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Kalkudah to Arugam Bay and some canny decision making by JRJ

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Excerpted from volume ii of Sarath Amunugama autobiography

I was lucky both as Permanent Secretary and a researcher in the field of family planning to spend time in the east coast which is one of the loveliest parts of Sri Lanka, with its pristine beaches and a large swath of blue sea. The Information department was a partner of the Ministry of Planning under Wickreme Weerasooria in undertaking a communications campaign to promote family health.

The UNFPA provided a well-known communications scholar, Flora Rosario Braid, of the Philippines as an expert for the project. Anura Goonesekere, Director of Information, and I were the local experts representing the Government. We decided to undertake a baseline survey of attitudes to family planning among the different communities in the country. One group to be tested were the Muslims of the Eastern Province with Kattankudy in Batticoloa district as the main focus of our interest. This was because Kattankudy was recognized as one of the most densely populated villages in the world.

This was before travel to the Middle East made this area a main provider of housemaids to Arab countries. This was followed by the Wahabisation of the East when Kattankudy was re-imaged as an Arabian village with date palms lining the roadways and men and women adopting the Arab dress which was quite unsuitable for our climate.

At the time we studied it, Kattankudy was a poor village subsisting on primitive agriculture and manufacturing of handloom sarongs. Its males were traders who fanned out to all parts of the country and established a communal network which was later exploited by the ISIS trained Muslim terrorists. It is amusing that when I was a member of the National Security Council as a Minister the only participant who had actually visited this ‘hot spot’ was me.

That spoke volumes about the lack of preparedness of the intelligence services under the Sirisena–Ranil dispensation. They were totally unprepared to respond to the intelligence provided by the Indian authorities regarding an impending attack by Muslim fanatics hailing from Kattankudy on that Easter Sunday which is now part of the sad history of that time.

The old Kalkudah Rest House was our meeting place during the survey. We would spend our weekends there by the sea and enjoy the sea food that was a specialty of the well-appointed Rest House. Close by was the large coconut estate belonging to the church which was managed by Father Miller, a legendary American Missionary. Unfortunately the Tsunami hit the East coast hard and the Kalkudah Rest House was obliterated.

The demographic projections we made clearly showed the lack of interest of the Muslim community vis-a-vis the other communities in the island, to family planning. On one hand it showed a demographic spurt in their numbers. On the other it showed the increase of poverty and paucity of health measures in the Muslim community which was later seen in their vulnerability to pandemics like Corona 19 in which their deaths were far above the average of other communities.

This was in contrast to the other samples from nearby Panama which had a mixed population. Sinhalese from Uva had fled there during the British repression following the failure of the rebellion of 1818. Panama is famous for its Pattini Temple and its procession in which the goddess’ anklets are paraded along the boundary of the village. From Kalkudah and Panama we went further south to Arugam Bay. This village and its nearby Whiskey Point with its fearsome sea waves, is one of the loveliest spots in the country’s shoreline.

Unfortunately it too was hit hard by the Tsunami. It has been rebuilt now. I am glad that the Tourist Board during my time managed to put the East coast on the map. After the Tsunami and the long civil war during which these spots were devastated, the East coast has now got a new lease of life. The future of adventure tourism lies in this beautiful area with its long sea line, pristine beaches and wild life without parallel in other parts of the country.

Government Printer

With the reshuffle when Anandatissa became our Minister, the President transferred more powers to the Ministry of State. In addition to tourism the subject of printing – the Department of Printing and the State Printing Corporation, was also allocated to us. This was mainly because those subjects were allocated to JRJ during the Dudley regime and Ananda was its Permanent Secretary at that time. The employees of these two institutions were happy at this change as they were coming back to familiar territory.

Both Ananda and I were personally interested in printing technology. To mark the assumption of the Presidency by JRJ, I started for the Sinhala reader a fortnightly news magazine called ‘Desathiya’ which was modeled on English news magazines like Time and Newsweek. I recruited the best talent among off beat Sinhala journalists like Cyril B. Perera, D.B. Warnasiri and Gamini Wijetunga and ‘Desathiya’ became a popular publication in the country.

It has now survived, indeed flourished, for 43 years and is still going strong having attracted a Sinhala middle class readership. Work on the magazine required regular interaction with the Printing Department and I acquired the rudiments of printing technology which became useful when I started my own newspaper as I shall describe later.

