Peace or Pacification?: Northern Ireland After The Defeat of the IRA
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About this ebook
Liam Ó Ruairc
Liam Ó Ruairc has a background in philosophy. He attended Queen's University Belfast to study Irish politics. Ó Ruairc is a member of the editorial board of Fourthwrite and of The Blanket: A Journal of Pro-test and Dissent which provided influential criticisms of the so-called Irish peace process as well as what has been called "a republican digital counter culture". His work has appeared in Fortnight magazine, History Ireland and Radical Philosophy as well as in many radical publications. He lives in Belfast, Northern Ireland, UK.
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Peace or Pacification? - Liam Ó Ruairc
What people are saying about
Peace or Pacification?
Liam Ó Ruairc’s stated aim in this book is to present Irish republicanism as part of a wider, international struggle against oppression, injustice and exploitation. In exploring both the historical and contemporary forces that have shaped Irish politics he not only admirably succeeds in that project, but also challenges key aspects of the complacent consensus that has come to dominate public debate on both sides of the border since the late 1990s. By going beyond the mere repetition of worn out shibboleths Ó Ruairc’s account reclaims the ‘universal and emancipatory core’ of republicanism and thus opens up new possibilities for political thought and action in Ireland.
Dr. Kevin Bean, Lecturer in Irish Politics, Institute of Irish Studies, University of Liverpool, author of The New Politics of Sinn Féin (2007)
Liam Ó Ruairc’s Peace or Pacification? Northern Ireland After the Defeat of the IRA offers an interesting and provocative perspective on the Northern Ireland peace process. Neo-liberals who believe that there has been a peace dividend
and those who believe that the revolutionary ideology
of Irish Republicanism has been derepublicanized
will benefit from Ó Ruairc ‘s insightful presentation.
Robert W. White, Professor and Chair of the Department of Sociology at Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI), author of Out of the Ashes: An Oral History of the Provisional Irish Republican Movement (2017) and Ruairí Ó Brádaigh: The Life and Politics of an Irish Revolutionary (2006)
A fascinating and provocative book. Even those who remain unpersuaded by its arguments will benefit from engaging with it.
Richard English CBE (Commander of the British Empire), Fellow of the British Academy, Member of the Royal Irish Academy, Fellow of Royal Historical Society, Professor at and Pro-Vice-Chancellor Queen’s University Belfast, author of Armed Struggle: The History of the IRA (2003), Ernie O’Malley: IRA Intellectual (1998)
Liam Ó Ruairc is one of the most fastidious commentators of the Irish political scene. Whether one agrees or disagrees with his opinion, his work is invariably scrupulously researched and supported evidentially. His book is, therefore, a welcome and valuable contribution to our understanding and analysis of the current political situation in the northern part of Ireland and deserves the wide readership that scholarship of this calibre merits.
Tommy McKearney, senior member of the Provisional IRA from the early 1970s until his arrest in 1977. Sentenced to life imprisonment, he served 16 years during which time he participated in the 1980 hunger strike in the Maze, author of: The Provisional IRA: From Insurrection to Parliament (2011)
Liam Ó Ruairc is a meticulous researcher with a particular eye for detail. A most astute observer of the Northern Irish political scene he has with this book brought acute discernment to major aspects of the peace process. This work will stand the test of time.
Anthony McIntyre, former IRA prisoner who spent eighteen years in the H-Blocks of Long Kesh prison, completed his PhD upon release and is the author of Good Friday: The Death of Irish Republicanism (2008)
Liam Ó Ruairc has written an important, revelatory analysis of the peace process in Northern Ireland which I am confident will take its place among the best books written about this consequential period in Anglo-Irish history. His underlying thesis is that what has happened in the near thirty years or so since the IRA recognized the southern state and embarked on a journey to constitutionalism is less a peace process and more a pacification process in which the republicans and the British co-operated to drain and enfeeble the vital ideological juices which had sustained resistance to partition for so long. The war in Ireland began with republicans and their allies abroad viewing the NI situation as a relic of British colonialism and ended with the militants accepting that it was really just a struggle over cultural identity; in the process republicans have been drained of their radicalism and now subscribe entirely to the neo-liberalism panacea. It is impossible to read this book and not wonder at the scale of the British triumph. The companion to this book, explaining how British intelligence so completely overwhelmed the IRA, has yet to be written. Until then Ó Ruairc’s fine work will do very nicely.
Ed Moloney, former Northern Ireland editor for The Irish Times and The Sunday Tribune, author of: A Secret History of the IRA (2002; 2007), Voices from the Grave: Two Men’s War in Ireland (2010)
Peace or Pacification?
Northern Ireland After the Defeat of the IRA
Peace or Pacification?
Northern Ireland After the Defeat of the IRA
Liam Ó Ruairc
Winchester, UK
Washington, USA
First published by Zero Books, 2019
Zero Books is an imprint of John Hunt Publishing Ltd., No. 3 East St., Alresford,
Hampshire SO24 9EE, UK
office@jhpbooks.net
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For distributor details and how to order please visit the ‘Ordering’ section on our website.
Text copyright: Liam Ó Ruairc 2018
ISBN: 978 1 78904 127 9
978 1 78904 128 6 (ebook)
Library of Congress Control Number: 2018946236
All rights reserved. Except for brief quotations in critical articles or reviews, no part of this book may be reproduced in any manner without prior written permission from the publishers.
The rights of Liam Ó Ruairc as author have been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
Design: Stuart Davies
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Contents
Presentation
Part One. Insular problem or universal cause?
