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A
CENTURY OF LOST OPPORTUNITIES
1900's -- Defiance and Confrontation
In 1900, after
eight hundred of subjugation and struggle, Ireland still
remained under British control. It was a treated as an
integral part of the British Empire, was subject to Queen
Victoria and was ruled from the British Parliament in
London. To all intent and purposes Ireland was a
subject nation that could not exercise any degree of
political or economic self determination.
In
spite of all of that, as well as the savagery endured at the
hands of the oppressor, Irish men and women remained defiant
and continued to struggle for freedom and independence.
In 1902, Arthur
Griffith, Editor of the United Irishman, presented to the third
annual convention of Cumann na nGaedheal the most revolutionary
political idea since the fall of Parnell; it was that the
elected Irish Members of Parliament should refuse to sit in
Westminster, demand reinstitution of the Irish Parliament of
1782, and pledge allegiance only to a king of Ireland, not to
the King of England. While the Liberator, Daniel O'Connell, had
once considered such unilateral action, he had not forced the
issue. Griffith provided a strategy of passive resistance by
turning an assembly of Irish MPs into a de facto constitutional
convention. Modeled on Frank Deak's policy, which resulted in
the Dual Monarchy of Austria-Hungary in 1867, Griffith
serialized his abstentionist program in the United Irishman as
the Resurrection of Hungary, and then published it as a pamphlet
and distributed it widely in 1904. The direct result of this
idea was the formation of Sinn Féin on 28th November 1905, as an
abstentionist political party, with internal self-reliance as
its principal plank, pledging never to recognize or use the
services or forces of the enemy.
The founders of
Sinn Féin were Arthur Griffith, Seán T. O'Kelly, Bulmer Hobson,
Countess Markiewicz and Seán Mac Diarmada. In addition to
contesting a Parliamentary election in North Leitrim in 1907,
Sinn Féin was also active locally, electing a number of men to
county councils and other local bodies.
(see contributing article)
The Ulster
Unionist Council, currently the governing body of the Ulster
Unionist Party, was founded on March 3, 1905 by Edward
James Saunderson as an all-Ireland Unionist party. The
Council consisted of delegates from the nine Ulster counties
and members of the Orange Order, the largest Protestant
organization in Ireland. Its main objective was to counter
the ongoing campaign for Home Rule and to preserve the union
between Ireland and Great Britain.
The stage was
set for another century of strife.
.1910's
--Rebellion and War
The
English General Election of 1910
produced a hung parliament in Westminster. The Liberals needed
the support of the Irish Nationalist Party to stay in power.
The Irish Nationalist Party agreed, providing that the Liberal
Prime Minister, Henry Asquith, introduced a Home
Rule Bill for Ireland. The Bill was passed in 1912. In
accordance with provisions of the Parliament Act of 1911 The
House of Lords could not obstruct the bill but only delay its
ratification by two years after which it became law. In the
meantime, descendants of the earlier Ulster Plantation settlers
and elements of the British army conspired to scuttle the deal.
Bowing to pressure and using the onset of the First World War as
an excuse, Asquith capitulated by making unspecified special
arrangements for Ulster.
As a result of this
treachery , Eoin McNeil raised an Irish Volunteer army of
thousands. During this same period the Irish Republican
Brotherhood (IRB) re-emerged. Originally formed in 1857 they
were dedicated to ending the British occupation of Ireland.
Members were called Fenians and had deep Irish-American roots.
The
Easter Rising of 1916
was an armed uprising of Irish nationalists against British rule
in Ireland. The uprising occurred on Easter Monday, April 24,
1916, and centered mainly in Dublin. The aim of the uprising was
to achieve political freedom in a 32-county Irish Republic.
The uprising began when about 2000 men led by Padraic Pearse
seized control of the General Post Office (GPO) in Dublin and
other strategic targets throughout the city. Shortly after the
initial deployments, at four minutes past noon, Pearse
read the
Proclamation of the Irish Republic
from the steps of the GPO and announced the establishment
of a provisional government of the Irish Republic.
Throughout the night of April 24, additional positions were
occupied by the rebels and by the morning of April 25 they
controlled a considerable part of city.
