358 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
358 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
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Workers Solidarity No. 42
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Irish Anarchist Paper
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Net addition
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Yes to peace and to an Ireland
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that is neither Orange nor Green
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DESPITE ALL THE talk of peace the war continues. The
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media has as usual focused on the acts of the
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republicans, particularly around the Heathrow attack in
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March. However as the following extracts show the
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British state is also continuing its war effort and
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continuing to defend its usual mixture of lies and
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torture while doing so. They are all taken from An
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Phoblacht/Republican News (Sinn Fein paper) in the
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closing weeks of March, mostly stories the media did
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not consider to be worth covering.
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"Yet again, an RIR soldier has walked free from a
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Diplock court even though he admitted supplying the
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names and addresses of republicans to loyalist gangs.
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David Murdock was one of three people who appeared
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before Belfast Crown Court on Tuesday, 15 March. The
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court was told that Murdock supplied information to 28-
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year-old loyalist Brian Appleton from Windsor Avenue,
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yet Appleton was not convicted of any offence arising
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from this."
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"The RUC has kept up its policy of harassment
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against nationalists in the County Tyrone town of
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Cookstown, with a series of dawn raids carried out on
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Monday last, 21 March, on the Greenvale Estate. The RUC
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rampaged through 12 houses using sledgehammers to gain
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entry to several houses at 5.45am. They arrested one
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man who was released the following day without any
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charges being preferred."
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"A ruling by the Court of Appeal in Belfast on
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Monday, 7 March, has sanctioned physical abuse of women
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prisoners in Six-County jails. It stated that the
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practices and procedures involved in the forced strip-
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searching of women prisoners is legal and so entitles
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the prison's governor "to order a prisoner to be strip-
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searched whenever he sees fit."
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"The inquest into the killings of six people in RUC
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shoot-to-kill operations in Armagh in 1982 have been
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adjourned yet again, for two months.... This latest
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adjournment was requested by the crown lawyers to allow
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the British government time to prepare a Public
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Interest Immune Certificate (PIIC)." The PIIC will
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prevent the questioning of those who carried out the
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shooting.
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WHAT'S NEW?
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Not an especially exciting collection, in fact pretty
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typical of the ongoing war of the British state, but
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one you just don't hear about in the mainstream press.
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Indeed in the aftermath of the Heathrow attack the
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mainstream centred on Gerry Adams threat of more IRA
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spectaculars to come. Except of course Adams it
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transpired had said no such thing. His words had been
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changed through the application of what it politely
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know now-a-days as spin. As usual however the original
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(false) remarks got front page headlines, the
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correction received no coverage or a couple of cm's on
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inside pages.
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The point of all this is that despite the formal
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lifting of Section 31 its business as usual for the
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media. The stories we are fed continue to be selective
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and designed to create a false impression from events,
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in this case that republicans are not serious about
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peace while the British government are. To a certain
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extent a reaction of 'so what else is new' is
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legitimate to all this. But the important point that
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all this black propaganda on one side, and endless
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calls for clarification on the other is hiding the real
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nature of the peace talks.
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WHAT'S GOING ON?
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The peace talks represent the ditching of Sinn Fein's
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left gloss and a return to good old nationalist
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politics, pure and simple. They started with the Hume -
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Adams dialogue, a still secret document but one which
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clearly set out to demonstrate that the northern
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nationalists could be trusted (by both Dublin and
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London) to 'behave' in the event of British withdrawal.
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Once Sinn Fein might have talked of nationalising
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foreign sections of the economy, now according to their
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recent pamphlet on The economics of Irish unification
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they expect that the British government will continue
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to pump around 1 billion pounds a year into Northern
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Ireland.
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Gerry Adams gave a special St. Patrick's day address
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as part of the process of spelling this out. In it he
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said
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"Irish history has been scarred and mutilated by the
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support which the British government gives to unionism
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and the consequent inability of unionists to come to a
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democratic accommodation with the rest of the Irish
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people. The British government's role as persuaders is
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key. That is obvious." AP/RN March 24, 1994
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What all this means is transparent. In the past
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Tories have feared that British withdrawal would lead
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to a "Cuba off the British Coast", that a Sinn Fein
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victory would lead to widespread nationalisation and
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social upheaval. But Sinn Fein is no longer talking at
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all of that kind of victory. To expect Britain to give
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1 billion a year after withdrawal clearly sees
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withdrawal not in the context of a defeat for
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imperialism but as a different way for imperialism to
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manage Ireland. The unionists are the problem, Britain
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as a persuader we are told is the potential solution.
