Michael J. Totten has an interview with Robert D. Kaplan, mainly on the subject of Sri T. Lanka. Sorry, Sri Lanka. But spreading out to Ukraine, Georgia, Azerbaijan, and elsewhere. It's an interesting read:
Sri Lanka defeated, more or less completely, a 26 year-long insurgency. They killed the leader and the leader’s son. But there are no takeaway lessons for the West here. The Sri Lankan government did it by silencing the media, which meant capturing the most prominent media critic of the government and killing him painfully. And they made sure all the other journalists knew about it. […]
There are a thousand disappearances a year in Sri Lanka separate from the war. Journalists are terrified there. The only journalism you read is pro-government. So that’s one thing they did.
The Tamil Tigers had human shields by the tens of thousands, not just by the dozens and hundreds like Al Qaeda. They put people between themselves and the government and say "you have to kill all the people to get to us." So the government obliged them. […]
They killed thousands of civilians in the course of winning this war. It acted in a way so brutal that there are no lessons for the West.
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