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Title: IRA Cease-Fire
Author: Carolyn
Date: 1997
Language: en
Topics: IRA, Ireland, Love and Rage Revolutionary Anarchist Federation
Source: Nov/Dec 1997 issue of L&R. Retrieved on 2016-06-13 from https://web.archive.org/web/20160613072401/http://loveandrage.org/?q=node/10

Carolyn

IRA Cease-Fire

On July 19, 1997 the Irish Republican Army (IRA) announced, “the

unequivocal restoration of the cease-fire of August 1994.” The renewed

cease-fire came soon after the Orange Lodge (a Protestant cultural

organization loyal to the British government) canceled some and rerouted

two of the four Orange Order parades scheduled for July 12. Nationalist

outrage at the beginning of the Loyalist marching season (Loyalists,

also called Unionists, support the enforced “union” of Ireland’s six

northern counties with Britain), forced the Orange Order to cancel the

parades. The widespread demonstrations, protests and rioting caused an

estimated $30 million of damage in the first week in July. This massive

show of resistance followed the July 6 Drumcree Parade which thrust its

way through Republican neighborhoods accompanied by the RUC (Royal

Ulster Constabulary) and the British Army.

The 1994 IRA cease-fire now being restored was ended by the IRA after 17

months because Loyalist political parties refused to meet with Irish

nationalist political party Sinn Fein, and the British government (under

former Prime Minister John Major) demanded that the IRA begin disarming

at the start of all-parties peace negotiations. The IRA resumed its

military campaign on February 9, 1997 with the bombing of the Docklands

in London. The IRA and Sinn Fein both beleive that all-party disarmament

(including that of Republicans, Loyalists and the withdrawal of the

British Army) should begin only after significant progress has been made

in the political negotiation process.

The current IRA cease-fire is timed to increase the pressure on Loyalist

forces. It came on the heels of more than a week of nationalist rioting,

and just days before the July 23 deadline for all parties to respond to

the British and Irish governments’ proposals on the process for

negotiations and the timing for disarmament.

Anti-Catholic Terror

In the past few years, Loyalist terror campaigns and parades celebrating

British imperialism have become a focal point for Republican resistance

to the British occupation of the six northern counties of Ireland. This

year Republicans began gathering days before the Spirit of Drumcree

parade through the small nationalist town of Portadown. The Spirit of

Drumcree and other Loyalist forces engaged in a campaign of

anti-Catholic terror; for weeks they attacked church-goers and tried to

burn down at least one church in the village of Dunloy in the months

preceding the marching season. In response to last year’s nationalist

rebellion, Mo Mowlam, the newly-appointed British Secretary of Northern

Ireland, held more than 20 secret negotiations, feeding speculation that

the new British Prime Minister Tony Blair’s administration was going to

cancel all parades through Republican areas. On July 6, the RUC, British

Army, and over a thousand Orangemen invaded the town of Portadown

attacking peaceful nationalist protesters. Instead of forewarning

nationalist forces, as Mowlam had earlier promised, the government

ordered all Catholics to stay in their homes. The Republican movement

went on the offensive against this pattern of harassment, to the

marching season, and to the persistence of British occupation and

discrimination.

The Blair administration has made a number of concessions to the

Republican movement including maintaining a public dialogue with Sinn

Fein despite continued IRA military actions, and proposing a process of

parallel discussions on issues of disarmament and peace negotiations.

The cease-fire succeeded as a well-timed political tactic, forcing

Loyalist parties to the negotiating table and winning concessions from

the British government.

After meetings with Tony Blair, the main Loyalist political parties

rejected the disarmament proposal brought by the British and Irish

Governments. To avoid looking like the only ones who will not negotiate,

the Ulster Unionist Party, the largest Loyalist political party by far,

announced its willingness to enter some sort of parallel negotiations

process. The Loyalist call for the IRA to disarm before negotiations on

the future of Ireland even begin is basically an insistence on a

symbolic surrender; it serves only to subvert the process of British

military withdrawal from the north of Ireland. The British know that

they cannot defeat the Irish national liberation movement.

In the days after the IRA announced a cease-fire, international

journalists proclaimed that Sinn Fein has softened its commitment to a

united Ireland. The IRA and Sinn Fein have thus far been clear and

consistent in their goals of a united Ireland. Martin McGuiness, chief

negotiator for Sinn Fein, said on July 22 that the IRA would not

surrender “a single bullet” before British troops are out of Ireland and

that “Sinn Fein will enter any negotiations as an Irish republican party

seeking national self-determination for the Irish people and an end to

British rule....It is our view that an independent Ireland achieved by

agreement offers the best and most durable basis for peace and

stability.” Despite lofty pronouncements, Sinn Fein has suggested that

with some form of interim agreement the IRA would probably be willing to

begin disarming before the completion of British withdrawal. It is

unclear how much the IRA will be willing to compromise as negotiations

continue.