The British counteroffensive began on Tuesday with the arrival
of reinforcements. Martial law was proclaimed throughout
Ireland. Bitter street fighting took place throughout the city
during which time the strengthened British forces dislodged the
Irish from their positions. By the morning of April 29, the post
office building, site of the rebel headquarters, was under
violent attack. Recognizing the futility of further resistance,
Pearse surrendered in the afternoon of April 29.
'All changed, changed utterly,
A terrible beauty was born.'
The
Irish general election of 1918
was part of the 1918 United Kingdom of Great Britain and
Ireland, general election. It is regarded as a defining moment
in modern Irish history as it was the only time the Irish people
in all 32 counties voted as an entity. The election saw the
defeat of the Irish Parliamentary Party (IPP), of Redmond that
dominated Irish politics since the 1880's. It also saw a
landslide victory for Sinn Féin whose
Election Manifesto
was to break free from the scourge of British imperialism and
march out into the full sunlight of freedom.
Of the 105
candidates elected to the Irish Parliament, 73 were Republicans
and 26 were Unionists. Redmond's IRP party gained only six
seats. Sinn Fein garnered 70% of the popular vote. Twenty-four
of Ireland's thirty-two counties returned only Republican
members. The Unionists gained a majority in only four of
Ulster's nine counties: Antrim, Derry, Down and Armagh.
The
first Dail Eireann of 1919
was formed from the Sinn Féin candidates returned in the
general election of 1918. At its first meeting on January 21,
1919 the Dáil issued a
Declaration of Independence
and proclaimed itself the parliament of the Irish Republic.
The prerogatives
assumed by the Dail included the creation of a viable defense
force and the establishment of Irish missions abroad. On
August 11, 1919 the Irish Volunteers took an oath of allegiance
to the Dáil and the organization changed its name to the Irish
Republican Army (IRA).
During the War of
Independence the Dail established republican "Arbitration
Courts" and the IRA acted as a police force in many parts of the
country where British law ceased to operate.
The Fist Dáil
existed until the second Dail convened on August 16, 1921 when
the second Dail came into existence after the elections of 1921.
The War of
Independence
started on January 21, 1919, as the fist Dail Eireann met.
Nine members of the Third Tipperary Brigade of the Irish
Volunteers ambushed a convoy transporting explosives near
Soloheadbeg in County Tipperary. In the ensuing gunfight two
members of the Royal Irish Constabulary (RIC), were
killed. This engagement is widely regarded as the beginning of
the War of Independence. Martial law was declared by the British
in South Tipperary three days later. Having demobilized its army
after the end of the war, the British responded quickly by
raising a military force of irregulars and mercenaries for
service in Ireland.
Most were recruited from prisons in exchange for a commuted
sentence.
Throughout 1919 and
1920, the
Irish Volunteers, renamed the Irish Republican Army (IRA) in
August 1919, attacked RIC barracks in rural areas in order to
obtain arms. The RIC retreated back to the larger towns
leaving parts of the country under Sinn Fein/IRA control.
In 1920 the IRA, decided to intensify the war as the ongoing
level of activity was not having the desired effect. On 21
November 1920, the IRA shot dead (11) British agents known
as the Cairo gang. Later on that day, the Black and Tans opened
fire on a crowd of spectators watching a football match in
Croke Park in Dublin. Twelve (12) spectators were killed
and the day became known as the 'first' Bloody Sunday. Ten days
later the IRA retaliated by killing (17) British soldiers in
County Cork.
The war ended in a Truce on July 11, 1921 after Lloyd George
issued an appeal for talks with Éamonn de Valera the
president of Dail Eireann
In the first 18
months of the war it is estimated that British forces staged
38,720 raids on private homes, arrest 4,982 suspects, committed
1,604 armed assaults, 102 sackings and shoot-ups in towns and 77
murders. The RIC became the principal target of the rebels. RIC
losses were 165 killed and 251 wounded.
