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Sri Lanka Army

The Sri Lanka Army (SL Army) (Sinhala: ශ්‍රී ලංකා යුද්ධ හමුදාව, romanized: Śrī Laṃkā yuddha hamudāva; Tamil: இலங்கை இராணுவம், romanized: Ilankai iraṇuvam) is the oldest and largest of the Sri Lanka Armed Forces. Established as the Ceylon Army in 1949, it was renamed when Sri Lanka became a republic in 1972. In 2010, the Army had approximately 200,000 regular personnel, between 20,000 and 40,000 reserve (volunteer) personnel and 18,000 National Guardsmen[5][6] and comprises 13 divisions, one air-mobile brigade, one commando brigade, one special forces brigade, one independent armored brigade, three mechanized infantry brigades and over 40 infantry brigades.[7] From the 1980s to 2009, the army was engaged in the Sri Lankan Civil War.

Sri Lanka Army
Sinhala: ශ්‍රී ලංකා යුද්ධ හමුදාව
Tamil: இலங்கை இராணுவம்
Emblem of the Sri Lanka Army
FoundedOctober 10, 1949; 73 years ago (1949-10-10)[1]
Country Sri Lanka
Allegiance Sri Lanka
TypeArmy
RoleLand warfare
Size250,000+ personnel[2][3]
Part ofSri Lanka Armed Forces
HeadquartersArmy Headquarters, Sri Jayawardenapura Kotte
Motto(s)Latin: Pro Patria
"For the Fatherland"
ColoursGold, blue and orange
   
AnniversariesArmy Day: 10 October[1]
Engagements1971 JVP Insurrection
1987–89 JVP Insurrection
Sri Lankan Civil War
DecorationsMilitary awards and decorations of Sri Lanka
Websitewww.army.lk
Commanders
Commander-in-ChiefRanil Wickremesinghe (President of Sri Lanka)
Commander of the ArmyLieutenant General Vikum Liyanage
Chief of Staff of the ArmyMajor General Channa Weerasuriya[4]
Deputy Chief of Staff of the ArmyMajor General Sujeewa Senarath Yapa
Notable
commanders
Field Marshal Sarath Fonseka
General Sepala Attygalle
General Hamilton Wanasinghe
Lieutenant General Denzil Kobbekaduwa
Major General Vijaya Wimalaratne
Major General Bertram Heyn
Major General Anton Muttukumaru
Insignia
Flag
Presidential Colour

The Army Headquarters is situated in Sri Jayawardenepura Kotte; Commander of the Army is the highest appointment in the army who commands the army and is assisted by the Chief of Staff of the Army and Deputy Chief of Staff of the Army.[8][9] The Commander-in-Chief of the Sri Lanka Armed Forces is the President of Sri Lanka, who heads the National Security Council through the Ministry of Defence, which is charged with formulating, executing defence policy and procurements for the armed forces.[10]

Background

Pre Anuradhapura period to the Transitional period

The first military engagements in Sri Lankan history were marked by the advent of Prince Vijaya, a prince from the Bengal region who landed along with his followers on the beaches of northwestern Sri Lanka around 543 BC. Prince Vijaya and his followers occupied the lands of the native Vedda people. Repeated incursions by South Indians, particularly the Cholas, into Sri Lankan territory occurred throughout the next few centuries and led to the engagement of the rival forces in battle.[11] In one famous encounter, Sinhalese King Dutugamunu (161-37 BC) raised an army of eleven thousand in his battle against the Chola invader Elara, whom he eventually defeated. Dutugemunu's organisational skills, bravery and chivalry are famous and his battles have gone down in history as outstanding offensive operations.[12]

Other Sri Lankan monarchs whose military achievements stand out include Gajabahu I (113-35), who sailed to India to bring back his captured soldiers, and Dhatusena (463-79) who is credited with repulsing numerous Indian invasions and for organising a naval build-up to deter seaborne attacks. He also had the foresight to cover his defences with artillery. Vijayabahu I (1055–1110) was another warrior king who dislodged Indian invaders and united the country. Parakramabahu the Great (1153–86) was an outstanding monarch of the Polonnaruwa period, and his accomplishments as a military leader and a great administrator are noteworthy. His reign included a military expedition to Burma in retaliation for indignities inflicted on his envoys and Burmese interference in the elephant trade. This marked the first overseas expedition in Sri Lankan military history. It is also reported that Parakramabahu's fame was such that his assistance was sought by South Indian rulers who were involved in internecine struggles. Another strong ruler in the Transitional period of Sri Lanka was Parakramabahu VI, who defeated Indian invaders, united the island and ruled it from capital Kotte.[12] Although the known epigraphical records do not indicate that the Sri Lankan rulers had a full-time standing army at their disposal, there is evidence supported by legend, designation, name, place and tradition that prove there were 'stand-by' equestrian, elephant, and infantry divisions to ensure royal authority at all times. Militias were raised as the necessity arose, and the soldiers returned to their pursuits, mainly for farming, after their spell of military duty.[12]

Transitional period

 
A Portuguese illustration of Sinhalese warriors, produced c. 1540

Parts of Sri Lanka came under the control of three colonial European powers, namely the Portuguese in the 16th century, the Dutch in the 17th century and the British in the 18th century. Yet, until the entire island was ceded to the British in 1815, regional kingdoms maintained most of their independent defense forces and were able to successfully repulse repeated thrusts by the European armies. However the British, unlike their counterparts, were not primarily restricted to maritime power, and thus had the capability to bring the entire island under their control and to integrate locals into the British defense forces.[12]

At the beginning of the 16th century, modern Europe first came in contact with Sri Lanka. In 1505 a Portuguese fleet, while operating in the Indian seas against Arab traders, was blown off course and landed at Galle, on the southern coast of the island.[13] In 1517 the Portuguese re-appeared, and with the consent of the Sinhalese King established a trading post in Colombo. Having initiated contact with Sri Lanka as traders, the Portuguese soon made themselves political masters of the western seaboard. Numerous forts were soon established, and features of European civilisation was introduced.[12]

The Portuguese are credited with the introduction of European-style fortresses to Sri Lanka during this era. Although some locals already possessed military training and fighting experience, there is no evidence that the Portuguese employed local inhabitants into their own forces. Thus the Portuguese were forced to restrict their presence in the island due to their small numbers and their efforts were more focused toward projecting maritime power.[12]

In 1602 Dutch explorers first landed in Sri Lanka. By 1658 they had completely ousted the Portuguese from the coastal regions of the island. Much like the Portuguese, they did not employ locals in their military and preferred to live in isolation, pursuing their interests in trade and commerce. Like the Portuguese, they defended their forts with their own forces, but unlike the Portuguese, Dutch forces employed Swiss and Malay mercenaries. The Dutch Forts in Jaffna, Galle, Matara, Batticaloa and Trincomalee were sturdily built and are considered a tribute to their military engineering skills. Also, like the Portuguese, the Dutch focussed on maritime power and although they had the capability to develop and use local forces, they chose to isolate themselves from the local population.[12]

Kandyan period

The British Empire then ousted the Dutch from the coastal areas of the country, and sought to conquer the independent Kandyan Kingdom. In the face of repeated British assaults, the Kandyans were forced into a degree of guerilla warfare and fared well against their superior British adversaries.[12]

Initially the British stationed their forces, which included naval vessels, artillery troops and infantry, to defend the island nation from other foreign powers, using the natural harbor of Trincomalee as their headquarters in Sri Lanka. In 1796, the Swiss and Malay mercenaries who were previously in the service of the Dutch were transferred to the British East India Company. While the Swiss Regiment de Meuron left in 1806 and was eventually disbanded in Canada in 1822, the Malays, who initially formed a Malay Corps, were converted into the 1st Ceylon Regiment in 1802 and placed under a British commanding officer. In the same year, the British became the first foreign power to raise a Sinhalese unit, which was named the 2nd Ceylon Regiment, also known as the Sepoy Corps.[12]

In 1803 the 3rd Ceylon Regiment was created with Moluccans and recruits from Penang. All these regiments fought alongside British troops in the Kandyan Wars which began in 1803. Throughout the following years, more Sinhalese and Malays were recruited to these regiments, and in 1814 the 4th Regiment was raised, which was composed entirely of African troops. It was later renamed as the Ceylon Rifle Regiment. Eventually, the Kandyan Kingdom was ceded to the British in 1815, and with that they gained control over the whole island. Resistance to British occupation cropped up almost instantly. During the first half-century of occupation, the British faced a number of uprisings, and were forced to maintain a sizable army in order to guarantee their control over the island. After the Matale Rebellion led by Puran Appu in 1848, in which a number of Sinhalese recruits defected to the side of the rebels, the recruitment of Sinhalese to the British forces was temporarily halted.[12]

History

British Ceylon period

 
First Prime Minister of Independent Sri Lanka D. S. Senanayake visiting the 1st battalion of the CLI at the Echelon Square and watching volunteers being trained to handle light machine guns
Ceylon Light Infantry Volunteers

The second phase in the employment of non-British personnel commenced in 1881 after the enactment of an ordinance designed to authorise the creation of a Volunteer Corps in the island. It was designated the Ceylon Light Infantry Volunteers (CLIV). This move compensated for the disbandment of the Ceylon Rifle Regiment in 1874. The Ceylon Light Infantry Volunteers was originally administered as a single unit. However, over the years various sections of the volunteers grew large enough to become independent from their parent unit. The different units that emerged from the Volunteer Force were the

Ceylon Defence Force
 
Brigadier James Sinclair, Earl of Caithness inspecting a guard of honour wearing khaki drill

In 1910 the name of the military was formally changed to the Ceylon Defence Force (CDF). It continued to grow throughout the early period of the 20th century. The CDF saw active service when a contingent of the Ceylon Mounted Infantry (CMI) in 1900, and a contingent of the Ceylon Planters Rifle Corps (CPRC) in 1902, took part in the Second Boer War in South Africa. Their services were recognised by the presentation in 1902 of a colour to the CMI, and a presentation in 1904 of a banner to the CPRC. In 1922, the CDF was honoured by the presentation of the King's and Regimental colours to the Ceylon Light Infantry (CLI).[12]

During the First World War, many volunteers from the Defence Force travelled to Great Britain and joined the British Army, and many of them were killed in action. One of them mentioned by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle was Private Jacotine of the CLI, who was the last man left alive in his unit at the Battle of Lys,[14] and who continued to fight for 20 minutes before he was killed.[15]

In 1939, the CDF was mobilised and an enormous expansion took place which required the raising of new units such as the Ceylon Signals Corps, the Auxiliary Territorial Service (Ceylon) and also the Colombo Town Guard, which had been previously disbanded, but was later re-formed to meet military requirements. During the Second World War, Britain assumed direct control over the Armed Forces of Ceylon.[16]

Contemporary Sri Lanka

At the end of World War II, CDF which had increased in size during the war began demobilisation. In 1948 Sri Lanka gained independence from Britain, becoming a Dominion within the Commonwealth and a year earlier Ceylon entered into the bi-lateral Anglo-Ceylonese Defence Agreement of 1947. This was followed by the Army Act No. 17 of 1949 which was passed by Parliament on April 11, 1949, and formalised in Gazette Extraordinary No. 10028 of October 10, 1949 marked the creation of the Ceylon Army, consisting of a regular and a volunteer force, the later being the successor of the disbanded CDF.[17][18] Therefore, October 10, 1949, is considered the day the Ceylon Army was raised, and as such October 10 is celebrated annually as Army Day. Brigadier James Sinclair, Earl of Caithness was appointed as Commandant of the Ceylon Army. The Defence Agreement of 1947 provided the assurance that British would come to the aid of Ceylon in the event it was attacked by a foreign power and provided British military advisers to build up the country's military. In November, a Ceylon Army Guard takes over duties at Echelon Barracks from the Guard of the British Army.[19]

The Army Headquarters, Ceylon was established in Colombo, with a General Staff Branch, an Adjutant General Branch, a Quartermaster General Branch and a Pay and Records Branch. Soon after the Headquarters, Ceylon Volunteer Force was established. The initial requirement was to raise an artillery regiment, an engineer squadron, an infantry battalion, a medical unit, and a service corps company. For much of the 1950s the army was preoccupied with the task of building itself and training existing and new personal. To this aim the British Army Training Team (BATT) advisory group carried out training for ex-members of the CDF within the Ceylon Army, field rank officers were sent to the British Army Staff College, Camberley and some attached to units of the British Army of the Rhine to gain field experience. Newly recruited officer cadets were sent for training at Royal Military Academy, Sandhurst, stating with 10 officer cadets in 1950, which continued until the 1968 and both officers and other ranks were sent to specialist training courses in Britain, India, Pakistan and Malaya. There were no formations and all units were structured to directly function under the Army Headquarters. However temporary field headquarters were to be formed at the time requirement arose.[18]

Due to a lack of any major external threats, the growth of the army was slow, and the primary duties of the army quickly moved towards internal security by the mid-1950s, the same time as the first Ceylonese Army Commander Major General Anton Muttukumaru took command of the army. The first internal security operation of the Ceylon Army began in 1952, code named Operation Monty to counter the influx of illegal South Indian immigrants brought in by smugglers on the north-western coast, in support of Royal Ceylon Navy coastal patrols and police operations. This was expanded and renamed as Task Force Anti Illicit Immigration (TaFII) in 1963 and continued up to 1981 when it was disbanded. The Army was mobilised to help the police to restore peace under provincial emergency regulations during the 1953 hartal, the 1956 Gal Oya Valley riots and in 1958 it was deployed for the first time under emergency regulations throughout the island during the 1958 Riots.[20]

During the 1950s and 1960s the army was called upon to carry to essential services when the workers went on strike which were organised by the left-wing parties and trade unions for various reasons, the most notable was the 1961 Colombo Port strike, during which ships threatened to bypass Colombo port and the country almost starved. To counter these common strikes several units were formed, who were employed in development work when there were no strikes. New regiments were formed, which included the Ceylon Armoured Corps, Ceylon Sinha Regiment and the Ceylon Pioneer Corps.[20]

In 1962 several senior officers attempted a military coup, which was stopped hours before it was launched. Thereafter the government mistrusted the military and reduced the size and growth of the army, especially the volunteer force, disbanding several units and forming the Gemunu Watch.

