{"id":49917,"date":"2015-12-02T11:58:13","date_gmt":"2015-12-02T17:58:13","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/?p=49917"},"modified":"2015-12-02T04:24:42","modified_gmt":"2015-12-02T11:24:42","slug":"eat-us-america-and-give-us-peace","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/2015\/12\/02\/eat-us-america-and-give-us-peace\/","title":{"rendered":"Eat us, America, and give us peace"},"content":{"rendered":"<h2><span style=\"color: #0000ff;\"><em>By\u00a0Rohana R. Wasala\u00a0Courtesy The Island<\/em><\/span><\/h2>\n<p>To be free of attachment and so also of anger, fear, and pain. Eat me, Professor Solanka silently prayed. Eat me, America, and give me peace.<\/p>\n<ul>\n<li>Salman Rushdie in his novel \u2018<em>Fury<\/em>\u2019 (2001)<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<p><em>The Island<\/em> editorial of November 24, 2015 entitled Power Play\u201d about Samantha Power\u2019s Sri Lanka visit provided the cue for this article. Samantha Power (45), American Ambassador to the UN, and President Obama\u2019s trusted advisor on American response to global genocide and human rights abuse issues, according to news reports, went back early that day local time after a brief visit to Sri Lanka. Her professional and political authority within the America-dominated UN establishment is beyond doubt. What is in question, however, as far as we Sri Lankans are concerned, is whether her visit is likely to help or hinder post-war normalization in our country. This is particularly so, given her controversial political and diplomatic track record. &#8220;A Problem from Hell: America and the Age of Genocide\u201d, a book she authored in 2002, won several awards including the J. Anthony Lukas Book Prize and the Pulitzer Prize for General Non-fiction the following year. She wrote this book (which came to be widely acclaimed within the Western bloc) while she was serving as a professor in human rights practices at Harvard university. It is claimed that Power was a key figure behind the meddlesome American role in Libya. She has been criticized for recommending \u2018solutions from hell\u2019 to \u2018problems from hell\u2019! (i.e., for advocating interventionist and militaristic responses to alleged genocide and human rights violation problems).\u00a0Seeing the disastrous consequences of uncalled for, essentially convoluted, American political and military involvement around the world including for instance Syria, Libya, Iraq, and Afghanistan, behind the smoke screen of \u2018free\u2019 Western media misinformation, how can we believe that Samantha Power meant to make an exception for an insignificant third world country like Sri Lanka? Should we let her sort out our internal problems, hoping that she\u2019d have our national interest at heart? But we know that what is good for us is not usually consistent with America\u2019s own geopolitical agenda for the region.<\/p>\n<p>As suggested by the <em>Island<\/em> editor in his short but incisive analysis of the diplomatic episode, Samantha Power was engaged in effective power play. Her meetings with representatives of the central government and the provincial administration, and her playful mingling with ordinary citizens were designed to reassure people at all three levels of the US-led West\u2019s alleged concern with the welfare of the people of the north, presumably, in terms of safeguarding their human rights, securing justice for supposed victims of disappearances, restoring ownership of lands acquired by the army for security related purposes during the war to their original owners, repairing roads, bridges, and public and private buildings such as houses, hospitals, and schools that suffered collateral damage during the civil conflict, and reconstructing new ones for an increased population due to natural growth and return of the war displaced, and so on. But the ordinary citizens of the country are politically savvy enough to know that such issues cannot be the real worry of these visiting foreign dignitaries who don\u2019t know anything true about our history, indigenous cultures and religions, languages, worldviews, and our real problems and needs shaped by those factors. These meddling nosy parkers want to see Tamils and Sinhalese embattled with each other as mortal enemies for their own selfish strategic purposes including trade. But there is reason for optimism given the fact that the majority Sinhalese Buddhists and the largest minority Tamil Hindus have tolerant, accommodating, nonviolent, humane values ingrained in their cultural DNA, as it were, particularly when free from the divisive influence of the few egotistic politicians. Ordinary Sri Lankans don\u2019t need opportunistic strangers to tell them how to settle their disputes. It won\u2019t be long before the educated young of both communities appreciate this fact and begin to see through the stratagems of neocolonialists and their few local lackeys and render those selfish interventionists irrelevant to the resolution of national problems, which can be easily achieved through democratic dialogue.