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New push by Britain and Ireland for IRA disbandment
By Chris Marsden and Julie Hyland
7 March 2005
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Recent weeks have seen intense pressure placed on Sinn Fein
by London and Dublin, backed by Washington, to accept not only
the disarming of the Irish Republican Army (IRA) but its disbandment.
The pretext for this has been the December 20 raid on the Northern
Bank in Belfast, which netted £26.5 million, making it Irelands
largest-ever bank robbery. The governments of Britain and the
Irish Republic insist that the IRA carried out the heistalthough
they have presented no evidence substantiating the chargeand
maintain that some within Sinn Feins leadership must have
known it was to take place.
Sinn Fein, which is considered the political arm of the IRA,
officially denies any link to the proscribed organisation. It
has denied any role in the bank raid, as has the IRA.
Nevertheless, Britain and the Irish Republic have used the
robbery to ratchet up the pressure on Sinn Fein President Gerry
Adams and his deputy Martin McGuinness to fall into line behind
their latest demands.
Sinn Fein has argued that the assault on them is the work of
hostile anti-republican forces within the norths pro-unionist
police and security apparatus. But it is the government of the
Irish Republic in the south that has been most vociferous in its
denunciations and, unlike Britain, has openly named Adams and
McGuinness as being members of the ruling IRA Army Council.
The IRA remains a proscribed organisation on both sides of
the border, and the naming of Sinn Feins leaders implies
a threat of criminal prosecution that goes beyond the financial
sanctions so far imposed by Britain. It is inconceivable that
Dublin would act in this way without the say-so of Washington,
given the extent of US control of the Southern Irish economy.
The Good Friday Agreement
The demand for IRA disbandment was not included in the Good
Friday Agreement, signed by Sinn Fein in 1998, which laid the
basis for a devolved power-sharing government in Northern Ireland.
Nevertheless, this demand flows from the character of the constitutional
arrangements for which the Agreement called.
The Agreement was drawn up to meet the political and economic
requirements of the two major imperialist powers with strategic
interests in Ireland, Britain and the United States. Its essential
aim was to bring to an end the armed conflict that had been taking
place in the north for more than three decades, resulting from
sectarian tensions between the dominant pro-British unionist Protestants
and the Catholics, who suffered systematic discrimination and
who largely supported unification with Southern Ireland. The major
powers hoped that a power-sharing deal between the unionist establishment
and Sinn Fein would reduce the massive financial costs of Britains
military occupation and provide a more stable environment for
attracting international investment, as had been successfully
achieved in the Republic to the south.
The Agreement provided no basis for a genuine resolution of
sectarian tensions within the north. It was cast as an agreement
between antagonistic communities that were to be represented by
contending republican and unionist parties. Moreover, it preserved
British rule of the six northern counties and the veto enjoyed
by the unionists over any move towards unification, while Dublin
renounced its historic claim to the north.
Sinn Fein accepted these provisions and was accepted into the
Assembly established at Stormont, alongside the Unionist parties,
after the IRA had ceased military operations against Britain.
All parties pledged total and absolute commitment to exclusively
democratic and peaceful means and opposition to any
use or threat of force by others for any political purpose.
This was taken to mean that the IRA and pro-British loyalist paramilitaries
would follow their ceasefire with disarmament.
As a reward, Sinn Fein was promised reform of the almost exclusively
Protestant Royal Ulster Constabulary, a substantial reduction
in the British armed presence in the North, and the creation of
various cross-border economic and political institutions.
Power sharing thus translated into an agreement on the part
of Sinn Fein to police the Catholic population alongside the unionist
parties role in policing Protestant areas.
The support of Sinn Fein and the IRA for the Agreement expressed
the failure of the nationalist perspective and the tactics of
terrorism associated with it. Rejecting any possibility of a unified
struggle of the working class against both British occupation
and the domination of big business on both sides of the border,
the republican organisations, both political and military, sought
to pressure the British state into withdrawing its troops and
giving up its claims on the north. However, the IRAs isolated
terrorist campaign never seriously threatened British imperialism
and played the reactionary role of deepening divisions between
Catholics and Protestants in the north, and between the Irish
and British working class.
The Agreement offered the dominant petty-bourgeois elements
within the republican movement the possibility of ending their
exclusion from positions of power and privilege under Protestant
ascendancy within the north. It won wider support amongst Catholic
workers because they were justifiably tired of the bankrupt strategy
of terror, which had failed to provide any alleviation of the
social hardship and suppression of democratic rights they faced.
The unionist parties were promised that accepting power sharing
with Sinn Fein and a role for Dublin in the norths political
affairs would bring substantial economic benefits. A majority
of Protestant voters initially backed the Agreement, but the unionist
camp has remained divided between the pro-Agreement Ulster Unionist
Party (UUP) of David Trimble and the anti-Agreement Democratic
Unionist Party (DUP) led by Ian Paisley.
