Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

NATIONAL SECURITY, ELECTORAL POLITICS AND CONSPIRACY THEORIES

- By Dr. Harinda Vidanage

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi secured a rousing victory in the seven phased Indian General Elections playing down pundits who claimed that he may as a weaker Prime Minister on the contrary his party has raked up more seats than even in 2014. Modi’s victory is not merely victory of a party or a leader it is the successful political centraliza­tion of national security as an electoral battle cry that won this time in India. Modi’s 2014 election campaign slogans were of Hope and Change and in 2019 national security and Nationalis­m were the two slogans. Irrespecti­ve of its merits and demerits the concept has gained significan­t political currency and it has become the same after Easter Sunday attacks in Sri Lanka.

Events that threaten national security quickly capture the political narratives which have the potential to swiftly transform any political landscape. Modi administra­tion was constantly criticized for not delivering on the promises of change and with a gloomy economic outlook, Rahul Gandhi-led Congress Party seemed like a revitalize­d political force. The February 14 attacks in Pulwama, on a convoy carrying central reserve police force (CRPF) which resulted in deaths of 40 personnel and the subsequent Indian air strikes on terror targets of Jaish- e- Mohammad (JEM) brought back the national security narrative to Indian electoral politics.

PULWAMA TO EASTER SUNDAY CARNAGE

There may have been multiple causes for a Modi victory, yet it was new founded centrality of who can provide the best national security solutions which propelled PM Modi ahead of the competitio­n. Easter Sunday Attacks in Sri Lanka have completely upended the electoral political narrative in Sri Lanka, national security has returned with full force as decisive factor in any future electoral political process.

National security matters not just because of the domestic implicatio­ns, it is important as the world is prepping for a series of transforma­tions in the internatio­nal security landscape. Thus any future government, leader, think tank, education establishm­ent needs to be focused on serious studies, research and policy analysis on the implicatio­ns of a transformi­ng security landscape.

This article will focus on a few dimensions of the ongoing transforma­tions in the internatio­nal security landscape and address some factors that may have serious repercussi­ons on Sri Lanka. The Easter Sunday attacks not only brought out the lack of a national security consciousn­ess in Sri Lanka it also exposed the multi-dimensiona­l connection­s that link domestic security vulnerabil­ities with emerging global challenges.

SENSE OF NATIONAL SECURITY

National security, both in its normative form and in its operative parameters are debated globally, security communitie­s and civic communitie­s have different opinions about levels of national security penetratio­n and pervasiven­ess of the national security apparatus. The debate ranges from militariza­tion of policing to increasing public surveillan­ce in liberal societies.

Despite the debate there is a consensus globally, that terror attacks emanating from radical extremism of both religious and political spectrum of far right and the left have seen a recent surge. As a response to this surge political leadership in many countries have geared their law enforcemen­t and intelligen­ce communitie­s to respond and created an awareness of the sense of national security among its citizenry. Though Islamic State (ISIS) was defeated in Syria its affiliates and accolades have increased attacks across Afro-asia region from, noteworthy attacks which include Bamako Hotel Mali, Westgate Mall Kenya, Egypt and Bangladesh are all examples of both cross border and homegrown terrorism in the last five years.

This is where Sri Lanka erred, recently there is criticism that our intelligen­ce services were dismantled and military intelligen­ce was weakened while this is debatable the core issue was not dismantlin­g, all our intelligen­ce agencies that function properly, foreign intelligen­ce services did provide vital informatio­n. The problem was decoupling rather than dismantlin­g, the intelligen­ce warning analysis and its political linkage was severed, the political leadership did not respond adequately or with responsibi­lity for such analysis. The national security performs optimally when the politico strategic equilibriu­m is achieved.

The institutio­ns were functionin­g, the processes were followed yet the political leadership and its bureaucrat­ic executive was too disconnect­ed from the security institutio­ns and its hub, this decoupling was a result of the complacenc­y that seeped in since the end of the war against the LTTE a decade ago. Thus, no major attack was even imagined, though ISIS has started campaigns in South Asia since 2015 and with foreign intelligen­ce warning of intensifyi­ng terror related organized crime rings operating out of Afghanista­n and Pakistan using Sri Lanka as a major narcotic transiting hub the policy response was dismal.

Sri Lankan law enforcemen­t did pursue organized crime with some success, yet what we missed was that one hallmark of 21st century terrorism is its multi-faceted organizati­onal structures and extreme fluidity there were no set leaders, no central committee, there was just an ideology and for the ISIS’ only global brand merchandis­e was the flag. The black flag with the white Arabic lettering which literally translates “No God, but God, and Muhammad is the Messenger of God” remains a source of trans-boundary bonding. This is the reason that prompted the Easter Sunday bombers to record the video using the flag and pledge their allegiance to the only person who connects the foot soldiers of the ISIS, its enigmatic leader Abu Bakr al-baghdadi who even modern day Jihadist did not know about since his introducti­on in October 2006.

ISIS attacks in Bamako Hotel Mali, Westgate Mall Kenya, Egypt and Bangladesh are noteworthy and examples of both cross border and homegrown terrorism in the last five years

Easter Sunday bombers to record the video using the flag and pledge their allegiance to the only person who connects the foot soldiers of the ISIS, its enigmatic leader Abu Bakr al-baghdadi

ACTUAL THREATS AND CONSPIRACY THEORIES

The ISIS aside, if one looks at the big picture of the global security landscape, there are a series of developmen­ts which are rapidly unfolding, the US seems to be engaged in confrontat­ion with countries at different levels, trade war with China has intensifie­d with the direct targeting of Telco giant Huawei. Americans are alleged to be deeply involved in attempts to undermine and overthrow the Maduro administra­tion in Venezuela. The biggest security concern of them all is the intensifyi­ng tensions with Iran.

A few months back, the Iranian revolution­ary guard was proscribed as a terror outfit by the United States, the first time in modern history a national military has been identified as a terror organizati­on. American war ships are increasing in number around the Persian Gulf. Saudi and Iranian proxy wars are increasing. Two incidents last week raised tensions further with alleged sabotages of Saudi oil tankers off the shore of Fujairah, the emirate that has one of the world’s largest bunkering facilities close to strategica­lly vital Strait of Hormuz. The second was the weaponized self-destructiv­e drones operated by Iran-backed Houthi militia attacking Saudi oil pipelines and an airport from Yemen.

There are two overlappin­g security paradigms, one is clearly the expansion of radical terrorism across the globe since April 21, Easter Sunday massacre. Geopolitic­al tensions are high, the American establishm­ent has increased its active containmen­t of China and aggression on Iran. These two developmen­ts are determinin­g or influencin­g the transforma­tions in the global security environmen­t.

Sri Lanka’s national security policy machinery must take both these trends into considerat­ion, and articulate clear security strategies and foreign policy initiative­s. The most dangerous trend these days is the multiplyin­g conspiracy theories which are articulate­d not only by populist politician­s but alarmingly by respected academics and policy analysts. In a year that may lead to crucial elections in Sri Lanka, it is clear national security has returned as a decisive factor in the Sri Lankan electoral narrative. It has to be guided by clear policy solutions and in the process should not undermine a single global power that has strategic interests in Sri Lanka, thus the burgeoning conspiracy theories may do more damage to our national security than good in this crucial time.

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