<\/p>\n<p>The same editorial recalls how British prime minister David Cameron went up to the north when he came here to attend the CHOGM summit in 2013. His motives were, no doubt, the same as Power\u2019s: motives which couldn\u2019t have anything to do with the lives of ordinary Sri Lankan citizens, be they Tamil, Sinhalese, or Muslims. Actually, Cameron, as the leader of a pathetically diminished (that is, in importance) Britain that in the past boasted of possessing an empire on which the sun never set, was trying to achieve more lowly aims than Power was planning to realize on her recent visit. Hers was a truly imperial mission in that her efforts were connected with serving the geopolitical interests of the globalized economic empire led (nowadays, at China\u2019s sufferance, though) by America, and she has implicit faith in the preeminence of that empire, whereas Cameron had the rather not so exalted motive of winning the Tamil bloc vote of his constituency back home. Of course, US president Obama was no less beholden to immigrant Tamils for their votes and their contributions to his 2008 campaign funding, which, however, it is likely, formed a less important part of American motives for interfering in our country\u2019s internal problems.<\/p>\n<p>The disparity between the two allies in terms of global economic power and political authority is not difficult to understand if we have some idea of how Britain\u2019s past colonial dominance came to be submerged by America\u2019s international ascendancy in the wake of the breakup of the British empire, a change accelerated by the internationalization of politics and economics since the end of the Second World War and the rapidly advancing communication technologies of worldwide accessibility. The epochal shift of the centre of global interconnectedness originally created by British colonialism to the present America-driven globalization juggernaut is memorably depicted in Salman Rushdie\u2019s \u2018<em>Fury<\/em>\u2019 in a highly illustrative scene in New York between the newly arrived ex-British academic Professor Malik Solanka and an advertising copywriter: the latter consults Solanka about a corporate-image campaign for the \u00a0American Express bank, where the advertisements display \u2018images of famous city skylines at sunset\u2019 with the copy-line: THE SUN NEVER SETS ON AMERICAN EXPRESS INTERNATIONAL BANKING CORPORATION. \u00a0The foregrounded message is clear: at any time of the day, there is an American Express bank open for business somewhere in the world. Corporate America has replaced imperial Britain in the famous slogan. In the same novel Rushdie gives the (fictitious) British prime minister the name \u2018Tony Ozymandias\u2019, which reminds the reader of Shelley\u2019s 1817 sonnet \u2018Ozymandias\u2019: the massive stone sculpture of Ozymandias, the once mighty, invincible \u2018King of Kings\u2019, now lies scattered in the sand in ruins.<\/p>\n<p>But the collapse of British colonialism has not been so final as Rushdie suggests by this image in his fictional work. As the progenitor of Western colonial domination of the world through trade and war it still survives in the form of an acolyte of the mighty America, which has succeeded it. (Britain is also responsible for our present \u2018ethnic\u2019 problems.) It was America\u2019s economic imperialism that brought in the era of globalization as we know it today, rather complex, though, this concept of globalization is. Amidst its multifarious manifestations, good and bad, globalization in this context is to be understood as an economic, political, and military phenomenon. In that globalized context, unwelcome superpower interventions in violation of the sovereignty, independence, and national interest of smaller nation states, of the sort that Samantha Power was attempting with us during her Sri Lanka visit (November 21 to 23), and the dehumanizing commercialism that Malik Solanka, the protagonist of\u00a0 Rushdie\u2019s first \u2018American\u2019 novel <em>Fury<\/em>, is raging against, must be taken for granted. Victims have no escape route. The present government appears to be pushing us towards that same decadent American economic bandwagon, if, among other things, the proposals of the budget that is being debated, are any indication of what to expect.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>By\u00a0Rohana R. Wasala\u00a0Courtesy The Island To be free of attachment and so also of anger, fear, and pain. Eat me, Professor Solanka silently prayed. Eat me, America, and give me peace. Salman Rushdie in his novel \u2018Fury\u2019 (2001) The Island editorial of November 24, 2015 entitled Power Play\u201d about Samantha Power\u2019s Sri Lanka visit provided [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[91],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-49917","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-rohana-r-wasala"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/49917","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=49917"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/49917\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=49917"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=49917"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=49917"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}