Chauncey Gardner wrote:Devogue wrote:Within Northern Ireland Adams and McGuinness were seen as pariahs by not only the whole of the Unionist community, but also by people from a Nationalist background. This was reflected at the ballot box during the 1980's when around 90% of the entire electorate in Northern Ireland consistently rejected them.
As for international support, PIRA enjoyed support from NORAID (which was constantly on the radar of the US government), Libya, ETA in Spain, the PLO, Hezbollah and other groups - but as for overwhelming international support? No - it is fair to say they held pariah status.
You're muddling up things there too much devogue.
Just to rewind a little, you asserted that Adams and McGuinness were "pariahs" in Ireland, the UK and internationally. That's not true. They received enormous support at the ballot box in the 1980s, in particular after Adams was elected president in 1983.
Nonsense. The best performance Sinn Fein could manage at the polls in the 1980's was a measly 13.3% of the vote in the 1983 General election, which fell to 11.8% in the 1985 Local Government elections - hardly "enormous" support. In 1987 they polled 11.4% of the vote and in the same year they polled less than 2% in the Dail election in the Republic.
As for international support, outside of various ultra-leftist groups, proscribed groups and rogue states in the 1980's name one country which officially supported the IRA, Sinn Fein and their objectives.
They also received a huge amount of support internationally in the 1980s particularly surrounding the hunger strikes.
Once again, outside of pro-Irish Republican groups in the US and various extremist groups who felt natural affinity to the IRA and antipathy towards Britain, name one country which condemned Britain or called for sanctions against Britain. I am in no way condoning Thatcher's reaction to the hunger strikers but I certainly contest your claim that there was a huge amount of support for the hunger strikers internationally. Also, while I do concede that the hunger strikers may have gained a certain amount of sympathy within the international community (which is very different from support), at no time before or until the end of the Troubles did PIRA or Sinn Fein enjoy anywhere near as much kudos, either at home or internationally.
International pressure on the british gov. was enormous at that stage...hence the famous "we don't talk with terrorists" line that the thatcher gov. used to avoid engaging with sinn fein.
If there was international pressure on the British it did not translate into outright hostility and sanctions - it remained diplomatic and strictly from a sympathetic point of view to the hunger strikers rather than a supportive position of the IRA. To illustrate, Amnesty International would certainly have campaigned against ill treatment of IRA prisoners while disagreeing fundamentally with the IRA's campain of violence.
It was the same tactic they used with Nelson Mandella..whom was branded a pariah and terrorist around the same time as Adams/McGuinness.
The international community as a whole - including Britain - was completely opposed to apartheid. Let me just address the side issue of Thatcher's shitty disdain for Mandela for a second. Thatcher wrongly tried to equate Mandela/ the ANC with the IRA, but as I explained in my last post she was wrong - there was a subtle but crucial difference. Now, leaving aside Mandela and the ANC, it is possible to call them all the wankers of the day while still condemning the separate (and genuine) evil that was apartheid. In other words it was possible to recognise and condemn the evil of apartheid while arguing that the ANC and Mandela were not the solution to the problem.
Also, Thatcher's condemnation of Mandela was typically batty - he was lauded and lionised by the rest of the international community at a time when Adams and McGuinness, the political faces of a movement carrying out unspeakable atrocities and causing endless suffering on behalf of a tiny rump were seen as personae non gratae by the international community. Mandela had no problem getting a Visa to the US on his release from prison, it took Adams and McGuinness a bit longer to come in from the cold.
In the same breath, it would be correct to say that the IRA and their actions were condemned around the globe, in ireland and the UK.
Exactly - and around the globe Sinn Fein were seen as being inextricably linked to the IRA. QED.
You're making the same mistake that many others make..thanks partly to the same sort of political spin thrown at nelson mandella..but that's sort of understandable considering how closely linked IRA and Sinn Fein actually were.
Once again - Mandela was seen by the International community as a beacon of hope against a cruel and genuinely illegitimate regime that was oppressing millions, whereas Adams and McGuinness were seen as mouthpieces for a deadly minority within a minority
within a minority. (say a couple of hundred people supported by 100,000 people within a population of 1.5 million).
Incidentally...at the time you describe adams as being a "pariah", he was sitting down with John Hume from Derry in secret talks that ultimately led to the GFA (good friday agreement). Those talks started in 1988, just a few years after Adams was elected president of SF. That's hardly the actions of a "pariah" or a terrorist, don't you think? One might argue that a "pariah" or "terrorist" would be too busy out attacking the british army or killing protestants, as the spin doctoring led many to believe.
I should state for the record that I am an Irish Nationalist - I would like to see a United Ireland achieved by peaceful means and with the consent of the majority of the people in Northern Ireland.