This was a time when we were moving from hot metal technology to digital printing and I was able to persuade the Treasury to make a considerable investment in the latest digitalized printing machinery. We became the pioneers in this field as it was an expensive outlay at that time. It was much later that newspaper moghuls turned to digitalization. Here too Upali newspapers led the pack.

When we took over the Department of Government Printing there were hundreds of workers who had not been confirmed even though they had served for more than ten years as temporary hands. They had been kept in limbo because their unions were supporters of the LSSP and the CP. It was their massive presence on Baseline road that made Borella a leftist stronghold. NM Perera’s municipal constituency was Borella.

However, in spite of being the Mayor, NM was defeated by the SLFP which fielded Dr. WD ‘Dadi Bidi’ Silva who was a popular private medical practitioner who belonged to the Salagama caste. A part of Borella, Wanathamulla, had a strong Salagama community and the SLFP, in their hatred of NM, had no hesitation in playing the caste card.

In 1977 however MH Mohamed managed to secure this seat and JRJ cannily made him Minster of Transport because private bus transport in the western province was mostly owned by Salagama capitalists of whom Sir Cyril de Zoysa was the outstanding example. Later Premadasa appointed Wijepala Mendis, the son of another Salagama bus Mogul, as the Minister of Transport. One could not understand the ups and downs of our leftists without reckoning the caste factor and the willingness of their ‘democratic’ opponents to use every trick in the book to defeat them.

With Anandatissas support I managed to confirm all the temporary workers because in fact it did not require new funds as they were already being paid monthly. This decision was welcomed by all the Unions, including the UNP and SLFP, and our stock was very high. The LSSP union led by Wimalasena was especially supportive and helped considerably in the book printing program which I will describe presently.

The State Printing Corporation which was founded by JRJ when he was Minister of State, had a strong UNP representation. JRJ had appointed one of his cronies, lawyer R.R. Nalliah, as the Chairman who worked closely with the Ministry and probably gave favourable reports about us to the Godfather. Nalliah frequently invited JRJ for functions of the SPC and JRJ often obliged because he knew many of the staff personally and was happy in their company.

With my minister’s blessings I arranged a comprehensive scholarship programme for our young printing executives with the London School of Printing on one of my visits there. Accordingly four young chemistry graduates were sent to London for training. They were taught the latest digital printing technology. On returning they were attached to the Department of Printing here and were asked to establish the Sri Lanka College of Printing with the resources of the Government Printer.

One of the returning graduates was Neville Nanayakkara whom I appointed the Government Printer though he was in his early thirties. He revolutionized printing in the country and brought it in line with the latest developments in technology and management. The other graduates joined the SPC and the private sector and helped in modernizing the printing trade here.

Text Book Printing

At a Cabinet meeting JRJ pulled out another rabbit from his hat. As a young State Councilor he had proposed that all school children should be provided text books free of charge. His proposal had been ignored at that time. Now he wanted his proposal implemented. It could have been argued that education in the State Council days was very different and at that time children had to be lured to schools with many incentives in order to promote education.

The free education scheme had brought almost all our children to school. Secondary education in Sri Lanka was being cited as a model by the UN, in its millennium development goal of education for all. But no Minister dared to argue with JRJ when it came to recycling his early fantasies. All solemnly agreed that it was a good idea and requested our Ministry to print the text books in consultation with the Education Ministry.

What followed is a classic example of decisive decision making by JRJ. The Minister of Education Nissanka Wijeratne was asked to provide a paper on the number of text books to be printed. He consulted his officials and said that the number was 20 and it was so entered into the Cabinet minutes. When I called my printers to discuss the printing schedule we were already in the month of September and had only three months to complete our task before schools reopened in January the following year.

We then discovered to our horror that the actual number of books to be printed were 60 and not 20. That was because there were three languages of instruction – Sinhala, Tamil and English – and text books were required for all three streams. Realizing the enormity of the problem I went to see the President with a graph showing the text books actually required class by class. JRJ immediately realized the dimensions of the blunder and called to his office the Minister and his Secretary, senior CCS officer DMPB Dassanayake.

