June 5, 2007:
The government told the UN that it would only accept a new cease fire if
there were strict controls on the LTTE, and the UN insured that the LTTE
adhered to the rules.
June 4, 2007: Over the weekend, there was heavy
fighting in the north. It began with a large exchange of artillery and mortar
fire, plus air force bombing attacks. The LTTE then launched commando style
attacks at army artillery positions, leading to heavy fighting for those guns
and ammo supplies. Nearly a hundred soldiers and LTTE were killed, and up to a
dozen howitzers were destroyed. The army has been expecting such raids, which
were a regular feature of LTTE operations in the past. But the LTTE contains a
much higher proportion of conscripts and kidnapped teenagers, than in the past.
The experienced fighters have been distributed among all these less reliable
fighters, making it difficult to put together the thousands of commandos, as in
the past. The LTTE only staged this one raid, through the thinly manned
"front lines" that separate LTTE and army forces in the north. It's
likely that the LTTE doesn't have the qualified manpower to do any more than
that. June 3, 2007: India has agreed to coordinate patrols in the
straits between India and Sri Lanka. This will make it more difficult for the
LTTE to smuggle weapons from India. Meanwhile, in the capital, two Red Cross
workers were seized and later killed by men who claimed to be policemen. The
government denied that any of their police were involved. June 2, 2007: Fighting continues in the east,
as small groups of LTTE fighters continue to resist. The military believes that
at least a few hundred LTTE fighters in the east will never surrender, and will
fight to the death. June 1, 2007:
Australia is preparing to ban the LTTE, which would shut down one of the
major sources of cash for the LTTE. That, combined with losses from similar
bans in Europe and North America, have cut LTTE income by more than half.
Meanwhile, Tamils in Sri Lanka are increasingly trying to get out. The
bitterness caused by two decades of rebellion and terrorism have made relations
with the native Sinhalese majority even more poisonous. While the Sinhalese
have always treated the Tamils as unwelcome foreigners, the Tamil terror
campaign simply made the original antagonism worse. This war will not end well
for the Tamils. May 30, 2007: The LTTE
has been launching terror attacks against civilians in the south. The
government believes this is an attempt to somehow draw military forces away
from the north, where the last LTTE stronghold is in great danger.