1920's -- Capitulation and Sedition
The
Government of Ireland Act
of December 20,1920 was enacted by the British Parliament at the
height of the Irish War of Independence. The Act partitioned
Ireland into two sectarian states, namely the (26) counties of
southern Ireland and the (6) counties of northeastern Ireland
and establishing separate parliaments for each. The Act also
repealed the Home Rule Bill enacted in 1912, gutted in
1914 and suspended at the onset of the World War I.
Elections were held
throughout Ireland in May 1921 to elect members to the new
parliaments. Sinn Féin participated but refused to recognize the
new home rule parliaments. Instead the party treated the
elections in both parts of Ireland as elections to the Second
Dáil.
The Act was
implemented in Northern Ireland in June 1921. It was not
implemented in the 26 counties as the Sinn Fein members refused
to attend the opening of the Southern Ireland Parliament.
However, in order to comply with British demands, the Act was
implemented in the 26 counties in January 1922, to ratify the
Anglo–Irish Treaty of 1921 and to put in place a Provisional
Government. Michael Collins was installed as head of the
Provincial Government by Britain's Lord Lieutenant in Ireland.
The second
Dail Eireann of August 1921 consisted of members
returned in the elections of 1921 which, were intended to
elect members to the parliaments of Northern Ireland and
Southern Ireland established by the British enacted
Government of Ireland Act of 1920. Sinn Féin participated
in these elections but refused to recognize the new home rule
parliaments. They treated the elections as elections to
the Second Dáil Eireann.
The second Dail
convened in August 1921 and functioned until June 1922. One of
its most important acts was to bring an end to the War of
Independence by approving the controversial Anglo-Irish Treaty
by 64 to 57 votes. After the pro-treaty vote Sinn Fein members
who opposed the treaty left the Dail.
In March 1922
,Irish Republican Army officers at their Army Convention
repudiated the authority of the Dail to accept the Treaty. The
anti-treaty IRA formed their own Army Executive which
they recognized as the legitimate government of Ireland
1921
-- Anglo-Irish Treaty
-- after numerous attempts to hold a
peace conference, with preconditions, with a delegation from the
first Dail Eireann of 1918, Lloyd George, the British
prime minister finally settled for a conference free of
conditions to be held in London in October 1921. The president
of Dail Eireann, Eamonn De Valera, accepted the invitation and
sent Michael Collins to head a plenipotentiary delegation to
London with several draft treaties and secret instructions from
the cabinet
After six week of
negotiations with representatives of the British Cabinet
the Irish delegation signed a compromise treaty on behalf of
Ireland. The Cabinet was not consulted prior to the
compromise treaty being signed. Terms of the compromise treaty
split the Dail between those members in favor and those
who held out for an Irish Republic as proclaimed by Pearse on
Easter Monday 1916.
On January 7th
1922, (64) Dail members voted in favor of the treaty and (57)
members voted against.
After the
vote, pro-treaty members led by Arthur Griffith and Michael
Collins left Sinn Fein and formed a new Free State party known
as Cumann na nGaedhael. De Valera stayed on as leader of
Sinn Fein.
On January 10, 1921
Arthur Griffith was elected President of Dail Eireann . Two days
later, as head of the Delegation to London that signed the
Treaty, he called into existence the rival Parliament of
Southern Ireland, created by the British Government of Ireland
Act 1920, to ratify the Treaty and set-up a Provincial
Government. In recognizing the Southern Ireland parliament
as the legitimate authority to ratify the Treaty, Griffith
ignored the fact that the Government of Ireland Act 1920 was
rejected by the deputies elected to Dail Eireann in May
1921.
The Civil War
started on April 1922, when 200
anti-treaty IRA volunteers led by Rory O'Connor, occupied the
Four Courts in Dublin in an attempt to arrest the subversion of
the Irish Republic. A tense stand off ensued until the
Free State under pressure from the British government bombarded
the Four Courts with artillery supplied by the British.
The
bombardment of the Four Courts provoking a
week of street fighting in Dublin City that left
315 dead, 250 of them civilians. When the
fighting ended Dublin was in Free State hands
and the IRA retreated to their rural heartlands
where they engaged in a campaign of guerilla
warfare.