The Minister had no explanation for his blunder and began to berate his Secretary. JRJ cut the meeting short and asked me to come back to his office by three o clock that afternoon. When I went to his office Menikdiwela and the Deputy Education Minister Lionel Jayatilleke were there. JRJ then gave letters of appointment to Jaytailleke and me.

In that brief period of time he had created a new Ministry called the Ministry of Education Supplies, by detaching several functions and budgetary provisions from the Education Minister. I was appointed the Permanent Secretary of the new Ministry in addition to my post in the Ministry of State. Lionel Jayatilleke was sworn in as the new Minister of Education Supplies. All this was done in the space of a few hours.

As we were leaving JRJ called me and said, “I can see you know your job” which was high praise indeed. Lionel and I found new premises for the Ministry near the Turf Club grounds and we got to work. Fortunately we had the goodwill of the workmen in the Government Press and the Printing Corporation. To their credit they all agreed to work round the clock without asking for overtime.

As the LSSP Trade Union leader Wimalasena, who was normally a hard nut to crack told me “We are doing this for our children”. Tragically many years later, after the signing of the Indo-Lanka Accord Wimalasena was shot dead by the JVP. Then another problem arose. Sepala Gunasena owner of the Davasa group called me with his dilemma. MD Gunasenas traditionally printed the texts for Buddhism classes in schools from Grade one to ten. By the time of the Cabinet decision he had already completed printing these textbooks.

He was now facing a big loss if the Government also printed the same book. I saw the merit of his case and appraised JRJ about it. I told him that my solution was to buy the Gunasena stock and distribute it with our books. He immediately agreed and asked me to go ahead. When I gave the good news to Sepala Gunasena he was greatly appreciative as his company was in the throes of a financial crisis. He remained a good friend and I averted a crisis in the good relations that the Information Ministry had with newspaper publishers.

We worked hard on the text book project and even organized `shramadanas’ where Minister Lionel and I took part in the gathering of printed sheets and stapling them. With JRJ’s consent we gave part of the printing to the private sector and had to fend off recommendations of assorted politicians to give contracts to their favourite printing shops. Anyway we did our job in time and organized a ceremonial handing over of books in a school in the Minister’s electorate, Kuliyapiitya.

By a strange coincidence that school in Nakkawatta had a nostalgic message for me. Nakkawatta was my father’s first teaching assignment as a young man in the late 1930s. He had often told us about his experiences there and it had remained in my mind’s eye. Many years later as Minister of Education I revisited this school with the Education Secretary Tara de Mel and was happy to address the students about my father’s pleasant memories of their school.

Unfortunately at that time there was no one in the school who remembered him. But when I told my father about this ceremony he was delighted and told many visitors to his home of the good time he had in Nakkawatta as a rookie teacher.



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The NPP Government is more than a JVP offspring:

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Rohana Wijeweera

It is also different from all past governments as it faces new and different challenges

No one knows whether the already broken ceasefire between the US and Iran, with Israel as a reluctant adjunct, will last the full 10 days, or what will come thereafter. The world’s economic woes are not over and the markets are yo-yoing in response to Trump’s twitches and Iran’s gate keeping at the Strait of Hormuz. The gloomy expert foretelling is that full economic normalcy will not return until the year is over even if the war were to end with the ceasefire. That means continuing challenges for Sri Lanka and more of the tough learning in the art of governing for the NPP.

The NPP government has been doing what most governments in Asia have been doing to cope with the current global crisis, which is also an Asian crisis insofar as oil supplies and other supply chains are concerned. What the government can and must do additionally is to be totally candid with the people and keep them informed of everything that it is doing – from monitoring import prices to the timely arranging of supplies, all the details of tender, the tracking of arrivals, and keeping the distribution flow through the market without bottlenecks. That way the government can eliminate upstream tender rackets and downstream hoarding swindles. People do not expect miracles from their government, only honest, sincere and serious effort in difficult circumstances. Backed up by clear communication and constant public engagement.

But nothing is going to stop the flow of criticisms against the NPP government. That is a fact of Sri Lankan politics. Even though the opposition forces are weak and have little traction and even less credibility, there has not been any drought in the criticisms levelled against the still fledgling government. These criticisms can be categorized as ideological, institutional and oppositional criticisms, with each category having its own constituency and/or commentators. The three categories invariably overlap and there are instances of criticisms that excite only the pundits but have no political resonance.

