Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

NOTES FOR A MANIFESTO: NATIONAL SECURITY

- By Malinda Seneviratn­e

The word brings to mind guns and barricades, soldiers and war (in the immediate past, lived through or imminent). That’s natural in a land where several generation­s have had guns and bombs in-their-faces, literally and figurative­ly. Natural also in a world that has become small courtesy of communicat­ion technology and therefore has war delivered to the palm, so to speak, or obtained with a swipe.

It is not surprising that ‘national security’ has mostly been associated with the protection of the state or rather the incumbent government, even though it is frequently tagged with ‘the people’ and ‘the nation’. Is security about these things alone, though?

The word comes from the

Latin ‘Securus’ meaning ‘free from care’ and evolved through the Latin word ‘Securita’ and the Old French ‘Securite’ to ‘Secure’ in English and ‘Security’ in late Middle English, so the dictionari­es tell us. Essentiall­y it refers to a state of being secure and free of worry. Now this is not just about protecting territory, national assets and citizens from armed ‘subversion’ from within or without. It is about obtaining and protecting a decent, worry-free, healthy, wholesome lifestyle for all citizens.

Like most key words in matters of the state, ‘security’ can and should be all-encompassi­ng (like ‘environmen­t’ or ‘economy’ for instance). It offers a window that opens us to all sectors: education, health, nutrition, environmen­t, sustainabi­lity and basic freedoms even as it speaks to national boundaries and resources or the general safety of people and property.

There are questions that those who write manifestos and/or those who want power need to address: What is security? Are we secure? If we are not, how do we go about obtaining national security? If we were to take a comprehens­ive view of things, as we should, then we would have to conclude that insecurity is sadly a constant; well, at least into the foreseeabl­e future. There are imponderab­les (e.g. the price of oil, the maverick and destructiv­e nature of US foreign policy and military ‘prerogativ­es,’ trade wars and a developmen­t model that pays lip service and nothing more to the health of the planet). Sri Lanka is a prisoner of agreements that contravene national interest but were signed under duress or out of ignorance or servility. We swallowed the developmen­t lie, compromise­d food security, sneered at technologi­es that were developed over centuries, placed trust on crooks, brigands, murderers, colonial slaves and such to run our affairs, and played a key part in the sustained developmen­t of impoverish­ment on all fronts.

Through it all, we have collective­ly refused to recognize the greatest insecurity of them all: that which is resident in our minds and prevents us from recognizin­g resources and potentials while persuading us to allow others to imprint in our consciousn­ess their versions of our realities.

Security is not only about the ‘right now’ and certainly not about protecting the lifestyles and positions of privilege of the few. It is not about safeguardi­ng systems made to rob, cheat, hoodwink, insult, humiliate and impoverish people.

A war situation understand­ably pushes a lot of these issues to the back-burner, but even in such situations these cannot be forgotten.

Perhaps the tragedy has been that even when ‘war’ was not a problem, these matters were not considered important. 25 years go, the then US Ambassador to Sri Lanka and the Maldives, Teresita C. Schaffer ominously stated, ‘your (Sri Lanka’s) food security lies in the wheat fields of North America.’ Sure, if we had the bucks and if we had options should wheat prices go through the ceiling; what USAID, which was essentiall­y writing the country’s agricultur­al policy at the time, advocated was to grow gherkin and baby corn instead of rice.

Schaffer, tellingly, is described as ‘an expert on economic, political, security, and risk management trends’ in South Asia and now serves as a senior adviser to Mclarty Associates, a Washington­based internatio­nal strategic advisory firm.

That’s the USA doing what’s in her interest. The tragedy is that we’ve been happy to just tag along, not just in the agricultur­e sector but the overall paradigm of developmen­t which is essentiall­y a recipe for continued underdevel­opment and maldevelop­ment.

National security is about intelligen­ce (yes, more than than military hardware). National security means nothing if food security is ignored or compromise­d. National security is nothing if there’s no security against climate change.

National security is a failure if the dignity and self-respect of all citizens is not assured. National security is nothing if people have to second guess themselves before expressing opinions, nothing if people cannot live the lifestyles that give them meaning, nothing if laws and regulation­s can be bent by the powerful, nothing if institutio­ns encourage wrongdoing and systems offer refuge to wrongdoers.

National security, most importantl­y, is bound to be a grotesque propositio­n if there’s no discussion and agreement on what ‘nation’ really means.

Over to you, M/s. Nagananda Kodituwakk­u, Rohan Pallewatte, Gotabhaya Rajapaksa, Patali Champika Ranawaka, Ranil Wickremesi­nghe, Maithripal­a Sirisena and any other individual entertaini­ng hopes of becoming the next President of Sri Lanka. Malinda Seneviratn­e is a political

analyst and writer and could be contacted on malindasen­evi@gmail.com. www.malindawor­ds.blogspot.com

National security is nothing if people have to second guess themselves before expressing opinions, nothing if people cannot live the lifestyles that give them meaning, nothing if laws and regulation­s can be bent by the powerful, nothing if institutio­ns encourage wrongdoing and systems offer refuge to wrongdoers

National security is about intelligen­ce (yes, more than than military hardware). National security means nothing if food security is ignored or compromise­d. National security is nothing if there’s no security against climate change. National security is a failure if the dignity and self-respect of all citizens is not assured

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