Around 3,500 combatants, mostly from the IRA,
had lost their lives, along with an unknown
number of civilian casualties, a greater number
than in the War of Independence. The Free State
executed (77) volunteers and many others were
executed after been captured by Free State
forces. The most notorious example of this
carnage occurred at Ballyseedy, Co Kerry where
(9) Republican prisoners were tied to a
landmine, which was exploded and the
survivors were then machine-gunned. One
prisoner, who was blown over a wall by the
explosion, escaped to tell the tale.
The
Civil War ended on May 24, 1923 when Frank Aiken
ordered the volunteers to cease fighting and
dump arms rather than surrender them to the Free
State.
British artillery and the support of the
Catholic Church carried the day for pro-Treaty
Free State forces.
Fianna Fail
was established in 1926 De Valera's motion after a motion he
introduced at the 1926 Sinn Fein Ard-Fheis was defeated. The
motion he introduced stated 'that the only Republican
objection to the Free State was the oath to the English King and
that it was removed they would enter Leinster House'.
Opponents led by
Father Michael O’Flanagan, defeated his motion by a vote of 223
to 218. De Valera subsequently resigned as Sinn Féin president
to form Fianna Fáil. a new Free State party.
Having a political
party that he controlled, De Valera had no problem in his next
proposal that his party enter Leinster House, taking the oath to
do so, in order to be able to abolish the oath once inside.
Fianna Fail members took the oath of allegiance to the King and
entered the Dáil of the Irish Free State in 1927.
1930's
thru 40's -- Resistance, Emergency Powers and IRA Executions
Throughout the 30's
and 40's, the Free State parties including Fine Gael (originally
known as Cumann na nGaedhael) and Fianna Fail continued to
accede to British demands to clamp down on republicans who
continued the campaign against their continuing presence in
Ireland. Ironically, former IRA veterans who succumbed to
the lure of power and privilege led the campaign against their
former comrades who remained faithful to the Irish Republic or
Pearce and Connelly and the other martyrs of 1916.
!n
1938, the Executive Council of the second Dail
Eireann delegated its authority to the Army
Council. This delegation of authority was
in accordance with a resolution adapted at
the first All-Ireland Dail meeting in march
1921. The resolution stated that when
enemy action has reduced the House to five
Deputies "'that it should resolve itself into
a Provincial Government" and that "Government
should be left to the Volunteers as the Military
Body" which was usual in the case of
countries invaded.
In
December 1939, members of the IRA stole
most of the ammunition stored in the Irish Army
Magazine storage depot in Dublin's Phoenix Park
in what became known as the "Christmas Raid".
The purported reason for the raid was to
replenish the IRA's ammunition supply.
Within a week of the raid, Gerald Boland, the
Free State Minister for Justice,
introduced the Emergency Powers bill in the Dail
to reinstate internment, Military Tribunal, and
executions for IRA members. The very next day
the
Emergency Powers Act
came into effect
The Fianna Fail
government led by de Valera executed (6) IRA members
in the Free State. Amongst those executed was Charlie
Kerins, the IRA's Chief of Staff. Tom Williams was executed in
the occupied six northern counties.
On Easter
Monday 1949, the Free State government, proclaim Eire a
Republic, formally breaking the last link to the Commonwealth of
Great Britain. The IRA refused to recognize this Republic, still
professing its allegiance to the Republic declared in 1916.
1950's -- The Border Campaign

In September1948,
Tony Magan was
appointed IRA Chief
of Staff by the IRA
Army Executive at
its convention.
Along with Michael
Traynor, Pádraig
MacLógáin and Tomás
MacCurtáin he
immediately set out
to reorganizse the
political and
military wings of
the Republican
Movement. At
one point or another
all of these men had
been imprisoned,
been on hungerstrike
or, as in the case
of MacCurtain,
sentenced to death.
Since the early
1930's the IRA and
Sinn Fein operated
as separate entities
with different
agendas. Under
the influence of the
IRA leadership
Sinn Fein, once
again, became the
political wing of
the Republican
movement.
On 13 August 1955,
Ruairi Ó Brádaigh
led a ten-member IRA
group in an arms
raid on Hazebrouck
Barracks, near
Arborfield,
Berkshire. The raid
was the biggest in
Britain netting a
large quantity of
ammunition together
with a number
guns, rifles
and a pistol. Most
of the items were
later recovered in a
garage in north
London.