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Adams Ard Fheis speech was laced with such a
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perspective, rather than appealing to Protestant
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workers he said "It is also time that the Protestant
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people heard the voice of reason and sanity from their
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leaders. They need a De Klerk to lead them and us into
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the next century."
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The left in Sinn Fein would once have talked of the
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spirit of James Connolly, I'm sure nobody needs the
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difference between Connolly and De Klerk spelt out for
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them.
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Adams Ard Fheis speech was quite clear about what
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Sinn Fein are offering and how they are looking to the
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ruling class of Britain and Ireland rather than the
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workers as the way forward. "Our party paper, Towards a
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Lasting Peace in Ireland, clearly places the onus on
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the two governments to secure change. It especially
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calls on the British government to "join the
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persuaders" and on the Dublin government to persuade
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the British that partition is a failure..."
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He also clearly put forward the idea of Hume-Adams
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as a pan-nationalist alliance saying "credit must given
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also to Albert Reynolds...the first Taoiseach to have
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taken the steps he has taken to address the core issues
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of a negotiated settlement" and again "we need
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particularly to consider how we can appeal to the
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national sentiment that is strong particularly at the
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grassroots of Fianna Fail..."
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SELL OUT, SENSE OR INEVITABLE?
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Now is all this a sell out? Well no, despite the twists
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and turns of republican politics from the "Year of
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Victory" militarism of the 1970's, to the community
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politics "ballot box and armalite" of the 1980's this
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is what has always been the core of nationalist
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politics. It is no more a sell out than Fianna Fail's
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attacks on healthcare or Thatcher's attacks on the
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trade unions.
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The purpose of Irish republicanism is and was to see
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Ireland as Robert Emmet put it "take its place among
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the nations of the world". A place which includes those
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key features of all the other nation states,
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alienation, cops and the rule of a minority. Not just
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in Ireland but everywhere in this century it has been a
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fault of the left to accept the populist rhetoric of
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nationalist movements, from Nicaragua to Cuba as
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socialist.
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Sinn Fein wants the same sort of settlement that the
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ANC and PLO have 'won'. Where the post boxes get a lick
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of green paint, and the harp replaces the crown on the
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caps of the police. Where the existing state (and
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yesterdays enemies) control what were their puppets (be
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it loyalist death squads or Inkatha) in return for a
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guarantee of stability from the 'anti-imperialists'. We
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recognise these things as a step forward, the ending of
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legal apartheid or the sectarian state in the North
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would not be trivial things and just as we would fight
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against their introduction, we support their ending.
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But they offer only crumbs to the working class.
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Unification under capitalism throws up a huge number
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of problems for the ruling class. First amongst these
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is Protestant privilege. The northern Protestant
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workers may have the second worst living standards in
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comparison with any group in Britain but they are ahead
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of the worst group, northern Catholic workers. What's
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more, in an economy where they too have a high
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percentage of unemployment about 30,000 Protestants are
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dependant on the 'security forces' for a job. If all
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that is on offer is unity under capitalism then given
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the past record of loyalism it could be foolish to
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expect them not to fight.
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A REPUBLICAN SURRENDER?
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On the other hand any settlement that did not rectify
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the imbalances would offer nothing to Catholic workers.
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War weariness might cause it to be accepted but in the
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longer term resistance to injustice would be sure to
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reappear and without any left alternative would
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probably repeat the events of the end of the 60's and
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start of the 70's. Sections of the far-left have
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supported just such a republican 'surrender' in the
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impression that this would give them room to grow. In
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the south however many people consider the border
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irrelevant to their day to day lives. Here too the far
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left has failed to break out of isolation, suggesting
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there's more than the border in the way in the north.
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So what are the two possibilities? With the end of
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the cold war and the collapse of the northern economy
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Britain's long term interests in staying have declined.
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A significant section of the ruling class would seem to
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want out if they could leave stability behind. Let us
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not get too excited by this however, another section
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wants to stay under any circumstances. The debate may
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be leaning towards the first section at the moment but
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the wind could easily change. The question is are they
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willing to pay the price of stability?
