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What
thirty years of death and destruction in Northern Ireland brought?
Back
to power-sharing
It
was a great day at Stormont. The great and the good from many
countries were there including the British Prime Minister, Tony
Blair, and the Irish Taoiseach, Bertie Ahern. Centre stage, of
course, were Ian Paisley, yesterday’s ‘Never-Never’ man, now
grinning like death in the apocalypse, and Martin McGuinness,
yesterday’s IRA commander, expensively tailored and replete with
effusive grin.
The
event was generally acknowledged to be the formal end of Northern
Ireland’s infamous thirty years of internecine warfare in which
nearly 4,000 people were killed and some 60/70,000 injured.
Doubtless
the fare was rich and the guests ate heartily. Paisley, Adams and
their followers especially may have baulked somewhat at the political
menu and the public exhibition of having to eat their words –
admittedly, generously marinated in personal emoluments well beyond
their past dreams of fulfilment. They could all be well satisfied
with the price they got for their bloodthirsty ‘principles’.
Among
the less great, the voting fodder who were afforded the democratic
privilege of watching the circus on television, there was cynicism
and utter disbelief but undoubtedly the overwhelming majority of the
people of the province looked on the spectacle with differing
measures of relief. If this collection of provocateurs and proxy
killers was to be endured for peace – or what passes for peace in
capitalist society – they would put up with it. The more thoughtful
would have scratched comfort from the realisation that its not very
different elsewhere.
Who
better to end conflict than those who had created it? It was the
First Minister in this new legislature, Ian Paisley, then a clergyman
in a church of his own invention and busily engaged translating
biblical inanities into mantras of political hatred, who was the
principal architect of conflict for the last forty-five years.
If
he had reason to hate the traditional IRA it might have been because
they had publicly renounced armed struggle in 1962, thus threatening
the political fabric of an Orange hegemony which was based on the
threat of the IRA. Paisley’s religion and its associated
politics were nourished by hatred of catholic nationalism and
official Unionism’s updated response to the new political climate
harboured the promise of a peace that would leave Paisleyism – the
brand of bigotry that bore his name – redundant.
Ironically,
Paisley’s anger at the threat of peace was shared by those
republicans who abandoned the new pragmatic IRA; effectively, those
on the catholic republican side who mirrored the hate politics of
Paisley and his cohorts.
First
killings
When
the first shots and explosions in the Northern Ireland conflict
occurred the Provisional IRA did not exist. On the 27 May 1966
a three-man gang of protestant paramilitaries went into the catholic
Falls Road area with the intention of assassinating a well-known
republican. They missed their target but they availed of the
opportunity to shoot and kill a drunken catholic called John
Scullion.
The
circumstances of the second killing demonstrates that, despite
Paisley’s bigoted ranting, inter-denomination movement in the
Belfast ghetto districts had not yet reached crisis point. At 2 a.m.
on Sunday 26 June 1966 four young catholics felt safe enough to go
for an after-hours drink in a hard-line protestant area when they
were attacked by loyalist killers; three were shot, one fatally.
Later the police arrested and charged three members of the
paramilitary Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF).
Thereafter
politico-religious zealots, some directly associated with Paisley,
carried out explosions at four reservoirs serving Belfast and a
member of Paisley’s religious sect was killed by his own bomb while
attempting to blow up an electricity generating station in
Ballyshannon, in the Republic of Ireland. Paisley’s close associate
and fellow director of the Puritan Printing Company – who,
incidentally, stood as a Protestant Action candidate against the
World Socialist Party in the late 50s – was convicted on explosives
charges.
By
now the touch-paper of violence had been well and truly lit. The
Unionist Prime Minister at the time, the condescending Captain
Terence O’Neill, and several subsequent Unionist Prime Ministers
tried to take the heat out of the situation with puny reforms limited
by the spectre of a bellowing Paisley demanding their political heads
for ‘selling out the protestant people’ but the mass torching of
homes had become a grim nightly diversion of the lumpen proletariat
on both ‘sides’ . The sectarian police force was overwhelmed and
the British Labour government, that had allowed the pot to boil over
the years, sent in the army.
Another
terror element
This
was the period of the so-called Cold War and in the higher echelons
of the British army there were those who adhered to the ‘Eastern
School’ of military strategists. Their thesis was based on the
notion that the balance of terror represented by nuclear warfare made
conflict between the two major power blocs improbable. Instead, ‘the
enemy’ would make war by proxy, exploiting areas of local conflict
and potential conflict.
The
main protagonist of this doctrine was Brigadier Frank Kitson, then a
senior officer serving with the British forces in Northern Ireland
and responsible for key elements of army strategy. Kitson had served
in Aden where the practice of army sponsored gang-and-counter-gang
operations had been operated unsuccessfully against the two opposing
nationalist forces fighting the British there. The evidence of
collusion in sectarian killings levelled against the army over the
years in Northern Ireland are consistent with the working of such a
policy.
