The Gotabhaya Project: a strong, modern nation
Posted on March 20th, 2017

by Dr. Dayan Jayatilleka Courtesy The Island


US-based Hafeel Farisz has written a double-barreled critique of Gotabhaya Rajapaksa and me, though as he says, I am the primary target because of the intellectual dimension or pretensions that I bring to bear. It is quite tempting for me to respond at the level of theory, but that would be a diversion. That is not what this entire matter is about.

Farisz’ critique takes place in a certain context. One aspect of that context is my formula that Gotabhaya Rajapaksa should be the Presidential candidate and Mahinda Rajapaksa the Prime Ministerial candidate of the Opposition at the national elections scheduled for end-2019/2020. But there is a broader context, and that is the ideological, or more crudely, propaganda battle that has now commenced. That battle swirls around three interconnected projects, namely the new Constitution, the new Geneva resolution and the new economic policy direction.

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My advocacy of a Gotabhaya Presidential run and a “Gota plus Mahinda ticket” comes in the context of, and is proposed as an answer to, a serious and deepening crisis.

That crisis is multifaceted. There is a push for a new Constitution which will remove the executive Presidency—a factor for stability and economic growth, introduced for that purpose by JR Jayewardene—further empower the Prime Minister whose role in the massive bond scam has yet to be clarified, and transfer more power to the provinces including the Northern and Eastern Provinces. The Northern Province has only recently passed a resolution calling for re-merger and “self-determination”. Its Chief Minister’s political behavior is borderline subversive of the constitution. A new Constitution which shifts power to these entities is an exercise in dangerous lunacy.

What is still more dangerous is that a Referendum would give the restive North and East the same opportunity that the British provided Jinnah, and Mustafa Barzaniis just about to exercise in Iraqi Kurdistan—a Referendum in those particular areas, after which it can be proclaimed to the world that the Tamil people of the North and East have rejected the idea of living within a unitary state and constitution and therefore have a right to exercise self-determination!

In the meanwhile this government seeks to sell off national assets and the national space, also permitting the economic annexation of Sri Lanka by the Behemoth next door. Free trade agreements are its only doctrine and free trade is best described in Che Guevara’s words as “a free fox among free chickens!”

Thus we in Sri Lanka today face an existential crisis. Our country is being robbed from us. Our vote has been robbed from us and we have a 16 member pseudo-opposition while a 51 member Opposition formation is unrecognized as the parliamentary Opposition.

We, the vast majority of Sri Lanka’s citizens, need to take Sri Lanka back and put it back on track; on an upward trajectory to be the best place we can be. And we need the best possible team to do it. That’s where Gotabhaya and Mahinda come in. I would have said Mahinda and Gotabhaya except for the realities of the 19th amendment. This time round, Mahinda has to be the booster rocket.

What then of my earlier critique of Gotabhaya? I was the only one to criticize Gotabhaya publicly at the time, and certainly the only one to do so from within the Mahinda camp. That tells the story. My criticism of Gota was that he was taking an excessively hard, hyper-securitized line, as distinct from Mahinda’s instinctively pragmatic balancing. So it was a preference at the time, of Mahinda’s line over Gota’s. Today the choice is not one that takes place within a patriotic MR government, between MR’s and GR’s line.

Today we are back to 2005, where MR, GR, BR, NR and the JO have to fight together to save the country from the Ranil-Chandrika partnership which seeks to dismantle the state and sell out the country, rolling back the gains of the war of liberation and reunification waged by our armed forces. The only difference between today and 2005 is that due to changed Constitutional and social realities, GR will have to be the vanguard element—rather like the role of the elite Special Forces–while MR is the leading force and the JO the main force.

Gota has demonstrated his developmental vision and capacities beyond any reasonable doubt. He is not only a decorated warrior who knows how to defend his country even at the risk of his life, but he is also a man with a constructive, modernizing vision and capacity. That is a combination of qualities—fighter and builder—that this country, and indeed any country, needs and should be proud to have.

I brought in Kumara Gunaratnam for a simple, symbolic reason. I don’t believe a society can tackle all its major tasks at the same time, nor do I believe that any leader or political option can do so either. I am convinced that a Gotabhaya Presidency based on a Mahinda Prime Ministership can take Sri Lanka to the same place that an earlier leader I worked closely with, President Premadasa, wanted to take it: Mahathir Mohamed’s Malaysia. I am convinced that no one but Gotabhaya can do so.

However, in my lifetime, I would like to see Sri Lanka eventually evolving beyond that, to an unlikely cross between Cuba and Singapore; a society with a Singaporean “brain” and a Cuban “heart and soul”; a fair and just society in which ethnic and religious factors can be transcended in a new fusion, a new identity. Of those I see around me, a combination of Kumara Gunaratnam and his FSP comrades and a JVP led by Sunil Handunetti and Bimal Ratnayake (minus its pro-Ranil rightwing)seem to have the necessary consciousness. That is the task for the next generation; not ours.

However, for that to be possible, the country needs to reach a level of economic and educational advancement; of urbanization and scientific development—all of which will be within a globally competitive national capitalist framework, not a socialist-oriented one.

This historical task of building the modern material foundation of a future social democracy under a ‘next generation’ democratic left government, can only be fulfilled today and tomorrowunder the strong, patriotic, modernizing leadership of Gotabhaya, backed by Mahinda.

3 Responses to “The Gotabhaya Project: a strong, modern nation”

  1. Dilrook Says:

    Dayan talks about 3 different combinations.

    One is a Gotabaya-Mahinda-Sirisena combination (a non-starter), the other is a Gotabaya-Mahinda combination (will fail due to extreme nepotism) and the other is a Gotabaya-Gunarathnam combination (insane and a disaster). Which one is the combination that should contest 2019/2020 elections?

    None can win unless they promise to scale down 13A, remove ETCA (if signed) and keep nepotism at bay. He must also accommodate Sarath Weerasekera. Without him there is no election success for any patriotic movement.

    I have my very serious doubts as to the true intentions of the writer. Is he trying to help Gotabhaya win the next election or muddle his chances of winning by tying him up to unmitigated disasters?

  2. Ananda-USA Says:

    The ONLY VIABLE COMBINATION is the Gothabhaya-Mahinda-Weerawansa combination with Sarath Weerasekara’s able assistance.

    All others are PIE-IN-THE-SKY dreams of Dayan who is beginning to shows signs of cerebral delusions!

  3. Nimal Says:

    I must say that Gota always wore the right cloths that gives us much confidence and he must follow the rules of good governance to earn respect from the people.

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