847 lines
38 KiB
Plaintext
847 lines
38 KiB
Plaintext
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********** Sinn F<>in and the 'Peace Process' ***********
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ARRIVING AT THE END OF THE ROAD TO NOWHERE
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Since the ending of the 'Cold War', many national
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liberation struggles throughout the world have been
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'settled'. In places as far apart as South Africa, El
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Salvador, Nicaragua and Palestine these national
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liberation struggles were led by groupings which were
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often seen as having left leanings. However in all of
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these cases the 'settlement' was far from socialist.
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The current 'Irish peace process' is following exactly
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the same lines and has nothing to offer the Irish
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working class North or South
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The announcement of the Provisional IRA cease-fire on
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August 31st 1994 was almost universally welcomed. In a
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statement, the Workers Solidarity Movement (WSM) stated:
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"We welcome the IRA cease-fire. Over the last 25 years
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over 3,000 people have been killed and 40,000 injured.
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Thousands have been through or are still in prison. The
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primary blame for these deaths and all the associated
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suffering belongs with the British state..." (1)
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Our welcome for the cease-fire was based on our
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recognition of the fact that the armed struggle was a
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flawed tactic, one
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"...incapable of achieving a solution as it is incapable
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of delivering a military victory and defeating the
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British army..." and one which "...relies on the actions
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of a few with the masses left in either a totally
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passive role, or one limited to providing intelligence
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and shelter to the few..." (2)
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However, while welcoming the cease-fire, we drew a very
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clear distinction between this and the "peace process" -
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a process which we saw as being inherently flawed
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"The 'peace process' as it is called, will not deliver a
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united socialist Ireland, or significant improvements
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apart from those associated with 'de-militarisation'.
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In addition it represents a hardening of traditional
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nationalism, and the goal of getting an alliance of all
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the nationalists - Fianna Fail, SDLP, Sinn Fein and the
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Catholic Church." (3)
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Sound of silence
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Over twelve months later, the cease-fire holds firm, the
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people of the 6-Counties have enjoyed the 'sound of
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silence' of the guns for over a year and a semblance of
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normality has returned to the area after 25 years of
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war.
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But, as the British government continues to drag its
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heels even on the simple concessions which normally
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follow the ending of conflict such as prisoner release
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and round-table inclusive talks, and as the Sinn F<>in
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leadership appears to have totally capitulated on its
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ultimate objective of a 32-County Socialist Republic and
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subsumed itself into the Pan-Nationalist Alliance of
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SDLP/Dublin and 'Irish-America', many republican
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supporters are left floundering and asking themselves
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exactly what is going on.
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Less than two short years ago Gerry Adams, Martin
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McGuinness et al - as far as the media and mainstream
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politicians were concerned - were "godfathers of
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violence" for whom the English language did not contain
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sufficient condemnatory terms. Now they are feted by
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Bill Clinton in the White House, wined and dined at
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$1,000-a-plate dinners and rub shoulders with captains
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of industry. How has this come about? And, more
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importantly, how does it square with their professed aim
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of a Socialist Republic? How must those who believed in
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the republicans' 'left turn' in the 1980s feel now?
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In order to answer these questions or even to begin to
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understand the logic of the current republican position,
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it is necessary to look back at the origins of the
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Provisional movement and to study the politics on which
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it was founded.
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Following the disastrous border campaign of 1956 - 1962,
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the IRA was practically non-existent, retaining only a
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handful of members and being regarded by most working-
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class nationalists as a thing of the past. Meantime,
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the nationalist middle-class had given up waiting for a
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united Ireland and had instead begun to look for
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equality of opportunity within the 6-County State. It
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was from this layer that the Northern Ireland Civil
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Rights Association (NICRA) was formed in 1967 with a
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very moderate (in any state that even pretends to be
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democratic) list of demands - one man (sic), one vote;
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allocation of housing on a points system; redrawing of
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gerrymandered electoral boundaries; repeal of the
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Special Powers Act; abolition of the notorious B-
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Specials; laws against discrimination in local
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government. The issue of the border was not even
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raised.
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However, because the Northern State had been founded on
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discrimination, even these moderate demands could not be
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acceded to. Nor could the bigots who controlled the
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State allow dissension in the form of public protest.
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When the Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC) attacked the
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second Civil Rights march on October 5th 1968 in Derry,
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the die was cast.
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The Peoples Democracy (PD) organised march from Belfast
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to Derry in January 1969 was to be a key turning point.
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When the 100 marchers were attacked by about 350
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loyalists throwing rocks and stones at Burntollet
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Bridge, the RUC stood by and watched.
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The naked sectarianism and irreformability of the Orange
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State had been dramatically exposed. Just seven months
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later the British army were back on the streets when the
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RUC found themselves incapable of restoring order
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following what became known as the "Siege of Derry".
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British Guns
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Up to this stage the IRA were non-existent in terms of
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military activity. The gun had been re-introduced to
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Northern politics, not by a highly organised republican
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movement determined to wreak havoc, but by the forces of
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the British State. It is interesting to note that the
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first death, the first dead soldier, the first dead
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policeman, the first dead child and the first bombing
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were all at the hands of British or Loyalist forces.