 
Sri Lanka Army flags

In 1971, the Army found itself facing a full blown insurgency, when the JVP Insurrection broke out in April 1971. Having been caught by surprise, as a result of failure to comprehend the magnitude of the insurgency from intelligence reports. Although completely ill-prepared to deal with an insurgency, lacking weapons, ammunition, equipment and training; the army responded quickly and successfully defeated the insurgency by the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna by mid 1971.

In May 1972, when Ceylon was proclaimed a republic and changed its name from the Dominion of Ceylon to the Republic of Sri Lanka, all Army units were renamed accordingly.[21]

By the late 1970s the army was confronted with a new conflict, this time with Tamil militant groups in the north of the island. The Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) emerged as the prominent of these Tamil militant groups. The war escalated to the point where India intervened as a peacekeeping force. This was later seen as a tactical error, as the Indian Peace Keeping Force united nationalist elements such as the JVP to politically support the LTTE in their call to evict the IPKF. This led to a second insurgency by the JVP, forcing the army to deploy its forces in the south of the island and to fight on two fronts between 1987 and 1989. The 1980s saw a massive expiation of the army from 15,000 personal to over 30,000 and more. New regiments were raised, while others were expanded with new battalions. New weapons and equipment were introduced as the war shifted from counter-insurgency to conventional warfare tactics, with multi battalion, brigade and division scale operations. New regiments were formed which included the Commando Regiment, Special Forces Regiment, Mechanized Infantry Regiment, Gajaba Regiment, Vijayabahu Infantry Regiment, Military Intelligence Corps, Sri Lanka Army Women's Corps, Sri Lanka Rifle Corps and the Sri Lanka National Guard.

The war with the LTTE was halted several times for peace negotiations, the last of which following the signing of a ceasefire agreement in 2002 with the help of international mediation. However, renewed violence broke out in December 2005 and following the collapse of peace talks, the Army has been involved in the heavy fighting that has resumed in the north and east of the country.

Since 1980 the army has undertaken many operations against the LTTE rebels. The major operations conducted by the army eventually led to the recapture of Jaffna and other rebel strongholds. On 19 May 2009 Sri Lankan army declare the victory of war as they found the dead body of LTTE leader Velupillai Prabhakaran. This marked the end of the war, with the LTTE ceasing to exist in Sri Lanka as a result of prolonged military offensives conducted by Sri Lanka army.[22] The Sri Lankan Armed Forces, including the army, have been accused of committing war crimes during the war, particularly during the final stages.[23][24] A panel of experts appointed by UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon to advise him on the issue of accountability with regard to any alleged violations of international human rights and humanitarian law during the final stages of the civil war found "credible allegations" which, if proven, indicated that war crimes and crimes against humanity were committed by the Sri Lankan Armed Forces and the Tamil Tigers.[25][26][27]

Deployments

 
Military gathering on Galle Face Green in Colombo

As of present, the bulk of the Sri Lankan Army is deployed for domestic defensive and combat operations, while a sizable foreign deployment is maintained.

Domestic

Due to the Sri Lankan Civil War the army has been on a constant mobilized (including reservist) state since the 1980s. The majority of the army has been deployed in the North and Eastern provinces of the country, which includes 14 Divisions coming under six operational headquarters and 2 independent Divisions and several independent Brigades. The army is also based in other parts of the island for internal security including a Division for the defence of the capital.

Foreign

The Sri Lanka Army currently participates in several major overseas deployments:

Peacekeeping

The Sri Lanka Army has taken part in two peacekeeping missions with United Nations over the course of its history. First assignment was in the Congo (ONUC) (1960–1963). Most recently, following the signing of a ceasefire agreement was signed between the government and the LTTE in 2002, Sri Lankan forces were invited by the United Nations to be part of the UN peacekeeping force in Haiti. In the process of the peacekeeping operations, two soldiers were killed in a raid in Petit-Goave.[35] After over 6 months of service, the first contingent of the peacekeeping force returned to Sri Lanka on May 17, 2005.[36] In December 2007, 7th rotation of the Sri Lankan contingent had been deployed with a force of 991 officers and other ranks, many of those deployed have been awarded the United Nations Medal for their services.[37] In November 2007, 114 members of the 950 member Sri Lankan Army peacekeeping mission in Haiti was accused of sexual misconduct and abuse[38][39] which resulted in 108 members, including three officers, being sent back after being implicated in alleged misconduct and sexual abuse where sex was exchanged for money and valuable items, with some acts considered rape as they involved those under 18.[40][39][41][42] In January 2019, a Sri Lankan army officer and trooper on peace keeping duty in Mali were killed and three more wounded when their convoy came under an IED attack.[43] The incident prompted the army to accelerate its Avalon program.[44]

Sri Lanka Army's newest contingent of 243 professionally-trained Army personnel in the Combat Convoy Company (CCC), well-prepared to serve in the United Nations (UN) Multidimensional Integrated Stabilization Mission in Mali (MINUSMA) left the island on the 21st of April 2021.[45]

Organization structure

The professional head of the army is the Commander of the Army. He is assisted by the Chief of Staff of the Sri Lanka Army and a Deputy Chief of Staff. The Commandant of the Volunteer Force is head of the Army Volunteer Force and is responsible for the administration and recruitment of all reserve units and personal. The Army Headquarters, housed in the Defence Headquarters Complex in Sri Jayawardenapura Kotte is the main administrative and the operational headquarters of the Sri Lanka Army.[46]

Administrative

The Army Headquarters is divided into a number of branches, namely the General Staff (GS) branch responsible for coordination of operations and training and the Adjutant General's (AGs) branch responsible for personal administration, welfare, medical services, and rehabilitation. The Quarter Master General's (QMGs) branch is responsible for feeding, transport, movement, and construction and maintenance. The Master General of Ordnance's (MGOs) branch is responsible for procurement and maintenance of vehicles and special equipment.[47] The Military Secretary's Branch is responsible for handling all matters pertaining to officers such as promotions, postings and discipline. Each branch is headed by an officer in the rank of Major General who is directly responsible to the Commander of the Army for the smooth functioning of the Branch. Under each Branch, there are several Directorates, each headed by a Brigadier.[47]

The headquarters of field formations each have its own staff. For instance a divisional headquarters is divided into a GS branch as an AQ branch, each headed by a Colonel and is responsible for operations & training and administration & logistics respectively. Similarly, a Brigade Major and Major AQ is responsible for operations and administration in a brigade.[47]

Like the Indian Army, the Sri Lanka Army has largely retained the British-style regimental system that it inherited upon independence. The individual regiments (such as the Sri Lanka Light Infantry and the Sri Lanka Sinha Regiment) operate independently and recruit their own members. Officers tend to remain in a single battalion throughout their careers. The infantry battalion, the basic unit of organization in field operations, includes five companies of four platoons each. Typical platoon has three squads (sections) of ten personnel each. In addition to the basic infantry forces, a commando regiment was also established in 1986. Support for the infantry is provided by an armoured regiment, five reconnaissance regiments, three mechanized infantry regiments, five field artillery regiments, a rocket artillery regiment, three commando regiments, three special forces regiments, six field engineering regiments, five signals battalions, a medical corps, and a variety of logistics units.[48]

Regiments and corps

[17]

Name Headquarters/Regimental Centre Regular Units Volunteer Units Headquarters Units
Armoured Corps Rock House Army Camp 5 2 0
Artillery Panagoda Cantonment 9 2 0
Engineers Panagoda Cantonment 10 2 0
Signals Corps Panagoda Cantonment 10 1 1
Light Infantry Panagoda Cantonment 16 6 1
Sinha Regiment Ambepussa Camp 14 6 1
Gemunu Watch Kuruwita Army Camp 15 6 1
Gajaba Regiment Saliyapura Camp 14 6 1
Vijayabahu Infantry Regiment Boyagane Camp 15 6 1
Mechanized Infantry Regiment Dambulla 4 1 0
Commando Regiment Ganemulla 4 0 1
Special Forces Regiment Naula 4 0 0
Military Intelligence Corps Polhengoda 4 2 0
Engineer Services Regiment Panagoda Cantonment 7 9 0
Service Corps Panagoda Cantonment 7 2 0
Medical Corps Boralesgamuwa 4 1 0
Ordnance Corps Dombagoda 6 1 0
Electrical and Mechanical Engineers Slave Island 7 1 0
Corps of Military Police Polhengoda 7 0 0
General Service Corps Panagoda Cantonment 3 3 0
Women's Corps Borella 2 4 0
Rifle Corps Pallekele 0 2 0
Pioneer Corps Matugama 0 2 0
National Guard Kurunegala 0 19 1

Operational command

Organized and controlled by the Army General Staff at Army HQ, various formations are raised from time to time to suit various security requirements and operations in the country and overseas. The Army at present has deployed 12 Divisions, 7 task forces and several independent brigades. Except for the 11 Division based at the Panagoda Cantonment which is responsible for the maintenance of capability for the defense of the capital, all other divisions, task forces and brigades are deployed for operations in the Northern and Eastern provinces of Sri Lanka, coming under five regional commands known as Security Forces Headquarters, which are the Security Forces Headquarters Jaffna (SFHQ-J), Wanni (SFHQ-W), East (SFHQ-E), Mullaittivu (SFHQ-MLT), West (SFHQ-W) and Central (SFHQ-C). One Security Forces Headquarters, the SFHQ-KLN was disbanded in 2021.

Each SFHQ and most divisions are commanded by a General Officer Commanding in the rank of Major General. A SFHQ has several divisions under its command and each division is further divided into brigades. Each brigade is commanded by an officer in the rank of Brigadier and has a number of Infantry battalions, support arms (Artillery, Engineers and Signals) and support services (Service Corps, Engineering Services, Ordnance Corps, Electrical and Mechanical Engineers) under assigned to it. There are also several administrative brigades (Artillery Brigade, Armored Brigade, etc.) and the Air Mobile Brigade.

In other parts of the country, there are Area and Sub-Area Headquarters. Armour, Artillery, Engineers and Signals Units are grouped under Brigade Headquarters of their own arm; Armored Brigade, Artillery Brigade and so on.