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That price comprises maintaining the current living
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standards of Protestant workers, including finding
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20,000 or so new jobs for those currently working in
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security. (Lets assume they keep 10,000 to police this
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'new' Ireland. It means offering a substantial enough
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bribe to the local ruling class to pull them (and the
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unionist parties) behind such a solution. It also means
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pulling up the standard of living of Catholics to a
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level where the deal appears to offer something and
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creating a mechanism to achieve equality of opportunity
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and access over a period of time. It would appear from
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their calls for a Protestant De Klerk, Britain to
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'convince' the unionists and continued investment from
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Britain that this is what Sinn Fein hopes for.
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The bill would be billions of pounds, the problem
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being that capitalism in recession would have severe
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difficulties finding this money. Is the British and
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Southern Irish ruling class prepared to pay such a
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price? It would seem unlikely with the exception of the
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bombings of the City of London (and they are important
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exceptions) the ruling class has managed to isolate the
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problem to the 6 counties and keep costs down. Thatcher
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once boasted that there had been more British troops
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killed in driving accidents in West Germany than in
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northern Ireland. The British ruling class is not going
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to support withdrawal unless it can be guaranteed un-
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interrupted exploitation and that it would be cheaper
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to leave then to stay.
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GAZA MARK II
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The second option would be of the type worked out by
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Israel and the PLO. Token improvements could be made
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that would redistribute poverty, the local ruling class
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bought off and any opposition destroyed by massive
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repression from the relevant side. Perhaps Britain
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would withdraw politically but possibly retain troops
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on the ground in a peace 'enforcement' capacity,
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through the EC or UN. Perhaps they would be U.S.
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troops. The new regime could then try and create a new
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stability through force.
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Is this a possibility? Its one fraught with
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difficulties for the ruling class. Britain's policy of
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Ulsterisation introduced under Labour and stepped up
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under Thatcher meant replacing British troops with
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local police and UDR (RIR) where possible, and arming
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loyalist death squads to do the dirty work. But these
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official and unofficial forces retain some loyalty to
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the community from which they come, the Protestant
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working class. Britain has been testing this loyalty in
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recent years with its partial (very) clampdown on the
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UDA. In turn the republicans would have similar
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problems in getting its forces to police its side of
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such a deal. Such an option would be far from straight
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forward for the ruling class (and needless to say
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disastrous for us).
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Whatever the possibilities and some of them are very
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unattractive all Sinn Fein is promising at best is a
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stability which will include mass unemployment, low
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wages and all the other features that make Ireland an
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attractive investment for imperialism, otherwise how
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can they expect #1 billion annually from Britain. That
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is why we have always said that only socialism can rid
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Ireland north and south of poverty and reaction. That's
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what we will continue to fight for, peace deal or
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otherwise; the class war goes on.
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Andrew Flood
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This is the fourth part of the latest issue of Workers Solidarity,
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produced by the Irish anarchist group, the Workers Solidarity
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Movement. We are changing the format for this posting to
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two parts consisting of short articles and then posting longer
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related articles separately. They should arrive on this
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list/newsgroup over the next few days. Some lists/
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newsgroups will only get postings relevant to them. To
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get other parts reply to this address with a request or
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watch out for them on alt.society.anarchy between the
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13th and 24th of June.
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The parts and their contents are.
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Workers Solidarity 42 (Editorial and shorts) 1/6
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For starters
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That's Capitalism
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Stake your claim to cash
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PLC students demand grants
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Telethon - A hypocritical sham
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If the cops don't like you
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French show how to fight... and win!
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Bosnia, Rwanda and UN intervention.
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Workers Solidarity 42 (More shorts) 2/6
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Significant minority say NO to union leaders
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Don't vote...it only encourages them
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Letter
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Prepare to Sink the service charges
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Find Out More
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WS 42 Gay Pride 3/6
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Loud and Proud
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The reasons Emmet Stagg should resign
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WS 42 Ireland, Sinn Fein and the peace talks. 4/6
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Yes to peace
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WS 42 Year of the Family 5/6
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Parents, puritans and poverty
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Gas masks and pantyhose
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WS 42 Evolution and revolution 6/6
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+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
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The Workers Solidarity Movement can be contacted at
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PO Box 1528, Dublin 8, Ireland
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or by anonymous e-mail to an64739@anon.penet.fi
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Some of our material is available via the Spunk press electronic archive
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by FTP to etext.archive.umich.edu or 141.211.164.18
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or by gopher ("gopher etext.archive.umich.edu")
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in the directory /pub/Politics/Spunk/texts/groups/WSM
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