April 5 anniversary nostalgia

There is also a new line of criticism that might be inspired by the April 5 anniversary nostalgia for the 1971 JVP insurrection. This new line traces the NPP government to the distant roots of the JVP – its April 1965 founding “in a working-class home in Akmeemana, Galle” by a 22-year old Rohana Wijeweera and seven others; the short lived 1971 insurrection that was easily defeated; and the much longer and more devastating second (1987 to 1989) insurrection that led to the elimination of the JVP’s frontline leaders including Wijeweera, and brought about a change in the JVP’s political direction with commitment to parliamentary democracy. So far, so good, as history goes.

But where the nostalgic narrative starts to bend is in attempting a straight line connection from the 1965 Akmeemana origins of the JVP to the national electoral victories of the NPP in 2024. And the bend gets broken in trying to bridge the gap between the “founding anti-imperialist economics” of the JVP and the practical imperatives of the NPP government in “governing a debt-laden small open economy.” Yet this line of criticism differs from the other lines of criticism that I have alluded to, but more so for its moral purpose than for its analytical clarity. The search for clarity could begin with question – why is the NPP government more than a JVP offspring? The answer is not so simple, but it is also not too complicated.

For starters, the JVP was a political response to the national and global conditions of the 1960s and 1970s, piggybacking socialism on the bandwagon of ethno-nationalism in a bi-polar world that was ideologically split between status quo capitalism and the alternative of socialism. The NPP government, on the other hand, is not only a response to, but is also a product of the conditions of the 2010s and 2020s. The twain cannot be more different. Nothing is the same between then and now, locally and globally.

A pragmatic way to look at the differences between the origins of the JVP and the circumstances of the NPP government is to look at the very range of criticisms that are levelled against the NPP government. What I categorize as ideological criticisms include criticisms of the government’s pro-IMF and allegedly neo-liberal economic policies, as well as the government’s foreign policy stances – on Israel, on the current US-Israel war against Iran, the geopolitics of the Indian Ocean, and the apparent closeness to the Modi government in India. These criticisms emanate from the non-JVP left and Sinhala Buddhist nationalists.

Strands of nationalism

To digress briefly, there are several strands in the overall bundle of Sri Lankan nationalism. There is the liberal inclusive strand, the left-progressive strand, the exclusive Sinhala Buddhist Nationalist (SBN) strand, and the defensive strands of minority nationalisms. Given Sri Lanka’s historical political formations and alliances, much overlapping goes on between the different strands. The overlapping gets selective on an issue by issue basis, which in itself is not unwelcome insofar as it promotes plurality in place of exclusivity.

Historically as well, and certainly after 1956, the SBN strand has been the dominant strand of nationalism in Sri Lanka and has had the most influential say in every government until now. Past versions of the JVP frequently straddled the dominant SBN space. Currently, however, the dominant SBN strand is in one of its more dormant phases and the NPP government could be a reason for the current dormancy. This is an obvious difference between the old JVP and the new NPP.

A second set of criticisms, or institutional criticisms, emanate from political liberals and human rights activists and these are about the NPP government’s actions or non-actions in regard to constitutional changes, the future of the elected executive presidency, the status of provincial devolution and the timing of provincial council elections, progress on human rights issues, the resolution of unfinished postwar businesses including the amnesia over mass graves. These criticisms and the issues they represent are also in varying ways the primary concerns of the island’s Tamils, Muslims and the Malaiyaka (planntationn) Tamils. As with the overlapping between the left and the non-minority nationalists, there is also overlapping between the liberal activists and minority representatives.

A third category includes what might be called oppositional criticisms and they counterpose the JVP’s past against the NPP’s present, call into question the JVP’s commitment to multi-party democracy and raise alarms about a creeping constitutional dictatorship. This category also includes criticisms of the NPP government’s lack of governmental experience and competence; alleged instances of abuse of power, mismanagement and even corruption; alleged harassment of past politicians; and the failure to find the alleged mastermind behind the 2019 Easter bombings. At a policy and implementational level, there have been criticisms of the government’s educational reforms and electricity reforms, the responses to cyclone Ditwah, and the current global oil and economic crises. The purveyors of oppositional criticisms are drawn from the general political class which includes political parties, current and past parliamentarians, as well as media pundits.