Formations

Army Headquarters Formation
  • Independent Brigade HQ
  • Commander Security Unit
SLAVF Headquarters
1 Corps, based in Kilinochchi
Security Forces Headquarters - Jaffna (SFHQ-J)
Security Forces Headquarters - Wanni (SFHQ-W)[49]
Security Forces Headquarters - East (SFHQ-E)
Security Forces Headquarters – Mullaitivu (SFHQ-MLT)[49]
Security Forces Headquarters – West (SFHQ-W)[52]
Security Forces Headquarters – Central (SFHQ-C)
Army Training Command
Logistic Command
Specialist Formations

Training

At the formation of the Ceylon Army in 1949, the need to train a standing army was felt strongly since the Ceylon Defence Force had operated on a regimental training model to maintain the efficiency of its volunteers culminating with the annual two week training camp at the garrison town of Diyatalawa, in the Badulla District which became the traditional training grounds for the newly formed army. The Army Recruit Training Depot was established in Diyatalawa in 1950 and later renamed as the Army Training Centre. Officer cadets were sent to the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst, along with specialized training at trade schools of the British Army, while officers of field rank were sent to the Staff College, Camberley and to the Royal College of Defence Studies. With the economic limitations in the 1960s, focus was given for local training in order to save foreign exchange. The army initiated basic officer training at the Army Training Centre in 1968. With the rapid expansion of the army in the 1980s and 1990s saw the establishment of local specialist and trade schools, along with staff colleges and a defence university. At present the Army Training Command (ARTRAC) with its headquarters at Diyatalawa formulates all training doctrine of the army and all its training centres. ARTRAC directs all army training establishments, regimental training establishments and battalion training schools.[53]

All pre-commissioning training for officers are carried out at the Sri Lanka Military Academy (SLMA) (formally the Army Training Centre) and at the Volunteer Force Training School situated in Diyatalawa. The officer cadets graduating from SLMA are commissioned as officers in the regular and volunteer forces. The course for officer cadets runs for ninety weeks and includes training in tactics and administration which helps prepare the cadets to take up the positions of platoon and company commanders. The course consisted of military and academic subjects and also trained the cadets physically. The course helps to promote leadership qualities and the understanding of each one's role as an officer and a servant of the state. Due to the lack of officers within the lower levels, the training process was sped up in the 1980s by developing a short commission course. The cadets were given a training of fifty-six weeks and devoted themselves to continue their careers in the military with the mandatory ten years of service for regular army officers and five years of service for volunteer officers. Once completing their basic training at SLMA, junior officers would receive specialized training at training centres which would include young officers courses in their area of specialization followed by advanced training on weapon systems.[47][48]

Junior field officers attended the Junior Staff Course at the Officer Career Development Centre followed by the Command and Staff Course at the Defence Services Command and Staff College (DSCSC) at Batalanda, Makola which was established in 1997 as the Army Command and Staff College. Officers may attend specialist long courses such as the Logistics Staff Course is conducted at the Army School of Logistics which was established in 2011. Senior field officers attend the prestigious National Defence College (NDC) in Colombo which is the highest level of training.[47][48]

The General Sir John Kotelawala Defence University (KDU) formed in 1981 and situated in Ratmalana, fourteen kilometers south of Colombo, as only university specializing in defence studies in the island. Each year, approximately fifty cadets from all three services are admitted to the university (aged 18–22) to participate in a three-year programme of academic work and as sent to their service academies for their final year of training. In addition KDU conducts postgraduate and masters programs in defence related subjects for officers who attend staff and defence courses at DSCSC and NDC.[47][48]

Training for the new recruits are carried out by the Army Training School in Maduru Oya and at several locations by training battalions, followed by additional specialized training in arms or trade at training centres such as the Infantry Training Centre in Minneriya and the Combat Training School in Ampara.[47][48]

At its formation the armed forces of Sri Lanka had limited indigenous training facilities, especially in technical and advanced roles, they have depended greatly on military training provided by foreign countries. The United Kingdom played a major role in the early years following independence and have continued to be an important source of military expertise to the Sri Lankan military. Other sources include India, Pakistan, the United States, Australia and Malaysia. Additionally, in an agreement reached in 1984, Israeli security personnel (reportedly from Shin Bet, the Israeli counterespionage and internal security organisation) trained army officers in counterinsurgency techniques. With the rapid expansion of the army, in recent years it has expanded its training facilities locally.[48]

The Sri Lankan Army has also provided special training to the United States Army on their request as well as many other countries in military education regarding civilian rescue, jungle combat, and guerilla warfare etc.[54]

Training establishments

Personnel

The Sri Lanka Army presently stands at 200,000 strong[3] including 2,960 women plus and 58,000 reservists.[56]

In late 1987, the army had a total estimated strength of up to 40,000 troops, about evenly divided between regular army personnel and reservists on active duty. The approximately 20,000 regular army troops represented a significant increase over the 1983 strength of only 12,000. Aggressive recruitment campaigns following the 1983 riots raised this number to 16,000 by early 1985.[48] By 1990 the army had expanded to over 90,000 personnel and by 2007, it had expanded to over 120,000.[5]

Since the Sri Lankan armed forces are all volunteer services, all personal in the Sri Lanka Army have volunteered as regular personnel or reservists. This should not be confused with the traditional term volunteers used for reservists or reservist units. Recruitment of the personal are carried island wide with a restrictions in the northern and eastern provinces during the civil war in those areas. The Rifle Corps is the only territorial unit that carries out recruitment from a specific area. In June 2009, Sri Lanka announced plans to create a "Tamil regiment" to promote integration in the army.[57]

Parama Weera Vibhushanaya recipients

The Parama Weera Vibhushanaya is the highest award for valour awarded in the Sri Lankan armed forces. Army recipients include;

Notable fallen members

Over 23,790 Sri Lankan armed forces personnel were killed since begin of the civil war in 1981 to its end in 2009, this includes 12 generals killed in active duty or assassinated.[58] 659 service personnel were killed due to the second JVP Insurrection from 1987 to 1990. 53 service personnel were killed and 323 were wounded in the first JVP Insurrection from 1971 to 1972.[59] Notable fallen members include;

Directorate of Rehabilitation

The Directorate of Rehabilitation was established with the intention and focus towards the rehabilitation of Officers and Other Ranks Wounded in Action. However, with the increase of a number of casualties due to the operations, the Sri Lanka Army proceeded to utilize the services of battle casualties with the view of obtaining a productive service from these individuals. As a result, under mentioned institutes had been established.[64]

  • Ranaviru Sevana
  • Ranaviru Apparels
  • Abhimansala Wellness Resort 1 (Anuradhapura)
  • Abhimansala Wellness Resort 2 (Kamburupitiya)
  • Abhimansala Wellness Resort 3 (Panagoda)
  • Ranaviru Resources Centre
  • Mihindu Seth Medura

Women in the Sri Lanka Army

Making a corps for women was dreamed by former Commander of the Army General Denis Perera who became commander in October 1977. Gen. Perera sought help from the British Army's Women's Royal Army Corps and in 1978 three females were sent to Britain for officer training. They returned to Sri Lanka in August 1979 after completion of eight months of training. The corps was officially formed on September 14, 1979, with one battalion (the 1st regular battalion).

The first three female cadets to enroll the army were K.C. Jayaweera, M.P Wijegunawardena and V.P. Senevitathna (trained in Britain) and the first batch of female cadets to be trained in Sri Lanka was commissioned from the Sri Lanka Military Academy on 18 August 1984.[65] On 16 October 1980, ten women were recruited for N.C.O. training and were given the basic Army training at the Army Training Centre, Diyatalawa. These N.C.O.s passed out in November 1980. The three officers and ten N.C.O.s participated at the Independence Day celebrations held at the Galle Face Green for the first time in 1981 and Women's Corps has been a part of the country's Independence celebrations ever since.[65] Lieutenant Colonel (later Brigadier) A.W. Thambiraja (male) was the first Commanding Officer of the 1st regular battalion (1 SLAWC) and Major K.C. Weerasekara was promoted to Lt. Col. in 1993; she was the first woman to be promoted to this rank from this corps and was also the first woman to be appointed as the commanding officer of the 1 SLAWC in 1989 in the rank of Major.

The regimental centre of the corps was established on 17 November 1997 at Borella. Male Major General W.A.A. de Silva RSP USP was the first Colonel Commandant of the Regiment and female Lieutenant Colonel M.H.P.S. Perera, USP was the first Centre Commandant. Major General H.I.G. Wijerathna, USP was the first female colonel commandant of this regiment who served from 2008 to 2010 and Brigadier D.T.N. Munasinghe was the second female to be appointed as the colonel commandant in 2016.[66][67][68]

The primary aim of raising Women's Corps was to provide telephone operators, computer operators, nurses and clerks, to release the male counterparts to the battle field. However, women soldiers were also employed on field duties later.[69][70] Six more battalions were created in the 1990s and 2000s.

Over 25 female soldiers have been killed in action with the first in 1997.[71] In 2021, a special 'Women Corps Quick Reaction Rider Team' was formed to operate in an emergency situation in Jaffna; female soldiers were in motorcycles.[72]

Equipment

In the 1980s, the army expanded its range of weapons from the original stock of World War II-era British Lee–Enfield rifles, Sten Submachine guns, Vickers machine guns, Bren machine guns, 6-inch coastal guns, Daimler Armoured Cars, Bren Gun Carriers,[73] 40 mm anti-aircraft guns, 3.7-inch heavy anti-aircraft guns and 4.2-inch heavy mortars as well as post war Alvis Saladins, Alvis Saracen, Ferrets and Shorland S55s. New sources of weaponry in the mid-to-late 1970s included the Soviet Union, Yugoslavia, and China – countries with which the leftist Bandaranaike government had close ties.

To meet the threat posed by predominantly the LTTE, Army purchased modern military hardware including 50-caliber heavy machine guns, rocket-propelled grenade (RPG) launchers, Night Vision Devices, 106 mm recoilless rifles, 60 mm and 81 mm mortars, 40 mm grenade launchers and some sniper rifles. Refurbished armored personnel carriers were added to the 'A' vehicle fleet of the 1st Reconnaissance Regiment, Sri Lanka Armoured Corps. These APCs enabled the Armoured Corps to have their own assault troops to provide close contact protection to their Alvis Saladin and Ferret Scout Cars which were vulnerable to anti-tank weapons. The capability of the Sri Lanka Artillery was enhanced with the introduction of Ordnance QF 25 pounders.[48][74] Chinese-made 122 mm, 130 mm and 152 mm howitzers were introduced to the Sri Lankan Army in 1995 and 1998 whilst 122 mm Multi Barrel Rocket Launchers (MBRL), were first used in 2000 by the Sri Lanka Army.[75]

Though the weapons were obsolete at the time of purchase, security forces found them to be successful in combat. Land mines proved to be the most lethal threat to personnel, as a number of mines were deployed against unprotected trucks and buses by the LTTE in the northern and eastern Provinces. These land mines weighed approximately 50 – 100 kg, against which no armoured vehicle that the SLA possessed was able to withstand the blast effect. Consequently, Armscor BuffelsSouth African armoured personnel carriers constructed on a Unimog chassis – were imported in quantity. By 1987 Sri Lanka's indigenous Unicorn APC had been engineered from the Buffel, followed by the improved Unibuffel class.[76] Both the Unicorn and the Unibuffel are assembled by the Sri Lanka Electrical & Mechanical Engineers (SLEME).[48][74]

In recent years, Sri Lanka has become increasingly reliant on China for weapons.[77] This is due to most European nations and the United States Governments passing regulations about the selling of weaponry to nations which are suffering from internal conflict.[78] However the United States has expressed its intent to maintain military training assistance. Recently the Sri Lankan Army started to produce locally weapons such as a new multiple rocket launcher, with 10 barrels and a firing range of 20 km.[79] The SLEME is also producing vehicles for transport, the UniCOLT series trucks,[80] and landmine-resistant vehicles, the UniAIMOVs and the UniAVALONs.[81] In 2020, the Army shipped several modernized Unibuffels to the Sri Lankan forces who are serving in a peacekeeping mission in Mali.[82]

Sri Lanka also continues to receive a variety of weapons from Britain, India, Japan, Pakistan, Israel and other former suppliers.[77][83]

Armour

 
Sri Lanka Army WZ551 APC
 
Unibuffel MK II Armored Personnel Carrier – Sri Lanka Army
 
Type 89 (YW534) Armored Fighting Vehicles
 
Sri Lanka Army BTR80A
 
Sri Lanka Army MT-55A Armored Vehicle-launched Bridge pulled by Tatra T815 Truck
 
Unicob Mine-Resistant Ambush-Protected Vehicle (MRAPV)
Type Origin Quantity Notes
Main battle tanks
T-55AM2   Czechoslovakia 62[84] Czech variant based on T-55 of Soviet Union
Type 69   China 30+[85] In reserve
Type 59   China 90+ In reserve
Infantry fighting vehicles
BMP-3   Soviet Union 50[86]
BMP-2   Soviet Union 49[84]
BMP-1   Soviet Union 13[84]
Armoured cars
Land Rover Hotspur   United Kingdom N/A
UniAIMOV   Sri Lanka N/A 4x4 Light armored High-Mobility/Forward Command vehicle
Armoured personnel carriers
Type 89 (YW534)   China 15+[87] Tracked
Type 85 (YW531H)   China 32+ Tracked, amphibious
Type 63 (YW531)   China 20+[88] Tracked
BTR-80   Russia 25[84] Wheeled
Type 92 (WZ551)   China 200 Wheeled
Buffel   South Africa 31[84] Mine-protected APC
Unibuffel   Sri Lanka 60+ Locally manufactured, mine-protected APC
Unicorn   Sri Lanka 70+ Locally manufactured, mine-protected APC
Avalon   Sri Lanka N/A[89] 6x6 Mine-Resistant Ambush Protected Command vehicle
Unicob   Sri Lanka N/A Mine Resistant Ambush Protected Vehicle
Engineering support vehicles
VT-55   Czechoslovakia 18+[90] Armoured recovery vehicle
MT-55A   Czechoslovakia 14+[91] Armoured vehicle-launched bridge

Multi Purpose Trucks

Type Origin Quantity Notes
UniCOLT   Sri Lanka N/A Multi Purpose Truck
Tata Model 1210 SD   India Field Artillery Tractor
Tata Defence Troop Carrier LPT 709   India Troop carrier
Ashok Leyland Stallion   India Troop carrier
NORTHBENZ Tiema XC2200   China Troop carrier, Field Artillery Tractor
Tatra 815   Czech Republic Troop Carrier, Heavy Equipment Transporter
Sinotruk HOWO 371   China Heavy Equipment Transporter
Tata LPTA 1628 6x6   India Used for UN missions.