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The lesson appeared clear - if even the modest demands
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of the Civil Rights Movement were met with such massive
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repression by the State, there was no alternative but to
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meet force with force. Unfortunately the left at the
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time failed to offer a coherent alternative and so 25
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painful years of war and bloodshed had begun.
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The Provisional movement was formed following a split in
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the Republican movement in January 1970. When the Sinn
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F<EFBFBD>in Ard Fheis (Conference) of that month voted to end
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the traditional policy of abstentionism from Stormont,
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the Dail and Westminster, the dissidents walked out.
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They established a provisional army council of the IRA
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and a caretaker Sinn F<>in executive.
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Their first public statements strongly attacked the
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leftward trend in the organisation and were vehemently
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anti-communist. In its Easter statement of 1970 the
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Provisional IRA army council stated:
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"Irish freedom will not be won by involvement with an
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international movement of extreme socialism." (4)
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But it would be wrong to see the split as simply being
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along left-right lines. Many of the Officials (as the
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other wing became known) had become reformists and were
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in favour of a strategy of working through parliament to
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effect change - even being willing to take their seats
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in Stormont - the notorious symbol of oppression - if
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elected.
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Because of the reformist nature of the Officials many of
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the younger militants - especially in the North - joined
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the Provisionals despite the fact that at the time they
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were controlled by right-wing traditional nationalists
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who wanted no truck with socialism.
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Throughout the early 1970s, the Provos engaged the
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British in a hugely intensive war of attrition. Events
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such as Bloody Sunday in Derry (when 13 civilians were
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killed by the Parachute Regiment during a Civil Rights
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March on Sunday 30th January 1972) brought floods of
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recruits. When the British sent heavily-armed troops
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into IRA no-go areas in Belfast and Derry in July 1972,
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there were 95 deaths. In the previous four months there
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had been 5,500 shooting incidents and hundreds of car
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bombs had devastated the centres of many Northern towns.
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(5)
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Throughout this time, the IRA remained heavily dependant
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on the conservative American Noraid network for funding.
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Joe Cahill had on the IRA's behalf promised Noraid that
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they would deliver"...a republic without socialist or
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communist ideas..." (6). General Army Order No. 8
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banned military activity in the 26-Counties and
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political work in the South was confined to support for
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the Northern IRA.
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Following a brief cease-fire in 1972 during which six
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Provo leaders - including Gerry Adams and Martin
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McGuinness - were flown to London for talks with British
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government ministers, the IRA campaign resumed. At this
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time too Loyalist paramilitary groups wreaked havoc with
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a particularly vicious sectarian campaign of terror
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aimed at the Catholic population.
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Flawed Strategy
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It was the Provisionals' cease-fire of 1974-1975 however
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which was to show up for the first time one of the flaws
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in a strategy which relied solely on a military campaign
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- especially one with a purely nationalist base.
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Speaking of this period 10 years later, in 1985, Gerry
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Adams was to say
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"When the struggle was limited to armed struggle, the
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prolongation of the truce meant that there was no
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struggle at all. There was nothing but confusion,
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frustration and demoralisation, arising directly from
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what I call spectator politics" (7)
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By the 1978, Sinn Fein Ard Fheis disaffection with the
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leadership's handling of the 1975 truce had begun to
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assert itself and Adams was elected to the position of
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Vice-President. A new leadership began to emerge based
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around Adams, Tom Hartley, Joe Austin and Danny
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Morrison. There was much talk - especially among the
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prisoners - of socialism and of replacing the
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reactionary nationalist outlook of the past. A new type
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of community politics began to emerge with Republicans
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being encouraged to involve themselves in community
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groups, trade unions and cultural groups.
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It was the beginning of the 'blanket protest' following
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the removal of the prisoners' 'special category status'
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in March 1976 which was to lead eventually to the hunger
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strikes of 1980 and 1981 and the highpoint of support
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for the Republican cause throughout the 32-Counties. By
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1980, with Margaret Thatcher in power, there were 380
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prisoners taking part in the 'no wash' protest and
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preparations for a hunger strike were well under way.
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When the prison protests began in 1976, Sinn F<>in as an
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organisation seemed incapable of the sort of political
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agitation necessary to highlight the prisoners' plight.
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When a conference was held in Coalisland, Co. Tyrone in
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January 1978 to discuss the building of a broad anti-
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Unionist front which would campaign on the prisons
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issue, Sinn F<>in criticised the naivety of the
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organisers and basically put forward the proposition
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that only those who offered uncritical support for the
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IRA's campaign were entitled to get involved. However
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by October 1979 when a further Conference was held in
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the Green Briar Hall in Andersonstown, the Sinn F<>in
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line had changed dramatically and Gerry Adams proposed
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to the conference a list of 5 demands around which a
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"Smash H-Block" campaign could be built. These demands
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were:
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(1) To be exempt from wearing prison clothes.
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(2) To be exempt from prison work.
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(3) To have freedom of association with fellow political
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prisoners.