Criticisms as expectations

What is common to all three categories of criticisms is that they collectively represent what were understood to be promises by the NPP before the elections, and have become expectations of the NPP government after the elections. It is the range and nature of these criticisms and the corresponding expectations that make the NPP government a lot more than a mere JVP offspring, and significantly differentiate it from every previous government.

The deliverables that are expected of the NPP government were never a part of the vocabulary of the original JVP platform and programs. The very mode of parliamentary politics was ideologically anathema to the JVP of Akmeemana. And there was no mention of or concern for minority rights, or constitutional reforms. On foreign policy, it was all India phobia without Anglo mania – a halfway variation of Sri Lanka’s mainstream foreign policy of Anglo mania and India phobia. For a party of the rural proletariat, the JVP was virulently opposed to the plantation proletariat. The JVP’s version of anti-imperialist economics would hardly have excited the Sri Lankan electorate at any time, and certainly not at the present time.

At the same time, the NPP government is also the only government that has genealogical antecedents to a political movement or organization like the JVP. That in itself makes the NPP government unique among Sri Lanka’s other governments. The formation of the NPP is the culmination of the evolution of the JVP that began after the second insurrection with the shedding of political violence, acceptance of political plurality and commitment to electoral democracy.

But the evolution was not entirely a process of internal transformation. It was also a response to a rapidly and radically changing circumstances both within Sri Lanka and beyond. This evolution has not been a rejection of the founding socialist purposes of the JVP in 1968, but their adaptation in the endless political search, under constantly changing conditions, for a non-violent, socialist and democratic framework that would facilitate the full development of the human potential of all Sri Lankans.

The burden of expectations is unmistakable, but what is also remarkable is their comprehensiveness and the NPP’s formal commitment to all of them at the same time. No previous government shouldered such an extensive burden or showed such a willing commitment to each and every one of the expectations. In the brewing global economic crisis, the criticisms, expectations and the priorities of the government will invariably be focussed on keeping the economy alive and alleviating the day-to-day difficulties of millions of Sri Lankan families. While what the NPP government can and must do may not differ much from what other Asian governments – from Pakistan to Vietnam – are doing, it could and should do better than what any and all past Sri Lankan governments did when facing economic challenges.

by Rajan Philips

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A Fragile Ceasefire: Pakistan’s Glory and Israel’s Sabotage

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Smokes over Beirut: Israel’s Ceasefire Attack on Hezbollah in Lebanon

After threatening to annihilate one of the planet’s oldest civilizations, TACO* Trump chickened out again by grasping the ceasefire lifeline that Pakistan had assiduously prepared. Trump needed the ceasefire badly to stem the mounting opposition to the war in America. Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu wanted the war to continue because he needed it badly for his political survival. So, he contrived a fiction and convinced Trump that Lebanon is not included in the ceasefire. Trump as usual may not have noticed that Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Shariff had clearly indicated Lebanon’s inclusion in his announcement of the ceasefire at 7:50 PM, Tuesday, on X. Ten minutes before Donald Trump’s fake deadline.

True to form on Wednesday, Israel unleashed the heaviest assault by far on Lebanon, reportedly killing over 300 people, the highest single-day death toll in the current war. Iran responded by re-closing the Strait of Hormuz and questioning the need for talks in Islamabad over the weekend. There were other incidents as well, with an oil refinery attacked in Iran, and Iranian drones and missiles slamming oil and gas infrastructure in UAE, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain and Qatar.

The US tried to insist that Lebanon is not part of the ceasefire, with the argumentative US Vice President JD Vance, who was in Budapest, Hungary, campaigning for Viktor Orban, calling the whole thing a matter of “bad faith negotiation” as well as “legitimate misunderstanding” on the part of Iran, and warning Iran that “it would be dumb to jeopardise its ceasefire with Washington over Israel’s attacks in Lebanon.”