In the 1950s the
IRA, under Magan's
leadership, started
planning for a
renewed armed
campaign, In 1956
Seán Cronin, who had
considerable
military experience,
drew up a plan
codenamed Operation
Harvest. The
campaign utilized
flying columns
operating from
within the Free
State attacking
military and
infrastructure
targets in Northern
Ireland. In
addition, another 20
organizers were sent
to various locations
within the North to
train new units,
gather intelligence
and report back to
the leadership in
Dublin.
On New Year's Eve,
January 1, 1957, a unit of twelve IRA Volunteers crossed the
border into County Fermanagh to launch an attack on an
RUC/B Specials barracks in Brookeborough. During the ensuing gun
battle, a number of Volunteers were injured including
Daithi O Conaill, Fergal O'Hanlon and Sean South. South
and O Hanlon later died of
their wounds as the unit made its escape. It is estimated that
50,000 attended Sean South's funeral in his native Limerick.
After a raid on an
RUC barracks in South Fermanagh in December 1956 some members of
the attacking IRA column were captured in Co. Cavan by the Free
State police. Amongst them was Ruairi O Bradaigh, who
together with his comrades were tried and imprisoned for six
months in the Free State. While in prison, O Bradaigh was
one of four Sinn Fein candidates who were elected Teachtai Dala
on an abstentionist ballot.
In the meantime
internment without trial, introduced first in the north and then
in the south Upon his release, O'Bradaigh was rearrested and
interned in the Curragh Military Prison with other
republicans.
In October 1957, Ó
Brádaigh became
IRA's Chief of
Staff, a position he
held until the
following year, when
he was arrested and
jailed under the
Offences Against the
State Act in
Mountjoy. From 1961
to 1962, he was IRA
Chief of Staff for a
second time.
Internment
curtailed military operations. In February of 1962, the
IRA announced that Operation Harvest, its border campaign, was
over.
Eighteen people in
total were killed
during the campaign,
of whom seven were
members of the Royal
Ulster Constabulary
(RUC) and eight were
members of the IRA.
In the Autumn of
1962 Cathal
Goulding took over
as Chief of Staff of
the IRA.
1960's -- Republicans Principles Violated, Occupied Counties
Erupt
In the 1960’s the Republican movement came under the influence
of
Desmond
Greaves and other socialists
thinkers associated with the Connolly organization in London. In
1962 Cathal Goulding was appointed Chief of Staff of the
IRA. Under his leadership the republican movement lifted the ban
on taking seats in
Stormont, the six county parliament and in
Leinster House, the twenty-six county
parliament. His acceptance of
the Stormont
and Leinster House
parliaments caused a split within the Republican Movement into
the Official and Provincial wings. The Official wing
embraced
socialism
and the Provisional, wing, at that time, continued to embrace
traditional republican values.
The Provisional
wing of the IRA (PIRA) elected Sean McStiofáin as its
Chief-of-Staff at its convention in 1970 and reiterated its
rejection of the partitionist parliaments of Stormont and
Leinster House and reaffirmed its commitment to waging an armed
struggle against British rule in Ireland. Goulding remained as
the 'Officials' Chief of Staff. In 1972 the Official IRA
declared an indefinite, unilateral cease-fire.
The Northern
Ireland Civil Rights Association (NICRA) was formed in January
1967 as a response to decades of Unionist discrimination against
Nationalists in the occupied counties. Inspired by the civil
rights movement in the U.S they took to the streets demanding
equality in employment, housing, voting rights, police, and
civil rights. These demonstrations were met with violent
opposition from the authorities. They were attacked and beaten
by Unionists mobs led by the Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC) and
B Specials (militia). Their homes and communities were burned to
the ground, many were killed and thousands were forced to flee
across the border to the Irish Free State.
During the
marching season of 1969, clashes erupted as the Apprentice
Boys marched past the Bogside, a nationalist district in Derry.
Protestant mobs assisted by the RUC and B Specials charged the
nationalists forcing them into William Street. Within hours
rioting had escalated into what became known as the
"Battle of the Bogside".