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(4) The right to organise educational and recreational
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facilities, to have one weekly visit, to receive and
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send out one letter per week and to receive one parcel
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per week.
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(5) Entitlement to full remission of sentence
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These demands were agreed by the Conference and became
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the central plank of the National H- Block/Armagh
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Committee. While this Committee worked to raise public
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awareness and bring pressure on the British government
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on the issue, Sinn F<>in was involved in secret
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negotiations with, among others, Cardinal Tom<6F>s O'Fiach
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- the head of the Irish Catholic Church - to try and
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persuade him to intervene with the British on the
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prisoners' behalf.
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Meanwhile pressure from inside the prisons was growing
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and Sinn Fein began to come to the realisation that they
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had to organise politically - especially in the 26-
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Counties - if they were to make progress.
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Hunger Strike
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In October 1980, the prisoners in the H-Blocks decided
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that their only hope of pressing home the issue of
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prison status was to go on hunger strike. In a
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communication sent in to Bobby Sands, Gerry Adams stated
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that the leadership of the republican movement
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was"...tactically, strategically, physically and morally
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opposed to a hunger strike." (8)
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The prisoners however, were determined to press ahead
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with their plans. The first hunger strike lasted for 53
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days and involved nearly 40 prisoners in the H-Blocks
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and Armagh. There were pickets, marches and riots
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throughout the 6-Counties. In Dublin, 12,000 people
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marched in support of the prisoners in late October and
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a further 2,000 picketed a summit meeting between
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Thatcher and Taoiseach Charles Haughey on 8th December.
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Republican strategists began to realise that political
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agitation could be a strong weapon in their arsenal.
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On 18th December - with one of the hunger strikers, Se<53>n
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McKenna, fast approaching death - the British government
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indicated that if the fast was called off some of their
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demands would be met. The prisoners decided to end the
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protest but discovered very quickly that the document
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presented to them by the British fell far short of
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meeting their demands. Almost immediately, preparations
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began for another hunger strike.
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Again the Sinn F<>in leadership attempted to dissuade the
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prisoners from their proposed course of action
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"...in terms of the political priorities of the moment,
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we did not want the hunger strike. We were just
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beginning our attempts to remedy the political
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underdevelopment of the movement, trying to develop the
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organisation, engaging in a gradual build-up of new
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forms of struggle and, in particular, we were working
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out our strategy in relation to elections. We were well
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aware that a hunger strike such as was proposed would
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demand exclusive attention, would, in effect, hijack the
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struggle, and this conflicted with our sense of the
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political priorities of the moment." (9)
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Bobby Sands
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But the prisoners were determined. They felt they had
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no alternative and plans went ahead. On 1st March 1981
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Bobby Sands was the first to refuse food. Over the
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course of the next seven months, ten republican
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prisoners - members of both the IRA and the INLA (Irish
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National Liberation Army) - were to die on hunger
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strike. The National H-Block/Armagh Committee - set up
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on a humanitarian/ pan-nationalist axis - was to
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organise protests, pickets, marches, riots and even some
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strike action throughout the 32-Counties. It was a
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period of mass action but also one of missed
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opportunity. It was a period also which was to have
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long-term effects on the direction of Sinn Fein's
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developing political strategy:
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"The hunger strike did away with spectator politics.
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When the only form of struggle being waged was armed
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struggle, it only needed a small number of people to
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engage in it. But, with the hunger strike, people could
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play an active role which could be as limited or as
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important as billposting, writing letters, or taking
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part in numerous forms of protest." (10)
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The mass action was indeed impressive. In the week of
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Bobby Sands' funeral, for example, over 10,000 marched
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in Dublin, 5,000 in Limerick, 4,000 in Cork. There were
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big marches in Waterford, Tralee, Killarney, Wexford,
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Bray, Meath, Monaghan, Donegal and many other places.
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In Belfast over 100,000 people attended the funeral.
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There were work stoppages - some organised, some
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spontaneous - all over the country, including Dublin
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Corporation maintenance depots, Alcan's construction
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site in Limerick (2,500 workers), Arigna mines in Co.
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Leitrim, building sites in Dublin, factories and shops
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in Limerick, Cork, Cobh, Tralee, Wexford, Bray, Sligo,
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Donegal, Leitrim, Monaghan. Trades Councils in places
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such as Waterford, Dungarvan, Meath, Dundalk and
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Drogheda called successful stoppages. (11) There were
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daily pickets and protests in almost every town in
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Ireland.
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While this was in many ways people power at its best,
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the necessity to maintain friendly relations with the
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'broad nationalist family' which included Southern
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political parties, the Catholic Church and the GAA meant
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that it had to be controlled. Thus the 100,000 people
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who attended Sands' funeral were told to go home and
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wait for the Republican movement to take its revenge.
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Thus also the failure to make workplace and community
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struggle the spearhead of the campaign. Ultimately the
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period was to prove the acid test of Sinn F<>in's
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'socialism' - a test they were to fail miserably.