But as the attack in Lebanon drew international condemnation – from Pope Leo to UN Secretary General António Guterres, and several world leaders, and amidst fears of Lebanon becoming another Gaza with 1,500 people including 130 children killed and more than a million people displaced, Washington got Israel to stop its “lawn mowing” in southern Lebanon.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu agreed to “open direct negotiations with Lebanon as soon as possible,”. Lebanese President Joeseph Aoun has also called for “a ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon, followed by direct negotiations between them.” Israel’s involvement in Lebanon remains a wild card that threatens the ceasefire and could scuttle the talks between the US and Iran scheduled for Saturday in Islamabad.

Losers and Winners

After the ceasefire, both the Trump Administration and Iran have claimed total victories while the Israeli government wants the war to continue. The truth is that after more than a month into nonstop bombing of Iran, America and Israel have won nothing. Only Iran has won something it did not have when Trump and Netanyahu started their war. Iran now has not only a say over but control of the Strait of Hormuz. The ceasefire acknowledges this. Both Trump and Netanyahu are under fire in their respective countries and have no allies in the world except one another.

The real diplomatic winner is Pakistan. Salman Rushdie’s palimpsest-country has emerged as a key player in global politics and an influential mediator in a volatile region. Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and Chief of Defence Field Marshal Asim Munir have both been praised by President Trump and credited for achieving the current ceasefire. The Iranian regime has also been effusive in its praise of Pakistan’s efforts.

It is Pakistan that persisted with the effort after initial attempts at backdoor diplomacy by Egypt, Pakistan and Türkiye started floundering. Sharing a 900 km border and deep cultural history with Iran, and having a skirmish of its own on the eastern front with Afghanistan, Pakistan has all the reason to contain and potentially resolve the current conflict in Iran. Although a majority Sunni Muslim country, Pakistan is home to the second largest Shia Muslim population after Iran, and is the easterly terminus of the Shia Arc that stretches from Lebanon. The country also has a mutual defense pact with Saudi Arabia that includes Pakistan’s nuclear cover for the Kingdom. An open conflict between Iran and Saudi Arabia would have put Pakistan in a dangerously awkward position.

It is now known and Trump has acknowledged that China had a hand in helping Iran get to the diplomatic table. Pakistan used its connections well to get Chinese diplomatic reinforcement. Pakistani Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar flew to Beijing to brief his Chinese counterpart and secured China’s public support for the diplomatic efforts. The visit produced a Five-Point Plan that became a sequel to America’s 15-point proposal and the eventual ten-point offer by Iran.

There is no consensus between parties as to which points are where and who is agreeing to what. The chaos is par for the course the way Donald Trumps conducts global affairs. So, all kudos to Pakistan for quietly persisting with old school toing and froing and producing a semblance of an agreement on a tweet without a parchment.

It is also noteworthy that Israel has been excluded from all the diplomatic efforts so far. And it is remarkable, but should not be surprising, the way Trump has sidelined Isreal from the talks. Prime Minister Netanyahu has been enjoying overwhelming support of Israelis for starting the war of his life against Iran and getting the US to spearhead it. But now the country is getting confused and is exposed to Iranian missiles and drones far more than ever before. The Israeli opposition is finally coming alive realizing what little has Netanyahu’s wars have achieved and at what cost. Israel has alienated a majority of Americans and has no ally anywhere else.

It will be a busy Saturday in Islamabad, where the US and Iranian delegations are set to meet. Iran would seem to have insisted and secured the assurance that the US delegation will be led by Vice President Vance, while including Trump’s personal diplomats – Steve Witkoff and son-in-law Jared Kushner. Iran has not announced its team but it is expected to be led, for protocol parity, by Iran’s Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, and will likely include its suave Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi. Vice President Vance’s attendance will be the most senior US engagement with Iran since Secretary of State John Kerry negotiated the 2015 nuclear deal under President Obama.

The physical arrangements for the talks are still not public although Islamabad has been turned into a security fortress given the stakes and risks involved. The talks are expected to be ‘indirect’, with the two delegations in separate rooms and Pakistani officials shuttling between them. The status of Iran’s enriched uranium and the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz will be the major points of contention. After Netanyahu’s overreach on Wednesday, Lebanon is also on the short list

The 2015 nuclear deal (the Joint Comprehensive Action Plan) took months of negotiations and involved multiple parties besides the US and Iran, including China, France, Germany, UK, Russia and the EU. That served the cause of regional and world peace well until Trump tore up the deal to spite Obama. It would be too much to expect anything similar after a weekend encounter in Islamabad. But if the talks could lead to at least a permanent ceasefire and the return to diplomacy that would be a huge achievement.