The secret talks were momentous - brave, far-sighted, historic and genuinely good. Adams and McGuinness have never received the credit they should have got for instigating the talks - a Nobel Peace Prize would not be a step too far. However, before the talks, and while the talks were taking place they were still international pariahs. It is only because of the talks and the peace process that followed that they left that status behind and, by treading a completely different path to Mandela, will eventually come to be revered in the same way in Irish history. But the fact is they once were pariahs.
Devogue wrote:The major difference with Adams, McGuinness and Mandela is that Mandela had absolutely overwhelming popular and moral support for his position in South Africa. Apartheid was recognised internationally as an aberation and the white minority government in South Africa rightly faced sanctions from the international community.
I think history will show that the only real difference between the civil rights movement in northern ireland and south africa was the use of colour as the dividing line, which made it far easier to conceal and sustain. Incidentally..I wasn't equivocating Mandella's civil rights movement with Sinn Féins. I was just illustrating how you have drawn your "pariah" conclusion.
I agree, but the Irish civil rights movement will forever be tainted by PIRA's ruthless hijacking of a noble cause for other motives, and that is unforgiveable.
PIRA's campaign grew out of the wholly justified Civil Rights movement of the late 1960's, but they took it way, way too far.
That's one way of looking at it...but many will argue that it was bloody sunday and the events leading up to it that was the "tipping point"...in other words PIRAs campaign wouldn't have even got off the ground, if there had of been a peaceful, political path towards civil rights. Or to put it even more bluntly, there wouldn't have been queues of volunteers around the block, ready to sign up for an armed campaign for civil rights, if it wasn't for the collapse of the attempts at a peaceful, political movement and innocent people weren't been shot in the streets.
Yes, the split from the Stickies and the birth of PIRA was precipitated by the attempt to surpress the Civil Rights movement, but if PIRA's list of demands and reasons for war had matched the Civil Rights Movement then a solution could have been found. The push for a united Ireland was completely unnecessary and misguided.
As for taking it "way too far"...while not justifying anything, I think it's churlish in the extreme to suggest that the IRA were the only ones involved who "took it way too far". What's very clear from the last 40 years is that nobody's hands are clean and I hope it's not too embarrassing for me to point out that, whether you like it or not, the IRA campaign succeeded....civil rights is returning to northern Ireland and there is now a peaceful, political path to resolving issues.
Nobodies hands are clean - you are absolutely right - but the only people who could ever stop the bloodshed was PIRA. You have been sold a massive pup, a huge piece of propaganda - the claim that PIRA won civil rights for the Nationalist people in Northern Ireland.
PIRA's agenda may have claimed the fight for civil rights was their goal, but they pushed way beyond that remit for a United Ireland - who asked for a violent campaign for unification? All they succeeded in doing was causing huge strife, bloodshed, the creation of ghettoes, incredible levels of sectarianism, hatred and economic and civil collapse. They destroyed Northern Ireland. While PIRA carried out its horrendous war for thirty years, supported publicly all the way by Sinn Fein, NICRA and then the SDLP led by John Hume were the true heroes of civil rights, campaigning for the principle of consent and giving a crucial voice to moderate nationalism.
Your claim that "civil rights are returning to Northern Ireland" doesn't make sense - by the early 80's the civil rights and political landscape had changed significantly and Unionist political hegemony was gone forever. Bit by bit, year by year, equality came to the North and it was hampered all the way by PIRA's actions which gave hardline British and Unionist opponents a reason to be heavyhanded.
As an added bonus for sinn féin, they have also successfully managed to shift NI one step further away from downing street, closer to full autonomy and the incredible reality that a referendum may be called to vote for/against reunification with the rest of Ireland.
The SDLP advocated the principle of consent decades before Sinn Fein! It could only be agreed upon after Sinn Fein pulled back from supporting armed struggle. Also, the GFA was created and agreed by all of the main parties, not just Sinn Fein, and there is nothing to suggest that Sinn Fein alone called for such a provision. Don't forget that the Republic also amended Articles 2 & 3 of its constitution as a counter offer to Unionists, something which seriously annoyed diehard republicans.
Whether that will happen or not, is up to the electorate to decide, but, that's the current situation and over 90% of the electorate on the island of ireland (all denominations and non-believers included) voted overwhelmingly in favour of that framework when it was presented to them on good friday all those years ago.
Yep - 90% of the whole of Ireland voted for consent, democracy, peace and parity of esteem, everything Sinn Fein was against for years while thousands of people died.
Even the most die-hard Unionists (apart from dicks like Jim Allister) realise the Shinners have done a 180 turn and have now completely disowned violence. However, while Nick Griffin is playing the same game he is nowhere near as trustworthy. In fact, he's full of shit. Also, as for the censorship issue with Sinn Fein - Peter Hain and those who wish to deny the BNP air time would do well to read up on that particularly grubby little piece of history.
