Eelam War II
Eelam War II refers to the second phase of the armed conflict between the Sri Lankan military and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, lasting from June 1990 to 1995. The war erupted after the breakdown of peace talks between the LTTE and the government of President Ranasinghe Premadasa, during which mutual distrust and provocations escalated tensions. It ended with the start of peace talks between the LTTE and the government of President Chandrika Kumaratunga.
Prelude
The first phase of the civil war ended in July 1987 following the Indo-Sri Lanka Accord and the arrival of the IPKF. The accord proposed greater autonomy for the Tamil rebels in the North in return for disarmament. The presence of the Indian forces triggered an uprising in the south by the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna. In the North, some Tamil militant groups complied with the IPKF for disarmament, while others, including the LTTE did not cooperate and soon the IPKF was heavily engaged in combat. President Premadasa campaigned in 1989 on the pledge of removing the IPKF. In April 1989, Premadasa declared a unilateral ceasefire and opened direct talks with the LTTE, excluding India. By May, the Sri Lankan government had granted more powers to the North-eastern Province. In June, Premadasa requested India to withdraw its troops, which was rejected by India. Sri Lanka had contended that it had held its end of the deal by confining its troops to barracks and granting a measure of autonomy to an elected Tamil provincial government; the Sri Lankan government threatened to take India to the United Nations Security Council for retaining troops unwelcome, which outraged India. An angered Sri Lanka refused to attend the SAARC Ministerial meeting in July in Islamabad, causing its postponement. India agreed to the withdrawal in July. The last IPKF units departed in March 1990. The LTTE soon eliminated rival Tamil groups—including the Eelam People's Revolutionary Liberation Front and People's Liberation Organisation of Tamil Eelam —consolidating its position as the dominant Tamil militant organization.Massacre of police officers
By June, the peace talks broke down, the LTTE surrounded police and military outposts in the Eastern Province and ordered their surrender following. The Government order the police officers to surrender and turn in their weapons, while the army refused to surrender. According to the UTHR(J) a local LTTE commander known as "Cashier" ordered the massacre of surrended Police officers, thus ending the ceasefire, starting the second phase of the war.Start of the Eelam War II
With the IPKF departure in March 1990, the control of the Jaffna Peninsula was formally handed back to the Sri Lankan government. However, the government had only a few thousand troops based in several isolated camps in the north, including key garrisons at Palaly, Kankesanthurai, and Jaffna Fort creating a power vacuum allowing the LTTE to assert its dominance rapidly over the Jaffa peninsula. As soon as fighting broke out in June 1990, these camps and garrisons with detachments of platoon or company strength came under siege utilizing months of preparation. The LTTE took over several police stations and the army withdrew from several camps in the first few days of hostilities. In July the army camp in Kokavil was overrun with the enter detachment killed. LTTE effectively engaged the army on multiple locations, the army short on numbers to effectively engage the LTTE soon found itself on the defensive. In the east, the LTTE had besieged the isolated army camp at Mullaitivu, which the army successfully relived in September with Operation Sea Breeze, its first amphibious operation.1990 Batticaloa massacre
The 1990 Batticaloa massacre, also known as the Sathurukondan massacre, was a massacre of at least 184 Tamil refugees from three villages in the Batticaloa District by the Sri Lankan Army on September 9, 1990. According to the Special Presidential Commission of inquiry appointed by the People's Alliance government, 5 infants, 42 children under the age of ten, 85 women and 28 old persons were among the 184 villagers who were murdered. Three captains of the Sri Lankan Army were identified as the culprits.Jaffna falls to the LTTE
From August to September 1990, the LTTE intensified its offensive with sustained mortar and artillery attacks on the army garrison holdup in the Jaffna Fort consisting mostly of policemen, cutting off reinforcements and food supplies by controlling surrounding areas. The government's attempts to send reinforcements by sea were thwarted, as the LTTE's newly organized Sea Tigers disrupted naval supply convoys along the Jaffna coast. By September, the LTTE had captured the Jaffna town and surrounded the fort. After weeks of heavy fighting, the army withdrew from the fort under fire in Operation Thrividha Balaya, effectively conceding the town to the LTTE. Following the fall of the fort, the LTTE took full control of Jaffna town and much of the northern peninsula.The organization quickly established an extensive civil administration—complete with police, courts, taxation systems, and even traffic management—transforming Jaffna into the de facto capital of Tamil Eelam. With rival Tamil groups and the central government removed from the Jaffna peninsula, LTTE established the foundations of parallel state structure, and claimed sole representative of the Tamil people. This gave the LTTE unprecedented territorial legitimacy and strengthened its bargaining position in any potential future negotiations with the Sri Lankan government. This marked a significant shift in the nature of the conflict: the LTTE now held and governed territory rather than operating as a purely guerrilla force. Scholars and military analysts view the capture of Jaffna as a turning point in the war. It demonstrated the LTTE's growing capability to conduct conventional, large-scale operations, and underscored the government's logistical and intelligence failures in securing the north after the IPKF's withdrawal.