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The real lesson that Sinn F<>in took from the H-Block
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Campaign happened almost by chance. The sudden death of
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Frank Maguire, independent MP for Fermanagh/South Tyrone
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|||
|
raised the possibility of a prisoner candidate standing
|
|||
|
in the bye-election. Bobby Sands was duly nominated and
|
|||
|
elected with 30,492 votes. Sands' election literature
|
|||
|
sought to "borrow" the votes of the electorate. Voters
|
|||
|
were told that by lending their votes they could help
|
|||
|
save Sands' life. In the following election they could
|
|||
|
go back to supporting their usual candidates.
|
|||
|
Apparently it would have been expecting too much to hope
|
|||
|
that people would vote for an IRA man because they
|
|||
|
supported what the Republican Movement stood for.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
When Charles Haughey called a general election in the
|
|||
|
26-Counties for 11th June, Republican prisoners stood as
|
|||
|
candidates in 9 constituencies. Paddy Agnew (Louth) and
|
|||
|
Kieran Doherty (Cavan/Monaghan) were elected. Kevin
|
|||
|
Lynch missed a seat in Waterford by just 300 votes. The
|
|||
|
electoral successes were to have two effects. Firstly,
|
|||
|
the Dublin and London governments moved to marginalise
|
|||
|
the Republican Movement through a process of extended
|
|||
|
collaboration that lead to the Anglo-Irish Agreement of
|
|||
|
1985 and the extradition legislation of 1987. For Sinn
|
|||
|
F<EFBFBD>in, the message they took from the period was that"Our
|
|||
|
tentative moves towards adopting an electoral strategy
|
|||
|
were rapidly concluded with the electoral success of
|
|||
|
that year. The centrality of mass popular struggle
|
|||
|
eventually found its place alongside the armed
|
|||
|
struggle." (12)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Buoyed by the prisoners' electoral successes many
|
|||
|
Republicans began to believe that not only should an
|
|||
|
electoral strategy become more central to the overall
|
|||
|
struggle but that it was only a matter of putting up
|
|||
|
candidates and winning seats. Thus the "armalite and
|
|||
|
ballot box" tactic was developed and indeed it appeared
|
|||
|
to meet with considerable success in the 6-County area.
|
|||
|
In the 1982 elections to the newly-established "Northern
|
|||
|
Assembly" Sinn F<>in candidates got 64,191 first
|
|||
|
preference votes and Adams (West Belfast), Jim McAlister
|
|||
|
(Armagh), Martin McGuinness (Derry), Danny Morrison
|
|||
|
(Mid-Ulster) and Owen Carron (Fermanagh/South Tyrone)
|
|||
|
were all elected. In elections to Westminster in June
|
|||
|
1983 the Sinn Fein vote increased to 13.4% and Gerry
|
|||
|
Adams was elected MP for West Belfast.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
'Left Turn'?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The first cracks began to appear in the traditional
|
|||
|
policy of abstentionism at the 1983 Ard Fheis when a
|
|||
|
decision was taken to contest the upcoming elections to
|
|||
|
the European Parliament and to take seats if elected.
|
|||
|
But it was the decision of this Ard Fheis to replace the
|
|||
|
movement's commitment to "Christian principles" to
|
|||
|
"Irish Republican Socialist principles" which was to
|
|||
|
lead many to believe, over the subsequent decade, that
|
|||
|
Sinn F<>in had taken a 'left turn'. Ruairi O'Br<42>daigh
|
|||
|
resigned as President and Adams was elected to the
|
|||
|
position.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
When the Euro elections were held, the Sinn F<>in vote in
|
|||
|
the 6-Counties was down slightly to 13.3%. In the South
|
|||
|
- where in the 1982 general election the SF vote in the
|
|||
|
key constituencies of Louth and Cavan/Monaghan had
|
|||
|
halved since the hunger strike election - their total
|
|||
|
vote was only 2%. In the 1985 Northern local elections,
|
|||
|
the Sinn F<>in vote slipped further, to under 12% but
|
|||
|
they had 59 Councillors elected.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In the South the electoral breakthrough never came. As
|
|||
|
one Sinn F<>in activist put it:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"...we were not going to get votes in Ballymun because
|
|||
|
the Brits were battering down doors in Ballymurphy"
|
|||
|
(13)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The need to 'become relevant' to 26-County voters meant
|
|||
|
that Sinn F<>in activists were encouraged to become
|
|||
|
involved in community and trade union activities. Much
|
|||
|
good work was done by SF activists on the drugs issue in
|
|||
|
Dublin, for example, over the next couple of years.