Artillery

 
RM-70 Multi Barrel Rocket Launcher – Sri Lanka Army
Type Origin Quantity Notes
Rocket artillery
RM-70 Multiple rocket launcher   Czechoslovakia 22[84]
Towed artillery
Type 56 85 mm field gun   China N/A[84] 85 mm field gun
Type 66 152 mm gun-howitzer 40[84] 152 mm gun-howitzer
Type 59 130mm field gun 40[84] 130 mm field gun
Type 60 122mm howitzer 74[84] 122 mm howitzer
Ordnance QF 25 pounder   United Kingdom N/A Field guns – ceremonial gun troop
76 mm mountain gun M48   Yugoslavia N/A
Mortars
M-43   Soviet Union 55[84] 160 mm heavy mortar
Type 86 (W86)   China 55 120 mm towed mortar
Type 84 (W84) N/A 82 mm mortar
Type 89 (W89) N/A 60 mm light mortar
Weapon locating radar
AN/TPQ-36 Firefinder Radar   United States N/A Weapon locating and counter-battery radar
SLC-2 Radar   China N/A

Infantry weapons

Handguns Country of manufacture
M9   Italy
Glock 17   Austria
Glock 19   Austria
CZ 75   Czech Republic
Assault rifles
Type 56 (ceremonial use only)[92]   China
Type 56-2   China
Type 81 assault rifles[93]   China
M16   USA
M4 Carbine   USA
SAR-21   Singapore
QBZ-95   China
SAR-80 (Retd)[92]   Singapore
FN FNC (Retd)   Belgium
G3 (Retd)   Germany
Sub-machine guns
MP5 (MP5A3, MP5SD6, MP5KA5)   Germany
Uzi submachine guns[92]   Israel
Taurus SMT-9   Brazil
Sniper rifles Country of manufacture
Accuracy International L96A1[94]   UK
Heckler & Koch PSG1 sniper rifles   Germany
Machine guns
Type 80[95]   China
FN Minimi[92]   Belgium
FN MAG[92]   Belgium
M240 machine gun   USA
HK21 Belt-fed light machine gun[96]   West Germany
Grenade launchers
Milkor MGL grenade launcher[92]   South Africa
HK 69 breech-loading grenade launcher[92]   Germany
M203 grenade launcher[92]   USA
STK 40 AGL automatic grenade launcher[92]   Singapore
Rocket Launchers
M72 LAW   USA
RPO-A Shmel man-portable rocket launcher   Russia
Type 12 RPG rocket launchers[48]   China
IMI Shipon shoulder-launched rocket system   Israel
Anti-tank weapons
HJ-8 Anti-tank guided missile   China
Carl Gustaf 8.4cm recoilless rifle   Sweden

Welfare

Sri Lanka Army Seva Vanitha Unit

 
Sri Lanka Army Seva Vanitha Unit President with the presidents of Regimental Branches

Inaugurated on 12 July 1984,[97] Sri Lanka Army Seva Vanitha Unit[98] functions with the main objective of providing welfare facilities to the next of kin of war heroes who have sacrificed their lives, gone missing in action or injured whilst defending the sovereignty and territorial integrity of their motherland while also empowering the families of the serving Army personnel. Traditionally the organization functions under the leadership of the wife of the serving Commander of the Army, and the members are the spouses of Army Officers as well as Lady Officers. The organization extends to 22 Regimental branches[99][97] functioning under the patronage of the wives of the respective Regimental Commanders.

Sri Lanka Army Seva Vanitha Unit conducts various welfare projects such as Viru Kekulu pre-schools, day care centres, welfare shops, bakeries and salons,[100] with the committed contribution of the dedicated membership. Construction of houses, giving away of educational scholarships and assisting in times of natural disasters, are done at both organizational and Regimental levels. The volunteer service extended by the spouses of the Army Officers whilst multitasking at their roles as wives, mothers and professionals, is an immense strength to Sri Lanka Army.[100]

Gallery

See also

Further reading

  • Army, Sri Lanka. (1st Edition – October 1999). Sri Lanka army: 50 years on, 1949–1999 ISBN 978-955-8089-02-6

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External links

  • Official website
  • Ministry of Defence Sri Lanka
  • General Sir John Kotelawala Defence University

