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DS Senanayake in the Final Stages of the Independence Struggle

Batapola Man**

Michael, I thought [your article on “Battleships Down: Early Signs in the Decline of British Imperial Power across the Span of the Indian Ocean”] is a very insightful piece that opens up an important and (as far as I know) unexplored dimension of the comparative Lanka-India route to Independence. I am not going to post these comments online because they will just encourage the abusive trolls.

  1. Might one add that the only significant local military force, the Ceylon Light Infantry, was sufficiently dominated by the plantocracy that it would likely be fairly effective in suppressing any serious local Quit Ceylon mobilisation?
  2. Is it possible that one reason for the savage colonial response to the events of 1915 was exactly that the colonial authorities knew they could get away with it because they held all the military cards, and did not need to be concerned about an adverse political response?
  3. While DS Senanayake was presumably a very accomplished insider politician, he really had almost everything going for him in support of his strategy of total cooperation in the British war effort:
  1. In retrospect, it seems that it would have been crazy to have done things differently.

Or are these all obvious points that I have just reinvented?

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** Authorship: The  Batapola man is a senior scholar who has several works on Sri Lankan politics and sent me these thoughts as a personal note. S/he has accepted my request for the MEMO to be placed in the public realm as an anonymous set of thoughts: for the reason that it broadens the debate ….and encourages others to address both Vinod and myself.

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