|
|||
|
However, there was a glaring dichotomy. The strategy
|
|||
|
being formulated by the leadership - that of developing
|
|||
|
a 'Pan-Nationalist Alliance', an "...Irish Ireland
|
|||
|
movement to offset, especially in the 26-Counties, the
|
|||
|
neo-colonial and anti-national mentality that exists
|
|||
|
there" (14), meant that direct conflict with the 26-
|
|||
|
County government had to be avoided. Instead of
|
|||
|
realising that the failure to make 'an electoral
|
|||
|
breakthrough' in the 26-Counties was directly
|
|||
|
attributable to the failure to offer a radical socialist
|
|||
|
alternative, the leadership decided instead that the
|
|||
|
problem was abstentionism. At the 1986 Ard-Fheis the
|
|||
|
decision was taken to enter Leinster House if elected
|
|||
|
and many of the "old guard" left to form Republican Sinn
|
|||
|
F<EFBFBD>in.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Anarchists would of course argue that the decision to
|
|||
|
use the tactic of participation in elections in the
|
|||
|
first place would inevitably lead to reformism. The
|
|||
|
decision to drop abstentionism was just one more step in
|
|||
|
that process. True socialism cannot be achieved through
|
|||
|
the parliamentary process. Participation in elections
|
|||
|
has the dual effect of maintaining illusions in the
|
|||
|
State apparatus and of taking away all possibility of
|
|||
|
self-activity among the working-class and replacing it
|
|||
|
with a reliance on voting for 'good representatives'
|
|||
|
every couple of years.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
While Sinn F<>in continued - and still continues - to
|
|||
|
call itself a socialist party, the central policy became
|
|||
|
one of creating the much talked about "Pan Nationalist
|
|||
|
Alliance". Much of the leadership's thinking on this
|
|||
|
issue was included in a document entitled "A Strategy
|
|||
|
For Peace" given by Sinn F<>in to the SDLP during a
|
|||
|
series of meetings between the two parties in 1988.
|
|||
|
These meetings had come about as a result of an
|
|||
|
extensive series of contacts between Sinn F<>in,
|
|||
|
representatives of the Catholic Church and indirect
|
|||
|
contact with Taoiseach Charles Haughey. In the
|
|||
|
document, Sinn F<>in called for a date for British
|
|||
|
withdrawal, saying that, "Within the new situation
|
|||
|
created by these measures [withdrawal], it is then a
|
|||
|
matter of business-like negotiations between the
|
|||
|
representatives of all the Irish parties, and this
|
|||
|
includes those who represent today's loyalist voter, to
|
|||
|
set the constitutional, economic, social and political
|
|||
|
arrangements for a new Irish state.... the British
|
|||
|
government needs to be met with a firm united and
|
|||
|
unambiguous demand from all Irish Nationalist parties
|
|||
|
for an end to the Unionist veto and a declaration of a
|
|||
|
date for withdrawal...."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
One of the aims of the SF/SDLP talks was, according to
|
|||
|
the document,"That Sinn F<>in and the SDLP join forces to
|
|||
|
impress on the Dublin government the need to launch an
|
|||
|
international and diplomatic offensive to secure
|
|||
|
national self-determination."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
It must be remembered that this proposal was made at a
|
|||
|
time of unprecedented co-operation between the Dublin
|
|||
|
and London governments in an attempt to marginalise and
|
|||
|
smash the Republican Movement. The Anglo-Irish
|
|||
|
Agreement of 1985, which Gerry Adams himself describes
|
|||
|
as "...a coming together of the various British
|
|||
|
strategies on an all-Ireland basis, with the Dublin
|
|||
|
government acting as the new guarantor of partition"
|
|||
|
(15) was already two years in place. Haughey was in the
|
|||
|
process of extraditing republicans and tightening up
|
|||
|
security co-operation with the British forces. And
|
|||
|
workers and the unemployed in the 26-Counties were
|
|||
|
facing a severe economic onslaught under the terms of
|
|||
|
the government-union-employer deal, the "Programme for
|
|||
|
National Recovery " (PNR).
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Socialism?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
So what of the 'left turn'? Adams still described
|
|||
|
himself as a socialist so he must have seen some role
|
|||
|
for socialists in the "Irish Ireland movement". And
|
|||
|
indeed he did:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"The true socialist will be an active supporter of the
|
|||
|
republican character of the national independence
|
|||
|
movement. She or he will realise that, unless this
|
|||
|
character is maintained and unless the most radical
|
|||
|
forces are in the leadership of the independence
|
|||
|
struggle, then inevitably it must fail or compromise.
|
|||
|
This classical view of the matter contrasts with the
|
|||
|
ultra-left view, which counterpoises republicanism and
|
|||
|
socialism and which breaks up the unity of the national
|
|||
|
independence movement by putting forward 'socialist'
|
|||
|
demands that have no possibility of being achieved until
|
|||
|
real independence is won. " (16) [my emphasis].