lanka, army, army, sinhala, හම, romanized, Śrī, laṃkā, yuddha, hamudāva, tamil, இலங, இர, வம, romanized, ilankai, iraṇuvam, oldest, largest, lanka, armed, forces, established, ceylon, army, 1949, renamed, when, lanka, became, republic, 1972, 2010, army, approxi. The Sri Lanka Army SL Army Sinhala ශ ර ල ක ය ද ධ හම ද ව romanized Sri Laṃka yuddha hamudava Tamil இலங க இர ண வம romanized Ilankai iraṇuvam is the oldest and largest of the Sri Lanka Armed Forces Established as the Ceylon Army in 1949 it was renamed when Sri Lanka became a republic in 1972 In 2010 the Army had approximately 200 000 regular personnel between 20 000 and 40 000 reserve volunteer personnel and 18 000 National Guardsmen 5 6 and comprises 13 divisions one air mobile brigade one commando brigade one special forces brigade one independent armored brigade three mechanized infantry brigades and over 40 infantry brigades 7 From the 1980s to 2009 the army was engaged in the Sri Lankan Civil War Sri Lanka ArmySinhala ශ ර ල ක ය ද ධ හම ද ව Tamil இலங க இர ண வம Emblem of the Sri Lanka ArmyFoundedOctober 10 1949 73 years ago 1949 10 10 1 CountrySri LankaAllegianceSri LankaTypeArmyRoleLand warfareSize250 000 personnel 2 3 Part ofSri Lanka Armed ForcesHeadquartersArmy Headquarters Sri Jayawardenapura KotteMotto s Latin Pro Patria For the Fatherland ColoursGold blue and orange AnniversariesArmy Day 10 October 1 Engagements1971 JVP Insurrection1987 89 JVP InsurrectionSri Lankan Civil WarDecorationsMilitary awards and decorations of Sri LankaWebsitewww wbr army wbr lkCommandersCommander in ChiefRanil Wickremesinghe President of Sri Lanka Commander of the ArmyLieutenant General Vikum LiyanageChief of Staff of the ArmyMajor General Channa Weerasuriya 4 Deputy Chief of Staff of the ArmyMajor General Sujeewa Senarath YapaNotablecommandersField Marshal Sarath Fonseka General Sepala Attygalle General Hamilton Wanasinghe Lieutenant General Denzil KobbekaduwaMajor General Vijaya Wimalaratne Major General Bertram Heyn Major General Anton MuttukumaruInsigniaFlagPresidential Colour The Army Headquarters is situated in Sri Jayawardenepura Kotte Commander of the Army is the highest appointment in the army who commands the army and is assisted by the Chief of Staff of the Army and Deputy Chief of Staff of the Army 8 9 The Commander in Chief of the Sri Lanka Armed Forces is the President of Sri Lanka who heads the National Security Council through the Ministry of Defence which is charged with formulating executing defence policy and procurements for the armed forces 10 Contents 1 Background 1 1 Pre Anuradhapura period to the Transitional period 1 2 Transitional period 1 3 Kandyan period 2 History 2 1 British Ceylon period 2 2 Contemporary Sri Lanka 3 Deployments 3 1 Domestic 3 2 Foreign 3 3 Peacekeeping 4 Organization structure 4 1 Administrative 4 2 Regiments and corps 4 3 Operational command 4 4 Formations 5 Training 5 1 Training establishments 6 Personnel 6 1 Parama Weera Vibhushanaya recipients 6 2 Notable fallen members 6 3 Directorate of Rehabilitation 6 4 Women in the Sri Lanka Army 7 Equipment 7 1 Armour 7 2 Multi Purpose Trucks 7 3 Artillery 7 4 Infantry weapons 8 Welfare 8 1 Sri Lanka Army Seva Vanitha Unit 9 Gallery 10 See also 11 Further reading 12 References 13 External linksBackground EditPre Anuradhapura period to the Transitional period Edit The first military engagements in Sri Lankan history were marked by the advent of Prince Vijaya a prince from the Bengal region who landed along with his followers on the beaches of northwestern Sri Lanka around 543 BC Prince Vijaya and his followers occupied the lands of the native Vedda people Repeated incursions by South Indians particularly the Cholas into Sri Lankan territory occurred throughout the next few centuries and led to the engagement of the rival forces in battle 11 In one famous encounter Sinhalese King Dutugamunu 161 37 BC raised an army of eleven thousand in his battle against the Chola invader Elara whom he eventually defeated Dutugemunu s organisational skills bravery and chivalry are famous and his battles have gone down in history as outstanding offensive operations 12 Other Sri Lankan monarchs whose military achievements stand out include Gajabahu I 113 35 who sailed to India to bring back his captured soldiers and Dhatusena 463 79 who is credited with repulsing numerous Indian invasions and for organising a naval build up to deter seaborne attacks He also had the foresight to cover his defences with artillery Vijayabahu I 1055 1110 was another warrior king who dislodged Indian invaders and united the country Parakramabahu the Great 1153 86 was an outstanding monarch of the Polonnaruwa period and his accomplishments as a military leader and a great administrator are noteworthy His reign included a military expedition to Burma in retaliation for indignities inflicted on his envoys and Burmese interference in the elephant trade This marked the first overseas expedition in Sri Lankan military history It is also reported that Parakramabahu s fame was such that his assistance was sought by South Indian rulers who were involved in internecine struggles Another strong ruler in the Transitional period of Sri Lanka was Parakramabahu VI who defeated Indian invaders united the island and ruled it from capital Kotte 12 Although the known epigraphical records do not indicate that the Sri Lankan rulers had a full time standing army at their disposal there is evidence supported by legend designation name place and tradition that prove there were stand by equestrian elephant and infantry divisions to ensure royal authority at all times Militias were raised as the necessity arose and the soldiers returned to their pursuits mainly for farming after their spell of military duty 12 Transitional period Edit A Portuguese illustration of Sinhalese warriors produced c 1540 Parts of Sri Lanka came under the control of three colonial European powers namely the Portuguese in the 16th century the Dutch in the 17th century and the British in the 18th century Yet until the entire island was ceded to the British in 1815 regional kingdoms maintained most of their independent defense forces and were able to successfully repulse repeated thrusts by the European armies However the British unlike their counterparts were not primarily restricted to maritime power and thus had the capability to bring the entire island under their control and to integrate locals into the British defense forces 12 At the beginning of the 16th century modern Europe first came in contact with Sri Lanka In 1505 a Portuguese fleet while operating in the Indian seas against Arab traders was blown off course and landed at Galle on the southern coast of the island 13 In 1517 the Portuguese re appeared and with the consent of the Sinhalese King established a trading post in Colombo Having initiated contact with Sri Lanka as traders the Portuguese soon made themselves political masters of the western seaboard Numerous forts were soon established and features of European civilisation was introduced 12 The Portuguese are credited with the introduction of European style fortresses to Sri Lanka during this era Although some locals already possessed military training and fighting experience there is no evidence that the Portuguese employed local inhabitants into their own forces Thus the Portuguese were forced to restrict their presence in the island due to their small numbers and their efforts were more focused toward projecting maritime power 12 In 1602 Dutch explorers first landed in Sri Lanka By 1658 they had completely ousted the Portuguese from the coastal regions of the island Much like the Portuguese they did not employ locals in their military and preferred to live in isolation pursuing their interests in trade and commerce Like the Portuguese they defended their forts with their own forces but unlike the Portuguese Dutch forces employed Swiss and Malay mercenaries The Dutch Forts in Jaffna Galle Matara Batticaloa and Trincomalee were sturdily built and are considered a tribute to their military engineering skills Also like the Portuguese the Dutch focussed on maritime power and although they had the capability to develop and use local forces they chose to isolate themselves from the local population 12 Kandyan period Edit The British Empire then ousted the Dutch from the coastal areas of the country and sought to conquer the independent Kandyan Kingdom In the face of repeated British assaults the Kandyans were forced into a degree of guerilla warfare and fared well against their superior British adversaries 12 Initially the British stationed their forces which included naval vessels artillery troops and infantry to defend the island nation from other foreign powers using the natural harbor of Trincomalee as their headquarters in Sri Lanka In 1796 the Swiss and Malay mercenaries who were previously in the service of the Dutch were transferred to the British East India Company While the Swiss Regiment de Meuron left in 1806 and was eventually disbanded in Canada in 1822 the Malays who initially formed a Malay Corps were converted into the 1st Ceylon Regiment in 1802 and placed under a British commanding officer In the same year the British became the first foreign power to raise a Sinhalese unit which was named the 2nd Ceylon Regiment also known as the Sepoy Corps 12 In 1803 the 3rd Ceylon Regiment was created with Moluccans and recruits from Penang All these regiments fought alongside British troops in the Kandyan Wars which began in 1803 Throughout the following years more Sinhalese and Malays were recruited to these regiments and in 1814 the 4th Regiment was raised which was composed entirely of African troops It was later renamed as the Ceylon Rifle Regiment Eventually the Kandyan Kingdom was ceded to the British in 1815 and with that they gained control over the whole island Resistance to British occupation cropped up almost instantly During the first half century of occupation the British faced a number of uprisings and were forced to maintain a sizable army in order to guarantee their control over the island After the Matale Rebellion led by Puran Appu in 1848 in which a number of Sinhalese recruits defected to the side of the rebels the recruitment of Sinhalese to the British forces was temporarily halted 12 History EditBritish Ceylon period Edit First Prime Minister of Independent Sri Lanka D S Senanayake visiting the 1st battalion of the CLI at the Echelon Square and watching volunteers being trained to handle light machine guns Ceylon Light Infantry VolunteersThe second phase in the employment of non British personnel commenced in 1881 after the enactment of an ordinance designed to authorise the creation of a Volunteer Corps in the island It was designated the Ceylon Light Infantry Volunteers CLIV This move compensated for the disbandment of the Ceylon Rifle Regiment in 1874 The Ceylon Light Infantry Volunteers was originally administered as a single unit However over the years various sections of the volunteers grew large enough to become independent from their parent unit The different units that emerged from the Volunteer Force were the Cadet Battalion Ceylon Light Infantry Ceylon Artillery Volunteers Ceylon Engineers Ceylon Mounted Infantry CMI Ceylon Planters Rifle Corps CPRC 12 Ceylon Supply amp Transport Corps Ceylon Volunteer Medical CorpsCeylon Defence ForceMain article Ceylon Defence Force Brigadier James Sinclair Earl of Caithness inspecting a guard of honour wearing khaki drill In 1910 the name of the military was formally changed to the Ceylon Defence Force CDF It continued to grow throughout the early period of the 20th century The CDF saw active service when a contingent of the Ceylon Mounted Infantry CMI in 1900 and a contingent of the Ceylon Planters Rifle Corps CPRC in 1902 took part in the Second Boer War in South Africa Their services were recognised by the presentation in 1902 of a colour to the CMI and a presentation in 1904 of a banner to the CPRC In 1922 the CDF was honoured by the presentation of the King s and Regimental colours to the Ceylon Light Infantry CLI 12 During the First World War many volunteers from the Defence Force travelled to Great Britain and joined the British Army and many of them were killed in action One of them mentioned by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle was Private Jacotine of the CLI who was the last man left alive in his unit at the Battle of Lys 14 and who continued to fight for 20 minutes before he was killed 15 In 1939 the CDF was mobilised and an enormous expansion took place which required the raising of new units such as the Ceylon Signals Corps the Auxiliary Territorial Service Ceylon and also the Colombo Town Guard which had been previously disbanded but was later re formed to meet military requirements During the Second World War Britain assumed direct control over the Armed Forces of Ceylon 16 Contemporary Sri Lanka Edit At the end of World War II CDF which had increased in size during the war began demobilisation In 1948 Sri Lanka gained independence from Britain becoming a Dominion within the Commonwealth and a year earlier Ceylon entered into the bi lateral Anglo Ceylonese Defence Agreement of 1947 This was followed by the Army Act No 17 of 1949 which was passed by Parliament on April 11 1949 and formalised in Gazette Extraordinary No 10028 of October 10 1949 marked the creation of the Ceylon Army consisting of a regular and a volunteer force the later being the successor of the disbanded CDF 17 18 Therefore October 10 1949 is considered the day the Ceylon Army was raised and as such October 10 is celebrated annually as Army Day Brigadier James Sinclair Earl of Caithness was appointed as Commandant of the Ceylon Army The Defence Agreement of 1947 provided the assurance that British would come to the aid of Ceylon in the event it was attacked by a foreign power and provided British military advisers to build up the country s military In November a Ceylon Army Guard takes over duties at Echelon Barracks from the Guard of the British Army 19 The Army Headquarters Ceylon was established in Colombo with a General Staff Branch an Adjutant General Branch a Quartermaster General Branch and a Pay and Records Branch Soon after the Headquarters Ceylon Volunteer Force was established The initial requirement was to raise an artillery regiment an engineer squadron an infantry battalion a medical unit and a service corps company For much of the 1950s the army was preoccupied with the task of building itself and training existing and new personal To this aim the British Army Training Team BATT advisory group carried out training for ex members of the CDF within the Ceylon Army field rank officers were sent to the British Army Staff College Camberley and some attached to units of the British Army of the Rhine to gain field experience Newly recruited officer cadets were sent for training at Royal Military Academy Sandhurst stating with 10 officer cadets in 1950 which continued until the 1968 and both officers and other ranks were sent to specialist training courses in Britain India Pakistan and Malaya There were no formations and all units were structured to directly function under the Army Headquarters However temporary field headquarters were to be formed at the time requirement arose 18 Due to a lack of any major external threats the growth of the army was slow and the primary duties of the army quickly moved towards internal security by the mid 1950s the same time as the first Ceylonese Army Commander Major General Anton Muttukumaru took command of the army The first internal security operation of the Ceylon Army began in 1952 code named Operation Monty to counter the influx of illegal South Indian immigrants brought in by smugglers on the north western coast in support of Royal Ceylon Navy coastal patrols and police operations This was expanded and renamed as Task Force