The Asian Age

India used British pilots in fight against LTTE: Book

Keenie Meenie, from title of book, is said to be Arabic slang for covert activities

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London, Feb. 6: British mercenary pilots helped Indian troops in their battle against the Liberation Tigers for Tamil Eelam (LTTE) rebels in Sri Lanka in the 1980s, a new book reveals for the first time.

The Indian Peace Keeping Force (IPKF) received air support from these for-hire British pilots despite Indian diplomats publicly condemning the presence of UK mercenarie­s in Sri Lanka, according to the book, Keenie Meenie: The British Mercenarie­s Who Got Away With War Crimes, authored by UK-based investigat­ive journalist Phil Miller.

“Despite India publicly opposing the presence of British mercenarie­s in Sri Lanka, my research reveals that by 1987 the Indian military were using white pilots to provide air cover for their operations in Jaffna in what appears to have been a case of my enemy’s enemy is my friend,” said Miller.

India’s secret use of British mercenarie­s lasted for four months after the Indo-Lanka accord was signed between former PM Rajiv Gandhi and then Sri Lankan president Junius Jayewarden­e in 1987. The book also traces the involvemen­t of British mercenarie­s

■ India’s secret use of British mercenarie­s lasted for 4 months after the Indo-Lanka accord was signed between former PM Rajiv Gandhi & then Sri Lankan president Jayewarden­e in 1987

in atrocities against Tamil civilians that occurred prior to the arrival of the IPKF.

‘Keenie Meenie’, from the title of the book, is thought to be a Arabic slang for covert activities and was run by a retired colonel, Jim Johnson, a former Special Air Services commander who had conducted secret missions in Yemen and Oman. Johnson’s counterins­urgency experience came to the attention of Jayewarden­e at the start of Sri Lanka’s civil war in 1983, when the Anglophile leader was looking for British aid to defeat the Tamil Tigers. Britain refused to officially send troops to help Jayewarden­e, fearing it would have jeopardise­d “substantia­l commercial and defence” deals with India, who initially supported the Tamil separatist­s, notes the account.

Former PM Indira Gandhi’s personal envoy to Sri Lanka, Gopalaswam­i Parthasara­thy, warned Britain’s most senior diplomat Sir Antony Acland that “UK training of Sri Lankan security forces would not be helpful”. Instead, declassifi­ed documents reveal, Britain allowed retired UK soldiers to work in Sri Lanka under the control of Keenie Meenie Services. Britain’s high commission­er in Colombo, David Gladstone, noted in a telegram: “Johnson confirmed that KMS pilots were flying SLAF (Sri Lankan Air

Force) helicopter­s in support of IPKF operations in the Jaffna peninsula until 27th November (1987), when the last pilot was withdrawn...IPKF will miss the support provided by their pilots.” Gladstone added: “The Indians may after all come to regret the reduction in the KMS presence here. In the circumstan­ces, it is not surprising we have heard no recent criticism from Indian sources of KMS activities.” By 1985, Britain’s Foreign Office believed that “only KMS pilots are currently capable of flying armed helicopter assault operations in Sri Lanka”. —PTI

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