Expulsion of Muslims from the Northern Province
In October the LTTE expelled all Muslims from the Northern Province of Sri Lanka.Government forces on the defensive
The government consolidated its defences in its remaining strongholds in the peninsula. In Mankulam, the army camp was under siege from June until November, when remaining troops withdrew, yielding the area to the LTTE. On 18 December, Trincomalee Are Commander Brigadier Lucky Wijayaratne was killed by a landmine, becoming the most senior army officer killed to that point.1991 Kokkadichcholai massacre
On June 12, 1991, following a LTTE landmine attack on the Sri Lankan Army, 152 Tamil civilians were massacred by members of the Sri Lankan Army in the village Kokkadichcholai near the eastern province town of Batticaloa. Locals also reported that six Tamil women were raped, including two sisters.Battle of Elephant Pass
The LTTE quickly consolidate its territory and the government launched a series of operations to regain territory and disrupt LTTE supply routes. Fighting was concentrated in Jaffna, Vavuniya, and Batticaloa. In July, the LTTE launched a major siege on Elephant Pass in July, until it was broken by in August by an amphibious landings under Operation Balavegaya.Rajiv Gandhi's assassination
On 21 May 1991, ex-Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi was assassinated by a female suicide bomber Thenmozhi Rajaratnam. In a Supreme Court of India judgment, by Judge K. T. Thomas, it was found that the killing was carried out due to personal animosity of the LTTE chief Prabhakaran towards Rajiv Gandhi arising from his sending the numerous war crimes perpetrated by IPKF personnel against [Sri Lankan Tamils">Indian Peace Keeping Force">numerous war crimes perpetrated by IPKF personnel against [Sri Lankan Tamils.Stalemate
Much of 1992, was a stalemate with no major engagements. Both sides engaged in smaller-scale engagements, including ambushes, artillery exchanges, and raids on isolated camps. The LTTE effectively used landmines and booby traps to disrupt army movements in the Vanni region, while the government relied increasingly on air strikes and naval blockades to restrict LTTE logistics and reinforcements. While planning to recapture Jaffna, the Northern Commander Major General Denzil Kobbekaduwa was killed in Kayts with most of his senior commanders, including Brigadier Vijaya Wimalaratne on 8 August by a landmine. Their deaths were a major psychological blow to the Sri Lankan military, as both officers had played crucial roles in the successful Operation Balavegaya that broke the siege of Elephant Pass. The loss of such senior field commanders dealt a setback to military planning and morale, contributing to the overall stagnation of the war during the remainder of 1992.The LTTE, consolidate its territorial control and rebuild forces after the losses suffered in the previous year's fighting. It expanded training camps in Mullaitivu, Kilinochchi, and Pooneryn, while reorganizing its political and military wings. The LTTE expanded its Sea Tiger naval wing, which began to play an increasingly important role in smuggling arms and engaging government patrol boats. The LTTE had launched a series of attacks on army convoys and police stations in the Eastern Province, particularly in Batticaloa and Ampara, aiming to weaken government control, with the aim to wear down the army through attrition and surprise attacks.