Anti Illicit Immigration TaFII in 1963 and continued up to 1981 when it was disbanded The Army was mobilised to help the police to restore peace under provincial emergency regulations during the 1953 hartal the 1956 Gal Oya Valley riots and in 1958 it was deployed for the first time under emergency regulations throughout the island during the 1958 Riots 20 During the 1950s and 1960s the army was called upon to carry to essential services when the workers went on strike which were organised by the left wing parties and trade unions for various reasons the most notable was the 1961 Colombo Port strike during which ships threatened to bypass Colombo port and the country almost starved To counter these common strikes several units were formed who were employed in development work when there were no strikes New regiments were formed which included the Ceylon Armoured Corps Ceylon Sinha Regiment and the Ceylon Pioneer Corps 20 In 1962 several senior officers attempted a military coup which was stopped hours before it was launched Thereafter the government mistrusted the military and reduced the size and growth of the army especially the volunteer force disbanding several units and forming the Gemunu Watch Sri Lanka Army flags In 1971 the Army found itself facing a full blown insurgency when the JVP Insurrection broke out in April 1971 Having been caught by surprise as a result of failure to comprehend the magnitude of the insurgency from intelligence reports Although completely ill prepared to deal with an insurgency lacking weapons ammunition equipment and training the army responded quickly and successfully defeated the insurgency by the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna by mid 1971 In May 1972 when Ceylon was proclaimed a republic and changed its name from the Dominion of Ceylon to the Republic of Sri Lanka all Army units were renamed accordingly 21 By the late 1970s the army was confronted with a new conflict this time with Tamil militant groups in the north of the island The Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam LTTE emerged as the prominent of these Tamil militant groups The war escalated to the point where India intervened as a peacekeeping force This was later seen as a tactical error as the Indian Peace Keeping Force united nationalist elements such as the JVP to politically support the LTTE in their call to evict the IPKF This led to a second insurgency by the JVP forcing the army to deploy its forces in the south of the island and to fight on two fronts between 1987 and 1989 The 1980s saw a massive expiation of the army from 15 000 personal to over 30 000 and more New regiments were raised while others were expanded with new battalions New weapons and equipment were introduced as the war shifted from counter insurgency to conventional warfare tactics with multi battalion brigade and division scale operations New regiments were formed which included the Commando Regiment Special Forces Regiment Mechanized Infantry Regiment Gajaba Regiment Vijayabahu Infantry Regiment Military Intelligence Corps Sri Lanka Army Women s Corps Sri Lanka Rifle Corps and the Sri Lanka National Guard The war with the LTTE was halted several times for peace negotiations the last of which following the signing of a ceasefire agreement in 2002 with the help of international mediation However renewed violence broke out in December 2005 and following the collapse of peace talks the Army has been involved in the heavy fighting that has resumed in the north and east of the country Since 1980 the army has undertaken many operations against the LTTE rebels The major operations conducted by the army eventually led to the recapture of Jaffna and other rebel strongholds On 19 May 2009 Sri Lankan army declare the victory of war as they found the dead body of LTTE leader Velupillai Prabhakaran This marked the end of the war with the LTTE ceasing to exist in Sri Lanka as a result of prolonged military offensives conducted by Sri Lanka army 22 The Sri Lankan Armed Forces including the army have been accused of committing war crimes during the war particularly during the final stages 23 24 A panel of experts appointed by UN Secretary General Ban Ki moon to advise him on the issue of accountability with regard to any alleged violations of international human rights and humanitarian law during the final stages of the civil war found credible allegations which if proven indicated that war crimes and crimes against humanity were committed by the Sri Lankan Armed Forces and the Tamil Tigers 25 26 27 Deployments Edit Military gathering on Galle Face Green in Colombo As of present the bulk of the Sri Lankan Army is deployed for domestic defensive and combat operations while a sizable foreign deployment is maintained Domestic Edit Due to the Sri Lankan Civil War the army has been on a constant mobilized including reservist state since the 1980s The majority of the army has been deployed in the North and Eastern provinces of the country which includes 14 Divisions coming under six operational headquarters and 2 independent Divisions and several independent Brigades The army is also based in other parts of the island for internal security including a Division for the defence of the capital Foreign Edit The Sri Lanka Army currently participates in several major overseas deployments Haiti an infantry battalion with support personal totaling around 1000 personal in Haiti as part of the United Nations Stabilization Mission in Haiti from 2004 to 2015 28 Chad a contingent of engineers joined the United Nations Mission in the Central African Republic and Chad on May 25 2010 29 30 Lebanon a mechanized infantry company with combat support personal in the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon since November 2010 31 South Sudan Sri Lanka Army s entry into South Sudan in 2014 as the newest member in the UN peace keeping family marks a milestone in the Army history Sri Lanka became the first country to deploy a surge contingent in South Sudan Army maintains a SRIMED Level 2 Hospital manned entirely by Sri Lanka s Sri Lanka Army Medical Corps personnel 32 33 Mali an infantry battalion with support personal that has been deployed as part of the United Nations Multidimensional Integrated Stabilization Mission in Mali in 2016 34 Peacekeeping Edit The Sri Lanka Army has taken part in two peacekeeping missions with United Nations over the course of its history First assignment was in the Congo ONUC 1960 1963 Most recently following the signing of a ceasefire agreement was signed between the government and the LTTE in 2002 Sri Lankan forces were invited by the United Nations to be part of the UN peacekeeping force in Haiti In the process of the peacekeeping operations two soldiers were killed in a raid in Petit Goave 35 After over 6 months of service the first contingent of the peacekeeping force returned to Sri Lanka on May 17 2005 36 In December 2007 7th rotation of the Sri Lankan contingent had been deployed with a force of 991 officers and other ranks many of those deployed have been awarded the United Nations Medal for their services 37 In November 2007 114 members of the 950 member Sri Lankan Army peacekeeping mission in Haiti was accused of sexual misconduct and abuse 38 39 which resulted in 108 members including three officers being sent back after being implicated in alleged misconduct and sexual abuse where sex was exchanged for money and valuable items with some acts considered rape as they involved those under 18 40 39 41 42 In January 2019 a Sri Lankan army officer and trooper on peace keeping duty in Mali were killed and three more wounded when their convoy came under an IED attack 43 The incident prompted the army to accelerate its Avalon program 44 Sri Lanka Army s newest contingent of 243 professionally trained Army personnel in the Combat Convoy Company CCC well prepared to serve in the United Nations UN Multidimensional Integrated Stabilization Mission in Mali MINUSMA left the island on the 21st of April 2021 45 Organization structure EditThe professional head of the army is the Commander of the Army He is assisted by the Chief of Staff of the Sri Lanka Army and a Deputy Chief of Staff The Commandant of the Volunteer Force is head of the Army Volunteer Force and is responsible for the administration and recruitment of all reserve units and personal The Army Headquarters housed in the Defence Headquarters Complex in Sri Jayawardenapura Kotte is the main administrative and the operational headquarters of the Sri Lanka Army 46 Administrative Edit The Army Headquarters is divided into a number of branches namely the General Staff GS branch responsible for coordination of operations and training and the Adjutant General s AGs branch responsible for personal administration welfare medical services and rehabilitation The Quarter Master General s QMGs branch is responsible for feeding transport movement and construction and maintenance The Master General of Ordnance s MGOs branch is responsible for procurement and maintenance of vehicles and special equipment 47 The Military Secretary s Branch is responsible for handling all matters pertaining to officers such as promotions postings and discipline Each branch is headed by an officer in the rank of Major General who is directly responsible to the Commander of the Army for the smooth functioning of the Branch Under each Branch there are several Directorates each headed by a Brigadier 47 The headquarters of field formations each have its own staff For instance a divisional headquarters is divided into a GS branch as an AQ branch each headed by a Colonel and is responsible for operations amp training and administration amp logistics respectively Similarly a Brigade Major and Major AQ is responsible for operations and administration in a brigade 47 Like the Indian Army the Sri Lanka Army has largely retained the British style regimental system that it inherited upon independence The individual regiments such as the Sri Lanka Light Infantry and the Sri Lanka Sinha Regiment operate independently and recruit their own members Officers tend to remain in a single battalion throughout their careers The infantry battalion the basic unit of organization in field operations includes five companies of four platoons each Typical platoon has three squads sections of ten personnel each In addition to the basic infantry forces a commando regiment was also established in 1986 Support for the infantry is provided by an armoured regiment five reconnaissance regiments three mechanized infantry regiments five field artillery regiments a rocket artillery regiment three commando regiments three special forces regiments six field engineering regiments five signals battalions a medical corps and a variety of logistics units 48 Regiments and corps Edit Main article List of current Sri Lanka Army regiments and corps 17 Name Headquarters Regimental Centre Regular Units Volunteer Units Headquarters UnitsArmoured Corps Rock House Army Camp 5 2 0Artillery Panagoda Cantonment 9 2 0Engineers Panagoda Cantonment 10 2 0Signals Corps Panagoda Cantonment 10 1 1Light Infantry Panagoda Cantonment 16 6 1Sinha Regiment Ambepussa Camp 14 6 1Gemunu Watch Kuruwita Army Camp 15 6 1Gajaba Regiment Saliyapura Camp 14 6 1Vijayabahu Infantry Regiment Boyagane Camp 15 6 1Mechanized Infantry Regiment Dambulla 4 1 0Commando Regiment Ganemulla 4 0 1Special Forces Regiment Naula 4 0 0Military Intelligence Corps Polhengoda 4 2 0Engineer Services Regiment Panagoda Cantonment 7 9 0Service Corps Panagoda Cantonment 7 2 0Medical Corps Boralesgamuwa 4 1 0Ordnance Corps Dombagoda 6 1 0Electrical and Mechanical Engineers Slave Island 7 1 0Corps of Military Police Polhengoda 7 0 0General Service Corps Panagoda Cantonment 3 3 0Women s Corps Borella 2 4 0Rifle Corps Pallekele 0 2 0Pioneer Corps Matugama 0 2 0National Guard Kurunegala 0 19 1Operational command Edit Organized and controlled by the Army General Staff at Army HQ various formations are raised from time to time to suit various security requirements and operations in the country and overseas The Army at present has deployed 12 Divisions 7 task forces and several independent brigades Except for the 11 Division based at the Panagoda Cantonment which is responsible for the maintenance of capability for the defense of the capital all other divisions task forces and brigades are deployed for operations in the Northern and Eastern provinces of Sri Lanka coming under five regional commands known as Security Forces Headquarters which are the Security Forces Headquarters Jaffna SFHQ J Wanni SFHQ W East SFHQ E Mullaittivu SFHQ MLT West SFHQ W and Central SFHQ C One Security Forces Headquarters the SFHQ KLN was disbanded in 2021 Each SFHQ and most divisions are commanded by a General Officer Commanding in the rank of Major General A SFHQ has several divisions under its command and each division is further divided into brigades Each brigade is commanded by an officer in the rank of Brigadier and has a number of Infantry battalions support arms Artillery Engineers and Signals and support services Service Corps Engineering Services Ordnance Corps Electrical and Mechanical Engineers under assigned to it There are also several administrative brigades Artillery Brigade Armored Brigade etc and the Air Mobile Brigade In other parts of the country there are Area and Sub Area Headquarters Armour Artillery Engineers and Signals Units are grouped under Brigade Headquarters of their own arm Armored Brigade Artillery Brigade and so on Formations Edit Main article List of current Sri Lanka Army formations Army Headquarters FormationIndependent Brigade HQ Commander Security UnitSLAVF Headquarters1 Corps based in KilinochchiReserve Strike Force 53 Division based at Inamaluwa Dambulla 49 Air Mobile Brigade 532 Brigade 533 Brigade 58 Division 581 Brigade 582 Brigade 583 Brigade Special Operations Force Commando Brigade Special Forces BrigadeSecurity Forces Headquarters Jaffna SFHQ J 51 Division based in Jaffna 511 Brigade 512 Brigade 513 Brigade 52 Division based in the Jaffna Peninsula 521 Brigade 522 Brigade 523 Brigade 55 Division based in Elephant Pass Military Base Jaffna Peninsula 49 551 Brigade 552 Brigade 553 BrigadeSecurity Forces Headquarters Wanni SFHQ W 49 Area Headquarters Mannar Mannar 21 Division 54 Division 56 Division 61 Division 62 DivisionSecurity Forces Headquarters East SFHQ E 22 Division based in Trincomalee 50 23 Division based in Poonani Batticaloa District 51 24 DivisionSecurity Forces Headquarters Mullaitivu SFHQ MLT 49 59 Division operating in the Mullaittivu District 64 Division operating in the Mullaittivu District 68 Division Kombavil Mullaittivu DistrictSecurity Forces Headquarters West SFHQ W 52 14 Division based in Colombo Western Province formerly Operation Command Colombo 141 Brigade based in Gampaha 142 Brigade based in Colombo and Kalutara 143 Brigade based in Puttalam and Kurunegala 61 DivisionSecurity Forces Headquarters Central SFHQ C 11 Division 111 Kandy Brigade 12 DivisionArmy Training CommandLogistic CommandSpecialist FormationsEngineers Division Armored Brigade Artillery Brigade Mechanized Infantry Brigade Signals Brigade Corps of Agriculture and LivestockTraining EditMain articles Military academies in Sri Lanka and List of military academies in Sri Lanka At the formation of the Ceylon Army in 1949 the need to train a standing army was felt strongly since the Ceylon Defence Force had operated on a regimental training model to maintain the efficiency of its volunteers culminating with the annual two week training camp at the garrison town of Diyatalawa in the Badulla District which became the traditional training grounds for the newly formed army The Army Recruit Training Depot was established in Diyatalawa in 1950 and later renamed as the Army Training Centre Officer cadets were sent to the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst