackle key economic reforms.
Because ultimately, the people of Sri Lanka, not just Tamils but also
the Muslim and Sinhalese communities, particularly in the south, will
judge the efficacy of the peace process by how it affects their
livelihood.
Reaching this vision of prosperity will require a strong and sustained
commitment from the Government of Sri Lanka. We should all give due
credit to President Kumaratunga.
She knew this was the only answer for her country long ago. And her
peace plan of 1995 was an important precursor to the progress we see
now. Of course today, we owe much of that progress to the Government
of Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe, who continues to take bold
steps in the direction of peace. But it is clear that if Sri Lanka is
to continue moving forward, the Government must move together as one.
No individual, no single political party can carry this burden alone.
This must be a concerted effort by the President, the Prime Minister,
and the parties.
There are those in Sri Lanka who remain skeptical, and truthfully,
many come to their doubts honestly. The President, for one, is
understandably cautious. But she also has unusual moral authority when
it comes to one of the most difficult challenges facing both the
government and the LTTE. As the head of state and inheritor of a
powerful political dynasty, she is in a unique position to speak on
behalf of everyone who serves or who has served in the government and
to ask that those who committed atrocities in the past be forgiven.
But she is also a victim of this conflict. She has not only lost loved
ones to the violence but will personally bear the scars for the rest
of her life. And so her forgiveness of those who have caused her pain
is equally important.
In such a close community, every one of the 65,000 lives lost in the
last two decades is a burden of memory the whole society will have to
carry. Indeed, perhaps it is too much to ask for forgiveness, but the
people of Sri Lanka must somehow find a way to move forward. This may
be the most significant challenge. It will require a concept of
justice that falls somewhere between retribution and impunity, which
will be absolutely necessary if the country is to reconcile with the
past and reclaim the future. I believe President Kumaratunga must play
a spiritually significant part in this search for truth and for
reconciliation.
These are tremendous challenges. But these are also largely questions
of the political will of the parties involved, something that must
come largely from within Sri Lanka. The Government of Norway does
deserve tremendous credit for catalyzing this political will and
ushering the parties to the negotiating table. And the Norwegians
deserve even more credit for going one step further.
Today, Sri Lanka has pressing humanitarian needs, as well as
longer-term reconstruction, rehabilitation, and reintegration needs.
Consider, for example, that there are an estimated 700,000 landmines
in the country, and that alone is a nearly insurmountable challenge.
Yet this is precisely where the government and the LTTE need to show
progress and ways for ordinary people to participate. And they have to
do this right away if the peace process is to attract the kind of
public backing it requires. But the scale and scope of these needs are
simply beyond Sri Lanka's means in the near term. And that is one
reason international support is so absolutely critical at this time.
In November, Norway hosted a conference to orchestrate this
international support, and where the Norwegians led and where they
lead, we, the United States, are delighted to follow.
I was pleased to attend on behalf of the United States and to pledge
$8 million in support of programs that meet immediate humanitarian
needs, as well as a little over $1 million for de-mining. In June, it
is my intention to return for the follow-on meeting of donors, which
Japan has graciously agreed to host. And at that time, I believe, with
a certain assurance, that I will be able to announce significant
further assistance to Sri Lanka for both humanitarian and economic
aid.
Of course, such international involvement will come at a cost for Sri
Lanka. The price tag for sustaining such interest will be progress --
a clear demonstration that all parties to the negotiations have the
determination to see this through. As I said at the outset, the
fundamental attraction for this outpouring of international interest
and certainly for my nation, is that we are not dealing in fantasy but
firmly in the art of the possible. By June, both the government, all
elements of the government, and the LTTE will need to have made some
hard choices and compromises that demonstrate the political will to
proceed if they want to meet their ambitions for international
support.
Of course, Sri Lanka is hardly the only nation that struggles in the
shadow of looming ethnic, racial and religious divides. From Kosovo to
Kabul, there are places all over the world that are engaged in a
similar fight, many of which have far less going for them in terms of
physical infrastructure, in terms of human resources, and in terms of
the institutions of democracy. And as Ambassador Schaffer recently
wrote, there are other nations, from Northern Ireland to South Africa,
that have already dealt with such challenges with some measure of
success. From my point of view, and from my government's point of
view, it is reasonable to hope that Sri Lanka will not only be able to
add to the legacy of optimism of such past success but will also be
able to build a model for peace and prosperity in a multifaceted
society.
Tezi [Schaffer], thank you so much. Mr. Ambassador [Subasinghe], thank
you."
Related Articles:25.11.02
US calls to renounce violence, says ready to play its part 25.11.02
'We are sincerely and firmly committed to peace' - Balasingh.. 25.11.02
Britain announces funding support at Oslo meeting 16.11.02
PA slams international aid conference 23.08.02
TNA meets Armitage 22.08.02
US Deputy Secretary of State visits Chavakachcheri 19.08.02
US Deputy Secretary to visit Jaffna