Legacy of “Peaceful” Solutions

More than a few people who participated in or witnessed the massive

outpouring of opposition to the Loyalist marching season are now asking

themselves, “A cease-fire? Why now? We’ve got ‘em on the ropes, let’s

finish them off.” Negotiations with the British government that include

unclear references to interim agreements and parallel negotiations evoke

the specter of Michael Collins and the 1921 partition of Ireland.

[Michael Collins was a member of the Irish Volunteers in the 1916 Easter

Uprising and the director of organization and intelligence for the IRA

until 1921. He played a central role in negotiating the partition of

Ireland, and was one of the signatories of the Anglo-Irish Treaty of

1921. The Treaty partitioned Ireland into the 26 counties of the

Republic of Ireland and a six-county statelet under direct British rule.

In the civil war that followed, Collins commanded the government forces

against the IRA. He was killed in an ambush in 1922.] Many committed

revolutionaries for good and bad reasons reject this negotiation process

especially when it becomes bogged down in confusing details. But while

abstaining from all negotiations might hold the moral high ground, it

doesn’t grasp the current conditions of struggle.

Are all negotiations equal?

The left in Palestine and elsewhere points to the example of “the peace

settlement” in Palestine and Arafat’s and the PLO’s bankrupt leadership

as proof of the futility of negotiations. The current negotiation

process in Ireland does differ slightly from the situation that brought

the PLO to the negotiating table. Sinn Fein and the IRA are in positions

of relative strength. While the IRA’s military power may have declined

compared to its height in the early 1980s, the Republican movement as a

whole is growing, particularly those forces that are closest to the IRA

and Sinn Fein’s politics. For example in the recent Irish elections Sinn

Fein won its largest electoral victory ever. The British Labour Party’s

electoral victory also adds pressure to Loyalist parties in the north of

Ireland who almost uniformly support (and are supported by) the Tories.

A more fitting comparison for the Irish than Palestine, might be the

EZLN (Zapatistas) in Mexico. While upholding negotiations with the

Mexican ruling class, the EZLN have put the majority of their energy

into building mass resistance to Neoliberalism and mass support for

indigenous rights and autonomy—and they have an army to back them up. In

both cases, the revolutionary movements have used every tactical

military option at their disposal while continuing to develop and rely

on the mass movements that brought them to their current position. Of

course an important distinction between the IRA and the EZLN to note is

the Zapatistas’ rejection of taking state power.

In recent weeks the Republican movement, including Sinn Fein, has

continued to emphasize substantive political issues, demonstrating for

the release of Republican political prisoners, and against police

brutality, state repression, and job discrimination. This emphasis on

mass social movements is more than just another means to a negotiated

settlement; it recognizes that even in the best case scenario,

negotiations will not solve all of Ireland’s social problems. This

contrasts markedly to current-day Palestine, where the PLO, and now the

Palestinian Authority (PA) strives to manage social protest and mass

mobilizations to use solely as a bargaining chip against Israel. Yasir

Arafat and the PA have at times banned public protests and detained

political organizers when negotiations with Israel seemed to be going

well. Arafat and members of the PA have even arrested Palestinian

journalists and activists who have simply questioned policy decisions or

challenged their leadership. Sinn Fein and the IRA have not engaged in

this type of activity and stand against such sectarian politics.

While emphasizing mass protest and resistance, Sinn Fein has continued

to build a Pan-nationalist alliance with more moderate and middle-class

political forces, such as Fianna Fail, the Social Democratic Labour

Party (SDLP) and segments of the Catholic Church. The Workers Solidarity

Movement (WSM), a libertarian communist organization in Ireland has

sharply criticized Sinn Fein for this Pan-nationalist, united front

approach. WSM argues that building a united front submerges the class

struggle for broader unity. This is certainly a real danger, and has no

doubt happened at specific times in Ireland. But this effect is not an

inevitable result of the united front, but dependent on the relationship

of forces in the united front and in Ireland as a whole.