along with specialized training at trade schools of the British Army while officers of field rank were sent to the Staff College Camberley and to the Royal College of Defence Studies With the economic limitations in the 1960s focus was given for local training in order to save foreign exchange The army initiated basic officer training at the Army Training Centre in 1968 With the rapid expansion of the army in the 1980s and 1990s saw the establishment of local specialist and trade schools along with staff colleges and a defence university At present the Army Training Command ARTRAC with its headquarters at Diyatalawa formulates all training doctrine of the army and all its training centres ARTRAC directs all army training establishments regimental training establishments and battalion training schools 53 All pre commissioning training for officers are carried out at the Sri Lanka Military Academy SLMA formally the Army Training Centre and at the Volunteer Force Training School situated in Diyatalawa The officer cadets graduating from SLMA are commissioned as officers in the regular and volunteer forces The course for officer cadets runs for ninety weeks and includes training in tactics and administration which helps prepare the cadets to take up the positions of platoon and company commanders The course consisted of military and academic subjects and also trained the cadets physically The course helps to promote leadership qualities and the understanding of each one s role as an officer and a servant of the state Due to the lack of officers within the lower levels the training process was sped up in the 1980s by developing a short commission course The cadets were given a training of fifty six weeks and devoted themselves to continue their careers in the military with the mandatory ten years of service for regular army officers and five years of service for volunteer officers Once completing their basic training at SLMA junior officers would receive specialized training at training centres which would include young officers courses in their area of specialization followed by advanced training on weapon systems 47 48 Junior field officers attended the Junior Staff Course at the Officer Career Development Centre followed by the Command and Staff Course at the Defence Services Command and Staff College DSCSC at Batalanda Makola which was established in 1997 as the Army Command and Staff College Officers may attend specialist long courses such as the Logistics Staff Course is conducted at the Army School of Logistics which was established in 2011 Senior field officers attend the prestigious National Defence College NDC in Colombo which is the highest level of training 47 48 The General Sir John Kotelawala Defence University KDU formed in 1981 and situated in Ratmalana fourteen kilometers south of Colombo as only university specializing in defence studies in the island Each year approximately fifty cadets from all three services are admitted to the university aged 18 22 to participate in a three year programme of academic work and as sent to their service academies for their final year of training In addition KDU conducts postgraduate and masters programs in defence related subjects for officers who attend staff and defence courses at DSCSC and NDC 47 48 Training for the new recruits are carried out by the Army Training School in Maduru Oya and at several locations by training battalions followed by additional specialized training in arms or trade at training centres such as the Infantry Training Centre in Minneriya and the Combat Training School in Ampara 47 48 At its formation the armed forces of Sri Lanka had limited indigenous training facilities especially in technical and advanced roles they have depended greatly on military training provided by foreign countries The United Kingdom played a major role in the early years following independence and have continued to be an important source of military expertise to the Sri Lankan military Other sources include India Pakistan the United States Australia and Malaysia Additionally in an agreement reached in 1984 Israeli security personnel reportedly from Shin Bet the Israeli counterespionage and internal security organisation trained army officers in counterinsurgency techniques With the rapid expansion of the army in recent years it has expanded its training facilities locally 48 The Sri Lankan Army has also provided special training to the United States Army on their request as well as many other countries in military education regarding civilian rescue jungle combat and guerilla warfare etc 54 Training establishments EditTraining Centres 55 Sri Lanka Military Academy SLMA Officer Career Development Centre OCDC Army School of Logistics ASL Volunteer Force Training School VFTS Army Training School ATS Infantry Training Centre ITC Combat Training School CTS Army Physical Education Centre APEC Marksman Sniper Training School MSTS Centre for Army Vocational Training CAVT Institute of Peacekeeping Support Operations Training Sri Lanka IPSOT SL Regimental Training Centres 55 Armoured Corps Training Centre School of Artillery Sri Lanka School of Military Engineering Sri Lanka Signal Corps Training School Mechanized Infantry Training Centre Commando Regiment Training School Commando Regimental Special Warfare Training School Special Forces Training School Special Forces Combat Diving Training School Special Forces Jungle Warfare Training School Military Intelligence Training School Airmobile Training School Engineer Services Trade School Army Service Corps Training School Sri Lanka Army Military School of Nursing Sri Lanka Army Ordnance School Sri Lanka Electrical And Mechanical Engineers School Sri Lanka Corps of Military Police School Sri Lanka Army General Service Corps Trade SchoolPersonnel EditSee also Sri Lanka Army historic senior officers The Sri Lanka Army presently stands at 200 000 strong 3 including 2 960 women plus and 58 000 reservists 56 In late 1987 the army had a total estimated strength of up to 40 000 troops about evenly divided between regular army personnel and reservists on active duty The approximately 20 000 regular army troops represented a significant increase over the 1983 strength of only 12 000 Aggressive recruitment campaigns following the 1983 riots raised this number to 16 000 by early 1985 48 By 1990 the army had expanded to over 90 000 personnel and by 2007 it had expanded to over 120 000 5 Since the Sri Lankan armed forces are all volunteer services all personal in the Sri Lanka Army have volunteered as regular personnel or reservists This should not be confused with the traditional term volunteers used for reservists or reservist units Recruitment of the personal are carried island wide with a restrictions in the northern and eastern provinces during the civil war in those areas The Rifle Corps is the only territorial unit that carries out recruitment from a specific area In June 2009 Sri Lanka announced plans to create a Tamil regiment to promote integration in the army 57 Parama Weera Vibhushanaya recipients Edit The Parama Weera Vibhushanaya is the highest award for valour awarded in the Sri Lankan armed forces Army recipients include Colonel A F Lafir Lieutenant Colonel Lalith Jayasinghe Major G S Jayanath Major K A Gamage Captain Saliya Upul Aladeniya Captain H G M H I Megawarna Lieutenant U G A S Samaranayake Second Lieutenant K W T Nissanka Warrant Officer 2nd Class Pasan Gunasekera Staff Sergeant H G S Bandara Sergeant D M S Chandrasiri Bandara Sergeant P N Suranga Corporal Gamini Kularatne Corporal K Chandana Corporal P M Nilantha Pushpa Kumara Corporal A M N P Abesinghe Lance Corporal W I M Seneviratne Lance Corporal T G D R Dayananda Lance Corporal R M D M Rathnayake Lance Corporal A M B H G Abeyrathnebanda Notable fallen members Edit Over 23 790 Sri Lankan armed forces personnel were killed since begin of the civil war in 1981 to its end in 2009 this includes 12 generals killed in active duty or assassinated 58 659 service personnel were killed due to the second JVP Insurrection from 1987 to 1990 53 service personnel were killed and 323 were wounded in the first JVP Insurrection from 1971 to 1972 59 Notable fallen members include Lt Gen Denzil Kobbekaduwa Overall Operational Commander Northern Sector 60 Lt Gen Parami Kulatunga Former Deputy Chief of the Staff of the Army 60 Lt Gen Nalin Angammana Former GOC 3 Division 61 Maj Gen Vijaya Wimalaratne Former Jaffna Brigade Commander 60 Maj Gen Lakshman Lucky Wijayaratne Former brigade commander 22 Brigade 61 Maj Gen Percy Fernando Former deputy GOC 54 Division 61 Maj Gen Larry Wijeratne Former brigade commander 51 4 Brigade 61 Maj Gen Susantha Mendis Former brigade commander 51 2 Brigade 61 Maj Gen Janaka Perera Former Chief of Staff of the Sri Lanka Army Overall Operational Commander of Northern Sector General Officer Commanding GOC of the 53 Division Maj Gen Ananda Hamangoda Former brigade commander 51 2 Brigade 62 Brig Ariyasinghe Ariyapperuma Former Commander Northern Command Brig Bhathiya Jayatilleka former Brigade commander 54 1 brigade Brig Rohitha Neil Akmeemana former Brigade commander Elephant Pass 61 Col Tuan Nizam Muthaliff Former commanding officer 1st Battalion Military Intelligence Corps 63 Maj Noel Weerakoon first army officer killed in action during the 1971 Insurrection Directorate of Rehabilitation Edit The Directorate of Rehabilitation was established with the intention and focus towards the rehabilitation of Officers and Other Ranks Wounded in Action However with the increase of a number of casualties due to the operations the Sri Lanka Army proceeded to utilize the services of battle casualties with the view of obtaining a productive service from these individuals As a result under mentioned institutes had been established 64 Ranaviru Sevana Ranaviru Apparels Abhimansala Wellness Resort 1 Anuradhapura Abhimansala Wellness Resort 2 Kamburupitiya Abhimansala Wellness Resort 3 Panagoda Ranaviru Resources Centre Mihindu Seth MeduraWomen in the Sri Lanka Army Edit Main article Sri Lanka Army Women s Corps Making a corps for women was dreamed by former Commander of the Army General Denis Perera who became commander in October 1977 Gen Perera sought help from the British Army s Women s Royal Army Corps and in 1978 three females were sent to Britain for officer training They returned to Sri Lanka in August 1979 after completion of eight months of training The corps was officially formed on September 14 1979 with one battalion the 1st regular battalion The first three female cadets to enroll the army were K C Jayaweera M P Wijegunawardena and V P Senevitathna trained in Britain and the first batch of female cadets to be trained in Sri Lanka was commissioned from the Sri Lanka Military Academy on 18 August 1984 65 On 16 October 1980 ten women were recruited for N C O training and were given the basic Army training at the Army Training Centre Diyatalawa These N C O s passed out in November 1980 The three officers and ten N C O s participated at the Independence Day celebrations held at the Galle Face Green for the first time in 1981 and Women s Corps has been a part of the country s Independence celebrations ever since 65 Lieutenant Colonel later Brigadier A W Thambiraja male was the first Commanding Officer of the 1st regular battalion 1 SLAWC and Major K C Weerasekara was promoted to Lt Col in 1993 she was the first woman to be promoted to this rank from this corps and was also the first woman to be appointed as the commanding officer of the 1 SLAWC in 1989 in the rank of Major The regimental centre of the corps was established on 17 November 1997 at Borella Male Major General W A A de Silva RSP USP was the first Colonel Commandant of the Regiment and female Lieutenant Colonel M H P S Perera USP was the first Centre Commandant Major General H I G Wijerathna USP was the first female colonel commandant of this regiment who served from 2008 to 2010 and Brigadier D T N Munasinghe was the second female to be appointed as the colonel commandant in 2016 66 67 68 The primary aim of raising Women s Corps was to provide telephone operators computer operators nurses and clerks to release the male counterparts to the battle field However women soldiers were also employed on field duties later 69 70 Six more battalions were created in the 1990s and 2000s Over 25 female soldiers have been killed in action with the first in 1997 71 In 2021 a special Women Corps Quick Reaction Rider Team was formed to operate in an emergency situation in Jaffna female soldiers were in motorcycles 72 Equipment EditIn the 1980s the army expanded its range of weapons from the original stock of World War II era British Lee Enfield rifles Sten Submachine guns Vickers machine guns Bren machine guns 6 inch coastal guns Daimler Armoured Cars Bren Gun Carriers 73 40 mm anti aircraft guns 3 7 inch heavy anti aircraft guns and 4 2 inch heavy mortars as well as post war Alvis Saladins Alvis Saracen Ferrets and Shorland S55s New sources of weaponry in the mid to late 1970s included the Soviet Union Yugoslavia and China countries with which the leftist Bandaranaike government had close ties To meet the threat posed by predominantly the LTTE Army purchased modern military hardware including 50 caliber heavy machine guns rocket propelled grenade RPG launchers Night Vision Devices 106 mm recoilless rifles 60 mm and 81 mm mortars 40 mm grenade launchers and some sniper rifles Refurbished armored personnel carriers were added to the A vehicle fleet of the 1st Reconnaissance Regiment Sri Lanka Armoured Corps These APCs enabled the Armoured Corps to have their own assault troops to provide close contact protection to their Alvis Saladin and Ferret Scout Cars which were vulnerable to anti tank weapons The capability of the Sri Lanka Artillery was enhanced with the introduction of Ordnance QF 25 pounders 48 74 Chinese made 122 mm 130 mm and 152 mm howitzers were introduced to the Sri Lankan Army in 1995 and 1998 whilst 122 mm Multi Barrel Rocket Launchers MBRL were first used in 2000 by the Sri Lanka Army 75 Though the weapons were obsolete at the time of purchase security forces found them to be successful in combat Land mines proved to be the most lethal threat to personnel as a number of mines were deployed against unprotected trucks and buses by the LTTE in the northern and eastern Provinces These land mines weighed approximately 50 100 kg against which no armoured vehicle that the SLA possessed was able to withstand the blast effect Consequently Armscor Buffels South African armoured personnel carriers constructed on a Unimog chassis were imported in quantity By 1987 Sri Lanka s indigenous Unicorn APC had been engineered from the Buffel followed by the improved Unibuffel class 76 Both the Unicorn and the Unibuffel are assembled by the Sri Lanka Electrical amp Mechanical Engineers SLEME 48 74 In recent years Sri Lanka has become increasingly reliant on China for weapons 77 This is due to most European nations and the United States Governments passing regulations about the selling of weaponry to nations which are suffering from internal conflict 78 However the United States has expressed its intent to maintain military training assistance Recently the Sri Lankan Army started to produce locally weapons such as a new multiple rocket launcher with 10 barrels and a firing range of 20 km 79 The SLEME is also producing vehicles for transport the UniCOLT series trucks 80 and landmine resistant vehicles the UniAIMOVs and the UniAVALONs 81 In 2020 the Army shipped several modernized Unibuffels to the Sri Lankan forces who are serving in a peacekeeping mission in Mali 82 Sri Lanka also continues to receive a variety of weapons from Britain India Japan Pakistan Israel and other former suppliers 77 83 Armour Edit Sri Lanka Army WZ551 APC Unibuffel MK II Armored Personnel Carrier Sri Lanka Army Type 89 YW534 Armored Fighting