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In essence, it's the classic stages theory - national
|
|||
|
independence first, then we can think about socialism.
|
|||
|
A significant section of the 'nationalist' ruling class
|
|||
|
- so the theory goes - can be drawn into the fight for a
|
|||
|
united Ireland, if we don't frighten them off by
|
|||
|
screaming too loudly about poverty, unemployment or the
|
|||
|
ills of capitalism!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
This 'tread very carefully' philosophy was seen clearly
|
|||
|
during the Anti-Extradition Campaign of the late 1980s.
|
|||
|
Appeal after appeal was made to the 'grassroots' of
|
|||
|
Fianna Fail (FF) and attempts were made, to quote from a
|
|||
|
motion from the National Committee to one of its first
|
|||
|
conferences,"...to play on the inherent contradictions
|
|||
|
within the party [FF] between the old Dev'ites and the
|
|||
|
newer monetarists.."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
At another Conference, a National Committee document
|
|||
|
stated"A primary means of pressurising Fianna Fail is
|
|||
|
through their own party structures."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Because this remained a key focus of the campaign, event
|
|||
|
after event was scaled down or cancelled entirely for
|
|||
|
fear of alienating the couple of backbench TDs who it
|
|||
|
was hoped would issue a statement against extradition.
|
|||
|
Thus when the January 1988 Conference of the Irish Anti-
|
|||
|
Extradition Committee (IAEC) took a decision to stage a
|
|||
|
large demonstration outside the Fianna Fail Ard Fheis,
|
|||
|
this decision was countermanded by Sinn F<>in and only a
|
|||
|
small picket took place.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Indeed this situation reached farcical heights following
|
|||
|
the extradition of Robert Russell in August, 1988. At
|
|||
|
the first National Committee meeting of the IAEC
|
|||
|
following Russell's extradition, Norah Comiskey, Richard
|
|||
|
Greene and Jim Doyle (all FF members) with the support
|
|||
|
of SF were still talking about organising meetings of FF
|
|||
|
members against extradition and even seriously discussed
|
|||
|
holding a press conference to call for the removal of
|
|||
|
Haughey as leader of FF and his replacement by a "true
|
|||
|
republican".
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The lessons of that period should have been clear. The
|
|||
|
complete failure of the anti-extradition campaign to
|
|||
|
make an impact should have taught Sinn F<>in that any
|
|||
|
alliance with bosses - even if in this case the alliance
|
|||
|
was more illusory than real - is one dominated
|
|||
|
politically by bosses. Instead, however, the drive to
|
|||
|
create the "Pan-Nationalist Alliance" was intensified.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
By the early 1990s the "Irish Peace Process" (as Sinn
|
|||
|
Fein was labelling it) was well under way and Sinn F<>in
|
|||
|
and the British government were in regular secret
|
|||
|
contact. Northern Secretary Peter Brooke had publicly
|
|||
|
acknowledged that he found it "...difficult to envisage
|
|||
|
a military defeat of the IRA." (17) On the other side
|
|||
|
of the coin, Republicans had realised that a military
|
|||
|
victory for the IRA was not a possibility.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The British were saying that they had no selfish
|
|||
|
interest in staying in the 6-Counties, and Brooke was
|
|||
|
involved in a series of 'talks about talks' with
|
|||
|
Unionist parties and the SDLP. At Sinn Fein's Wolfe
|
|||
|
Tone commemoration in June 1991, Adams stated
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"While Dublin and the SDLP refuse to stand up to the
|
|||
|
British government it will continue to think it can do
|
|||
|
exactly what it wants in Ireland......Dublin should seek
|
|||
|
a change in Britain's current policy of maintaining the
|
|||
|
union to one of ending it and handing over sovereignty
|
|||
|
to an all-Ireland government, democratically elected and
|
|||
|
accountable to the Irish nation. Dublin should use the
|
|||
|
opportunity of these talks [Brooke talks] to persuade
|
|||
|
the unionists that their future lies in this context and
|
|||
|
to persuade the British to accept that they have a
|
|||
|
responsibility to influence the unionist position. To
|
|||
|
secure a national and international consensus on this
|
|||
|
the Dublin government needs a strategy for unity and
|
|||
|
independence. Such a strategy would involve winning
|
|||
|
international support for the demand for Irish
|
|||
|
independence and would require the full use of Irish
|
|||
|
diplomatic skills and resources." (18)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Nobody ever explained how a government which was
|
|||
|
presiding over massive unemployment and poverty, which
|
|||
|
had - over the previous 5 years - imposed severe
|
|||
|
restrictions on the living standards of workers and the
|
|||
|
unemployed through "National Programmes"
|
|||
|
(government/employer/union deals) and which was quite
|
|||
|
efficiently fulfilling its role as a junior partner in
|
|||
|
the western capitalist system was likely to persuade the
|
|||
|
unionists that life in a 32-County State was going to be
|
|||
|
any better for them. The realpolitik of the Pan-
|
|||
|
Nationalist Alliance meant that the need to smash both
|
|||
|
states on the island and replace them with a Socialist
|
|||
|
Republic was quietly shelved. Instead it was more
|
|||
|
important to play footsie with Dublin and 'Irish-
|
|||
|
America'. Such a policy was never likely to win
|
|||
|
working-class Unionists over from the Orange bigots.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Persuaders for Unity!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Not alone did Sinn F<>in now call on the Dublin
|
|||
|
government to take up the banner of "Irish
|
|||
|
Independence", but the call also went out to the British
|
|||
|
government to"...join the ranks of the persuaders in
|
|||
|
seeking to obtain the consent of all sections to the
|
|||
|
constitutional, political and financial arrangements
|
|||
|
needed to establish a united Ireland." (19)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
With the publication of the Sinn F<>in document "Towards
|
|||
|
a Lasting Peace in Ireland" in 1992, the strategy was
|
|||
|
fully in place. The central thrust of the document was
|
|||
|
that Britain must "join the persuaders" and Dublin must
|
|||
|
"...persuade the British that partition has
|
|||
|
failed,...persuade the unionists of the benefits of
|
|||
|
Irish reunification, and....persuade the international
|
|||
|
community that it should support a real peace process in
|
|||
|
Ireland." (20)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The first steps were now being taken to establish the
|
|||
|
'Irish American' arm of the axis. "Americans for a New
|
|||
|
Irish Agenda" was set up by, among others, a former U.S.