Recent Bombing challenges the Peace Process

Since the opening of the September 15 Stormont talks (without the

participation of the main Loyalist parties), the situation has changed

rapidly. Protestant paramilitaries considered to be significantly

dominated by British intelligence agencies are now talking of a renewed

campaign of murder in Catholic areas. And more importantly, the Irish

National Liberation Army (INLA) and the Continuity Army Council—IRA

(CAC), two small Republican military organizations have both declared

their intention to challenge the Stormont talks with renewed military

activity.

On September 16 an RUC station was bombed in Markethill, a small town

just outside of Belfast. A few days later the INLA launched a failed

grenade attack in Derry. The IRA has denied the Markethill bombing, and

denounced the two attacks. Recently the CAC took responsibility for the

bombing. The CAC is an armed organization that may be linked to the

political party Republican Sinn Fein, a 1987 split from Sinn Fein.

Republican Sinn Fein differs from Sinn Fein in (1) their refusal to take

seats in or recognize governmental bodies in the northern counties while

Ireland is partitioned, and (2) their demand that Britain declare its

intent to withdraw from Ireland before any negotiations take place. As

for the INLA, they have repeatedly stated that the IRA has conceded too

much too soon. The Zapatista National Liberation Army (EZLN) offers an

interesting model for such a consultation. The EZLN has held

locally-based meetings in southern Mexico where their supporting

communities decide on political and military questions. In 1995 the EZLN

circulated a series of questions in their base areas as well as

nationally and internationally on what general direction the Zapatista

movement should go. Who knows whether a similar process could work under

conditions of the “hot” war in northern Ireland. Nevertheless the IRA

cease-fire, the Stormont talks, and their outcome are momentous events

that all Republicans should have a voice in. Some sort of consultation

process is in order. Even so, the INLA has recognized that the

cease-fire has popular support, and have gone as far as to say that

negotiations could move the liberation struggle forward.

The INLA is the armed wing of the Irish Republican Socialist Party

(IRSP), a left-wing split from the Official IRA which halted operations

in 1972 to become the Provisional IRA. The INLA, and the IRSA are

explicitly republican socialists who fight for a united, democratic

socialist republic. Neither the INLA nor the CAC are not against

negotiations in principle; they simply reject the particulars of the

Stormont talks. While the CAC and the most recent incarnation of the

INLA have much less active support now, some independently-minded

Republicans who are uneasy with the IRA and Sinn Fein’s strategy of a

negotiated settlement seem to be looking to these other groups to keep

Sinn Fein on the right path. And if the IRA and Sinn Fein do “sell-out,”

the anti-negotiation Republican organizations might see a rapid increase

in support.

Meanwhile all of the Loyalist political parties have seized upon the

recent bombings as examples of IRA deceit, and have called,

unsuccessfully, for the expulsion of Sinn Fein from the Stormont talks.

The Loyalist parties have suggested that the (Provisional) IRA and the

CAC and the INLA are somehow linked organizationally and politically,

even though British intelligence sources quoted in the mainstream press

acknowledge that there is no working relationship between the

organizations.

The recent bombing and calls to resume armed struggle may short-circuit

the negotiations process and in turn divide and demoralize the

Republican movement. Right now the Stormont talks seem to offer the best

possible solution to the colonial occupation and partition of Ireland.

The IRA and Sinn Fein have seized on this opportunity with massive

support from the Republican community. While different organizations

committed to uniting Ireland should continue to struggle politically

with each other and in the broader society, military actions by the more

marginal groups that have no chance of winning the liberation of Ireland

can only cause a major division in the Republican movement. At this time

a deep division in the Republican movement can only serve the interests

of the Loyalists and the British government. So far Sinn Fein has

conceded nothing. If Stormont were to lead to a settlement similar to

the Treaty of 1921, then revolutionaries would have a responsibility to

push forward by whatever means possible.

What does the future hold?

What the negotiations will bring is unclear. Sinn Fein and the IRA have

always been clear that freedom for all of Ireland requires both military

and political struggle; and that in order to win, negotiations are a

tactic Republicans need to employ. The tragic history of national

liberation struggles that have lead to neocolonialism illustrates that

there are no easy answers and that a healthy dose of skepticism is

crucial. But this should not lead us to dismiss the Stormont talks out

of hand. The route of a just peace and its form must be worked out in

practice. A massive assault on the British Army occurred in response to

a Unionist parade held the previous day. Thousands of Irish nationalists

chanted “no cease-fire, no cease-fire.” Sinn Fein seems to understand

that nationalist demands for justice and a free Ireland cannot be

negotiated away. Time will tell if they truly understand.