Vadamarachchi Operation

Vadamarachchi Operation
Part of the Sri Lankan civil war, Eelam War I
DateMay 26, 1987 - June 1987
LocationJaffna, Sri Lanka
Result Partial Sri Lankan Army victory
Belligerents
Military of Sri Lanka Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam
Commanders and leaders
Lt. Gen. (later Gen.) Nalin Seneviratne,
Brig. (later Lt. Gen.) G. H. De Silva,
Brig. (later Lt. Gen.) Denzil Kobbekaduwa,
Col. (later Maj. Gen.) Vijaya Wimalaratne
Velupillai Pirabakaran
Strength
8,000 Unknown
Casualties and losses
689 killed[1] 631 killed[1]

Operation Liberation or the Vadamarachchi Operation was the military offensive carried out by the Sri Lankan military in May and June 1987 to recapture the territory of Vadamarachchi in the Jaffna peninsula from the LTTE (Tamil Tigers). It was the first conventional warfare engagement on Sri Lankan soil after the end of British colonial rule.

The battle

Brig. Denzil Kobbekaduwa and Col. Vijaya Wimalaratne led the government troops. Brig. G. H. De Silva acted as the Overall Operations Commander.[2] Former Sri Lankan President Junius Richard Jayewardene and minister of National Security Lalith Athulathmudali had political leadership for the operation until the government of India dropped food supplies over Jaffna in Operation Poomalai on June 4, 1987, which prompted the government to accept the Indo-Sri Lankan Accord.

The offensive started on May 26, 1987, under the leadership of two commanders with 8,000 troops from several battalions from Gemunu Watch (under the Command of Lt. Col. Vipul Botheju and Lt. Col. Wasantha Perera), Gajaba Regiment (under the command of Lt. Col. Sathis Jayasundara and Maj. Gotabaya Rajapaksa) and Sri Lanka Light Infantry (under Lt. Col. Naradha Wickramarathne and Maj. Sarath Fonseka), supported by the Sri Lanka Air Force.[3][4][5] Brig. G. H. de Silva was in commanded of the 2 Brigade Group, tasked on Deception planning and Holding Operations. It was difficult for the troops to break out from the Thondamanaru area because LTTE forces blew up the Thondamanaru bridge to delay the government forces from reaching Valvettithurai, the birthplace of LTTE leader V. Prabhakaran. The eastern side of Thondamanaru was heavily mined by the LTTE and clearing of the mines and booby traps were left to a 2nd Field Engineer Squadron of the Sri Lanka Engineers commanded by Maj. Lucky Rajasinghe. The first day of the battle belonged mainly to the field engineer squadron. Engineers neutralized and removed mines and booby traps left by LTTE forces, losing 42 men in four hours and suffering injuries to its commander Maj. Rajasinghe. The unit crossed the minefield under intense fire from LTTE bunkers, with support from 1 Gajaba Regiment commanded by Maj. Gotabaya Rajapakse. On May 28 troops managed to capture Udupiddy and Valvettithurai, and another column (commandos, under the command of Maj. Sarath Handapangoda) captured Nelliady and advanced towards Point Pedro without giving LTTE units time to regroup. By the first week of June the government forces managed to gain control over the entire zone and captured large amounts of arms left behind by retreating LTTE forces. Military intelligence discovered that LTTE leader Prabakaran, along with Sea Tiger leader Col. Soosai, narrowly escaped from advancing troops.

The second stage of this operation was launched on June 3, 1987, with the goal of capturing the city of Jaffna, but was abandoned. Indian military cargo planes escorted by fighter aircraft dropped humanitarian relief supplies in the Jaffna area on June 4 in Operation Poomalai. Indian forces landed in Sri Lanka on July 29 with the signing of the Indo-Sri-Lankan accord.

Other information

See also

References

  1. 1 2 "Welcome to UTHR, Sri Lanka". Uthr.org. Retrieved 7 October 2014.
  2. The 1st. Battalion of the Gemunu Watch
  3. Operation Liberation One, The Sunday Times, Retrieved 6 April 2015
  4. Full text of H.Efs speech at the War Heroes commemoration event at the Ananda College, Old Anandians Web Japan, Retrieved 6 April 2015
  5. Sri Lanka taught world the art of humane ops-President, Ministry of Defence, Retrieved 6 April 2015
  6. "Commandants". ceylondatabase.net. Retrieved 21 March 2014.

Sources

Official websites
Independent reports and texts

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/13/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.