I hate to be a pain, but, you're wrong there as well. Republicans will have no problem picking back up arms if the unionists continue to stall the political process. Adams/McGuinness have done extremely well to contain and convince republicans that there is a peaceful way but I think it's naive in the extreme to think that the stuttering stop-start nature of the NI assembly is not going unnoticed in certain circles and there is an incredible amount of pressure on adams/mcguinness to prove they were right.
I'm not wrong - I specifically mentioned the Shinners (Sinn Fein). I did not mention splinters and off-shoots which are waiting in the wings and are ready to fuck everyones lives up again like the IRA did.
Also, the censorship issue wasn't just for sinn fein..it was for all "parties" in NI with proven ties with paramilitaries.
Indeed.
As for your point about peter hain...I think you're mistaken in comparing the gagging order in Norn Iron in the 80s with hains complaint..but I do agree that it wasn't wise to try and deny free speech because he didn't like what they have to say.
There were of course differences in the detail, but the major point is the issue regarding censorship .
Armed resistance should be the final recourse for a group which has exhausted every avenue in the search of an ethical solution to an injustice
Do you mean how
NICRA (Northern Irish Civil Rights Association) members suddenly morphed into IRA volunteers in the 1970s, particularly following bloody sunday (1972) when IRA sign ups went through the roof?
Or do you find it too uncomfortable to believe that there really was a genuine civil rights grounding behind their aims and goals?
Before you answer that, I should probably point out that most historians appear to agree that PIRA was more or less dormant, almost an aspiration rather than an active army, in the run up to the 1960s.
Even after Bloody Sunday they
hadn't exhausted every avenue. If they had then John Hume would have joined the Provos - you are making the mistake that the whole of Irish nationalism was represented on the streets of Derry that day, that it was the last stand of the Civil Rights movement and that afterwards war was inevitable. Absolutely not - the British army fucked up big time, they were complete cunts that day but there wasn't a systemic policy by them against all catholics or nationalists - the IRA took advantage of Bloody Sunday and ratcheted up their war, and I can't stress enough
their war against the Brits.
As I have said over and over again, there was not a genuine civil rights grounding behind their aims and goals - they completely hijacked the civil rights campaign and waged a terror campaign instead. To make a rather clumsy analogy, imagine Martin Luther King spearheaded the Black Civil Rights Movement for equality and parity with white America and an armed group led by Malcolm X came along and across the course of 30 years murdered and maimed hundreds of thousands of Americans in the pursuit of a Black separatist state - their goals and aims would be completely different, wouldn't they?
Also, Britain recognised the evil of apartheid with sanctions against South Africa in the 1970's and 80's.
oh really?
In the 1980s Lady Thatcher caused controversy when she refused to back sanctions against South Africa. In 1987 she said that anyone who believed the ANC would ever rule South Africa was “living in cloud-cuckoo land”
There was a
huge kerffufle about the UK governments support of apartheid in south africa recently when david cameron openly criticised Thatchers support of the apartheid regime (in south africa) and branded Mandella a "pariah" and "terrorist".
Yes, I must concede an error on my part - certain British groups including businesses imposed sanctions and partial sanctions were imposed by the government, but never full sanctions.
Interesting - you reckon that European fascism is more of a danger than just the BNP. It's ironic that the BNP want to withdraw completely from Europe - perhaps the British are damned if they do, damned if they don't...

...I would be careful though. We live in an era of banner headlines, celebrity, soundbites and low attention thresholds -ideal for the likes of the BNP.
On the contrary, as was proven last night and today...Griffin is probably the most despised person in the UK at the moment and if there was an election tomorrow, only the very small minority of small-minded racist bigots would vote for them...i.e. the same people who have voted for them over the years. They don't care that he's despised. They are small-minded racist bigots and they will vote for them regardless. Last night won't have converted those sort of people.
There's an underlying myth that vast swathes of people voted for the BNP out of frustration with the gov. I think that's an inaccurate way of looking at the results and it's a mistake to get your knickers in a twist worrying about the BNP.
It was because vast swathes of people DIDN'T BOTHER VOTING in the recent european elections that they got 2 seats.
I'm not sure if that's clear but to put it another way.....the reason you don't have to worry about the BNP is because, after last night, every non-racist person in the UK is going to make DAMN SURE they vote in their next council and parliament elections to ENSURE the BNP don't get any more seats.
I would like to think that is the case, but after seeing the depressing yougov opinion poll today and seeing the sheer apathy of the electorate over recent years I can only see things going the other way.
the BNP don't have the intellect to advance their cause beyond small minded racist bigots with their jaded brand of fascism. however in europe...there is a new, contemporary form of neo-fascism that is very subtle and very sophisticated that IS gaining a lot of ground. In ireland we were almost suckered in by one such party (libertas) and one only has to look at the rise of the pirate party or UKIP and you begin to see where the threat of fascism really is.
It must be extremely subtle. I know of UKIP and I fail to see how they are fascist in any shape or form. It seems that each of the parties you mention are anti-EU and that you are labelling them as fascist as a result.