Members of PIRA joined the
Derry Citizens Defense
Association (DCDA) in defending the Bogside
and its residents
against the RUC and the Unionists mobs. The British government
sent in reinforcements, supposedly, to protect the
nationalist population,
1970's -- Insurrection and Retribution
By 1971 PIRA
had intensified its campaign throughout the six occupied
counties to the extent that the British government felt
compelled to take action to regain control of the situation.
Operation Demetrius,
or Internment without trial
as it is more commonly known started on February 9, 1971 and
continued until December 1975.
Thousand
were interned in the initial phases of the operation. By the end
of 1971 approximately 1,000 people, mostly Nationalists, were
interned. At the same time that internment was introduced, a
six-month ban on public demonstrations was imposed under
emergency legislation in force at the time. Instead of quelling
the IRA as the British intended, the opposite was true.
The IRA drew valuable sympathy and support from
internment.
The
Eire Nua
Program
co
authored by Ruairi Ó Brádaıgh and Daithi Ó Conaıll
was launched in 1972.
The program contained proposals to reunite the British occupied
six north-eastern counties with the 26 southern counties
in an all-Ireland federation comprised of the four historic
provinces of Ulster, Munster, Leinster and Connacht. The
comprehensive and far-reaching program, which is still on the
table, is a constructive proposal for achieving an enduring
peace in Ireland in contrast to the failed British schemes such
as the Anglo-Irish Treaty of 1921, Sunningdale, Hillsborough and
the Good Friday Agreement. All of these schemes were
formulated, not necessarily to achieve peace, but rather to
copper-fasten and legitimize British control over the occupied
six counties.
On Sunday
January 30 1972, British soldiers from the 1st Parachute
Regiment opened fire on unarmed and peaceful civilian in
the Bogside, Derry. Thirteen demonstrators, six of whom were
minors, were killed on the spot and 17 others wounded, one of
whom died later in hospital. What has gone down in history as
“Bloody Sunday”
is a key event in the latest phase of
the struggle for Irish freedom and reunification. The
massacre of innocent civilians blew apart British claims that
the military were in the province to defend the Catholic
minority.
The Sunningdale
Agreement
of
December 9, 1973
was their first attempt by the British to preempt the IRA
campaign to force their withdrawal from the occupied
counties and reunite Ireland.
The Agreement included among its provisions,
an elected assembly,
a power-sharing executive and a
cross-border Council of Ireland.
As the result of a failed motion in the Northern Ireland
Assembly to condemn power-sharing, the loyalist Ulster
Workers' Council called a general strike for 15 May 1972. On May
28, after two weeks of shortages, rioting and intimidation,
Brian Faulkner resigned as Chief Executive
causing the Agreement to
collapse
"Ulsterisation - Normalization - Criminalization" was
introduced by the British in 1976 to process political
prisoners. Non-jury courts, the centerpiece of this
policy, were constituted to render the same results as the
existing policy of internment without trial. This new approach
would, in their opinion, mute international criticism and show
the world how judicious the British were in handling Irish
malcontents.
The new policy utilized a conveyor-belt type system of
injustice. After being arrested, IRA volunteers were
interrogated and tortured and then forced to sign
self-incriminating statements. Next, they were processed through
the no acquittal non-jury courts ending up in the Long Kesh
prison camp as before. This time around they were to be
treated as common criminals.
The British felt that this new approach to handling their
so-called Irish malcontents was adequate to stifle any future
criticism of their political and judicial processes; after all
they were dealing with the Irish.
In
September 1976 the late
Keiran
Nugent
became the first volunteer to be subjected to the new policy. He
would not accept criminal status and in protest began the
‘blanket protest’. Other prisoners of war (POW’s) soon joined
the protest. Over time the blanket protest escalated in the
‘dirty protest’.
1980's -- Collusion and Dishonor
In
1980 after four years of protest the POW’s decided to stage a
hunger strike in an attempt to regain political status. The
strike ended after the renegade faction within PIRA’s Northern
Command made a deal with the British. The details of the deal,
if indeed a deal was made, were shrouded in secrecy. Either way
the British ignored it and as a result, the hunger strike ended
in failure.