(*As of 2025–2026, Donald Trump is nicknamed “TACO Trump” by Wall Street traders and investors as an acronym for “”. This term highlights a perceived pattern of him making strong tariff threats that cause market panic, only to later retreat or weaken them, causing a rebound.)

by Rajan Philips

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CIA’s hidden weapon in Iran

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We are passing through the ten-day interregnum called a ceasefire over the War on Iran. The world may breathe briefly, but this pause is not reassurance—it is a deliberate interlude, a vacuum in which every actor positions for the next escalation. Iran is far from secure. Behind the veneer of calm, external powers and local forces are preparing, arming, and coordinating. The United States is unlikely to deploy conventional ground troops; the next moves will be executed through proxies whose behaviour will defy expectation. These insurgents are shaped, guided, and amplified by intelligence and technology, capable of moving silently, striking precisely, and vanishing before retaliation. The ceasefire is not peace—it is the prelude to disruption.

The Kurds, historically instruments of Tehran against Baghdad, are now vectors for the next insurgency inside Iran. This movement is neither organic nor local. It is externally orchestrated, with the CIA as the principal architect. History provides the blueprint: under Mohammad-Reza Shah Pahlavi, Kurdish uprisings were manipulated, never supported out of sympathy. They were instruments of leverage against Iraq, a way to weaken a rival while projecting influence beyond Iran’s borders. Colonel Isa Pejman, Iranian military intelligence officer who played a role in Kurdish affairs, recalled proposing support for a military insurgency in Iraq, only for the Shah to respond coldly: “[Mustafa] Barzani killed my Army soldiers… please forget it. The zeitgeist and regional context have been completely transformed.” The Kurds were pawns, but pawns with strategic weight. Pejman later noted: “When the Shah wrote on the back of the letter ‘Accepted’ to General Pakravan, I felt I was the true leader of the Kurdish movement.” The seeds planted then are now being activated under new, technologically empowered auspices.

Iran’s geographic vulnerabilities make this possible. The Shah understood the trap: a vast territory with porous borders, squeezed by Soviet pressure from the north and radical Arab states from the west. “We are in a really terrible situation since Moscow’s twin pincers coming down through Kabul and Baghdad surround us,” he warned Asadollah Alam. From Soviet support for the Mahabad Republic to Barzani’s dream of a unified Kurdistan, Tehran knew an autonomous Kurdish bloc could destabilize both Iraq and Iran. “Since the formation of the Soviet-backed Mahabad Republic, the Shah had been considerably worried about the Kurdish threat,” a US assessment concluded.

Today, the Kurds’ significance is operational, not symbolic. The CIA’s recent rescue of a downed F-15 airman using Ghost Murmur, a quantum magnetometry system, demonstrated the reach of technology in intelligence operations. The airman survived two days on Iranian soil before extraction. This was not a simple rescue; it was proof that highly mobile, technologically augmented operations can penetrate Iranian territory with surgical precision. The same logic applies to insurgency preparation: when individuals can be tracked through electromagnetic signatures, AI-enhanced surveillance, and drones, proxy forces can be armed, guided, and coordinated with unprecedented efficiency. The Kurds are no longer pawns—they are a living network capable of fracturing Iranian cohesion while providing deniability to foreign powers.

Iran’s engagement with Iraqi Kurds was always containment, not empowerment. The Shah’s goal was never Kurdish independence. “We do not approve an independent [Iraqi] Kurdistan,” he stated explicitly. Yet their utility as instruments of regional strategy was undeniable. The CIA’s revival of these networks continues a long-standing pattern: insurgent groups integrated into the wider calculus of international power. Israel, Iran, and the Kurds formed a triangular strategic relationship that terrified Baghdad. “For Baghdad, an Iranian-Israeli-Kurdish triangular alliance was an existential threat,” contemporary reports noted. This is the template for modern manipulation: a networked insurgency, externally supported, capable of destabilizing regimes from within while giving foreign powers plausible deniability.