|
|||
|
Congressman, Bruce Morrison. Adams and Hume went public
|
|||
|
on the results of their discussions in April 1993. In
|
|||
|
June - amidst great controversy - Mary Robinson, the 26-
|
|||
|
County President, visited Belfast and shook hands with
|
|||
|
Gerry Adams. It was to be the first of many famous
|
|||
|
handshakes and the first public acknowledgement of Adams
|
|||
|
the peace-maker.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Warrington bombing of March 1993 in which two
|
|||
|
children were killed brought intense criticism of the
|
|||
|
armed campaign from both inside and outside the
|
|||
|
Republican Movement. The massive car bomb which was
|
|||
|
exploded in the City of London in April, causing
|
|||
|
millions of pounds worth of damage, reminded the British
|
|||
|
government that the IRA was still a force to be reckoned
|
|||
|
with.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Realising that the initiative could not be left in the
|
|||
|
hands of Sinn F<>in, Dublin and London had meanwhile been
|
|||
|
involved in drawing up their own set of proposals. The
|
|||
|
Downing Street Declaration - launched in December - was
|
|||
|
a classic fudge. In the House of Commons Prime Minister
|
|||
|
John Major said that the Declaration did not contain
|
|||
|
"...any suggestion that the British government should
|
|||
|
join the ranks of the persuaders of the value or
|
|||
|
legitimacy of a united Ireland...". Meantime in the
|
|||
|
D<EFBFBD>il Taoiseach Albert Reynolds was saying that "...for
|
|||
|
the first time ever, the right to self-determination of
|
|||
|
the people of Ireland is acknowledged...".
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Despite the fact that Downing St. contained nothing that
|
|||
|
had not been in the Anglo-Irish Agreement, Sinn F<>in
|
|||
|
felt that its strategy was in place and that it was in a
|
|||
|
stronger position than in 1985. Therefore, despite
|
|||
|
nearly eight months of procrastination, it was only
|
|||
|
going to be a matter of time until the IRA cease-fire
|
|||
|
was declared. The rapidity with which the Sinn Fein
|
|||
|
leadership was accepted into the arms of
|
|||
|
'respectability' caught many by surprise. For Adams,
|
|||
|
McGuinness et al it was, however, simply the culmination
|
|||
|
of a strategy built up over many years.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Sinn F<>in now declares as its priority:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"...to move the peace process forward...to build on the
|
|||
|
gains which have been made and to move speedily forward
|
|||
|
into all-party talks led by both the British and Irish
|
|||
|
governments...to bring about an inclusive and negotiated
|
|||
|
end to British jurisdiction in Ireland. We seek to
|
|||
|
replace it with an agreed Irish jurisdiction."(21)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
If socialism had to wait throughout the seventies and
|
|||
|
eighties, the realpolitik of the nineties means that the
|
|||
|
word should not even be mentioned for fear of upsetting
|
|||
|
John Bruton, John Hume or Bill Clinton. Republicans
|
|||
|
might well be justified in asking if this is what Bobby
|
|||
|
Sands died for.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Multinationals
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Meanwhile, Sinn F<>in has no difficulty in attending Bill
|
|||
|
Clinton's "Investing in Ireland" Conference (Washington
|
|||
|
24/5/95), attended by the chief executives of some of
|
|||
|
the biggest multinationals in the world all looking to
|
|||
|
see if Ireland can provide them with tax breaks and low
|
|||
|
wages to extract even more profits. Their Northern
|
|||
|
Chairperson Gear<61>id O'Hara calls on the anti-union
|
|||
|
multinational Seagate not to cease their exploitation of
|
|||
|
Irish workers but to offer training schemes to
|
|||
|
"...afford the youth of Derry the chance to become the
|
|||
|
direction and decision-makers of industry in their own
|
|||
|
country..." (22). In the course of a debate in the
|
|||
|
U.S., the same Mr. O'Hara can declare that Sinn F<>in
|
|||
|
"...have no problem with capitalism." (23)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The only surprising thing is that anybody should be
|
|||
|
surprised. This is simply the logical consequence of
|
|||
|
the type of 'nation-state' politics pursued by Sinn F<>in
|
|||
|
over the years. If "labour must wait" then labour will
|
|||
|
always be left behind. This is not a uniquely Irish
|
|||
|
phenomenon. It has happened and is happening throughout
|
|||
|
the world, the most notable recent examples being the
|
|||
|
ANC in South Africa and the PLO in Palestine. Because
|
|||
|
the driving political force has been nationalist rather
|
|||
|
than socialist in nature, compromise with and the
|
|||
|
eventual acceptance of capitalism is inevitable even for
|
|||
|
those who continue to call themselves socialists.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
This is not because - as some might claim - the SF
|
|||
|
leadership have "sold out" on their socialism. The
|
|||
|
entire direction of the 'Peace Process' shows instead
|
|||
|
the bankruptcy of nationalist politics and the fact that
|
|||
|
nationalist alliances have nothing of consequence to
|
|||
|
offer the working-class. 'Socialism' is useful to the
|
|||
|
Republicans at times as a slogan to show why they are
|
|||
|
different, to mark them out from other members of the
|
|||
|
"nationalist family". However the most important aim is
|
|||
|
to develop and maintain unity among that nationalist
|
|||
|
family. In order to do this the socialist slogans must
|
|||
|
be left on the backburner, to be resurrected now and
|
|||
|
again, usually at election time, when they are useful.