Vehicles Sri Lanka Army BTR80A Sri Lanka Army MT 55A Armored Vehicle launched Bridge pulled by Tatra T815 Truck Unicob Mine Resistant Ambush Protected Vehicle MRAPV Type Origin Quantity NotesMain battle tanksT 55AM2 Czechoslovakia 62 84 Czech variant based on T 55 of Soviet UnionType 69 China 30 85 In reserveType 59 China 90 In reserveInfantry fighting vehiclesBMP 3 Soviet Union 50 86 BMP 2 Soviet Union 49 84 BMP 1 Soviet Union 13 84 Armoured carsLand Rover Hotspur United Kingdom N AUniAIMOV Sri Lanka N A 4x4 Light armored High Mobility Forward Command vehicleArmoured personnel carriersType 89 YW534 China 15 87 TrackedType 85 YW531H China 32 Tracked amphibiousType 63 YW531 China 20 88 TrackedBTR 80 Russia 25 84 WheeledType 92 WZ551 China 200 WheeledBuffel South Africa 31 84 Mine protected APCUnibuffel Sri Lanka 60 Locally manufactured mine protected APCUnicorn Sri Lanka 70 Locally manufactured mine protected APCAvalon Sri Lanka N A 89 6x6 Mine Resistant Ambush Protected Command vehicleUnicob Sri Lanka N A Mine Resistant Ambush Protected VehicleEngineering support vehiclesVT 55 Czechoslovakia 18 90 Armoured recovery vehicleMT 55A Czechoslovakia 14 91 Armoured vehicle launched bridgeMulti Purpose Trucks Edit Type Origin Quantity NotesUniCOLT Sri Lanka N A Multi Purpose TruckTata Model 1210 SD India Field Artillery TractorTata Defence Troop Carrier LPT 709 India Troop carrierAshok Leyland Stallion India Troop carrierNORTHBENZ Tiema XC2200 China Troop carrier Field Artillery TractorTatra 815 Czech Republic Troop Carrier Heavy Equipment TransporterSinotruk HOWO 371 China Heavy Equipment TransporterTata LPTA 1628 6x6 India Used for UN missions Artillery Edit RM 70 Multi Barrel Rocket Launcher Sri Lanka Army Type Origin Quantity NotesRocket artilleryRM 70 Multiple rocket launcher Czechoslovakia 22 84 Towed artilleryType 56 85 mm field gun China N A 84 85 mm field gunType 66 152 mm gun howitzer 40 84 152 mm gun howitzerType 59 130mm field gun 40 84 130 mm field gunType 60 122mm howitzer 74 84 122 mm howitzerOrdnance QF 25 pounder United Kingdom N A Field guns ceremonial gun troop76 mm mountain gun M48 Yugoslavia N AMortarsM 43 Soviet Union 55 84 160 mm heavy mortarType 86 W86 China 55 120 mm towed mortarType 84 W84 N A 82 mm mortarType 89 W89 N A 60 mm light mortarWeapon locating radarAN TPQ 36 Firefinder Radar United States N A Weapon locating and counter battery radarSLC 2 Radar China N AInfantry weapons Edit Handguns Country of manufactureM9 ItalyGlock 17 AustriaGlock 19 AustriaCZ 75 Czech RepublicAssault riflesType 56 ceremonial use only 92 ChinaType 56 2 ChinaType 81 assault rifles 93 ChinaM16 USAM4 Carbine USASAR 21 SingaporeQBZ 95 ChinaSAR 80 Retd 92 SingaporeFN FNC Retd BelgiumG3 Retd GermanySub machine gunsMP5 MP5A3 MP5SD6 MP5KA5 GermanyUzi submachine guns 92 IsraelTaurus SMT 9 BrazilSniper rifles Country of manufactureAccuracy International L96A1 94 UKHeckler amp Koch PSG1 sniper rifles GermanyMachine gunsType 80 95 ChinaFN Minimi 92 BelgiumFN MAG 92 BelgiumM240 machine gun USAHK21 Belt fed light machine gun 96 West GermanyGrenade launchersMilkor MGL grenade launcher 92 South AfricaHK 69 breech loading grenade launcher 92 GermanyM203 grenade launcher 92 USASTK 40 AGL automatic grenade launcher 92 SingaporeRocket LaunchersM72 LAW USARPO A Shmel man portable rocket launcher RussiaType 12 RPG rocket launchers 48 ChinaIMI Shipon shoulder launched rocket system IsraelAnti tank weaponsHJ 8 Anti tank guided missile ChinaCarl Gustaf 8 4cm recoilless rifle SwedenWelfare EditSri Lanka Army Seva Vanitha Unit Edit Main article Sri Lanka Army Seva Vanitha Unit Sri Lanka Army Seva Vanitha Unit President with the presidents of Regimental Branches Inaugurated on 12 July 1984 97 Sri Lanka Army Seva Vanitha Unit 98 functions with the main objective of providing welfare facilities to the next of kin of war heroes who have sacrificed their lives gone missing in action or injured whilst defending the sovereignty and territorial integrity of their motherland while also empowering the families of the serving Army personnel Traditionally the organization functions under the leadership of the wife of the serving Commander of the Army and the members are the spouses of Army Officers as well as Lady Officers The organization extends to 22 Regimental branches 99 97 functioning under the patronage of the wives of the respective Regimental Commanders Sri Lanka Army Seva Vanitha Unit conducts various welfare projects such as Viru Kekulu pre schools day care centres welfare shops bakeries and salons 100 with the committed contribution of the dedicated membership Construction of houses giving away of educational scholarships and assisting in times of natural disasters are done at both organizational and Regimental levels The volunteer service extended by the spouses of the Army Officers whilst multitasking at their roles as wives mothers and professionals is an immense strength to Sri Lanka Army 100 Gallery EditSri lanka Army SLA HJ 8 BMP 2 infantry fighting vehicle T 55AM2 SLA Unibuffel SLA MIR weapons SLA Bomb Disposal Units on Victory Day Parade WZ551 Type 92 armoured personnel carriers Combat Rider Teams Special Forces Regiment Type 59 130mm field gun Type 66 152 mm gun howitzerSee also EditAwards and decorations of the military of Sri Lanka Uniforms of the Sri Lanka Army Sri Lanka Army ranks and insignia Sri Lanka National GuardFurther reading EditArmy Sri Lanka 1st Edition October 1999 Sri Lanka army 50 years on 1949 1999 ISBN 978 955 8089 02 6References Edit a b SL celebrates 70th Army Day themorning lk 10 October 2019 Security News Sundayobserver lk Sri Lanka sundayobserver lk Archived from the original on 29 July 2010 Retrieved 25 July 2016 a b Almost A Decade After The End Of War Sri Lanka Military Is The 20th Biggest In The World Counterpoint 18 May 2018 Retrieved 4 July 2020 army lk 1 December 2022 https www army lk news major general channa weerasuriya new chief staff receives letter appointment a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help a b Country Reports on Human Rights Practices 2000 U S State Department 23 February 2001 Archived from the original on 7 June 2001 Retrieved 23 March 2007 The Island News Retrieved 6 February 2015 Deadly arsenals dot Sri Lanka Richard M Bennett Asia Times Online 5 August 2006 Archived from the original on 5 August 2006 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint unfit URL link Mahesh Senanayaka new Army Commander www dailymirror lk Lieutenant General Mahesh Senanayake appointed as new Army Commander www defence lk Archived from the original on 4 July 2017 Commander in Chief Completes One Year in Office Media Center for National Security 8 March 2007 Archived from the original on 28 September 2007 Retrieved 20 April 2007 Sri Lanka Army History The Ancient Time Sri Lanka Army Archived from the original on 2 February 2007 Retrieved 4 February 2007 a b c d e f g h i j k l Army Sri Lanka October 1999 Chapter 1 Sri Lanka Army 50 YEARS ON 1949 1999 1st ed Colombo Sri Lanka Army pp 1 3 ISBN 978 955 8089 02 6 The Portuguese in Sri Lanka 1505 1658 WWW Virtual Library Sri Lanka Retrieved 30 June 2004 Doyle Arthur Conan 20 March 2014 The Great War the British campaign in France and Flanders Volume 1 LONDON England ISBN 978 1 78394 624 2 OCLC 865473156 Indias com Sri Lankan Army Indias Retrieved 4 February 2006 History of the Sri Lanka Light Infantry Regiment Sri Lanka Army Sri Lanka Army Archived from the original on 8 July 2006 Retrieved 4 February 2006 a b Establishment Sri Lanka Army Sri Lanka Army Archived from the original on 26 March 2006 Retrieved 4 February 2006 a b Sergei de Silva Ranasinghe looks back at the early days of the Sri Lanka Army Retrieved 6 February 2015 1950 Fergusons Ceylon Directory Colombo Fergusons a b An evolving army and its role through time Sergei de Silva Ranasinghe s article on the early days of the Sri Lanka Army Retrieved 6 February 2015 Sri Lanka Army Marks 50 Years Washingtonpost AP News 10 October 1999 Archived from the original on 10 November 2012 Sri Lanka s Tamil Tigers admit defeat Christian Science Monitor May 17 2009 Rajapaksa vows to shield his army from international probe The Indian Express 27 May 2011 Sri Lankan army agrees to probe war crimes The Daily Telegraph Agence France Presse 15 February 2012 Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Report of the UNSG s panel of experts on accountability in SL The Island Sri Lanka 16 April 2011 UN panel admits international failure in Vanni war calls for investigations TamilNet 16 April 2011 Summary of UN Panel report Daily Mirror Sri Lanka 16 April 2011 Haiti MINUSTAH Facts and Figures Sri Lanka Army Defenders of the Nation Retrieved 6 February 2015 Ranil at Gangaramaya Dailymirror lk Breaking News Retrieved 6 February 2015 The Island Retrieved 6 February 2015 Army s UN Peace Keeping mission opens a new Hospital in South Sudan SL Army opens new hospital in South Sudan under UN Mission South Sudan ReliefWeb Retrieved 4 July 2020 SL Army contingent invited for UN Peacekeeping in Mali The Sunday Times Sri Lanka 2 U N peacekeepers killed in Haiti fighting San Diego Union Tribune 21 March 2005 Sri Lanka Light Infantry UN Peacekeeping Operations Sri Lanka Army Archived from the original on 4 February 2007 Retrieved 16 March 2007 Sri Lankan troops in Haiti honoured Williams Carol J 15 December 2007 U N confronts another sex scandal Los Angeles Times Retrieved 7 November 2008 a b Sri Lanka to probe UN sex claims BBC 3 November 2007 Retrieved 5 November 2007 Haiti Over 100 Sri Lankan blue helmets repatriated on disciplinary grounds UN United Nations 2 November 2007 Retrieved 4 November 2007 Reddy B Muralidhar 5 November 2007 Part of Sri Lankan contingent in Haiti to be sent back The Hindu Archived from the original on 6 November 2007 Retrieved 5 November 2007 UN confirms sex charges Sundaytimes 30 March 2008 Retrieved 30 March 2008 SL army contingent attacked in Mali Two killed three injured www dailymirror lk New locally made MPV better at withstanding mines SLEME The Sunday Times Sri Lanka Another Army contingent leaves for Mali on peacekeeping mission 21 April 2021 Sri Lanka Army Establishment Sri Lanka Army Organization structure www army lk Retrieved 4 July 2020 a b c d e f g Military Balance Sri Lanka Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies Archived from the original on 2 October 2006 Retrieved 14 March 2007 a b c d e f g h i j Training Sri Lanka Army Sri Lanka Army Retrieved 4 July 2020 a b c d Two Security Forces Headquarters established in Mullaitivu Kilinochchi Archived 2011 09 16 at the Wayback Machine Security Forces on a realistic path to achieve the set target Dailynews Archived 2008 08 02 at the Wayback Machine Columns Situation Report Retrieved 6 February 2015 Sri Lanka Army Defenders of the Nation Archived from the original on 19 December 2014 Retrieved 6 February 2015 Training Sri Lanka Army www army lk Retrieved 4 July 2020 Sri Lanka Sri Lanka Army to train US Army 15 May 2010 Retrieved 6 February 2015 a b Training Sri Lanka Army Sri Lanka Army Archived from the original on 10 April 2006 Retrieved 4 February 2006 Sri Lanka Nations Encyclopedia Retrieved 4 February 2007 Tamil unit for Sri Lanka s army BBC June 29 2009 Victory s price 6 200 Sri Lankan troops News smh com au 22 May 2009 Retrieved 30 May 2009 The Sunday Times Special Assignment Retrieved 6 February 2015 a b c Kanagaraarachchi Ramani 20 January 2007 Heroes who made the supreme sacrifice Daily News Associated Newspapers of Ceylon Archived from the original on 30 September 2007 Retrieved 25 May 2007 a b c d e f Heroes who made the supreme sacrifice Archived from the original on 30 September 2007 Ratnayake Brigadier Daya 30 July 2005 Noble in death as in life The Sunday Times Wijeya Newspapers Ltd Retrieved 18 August 2007 De Silva Senaka 1 June 2005 Senior Army officer shot dead Daily Mirror Wijeya Newspapers Ltd Archived from the original on 30 September 2007 Retrieved 3 June 2007 Directorate of Rehabilitation PDF About Inc Retrieved 10 April 2017 a b History Of 1 SLAWC alt army lk slawc Newly Appointed SLAWC Colonel Commandant Assumes Duties alt army lk slawc Sri Lanka Army Women s Corps Sri Lanka Army Sri Lanka Army Archived from the original on 28 January 2007 Retrieved 4 February 2007 Sri Lanka Army Women s Corps army lk Retrieved 25 July 2016 Sri Lankan Army Women s Corps About Inc Retrieved 4 February 2007 An officer and a lady You ve come a long way lass Sunday Observer Retrieved 8 October 2006 War Heroines army lk Sri Lanka Army Retrieved 5 May 2021 Woman soldiers now operate as special riders to monitor spread of COVID 19 in Jaffna Daily Mirror Retrieved 28 May 2021 Michael K Cecil Sri Lanka s Military The Search For A Mission 1 a b Army Sri Lanka October 1999 Chapter 1 Sri Lanka Army 50 YEARS ON 1949 1999 1st ed Colombo Sri Lanka Army p 393 ISBN 978 955 8089 02 6 Sri Lanka Army army lk Archived from the original on 7 July 2006 Retrieved 25 July 2016 SFrom Unicorn to Unibuffel sundayobserver Archived from the original on 30 September 2007 a b Bedi Rahul 2 June 2007 Sri Lanka turns to Pakistan China for military needs IANS Urdustan com Network Archived from the original on 4 June 2007 Retrieved 2 June 2007 Small Arms and Light Weapons Conference Report PDF Judith McDaniel Retrieved 23 July 2006 SL made multi barrel rocket launcher unveiled www dailymirror lk Retrieved 11 January 2021 Made in Sri Lanka UniCOLT Vehicles to be Manufactured at SLEME Workshop Sri Lanka Army www army lk Retrieved 11 January 2021 Sri Lanka Army s innovative new workshop Sri Lanka News Newsfirst 15 December 2020 Retrieved 11 January 2021 KATUGAMPALA MANOHARI Military engineers achieve success with modified Unibuffels Daily News Retrieved 11 January 2021 Naval surveillance is the millstone around LTTE s neck P K Balachanddran Archived from the original on 20 November 2003 Retrieved 17 October 2003 a b c d e f g h i j k Sri Lanka Army Equipment globalsecurity org Retrieved on 2013 06 09 Type 69 Main Battle Tank GlobalSecurity org 31 July 2005 Retrieved 15 March 2007 Sri Lanka LTTE International Institute For Strategic Studies 15 March 2007 Archived from the original on 22 July 2012 Retrieved 15 March 2007 ZSD89 Armoured Personnel Carrier sinodefence com 2007 Archived from the original on 12 December 2007 Retrieved 2 December 2007 Type 63 nation lk New locally made MPV better at withstanding mines SLEME The Sunday Times Sri Lanka Retrieved 6 January 2021 United Nations Register of Conventional Arms PDF United Nations 21 August 2003 Retrieved 16 March 2007 Saferworld s research project on arms and security in EU Associate Countries Czech Republic PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2 October 2008 a b c d e f g h i Smith Chris October 2003 In the Shadow of a Cease fire The Impacts of Small Arms Availability and Misuse in Sri Lanka PDF Small Arms Survey Archived from the original PDF on 12 August 2006 T 81 Assault Rifle SinoDefence Archived from the original on 14 February 2007 Retrieved 14 March 2007 Accuracy International L96A1 www MilitaryFactory com 16 January 2009 Retrieved 20 January 2009 Biography of Mikhail Kalashnikov VRQ International Inc 14 January 2004 Retrieved 15 March 2007 If You re Involved in Resolving the ibiblio org 5 January 1999 Retrieved 15 March 2007 a b About Us Army Seva Vanitha Unit alt army lk Retrieved 1 December 2018 Welcome to Army Seva Vanitha Unit alt army lk Retrieved 1 December 2018 Sri Lanka Army www army lk Retrieved 1 December 2018 a b About Us Army Seva Vanitha Unit alt army lk Retrieved 4 July 2020 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sri Lanka Army Official website Ministry of Defence Sri Lanka General Sir John Kotelawala Defence University Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sri Lanka Army amp oldid 1129642161, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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