Iran today faces fragility. Years of sanctions, repression, and targeted strikes have weakened educational and scientific hubs; Sharif University in Tehran, one of the country’s leading scientific centres, was bombed. Leaders, scholars, and innovators have been eliminated. Military readiness is compromised. Generations-long setbacks leave Iran exposed. Against this backdrop, a Kurdish insurgency armed with drones, AI-supported surveillance, and precision munitions could do more than disrupt—it could fracture the state internally. The current ten-day ceasefire is a mirage; the next wave of revolt is already being orchestrated.

CIA involvement is deliberate. Operations are coordinated with allied intelligence agencies, leveraging Kurdish grievances, mobility, and ethnolinguistic networks. The Kurds’ spread across Iran, Iraq, Turkey, and Syria provides operational depth—allowing insurgents to strike, vanish, and regroup with impunity. Barzani understood leverage decades ago: “We could be useful to the United States… Look at our strategic location on the flank of any possible Soviet advance into the Middle East.” Today, the calculation is inverted: Kurds are no longer instruments against Baghdad; they are potential disruptors inside Tehran itself.

Technology is central. Ghost Murmur’s ability to detect a single heartbeat remotely exemplifies how intelligence can underpin insurgent networks. Drones, satellite communications, AI predictive modeling, and battlefield sensors create an infrastructure that can transform a dispersed Kurdish insurgency into a high-precision operation. Iran can no longer rely on fortifications or loyalty alone; the external environment has been recalibrated by technology.

History provides the roadmap. The Shah’s betrayal of Barzani after the 1975 Algiers Agreement demonstrated that external actors can manipulate both Iranian ambitions and Kurdish loyalties. “The Shah sold out the Kurds,” Yitzhak Rabin told Kissinger. “We could not station our troops there and keep fighting forever,” the Shah explained to Alam. The Kurds are a pivot, not a cause. Networks once acting under Tehran’s influence are now being repurposed against it.

The insurgency exploits societal fissures. Kurdish discontent in Iran, suppressed for decades, provides fertile ground. Historical betrayal fuels modern narratives: “Barzani claimed that ‘Isa Pejman sold us out to the Shah and the Shah sold us out to the US.’” Intelligence agencies weaponize these grievances, pairing them with training, technological augmentation, and covert support.

Geopolitically, the stakes are immense. The Shah’s defensive-offensive doctrine projected Iranian influence outward to neutralize threats. Today, the logic is inverted: the same networks used to contain Iraq are being readied to contain Iran. A technologically augmented Kurdish insurgency, covertly backed, could achieve in months what decades of sanctions, diplomacy, or repression have failed to accomplish.

The operation will be asymmetric, high-tech, and dispersed. UAVs, quantum-enhanced surveillance, encrypted communications, and AI-directed logistics will dominate. Conventional Iranian forces are vulnerable to this type of warfare. As Pejman reflected decades ago, “Our Army was fighting there, rather than the Kurds who were harshly defeated… How could we keep such a place?” Today, the challenge is magnified by intelligence superiority on the insurgents’ side.

This is not a temporary flare-up. The CIA and its allies are constructing a generational network of influence. Experience from Iraq, Syria, and Lebanon proves these networks endure once operationalised. The Shah recognized this: “Iran’s non-state foreign policy under the Shah’s reign left a lasting legacy for the post-Revolution era.” Today, those instruments are being remade as vectors of foreign influence inside Iran.

The future is stark. Iran faces not simply external threats, but a carefully engineered insurgency exploiting historical grievances, technological superiority, and precise intelligence. The Kurds are central. History, technology, and geopolitical calculation converge to create a transformative threat. Tehran’s miscalculations, betrayals, and suppressed grievances now form the lattice for this insurgency. The Kurds are positioned not just as an ethnic minority, but as a vector of international strategy—Tehran may be powerless to stop it.

Iran’s containment strategies have been weaponized, fused with technology, and inverted against it. The ghosts of Barzani’s Peshmerga, the shadows of Algiers, and the Shah’s strategic vision now converge with Ghost Murmur, drones, and AI. Tehran faces a paradox: the instruments it once controlled are now calibrated to undermine its authority. The next Kurdish revolt will not only fight in the mountains but in the electromagnetic shadows where intelligence operates, consequences are lethal, and visibility is scarce.

by Nilantha Ilangamuwa

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