|
|||
|
With time, the slogans become less and less useful and
|
|||
|
will eventually be disposed of entirely. Nationalists
|
|||
|
see their rightful role as being that of governing
|
|||
|
"their" States and will do deals with almost anybody to
|
|||
|
be allowed to fulfil that role.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The question which remains is to ask what future there
|
|||
|
is for Sinn F<>in. In the absence of the military
|
|||
|
campaign (which is extremely unlikely to re-commence
|
|||
|
under the present leadership for a variety of reasons),
|
|||
|
is there any real space for Sinn F<>in's politics? One
|
|||
|
thing is clear - Sinn F<>in may describe itself as
|
|||
|
"socialist", it may have as its objective a 32-County
|
|||
|
Socialist Republic but it does not have the policies or
|
|||
|
the ability to deliver on that objective. Already one
|
|||
|
Sinn F<>in activist has been quoted in a national Sunday
|
|||
|
newspaper as saying that Sinn F<>in could well be part of
|
|||
|
the next government in the 26-Counties (if of course
|
|||
|
they manage to get anyone elected!). As a nationalist
|
|||
|
party, Sinn F<>in has actually achieved one of its main
|
|||
|
objectives of the last decade - the Pan-Nationalist
|
|||
|
Alliance is firmly in place, even if the British
|
|||
|
government is hardly shaking in its shoes at the sight
|
|||
|
of it. With the demand for immediate unconditional
|
|||
|
British withdrawal having been replaced by a plea for
|
|||
|
"inclusive all-party talks", Sinn F<>in look set to
|
|||
|
become yet another moderate 'party of the centre'.
|
|||
|
Without an armed campaign to support, their politics
|
|||
|
differ little from those of the other mainstream Irish
|
|||
|
political parties. Genuine socialists who are members
|
|||
|
of Sinn F<>in should be asking themselves why.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
REFERENCES
|
|||
|
(1) WORKERS SOLIDARITY MOVEMENT (WSM) statement 7/9/1994
|
|||
|
(2) WSM Position Paper: The National Question (adopted
|
|||
|
January 1991)
|
|||
|
(3) WSM statement 7/9/1994
|
|||
|
(4) AN PHOBLACHT Vol. 1, No. 3: quoted in FARRELL,
|
|||
|
MICHAEL: Northern Ireland; The Orange State. Page 270
|
|||
|
(5) source: BOWYER BELL, J.: IRA Tactics and Targets.
|
|||
|
Page 18
|
|||
|
(6) CLARKE, LIAM: Broadening the Battlefield; The H-
|
|||
|
Blocks and the Rise of Sinn Fein. Page 13
|
|||
|
(7) Bobby Sands Memorial Lecture, 5/5/1985; quoted in
|
|||
|
CLARKE, LIAM op. cit. Page 29
|
|||
|
(8) quoted in ibid. Page 121
|
|||
|
(9) ADAMS, GERRY: Free Ireland; Towards a Lasting Peace.
|
|||
|
Page 79
|
|||
|
(10) ibid. Page 86
|
|||
|
(11) AN PHOBLACHT/REPUBLICAN NEWS (AP/RN) Sat. 9/5/1981
|
|||
|
(12) GIBNEY, JIM speaking on 10th anniversary of hunger
|
|||
|
strikes, quoted in AP/RN 22/11/90
|
|||
|
(13) CLARKE, LIAM op. cit. Page 226
|
|||
|
(14) ADAMS, GERRY op.cit. Page 135
|
|||
|
(15) ibid. Page 108
|
|||
|
(16) ibid. Page 133
|
|||
|
(17) quoted in ibid. Page 199
|
|||
|
(18) AP/RN 27/6/91
|
|||
|
(19) ADAMS, GERRY op.cit. Page 203
|
|||
|
(20) ibid. Page 209
|
|||
|
(21) ADAMS, GERRY speaking to United Nations
|
|||
|
Correspondents Association 5/5/95
|
|||
|
(22) DERRY JOURNAL 24/5/95
|
|||
|
(23) IRISH TIMES 10/5/95
|
|||
|
|