Abstract:
Robert D. Kaplan in his book Monsoon (2010) transpired, "one diplomat told me that
the West should ostracize the Rajapaksa regime and not worry about it becoming a
linchpin of Chinese great-power strategy. As he saw it, hundreds of billions of dollars
of Chinese money invested in the U.S. economy was more central to American interests
than one more Chinese-built port in the Indian Ocean which, in any case, was of greater
concern to the Indian and Japanese navies than to Americans" (p.337). However, the
diplomat's calculations seem to be palpable contradictions since the completion of the
general elections. Hence, the above remarks about Sri Lanka being strongly entrenched
within the Chinese orbit and the U.S. being less interested in Sri Lanka's geostrategic
significance are profoundly flawed. Given the most recent developments in the US- Sri
Lanka nexus, it is credible to deduce the fact that Colombo has made rapid progression
in recalibrating its foreign policy since the fall of the Rajapaksa administration. The
visit of John Kerry juxtaposed with the proposed visit of Barrack Obama in December
evidently reflects the foreign policy trajectory of the current government. However, the
author attempts to examine the reasons which prompted the Sirisena administration to
adopt a pro-American foreign policy contrary to non-alignment. Nevertheless, the
objective of the author is to examine Washington-Colombo ties since 2009 from a
foreign policy perspective, based on the answers to the following research questions. Is
Sri Lanka's foreign policy change attributable to the developments in Geneva? Is
America's growing influence in Sri Lanka a result of strategic inroads made by China
since 2009? Or has Washington changed its policy towards Colombo since the defeat
of the Rajapaksa administration? The foreign policies of the two countries will be
examined from a Realist Perspective while assimilating George Modelski's (1962) and
Geoffrey Stern's (1995) views. Further, primary and secondary sources shall contribute
to qualitative research given the absence of an experimental design. Hence, the author
shall produce content based analysis primarily through archival research.