The
entry of the British army brought another element of terror into the
Northern Ireland conflict. Not only was the army bereft of any
ultimate political objective, it was heavily influenced by some
officers who perceived a local conflict in absurdly wider terms, and,
despite the evidence of then current happenings, its intelligence
base was that of the Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC), a notoriously
anti-nationalist paramilitary police force.
The
IRA (later called the Official IRA), wanted no part in a sectarian
war and to its credit initially refused to release weapons to its
Belfast and Derry members to use against protestant workers who were
loyalists. In the wings a small group of republicans were
endeavouring to create a movement that would offer armed resistance
to loyalists. Their efforts were sustained by the bigoted posturing
and naked aggression of Paisley, the partiality of the RUC, and the
crass stupidity of the military strategists.
In
July 1970 the army put a ring of steel around part of a nationalist
area in west Belfast, declared a curfew, brutally confined people to
their homes and killed four civilians. The curfew lasted over the
week-end during which houses were systematically searched . On the
Monday the media showed the destruction the troops had wrought. That
destruction could be said to be the birth pangs of the Provisional
IRA; the republican sectarians now had an army and a surfeit of
recruits.
It
would be naive to believe that the reckless move on the part of the
army – a move which could only give emotional muscle to those
promoting a return to militant republicanism – was an act of
military stupidity, but in the background there were events which
explain why the London government, which, as always, were the puppet
masters of the generals, permitted the move.
The
previous month had seen the return of the Tories – the Conservative and
Unionist Party – to power in
Britain. This
gave the Ulster Unionists – the Tories’ political cousins – a
more sympathetic ear at Westminster and in Northern Ireland the
Ulster Unionist Prime Minister, James Chichester Clarke, was in
serious trouble and inevitably Ian Paisley was prominent among those
creating that trouble.
Go,
so I can take your place
Paisley
had led a strident crusade against Clarke’s predecessor, Terence
O’Neill, because O’Neill had shown a willingness to remove some
of the notoriously undemocratic practices used to consolidate
Unionist political hegemony; practices which affected the working
class in general but which catholic nationalist leaders nourished as
purely anti-catholic grievances.
Paisley
had raised the slogan ‘O’Neill Must Go!’ and it found
sufficient response among the backwoodsmen of the Unionist Party to
force O’Neill’s resignation. Now his slogan was ‘Clarke Must
Go!’ The legend for Clarke’s proposed exit was because the writ
of the sectarian Unionist Party did not run in some nationalist areas
of Belfast and Derry. Again, Paisley’s activities were causing
tremors within the Unionist Party whose Standing Committee was
summoned to debate Clarke’s fate. Five days before that debate was
scheduled to take place the army carried out its ruthless attack
temporarily removing the sting from the Paisley threat.
Others
who took on the Prime Ministerial role and later the role of First
Minister had to ‘Go! before the present incumbent – Paisley –
got the job.
By
now, of course, the Provisional IRA’s murder campaign was in full
swing endorsed by the notion that they were fighting a war to drive
out the Brits but inexorably they were drawn into tit-for-tat
sectarian killing. Additionally, they murdered catholics and
protestants in any way tenuously associated with the British
administration – numerous in an economy where public money
underwrote some 60 percent of all jobs. Especially ruthless and
cowardly, the Provisionals forced non-combatants to fight their dirty
war by forcing them by threat to themselves or their families to
deliver bombs to determined targets.
The
IRA and the protestant paramilitary gangs as well as the duplicitous
‘security’ forces were killing people with military ordinance.
Paisley brought death and disorder by threats and phantom battalions
of red-bereted ‘defenders’ and midnight squadrons of men waving
their government-issued firearms certificates.
Now
Paisley’s DUP and the IRA’s Sinn Fein are together in government.
Sane people can only hope that the electorate put them there because
it was the despicable price that had to be paid for peace – for the
game was always about power – even in Mother Erin’s
British-subsidised Fourth Green Field.
Ironically,
Paisley’s antics over the last 40 years have done more to emaciate
Unionism’s power base than the IRA; conversely, Sinn Fein is now an
integral part of the political structures its murder campaign was
supposed to destroy.
It
is reasonable to ask what the working class got in return for its
suffering, for the victims – the killed and the killers, the
mentally and physically maimed, the prisoners – were, as always,
overwhelmingly of the working class. The media clarions our reward;
we are going to get peace, we are told. The agencies that were making
war have gone into partnership - showing once again that peace and
war emanate from the same source.
Meanwhile
real power will not reside in Stormont, or London, or Dublin. It will
reside in the cheque books of the billionaires and the multinational
consortiums whose profit considerations will decide the priorities.
Ultimately it is their writ that determines how we live in latter-day
capitalism – even, indeed, if we live.
RICHARD
MONTAGUE
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