The second hunger strike in 1981 was a different story.
Ten young republican volunteers
died for their beliefs. The widespread empathy generated by the
sufferings and sacrifices of the hunger strikes resulted in
substantial gains at the polls in both the occupied counties and
the 26-county Free State. While on hunger strike, Bobby
Sands was elected to the British parliament. Paddy Agnew and
Kieran Doherty were elected to the 26-county parliament.
The
second hunger strike ended with the return of political status
for the POW’s.
In 1983 the Northern faction of
Provisional Sinn Fein, led by Adams and McGuinness wrestled
control of the organization from Ruairi O'Bradaigh by claiming
that it was their right to lead the struggle, because the war
was fought in the north. Also in 1983, unknown to the Army
Council, Adams had engaged in indirect talks with the London and
Dublin government's through
Father Alex Reid, a Redemptorist
priest from West Belfast.
In 1984, as the Army
Council was planning for a major escalation of the war,
Adams was engaged in talks with the Dublin government regarding
a possible IRA ceasefire.
During that period he was also requesting
the assistance of the Dublin government to create a
"pan-nationalist initiative".
Hillsborough
Agreement
of 1985 was signed by the
London and Dublin governments at Hillsborough, Co. Down on 15
November 1985. Both Governments agreed that there would be
no change in the status of Northern Ireland without the consent
of the Unionist majority, the infamous built-in Unionist veto.
Despite the Agreement, the situation in the occupied counties
continued to deteriorate. The unionists, unwilling to
accept any Dublin government's role in the affairs
of the occupied counties withdrew from implementation talks with
the British Government in the summer of 1993.
At the 1986 Sinn Féin Árd-Fheis Adams and McGuinnesss, through a
series of dubious maneuvers involving delegates representing
'paper units’, managed to deep-six the Eire Nua policy
document authored by Ó Brádaigh and Ó Connail in 1972, ‘as a sop
to the unionists’. They and their cronies also managed to set
aside the ban on taking seats in Leinster House thus accepting
the legitimacy of the 26-county Free State.
As a result of these dubious
tactics that violated the Sinn Féin constitution a substantial
number of delegates walked out of the Ard-Fheis led by Ó
Brádaigh and Ó Connail. At a subsequent meeting they rejected
the renegades tactics as a betrayal of true republican
principles and declared that “they a minority had expelled a
majority to protect the core principles of Sinn Féin.”
Responding to rumblings within PIRA/PSF following the rejection
of the Éire Nua policy document Adams and McGuinness
published a new document in May of 1987 entitled ‘A Scenario for
Peace”. What was telling about this document was that it
replaced the traditional republican demand for a British
withdrawal with an ambiguous demand for "national
self-determination". This should have been a wake-up call for
those who continued to believe in Adams/McGuinness’s commitment
to a 32-county Irish Republic.
1990's -- Betrayals and Deceit
As a
result of ongoing negotiations throughout 1990 with MI6
representatives, Martin McGuinness called for a formal
PIRA Christmas cease-fire. The cease-fire conveyed McGuinness
and Adams desire to abandon the revolutionary path in favour of
a purely political approach; an approach more in tune with
their own political ambitions
In 1992,
the Provisional movement introduced a new policy document
dubbed "Towards A Lasting Peace" at its annual Ard-Fheis.
This document stated that the republican struggle could
not achieve national liberation and that the creation of a
"pan-nationalist alliance" was essential if they were to achieve
their objective. What this meant was that the Provisionals
would join with other established political parties who accepted
British occupation and the unionists veto as non-negotiable
conditions with respect to any political deal regarding the
future status of the occupied counties. The message was
clear for anyone listening that the Provisionals would accept a
settlement that would leave the constitutional status of
the six-county enclave unaltered. The publication of that
document portended the most insidious political betrayal
in Irish republican history
In early
1995, the Provisionals stated that they would accept the
return of Stormont providing that it was treated as a
"transitional measure". The term 'transitional' would be used by
the Provisional leadership throughout the nineties as the
rationale for accepting other agreements that further
copper-fastened British control of the six occupied Irish
counties and advanced the Provisionals agenda. While all
these agreements were being accepted by the Provisionals they
never again mentioned or pursued any transitional
mechanism that would lead to national liberation, their
purported objective.
