Plugging loopholes in Sri Lanka’s maritime security architecture

25 August 2022 03:30 am Views - 425

The recent Sri Lanka-India-China triangular controversy over the docking of the Chinese research vessel Yuan Wang 5 at Hambantota port, once again underscores the need to have a Sri Lankan National Maritime Strategy, a functioning National Security Council (NSC) staffed by experts, and the appointment of a National Security Advisor (NSA).


While Sri Lanka has an NSC, albeit weak, it does not have an NSA.  The NSC has to be made functional, and an NSA has to be appointed. Both have to be suitably empowered and staffed.


Yuan Wang 5 was given permission to dock at Hambantota without informing India with which Sri Lanka has a Maritime Domain Awareness (MDA) understanding along with the Maldives. Following some serious hiccups, the concerns that India expressed were addressed by Sri Lanka. Indeed, it had imposed some restrictions for allowing the vessel to dock. Eventually, both India and China were satisfied as the vessel was allowed to dock and India reaffirmed its friendship with Sri Lanka by gifting it a Dornier maritime reconnaissance aircraft. In appreciation, President Ranil Wickremesinghe said that Sri Lanka and India are like two sides of a coin- inseparable.


If only Sri Lanka had had a functioning NSC and an NSA too, the issue would have been routed through them and a correct decision, based on existing agreements and geopolitical assessments, would have been taken before matters got out of control. In the event, the issue did get out of control and threatened to spoil Sri Lanka’s relations with both India and China, something the island nation could not afford at this juncture.


Sri Lanka has been having an NSC since 1999 but it malfunctioned in 2019 when it was unaware that Islamic radicals were planning to conduct suicide bombings, even though India had shared intelligence about such a possibility more than once. Caught in personal conflicts, the NSC was a fractured body. President Sirisena reportedly would not want Prime Minister Wickremesinghe and the police chief, Pujith Jayasundara to attend meetings of the NSC. And there was no NSA to coordinate the security-related activities from the national security point of view.   

 


No National Maritime Strategy
Sri Lanka does not even have a National Maritime Policy even though it is an island nation, and historically, all threats to it have come from the sea. Even the LTTE, which tormented Sri Lanka for three decades on land, built itself up and drew its strength from its overseas bases. It survived on fuel and armaments smuggled through the sea. The LTTE was crippled only when its eight floating armouries were destroyed in mid-sea.


The LTTE was a creature of the sea and yet the island nation’s governments looked at it for decades as a land-based terror group to be tackled mainly by the army.  


In his paper entitled Maritime Strategy for National Development: Sri Lankan perspective published in 2015 for the Kotelawala Defence Academy, Com. Rohan Joseph of the Sri Lanka Navy strongly urged the Sri Lankan authorities to formulate a comprehensive and long-term “National Maritime Strategy” which would be different from, and broader in scope, than a “Military Maritime Strategy.”


While the world’s powers are aware of the strategic importance of the island of Sri Lanka, its rulers have been ignoring this aspect from the time of independence in 1948. Matters were altogether different when the British ruled the island. During World War II, after the fall of Singapore to the Japanese in 1942, the British rulers gave the defence of Sri Lanka or Ceylon, the highest importance in their fight against the Japanese. British naval and air defences in the island were dramatically increased.  


But all this faded out after the war. It was only in the 1980s when the Tamil militants began to use the Palk Strait to do gun-running, that President J.R. Jayewardene wanted the navy to be strengthened. But the army-dominated Lankan military establishment quashed his plan. It was only in the 2000s, that the government, under President Mahinda Rajapaksa, gave a significant role for the navy to choke the LTTE’s vital maritime supply lines. The war could not have been won without the navy’s playing the stellar role it did from 2008 onwards. The navy’s newly formed Small Boat Squadron fought the LTTE near the island’s shores using unconventional tactics.


But once the war was over in May 2009, no new assessment of maritime security threats was made. No doctrine was evolved to face post-war threats including threats from the rapidly changing geo-political and geo-military environment.


This was so despite the fact that the only threat that Sri Lanka faced after the war, was from the sea. And according to Com. Joseph, these threats were from smugglers, drug and human traffickers, illegal fishers and possibly, seaborne terrorists.


Due to India’s insistence, Sri Lanka recently entered into a trilateral agreement with India and the Maldives for Maritime Domain Awareness. Com. Joseph says that international tie-ups are absolutely necessary because no nation can fight the new threats alone in the vast ocean.  Then there are other issues like marine pollution, maritime disasters, and search and rescue to take cognizance of. Here too, international, especially regional cooperation is a must.

 


Military and National Maritime Strategy
The maritime strategy has two components: (1) the defence of the sea and (2) the defence of the “littoral”. The “littoral” comprises areas on land which are susceptible to influence from the sea. The littoral covers three-quarters of the world’s population, and hosts over 80% of the world’s capital cities and nearly all of the marketplaces for international trade.  The navy is expected to ensure “sea denial” to the enemy. Sea denial stems from “sea control”, Com Joseph says.


A National Maritime Strategy should encompass other vital areas also, including the defence of the country’s economy, environment, and the country’s social and political systems. The Military Maritime Strategy, on the other hand, covers the fighting in the sea and the policing of the sea.


According to Com. Joseph, Sri Lanka needs a National Maritime Strategy for the following reasons:  In 2011, around 86% of Lanka’s fish supply came from the sea. The recent discovery and exploration of oil and gas reserves could easily open a host of new economic opportunities he adds.  Sri Lanka is located on one of the most important international shipping routes. It has to become a major hub for container handling and transshipment. For this a maritime strategy is essential.  


The delimitation of the continental shelf (DECOM,) as provided in the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), was initiated in 1999 by Sri Lanka and was completed in 2009. This unique feature spans an area of 3,000 Km in length and 830 to 1,430 Km in width. Sri Lanka’s claim of the extended continental shelf is about 20 times its land area, Com. Joseph says.


“This is indeed a huge area for a small country like Sri Lanka. Conducting surveillance, scientific research, infrastructure expansion etc. are among the many important aspects that Sri Lanka will need to look through a broader maritime strategic plan,” he submits.


For the evolution of the National Maritime Strategy including a maritime military strategy, Sri Lanka needs a fully functional National Security Council (NSC) staffed with experts in a variety of relevant fields. And to coordinate all security activities, communicate with the President on a regular basis and to interact with foreign powers, the country has to have a competent National Security Advisor who is well versed in geopolitics, regional and global strategic thinking, and Sri Lanka’s national interests.