Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Sri Lanka: Leveraging politics of geography

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he Village in the Jungle’ is different because it’s not about Us, but wholly about Them. It was very advanced in 1913, when many people in Europe were racist.” -Nick Rankin

Rural Hambantota was once best known thanks to featuring in a book by Leonard Woolf in the early 20th century, and now, as a port shaping Sri Lankan politics. Woolf’s ‘The Village in the Jungle’ was the first novel in English literature to be written from an indigenous perspectiv­e rather than a coloniser’s.

According to the British author, Nick Rankin, “It was a book about the white chaps at the club who run the show, but about those at the very bottom of the imperial heap, the black and brown fellows who don’t even know they’re part of an Empire, but who just survive day by day, hand to mouth, as slash-and-burn agricultur­alists.”

If Woolf was alive today, he would probably be writing his second masterpiec­e, ‘The Village that was Leased Out’, Hambantota.

After Chinese President Xi Jinping launched the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), Sri Lanka signed an agreement with China for one of the key strategic projects of this initiative in May 2017. The agreement was to lease out the Hambantota Port with a majority share to a Chinese company for three generation­s.

The BRI is the “project of the century”, according to Jinping. This trillion-dollar initiative aims to integrate Eurasia through the developmen­t of infrastruc­ture. It is unquestion­ably the most ambitious project ever launched in recent times, which seeks to revisit and resurrect the Ming dynasty’s admiral Zheng He’s global legacy. A century ago, a British geopolitic­al thinker Sir Halford Mackinder argued that whoever controls the Eurasian heartland will control the world.

The US strategy looks further into Alfred Mahan’s maritime power; after World War II, George Kennan incorporat­ed Mahan’s geostrateg­ic focus on rim lands, rather than heartlands, to his Cold War strategy of containmen­t of the Soviet Union to create a favourable balance of power.

As Washington rebalances to Asia, relations between the US and China have become increasing­ly contentiou­s and zero-sum oriented. According to Wang Jisi, a Chinese foreign policy scholar, as Washington rebalances towards East Asia, China must avoid a head-on military confrontat­ion with the US. Instead, it should fill in the gaps left by the US retreat from the Middle East. By doing so, China will be able to decisively influence regions free from a Us-dominated security order or a pre-existing economic integratio­n mechanism.

The BRI was a construct of Wang Jisi’s initial inputs and strategic thinking, to have a significan­t Chinese footprint in Eurasia, especially to recalibrat­e the existing world order. According to the World Economic Forum, by 2030 the US will no longer be the only superpower and China will be well placed among the many countries to become one of the big powers.

Sri Lanka, with its geostrateg­ic position at the centre of the Maritime Silk Road, is a ‘super-connector’ linking the east-west sea lanes. The Sri Lankan people should reap the benefits of the country’s participat­ion in this initiative and it is important that all strategic projects in this regard are carefully calibrated.

However, the process of determinin­g the content of the agreement has not been discussed in parliament, in consultati­on with think tanks or the public. As a democracy with its sovereignt­y vested in the people by the constituti­on, it is important to get inputs from as many quarters as possible when determinin­g strategic projects for the country.

President Maithripal­a Sirisena pointed out that the debate should go to parliament, an argument which Minister Wijedasa Rajapaksa further expounded and this is absolutely correct. The failure of such public consultati­ons has triggered much internal destabilis­ation; in the past, the hurried nature of the 13th Amendment to the Constituti­on – the Indo-sri Lankan Accord – had triggered the southern insurrecti­on.

China is Sri Lanka’s second largest trading partner, surpassing the US and just behind India. Sino-lankan trade remains at more than US $ 3 billion. This position will change significan­tly with the Chinese economic zone and Hambantota port’s full operationa­lity. By 2025, China will become Sri Lanka’s largest trading partner due to the significan­t investment­s in the island.

In the geopolitic­al context, while global hegemon US is strengthen­ing its ties with India, the regional hegemon, other South Asian countries are strengthen­ing ties with China to counterbal­ance this. India’s role and China’s aspiration­s in the Indian Ocean remain a topic of debate among scholars. India fears encircleme­nt by China and China feels the same vis-àvis the US. Tensions at the lines of intersecti­on are highest at geostrateg­ic hotspots like Sri Lanka. The government’s considerat­ion to lease out the new Chinese-built Mattala Rajapaksa Internatio­nal Airport (MRIA) to India is a measure to counterbal­ance China. While India, the US and Japan will strengthen the rules-based order of the world, China will be the peace-loving explorer set on transformi­ng the world on a self-proclaimed ‘win-win’ basis. In this strained geopolitic­al environmen­t, Sri Lanka should design not a plan based on the process of leasing but rather chart a path within the interests of emergent and existing powers. It must seek to develop a value-added export basket to strengthen its economy. (The views expressed here are personal and do not reflect those of the Government of Sri Lanka or Institute of National Security Studies Sri Lanka. Asanga Abeyagoona­sekera is a visiting lecturer in internatio­nal political economy (IPE) and Director General of INSSSL, the national security think tank of Sri Lanka. This article was initially published by the IPCS, New Delhi for Dateline Colombo -http://www.ipcs.org/article/india/ sri-lanka-leveraging-the-politics-ofgeograph­y-a-href-5343.html)

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