In June
1997 British negotiators issued an aide memoire (reminder) to
the Provisionals of the terms for their entry into all-party
talks. The terms included (1) a declaration of an IRA
cease-fire, (2) a commitment to the Mitchell principles.
(3) an acceptance of May 1998 as the deadline for all-party
talks. (4) an acceptance of Mitchell's proposals on
decommissioning. (5) the initiation of confidence building
measures on all sides.
The aide
memoire made no mention of a British withdrawal.
By an
overwhelming vote PIRA leaders rejected a new cease-fire thus
defeating the five British terms for participation in the
all-party talks. In spite of the PIRA's overwhelming
rejection, the Army Council declared a cease-fire on July 2,
1997 without the knowledge or consent of Army Executive or GHQ.
At a subsequent meeting between the Army Council and the
Executive to discuss the cease-fire, Adams asked the Executive
to pass a motion of confidence in the Army Council. The motion
was defeated as no one came forward to propose or second the
motion.
The Good Friday Agreement
(GFA) was unveiled by the London and Dublin governments on
April 10th
1998. The Agreement, to all intent and purposes, is
a restatement of the Government of Ireland Act 1920, and the
subsequent Anglo-Irish Treaty of 1921. The GFA did not revoke
the partition of Ireland, the prime cause of decades of conflict
and strife. One significant outcome of the Agreement was that
the Dublin government relinquished all territorial claims
to the six occupied counties by deleting articles 2 & 3 of the
Irish constitution, thus leaving British
sovereignty over the
occupied counties unchallenged.
The Provisionals
latched on to the agreement,
including the deletion of articles 2 & 3 from the Irish
constitution, without a question or whimper regarding its 'transitional'
credentials. They also
agreed to take their seats in Stormont, a British
institution they once vowed to destroy. Taking seats in
Stormont, the nemesis of Irish republicanism,
was the most insidious and
revolting betrayal in Irish republican history as it discarded
to the junkyard of history the premise upon which the
Provisionals came into existence in the first place. The
decision also gave credence to the British occupiers that the 30
year war was for naught and that the sacrifices and loss of life
was unnecessary.
In a rush to
surrender all vestiges of resistance to the British the Provos
proceeded to destroy stockpiles of arms and explosives. They
agreed to the reform and not the disbandment of the Royal Ulster
Constabulary (RUC) and accepted, as a right, the unionists veto
over Irish reunification. Their latest step in the
surrender process was to join the RUC from whence
they will try to destroy any remaining resistance to the
British occupation.
The reason it is
taking Gerry & Co. so long to deliver the goods is not because
they are unwilling, rather, it has to do with the quality of
goods they are required to deliver. The British want more than
stockpiles of explosives and arms they want Gerry & Co. to
deliver the ashes of the Republican movement. After
centuries of trying to destroy Irish recalcitrance, the British
want it over with once and for all. Gerry & Co. is their best
hope.
After a century of
struggle, the British are still controlling six of Ireland's 32
counties. This outcome would not be possible without the readily
available Irish touts, collaborators and assassins recruited by
and operating on behest of the British. The Provo leadership and
their willing followers are the latest crop to grace the British
court.
The
Way Forward
An Independent
Judiciary that would ensure that the nations' Supreme Court,
as guardian of the constitution, would have equal status to the
legislative and executive branches of government. The judicial
power of the nation would be vested in the Supreme Court.
The
National Irish Freedom Committee (NIFC) consider the
Eire Nua
program to be innovative and far-reaching and believes it to
be a positive approach
that recognizes the rights of all Irish people, irrespective
of their ancestry or religious affiliations. For this reason
the NIFC has adopted and will promote Eire Nua
as the most logical choice to achieve a lasting peace for
Ireland. We believe that this program is based on
sound and honorable principles incorporating fair and
realistic plans to achieve national unity within the
framework of a 32-county Irish Republic.
Mac Oιsdealbhaιgh
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