Janes’s Defence Weekly Interview: Vice Admiral Jayanath Colombage,
Commander of the Sri Lanka Navy
By Tim Fish
JDW Correspondent
After more than two decades of fighting the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) at sea, the Sri Lankan Navy (SLN) is being reshaped to prioritize maritime security for the nation. This new phase of development, which will enhance the Navy’s blue-water capabilities as well as maintain its existing expertise in brown water counter-insurgency operations, is being led by Vice Admiral Jayanath Colombage.
“Sri Lanka is an island and our maritime interests cover an ocean area many times the size of the land,” Adm Colombage noted. “Our first line of defence is the entire 1,340 km of coastline and territorial waters. We need to maintain surveillance around the country and, hence, need ships and craft, surveillance equipment, and sufficient people to perform the task.
“Therefore, the SLN will concentrate on enhancing maritime domain awareness and developing a combined operating picture using network-centric operations to maintain an effective surveillance of the ocean area.” To meet these objectives the SLN will focus on infrastructure and training to improve its capabilities and create a professional force of officers and sailors that can spearhead the next generation of naval development. Adm Colombage believes his naval personnel deserve this investment after their sacrifices during decades of counter-insurgency operations against the LTTE Sea Tigers.
“Our sailors performed their duties by sacrificing even basic needs. Now the time has come to develop naval infrastructure and living conditions, and to provide them with standard basic needs and to make them more professional through training. More emphasis is now being paid to develop training facilities and staff. We are training sailors for UN missions and disaster management duties as well,” he said. New infrastructure includes the formation of Regional Security Centres and satellite camps covering the entire Sri Lankan coastline, while new Naval Area Commands have been established to focus on maritime interests. The latest has been the opening of a new command in the southeast of Sri Lanka to expand surveillance and improve the command and control of naval forces in that area. Existing infrastructure is being upgraded to improve habitation conditions so that sailors can have a “home away from home”, Adm Colombage said.
In developing a wider training programme, the emphasis is on providing more advanced naval training at the mid-career level to create more specialists and to establish an expert core of naval instructors. Furthermore, the SLN wants more modern naval simulators to prepare their next generation of officers and sailors. “We want at least 25% of the naval complement to undergo some kind of training at all times. We are focusing on retaining our hardearned brown-water expertise and improving the professional outlook of the SLN,” said Adm Colombage. “We welcome joint training proposals and we are already undertaking an instructor officer exchange programme with the Indian Navy. We shall continue to send our officers and men overseas for training to expose them to the operations of other navies, develop their skills, and broaden their horizons.
” Although the SLN will have to work with its existing budget and resources, there are plans to buy two new offshore patrol vessels (OPVs) and to increase the size of some special forces units.
“The SLN does not anticipate a large increase in the defence budget,” he continued. “However, there are plans to acquire more offshore patrol vessels in the near future. The new claims on the continental shelf and its resources will mandate the SLN to be able to operate in a wider policing area. This will require advanced OPV-type platforms and discussions are under way to finalise acquiring such platforms from India. The details are not finalised yet.
“We want to retain this hard-earned capability and expertise,” said Adm Colombage. “Many navies, and especially Special Forces, have expressed the desire to learn small boat tactics and asymmetric warfare operations and the SLN is positively accommodating these requests. The SLN is determined not to allow our coast or sea to be exploited by subversive or insurgent elements in the future.
“Some LTTE front organisations, sympathisers, have not given up the elusive dream of achieving a separate state. Intelligence reveals that those factions are trying to regroup with a view to destabilising the country again. Hence, we have to be mindful of this possibility,” the admiral cautioned. “Intelligence operations can play a key role in this endeavour. The SLN has to play an enhanced role in intelligence gathering and sharing with other agencies, locally and internationally, for the purpose of national and regional security.”..
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