The fallout of the spat between two headstrong and powerful personalities like Mahinda Rajapakse and Sarath Fonseka does not augur well for this small and beautiful Island nation struggling to leave the ravages of war behind, writes Nitin Gokhale.
Vellupillai Prabhakaran must be gloating in his grave.
The trinity that plotted his and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam's downfall has fallen out in less than a year.
Retired General Sarath Fonseka's arrest in Colombo by the military police on Monday night heralds the final chapter in the ongoing clash of egos between the powerful president and his former army chief.
Fonseka is being charged with "military offences", and plotting to kill Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapakse and his powerful brothers.
How things change!
Exactly a year ago, in February 2009, President Rajapakse, his tough talking brother, defence secretary Gotabaya and Lt Gen. Sarath Fonseka it seemed, could do no wrong. As a team, the trio had defied international opinion to launch an all out offensive that finally annihilated the LTTE in May 2009.
The Rajapakse brothers and Fonseka rightly took joint credit for what was seen as a rare military victory over an insurgency anywhere in the world.
Now the same officer, who was hailed as an authentic war hero, is facing a court martial on charges of revealing state secrets!
DBS Jayeraj, a seasoned Sri Lanka watcher, writes in his blog: 'General Fonseka widely regarded as the most successful army commander in post-independence Sri Lanka was roughly manhandled, assaulted and forcibly dragged away by military personnel who had saluted him with respect only a few months ago
the ex-army chief, who was the main challenger of President Mahinda Rajapakse in the recently-concluded presidential poll, is currently detained at a chalet within the Naval headquarters precincts in Colombo.'
Other accounts emanating from Colombo also suggest that Fonseka was humiliated and physically dragged by a posse of military policemen led by a major general.
The retired general is apparently being charged on various acts of commission and omission committed during his tenure as army chief. The charges include conspiracy against the commander-in-chief whilst in service, harbouring deserters while in service and indulging in corrupt practices relating to military procurements.
From all available indications, the general is most likely to face an in camera trial under military law.
The general was in the crosshairs of the Rajapakse brothers ever since he broke ranks late last year and quit from his largely ceremonial post of chief of defence staff (CDS).
Fonseka, who almost died in a suicide blast triggered by a female LTTE bomber in the army headquarter in April 2006, was promoted to the post of CDS in less than a week after he led the Army to a military victory over the LTTE.
The speculation at that point was that the President and his brothers felt Fonseka had become too powerful and that the large sections of the military were loyal to the general rather than to the country.
Fonseka was also seen as an authentic war hero by a large section of the majority Sinhala population. As Fonseka's stock rose, so did the mistrust and insecurity about him in the ruling political establishment and especially among the Rajapakse brothers who saw in Fonseka a possible challenger to their popularity. By promoting him overnight as CDS, the president
How India secretly helped Lanka destroy the LTTE
How the Lankan army crushed the LTTE
Why peace seems elusive in Sri Lanka
The story of Sri Lanka, then and now
'India wouldn't like to have a general on its southern flank'