The British Labour government of Tony Blair did everything
it could to placate Britains traditional unionist allies,
and the main emphasis was always on the need for the republicans
to accept IRA disarmament, which was portrayed as the main or
even sole obstacle to a permanent peace.
The impact of 9/11
Initially, London and Washington were reluctant to place undue
pressure on Adams and McGuinness, who were seen as committed to
bringing the more reluctant forces within the IRA into line. It
was accepted that the decommissioning of arms by the IRA would
take years.
All this changed following the destruction of the Twin Towers
and the attack on the Pentagon on September 11, 2001an event
that was used to launch the Bush administrations war
on terror as the cover for its plans to seize control of
the oil reserves of the Middle East and Caspian Basin.
Faced with the need to appear intransigent towards all forms
of terrorist activity, it became increasingly difficult for Washington
and London to treat Sinn Fein and, by implication, the IRA as
legitimate negotiating and even power-sharing parties. This was
especially the case under conditions in which the anti-Agreement
unionists cited Bush and Blairs insistence that there could
be no negotiations with terrorists to justify their own refusal
to participate in the power-sharing arrangements.
With Stormont in a state of permanent crisis and suspension,
Adams and McGuinness were instructed to demonstrate publicly that
the IRA was in the process of disarming. But every initiative
failed to satisfy the unionists. In October 2002, Blair issued
a public statement demanding that the IRA be disbanded.
At that time, Sinn Fein refused to accede to Blairs injunctions,
which were described as a unionist ultimatum. As a result, the
Northern Ireland executive has remained stalled until today.
This has had a deleterious impact on the plans to develop the
north as an investment platform. A 2004 report from Northern Irelands
Economic Development Forum identified key weaknesses faced by
the regions companies, attaching primary importance to the
threat posed by political instability. It stated, Northern
Irelands political representatives...ignore the importance
of political stability at the economys peril. Every effort
must be made to resolve the current difficulties in the peace
process and mitigate against the direct negative impact political
instability has on economic growth and tourism in particular.
Last summer, the pressure placed on Sinn Fein to accede to
the demand for IRA disbandment appeared to have succeeded. On
May 20, the partys national chairman, Mitchel McLaughlin,
told the Guardian, We are saying it is possible to
get rid of the IRA.
This was followed by a speech by Adams himself to a party gathering
in August in which he stated, I personally feel that while
there are justifiable fears within unionism about the IRA and
while people have concerns about the IRA, I think political unionism
uses the IRA and the issue of IRA arms as an excuse. I think republicans
need to be prepared to remove that as an excuse.
According to the security forces, the ensuing months were taken
up with a political campaign by the Adams leadership to secure
the agreement of the IRA that it must disarm and even disband.
As far as London and Washington were concerned, however, the Northern
Bank raid provided an opportunity to intensify the pressure on
the Sinn Fein leadership.
The opposition faced by Adams from within the IRA does not
imply a significant constituency within that organisation wishing
to resume military hostilities against Britain, especially given
its traditional reliance on funding and political support from
within Americas political establishment.
But there are those who argue that disarmament is being called
for in isolation from any significant change in the threat posed
by the police, the British army and the loyalist gangs. Moreover,
there are numerous allegations that elements within the IRA, like
their counterparts amongst the loyalists, are involved in criminal
activity such as smuggling cigarettes and fuel, for which arms
are necessary.
Like every other aspect of the Agreement the latest moves against
Sinn Fein are characterised by unprincipled manoeuvring, hypocrisy
and lies designed to conceal the real issues being fought out.
Behind the mask of outrage over Sinn Feins alleged collusion
with IRA criminality is a final push to ensure that the plans
of the major imperialist powers for Ireland are fully implemented.
No one should assume that Sinn Fein will not be prepared to
go along with what is now being demanded of it. Adams and McGuinness
have spent more than a decade seeking to transform Sinn Fein into
precisely the type of respectable bourgeois party with which US
and British imperialism can do business.
Even while rejecting the accusations being levelled against
them, their statements leave open the option of turning on any
elements within Sinn Fein who might prove to have been involved
in the bank raid or other criminal activities. Adams told an IRA
memorial unveiling last week that No republican worthy of
the name can be involved in criminality of any kind and
those that were would be expelled.
More than a century of bitter experience in Ireland has demonstrated
that a nationalist perspective, whether accompanied by a military
campaign or not, cannot overcome the bitter legacy of imperialist
domination. Nor can a perspective that does not challenge capitalist
property relations provide the basis for addressing the essential
social and democratic interests of the working class.
The only way forward is to adopt a socialist programme based
upon a unified struggle of the Catholic and Protestant working
class on both sides of the border against the imperialist powers
and the Irish and unionist bourgeoisie. Such a struggle would
find powerful support within Britain and throughout Europe.
See Also:
Northern Ireland:
New efforts to revive power sharing at Stormont
[24 November 2004]
Ireland: election
results record decay of Fianna Fail
[30 June 2004]
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