Peace process
Truth or ‘constructive ambiguity’?
Partition
Land of Habeas Corpus or state of exception?
‘Troubles’ or war?
An insular problem?
Colonial entropy
Republicanism and the universal
Conclusion
Endnotes
Part Two. The ‘Process’: one step forward or two steps backwards?
Self-determination as foundation of a lasting peace
Lines of political demarcation
Negotiations: parameters and preconditions
The 1993 Downing Street Declaration
The 1995 Framework Documents
The 1996 Mitchell Principles
Republicanising the process or de-republicanising Sinn Féin?
Belfast Agreement
Balanced constitutional changes?
Self-determination or limited form of co-determination?
Honourable compromise?
‘Sunningdale for slow learners’?
Decommissioning
Troops out?
RUC disbanded?
Removal of emergency powers?
Prisoners release
Human rights
‘Remarkable progress’ or ‘Back where we started in 1969’?
Movement is everything
Principles and tactics
Pragmatism or opportunism?
Conclusion
Endnotes
Part Three. ‘Peace’: What ‘Dividends’?
Peace dividends
Failed economic entity
Living conditions
Nationalists ‘part of the establishment as never before’
A ‘cold house for Protestants’?
Privatised peace
A benign form of apartheid?
Victims industry and therapy culture
Inquiries, ‘legacy issues’ and the past
Conclusion
Endnotes
Part Four. Real Peace or Simulation of Peace?
Retreat from politics
The peace process in an age of austerity
Brexit
Six counties border poll or all-Ireland referendum?
The ‘respectable minority’: ‘dissidents’ and dissenters
Negative peace or peace with justice?
Strategic failure or new phase of the struggle?
Changing the question
Conclusion: ‘Thought as the courage of hopelessness’?
Endnotes
Cover
Half Title
Title
Copyright
Presentation
Part One. Insular problem or universal cause?
Peace process
Truth or ‘constructive ambiguity’?
Partition
Land of Habeas Corpus or state of exception?
‘Troubles’ or war?
An insular problem?
Colonial entropy
Republicanism and the universal
Conclusion
Endnotes
Part Two. The ‘Process’: one step forward or two steps backwards?
Self-determination as foundation of a lasting peace
Lines of political demarcation
Negotiations: parameters and preconditions
The 1993 Downing Street Declaration
The 1995 Framework Documents
The 1996 Mitchell Principles
Republicanising the process or de-republicanising Sinn Féin?
Belfast Agreement
Balanced constitutional changes?
Self-determination or limited form of co-determination?
Honourable compromise?
‘Sunningdale for slow learners’?
Decommissioning
Troops out?
RUC disbanded?
Removal of emergency powers?
Prisoners release
Human rights
‘Remarkable progress’ or ‘Back where we started in 1969’?
Movement is everything
Principles and tactics
Pragmatism or opportunism?
Conclusion
Endnotes
Part Three. ‘Peace’: What ‘Dividends’?
Peace dividends
Failed economic entity
Living conditions
Nationalists ‘part of the establishment as never before’
A ‘cold house for Protestants’?
Privatised peace
A benign form of apartheid?
Victims industry and therapy culture
Inquiries, ‘legacy issues’ and the past
Conclusion
Endnotes
Part Four. Real Peace or Simulation of Peace?
Retreat from politics
The peace process in an age of austerity
Brexit
Six counties border poll or all-Ireland referendum?
The ‘respectable minority’: ‘dissidents’ and dissenters
Negative peace or peace with justice?
Strategic failure or new phase of the struggle?
Changing the question
Conclusion: ‘Thought as the courage of hopelessness’?
Endnotes
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Guide
Cover
Half Title
Title
Copyright
Contents
Presentation
Start of Content
Everybody knows that the dice are loaded
Everybody rolls with their fingers crossed
Everybody knows the war is over
Everybody knows the good guys lost
Everybody knows the fight was fixed
The poor stay poor, the rich get rich
That’s how it goes
Everybody knows
Leonard Cohen (1988), Everybody Knows
A Brechtian maxim: ‘Don’t start from the good old things but the bad new ones.’
Walter Benjamin, Conversations with Brecht (diary notes), Svendborg, 25 August 1938
If there is anyone today to whom we can pass the responsibilities for the message we bequeath it is not to the ‘masses’, and not to the individual (who is powerless), but to an imaginary witness (eingebildeter Zeuge) – lest it perish with us.
Max Horkheimer and Theodor W. Adorno (1947), Dialektik der Aufklärung
Communists, when they are Marxists, and Marxists when they are Communists, never cry in the wilderness. Even when they are alone.
Louis Althusser (1973), Réponse à John Lewis
Presentation
For a good number of years, the Northern Irish ‘peace process’ has been sold abroad as a model for conflict resolution. The present study aims to show that this process is unable to ground ‘peace’ in ‘justice’ and that it is therefore more accurate to speak of a ‘pacification process’ than a peace process.
While do minant discourses reduce the so-called ‘Irish Question’ to an insular problem and ancestral hatreds, the present study grounds it in the context of colonialism, anti-imperialism and liberation struggles.
Its central argument is that the ‘process’ represents a major defeat for national liberation as it reinforces the partition of Ireland and that following the 1998 Agreement, Sinn Féin has become a junior partner of the British state.
The ‘peace process’ also has an economic aspect according to which neo-liberal social and economic policies are the best way to consolidate peace. This study shows that the economic side of the peace process has only increased social and economic inequalities and that the people who were affected the most by the conflict are those who benefit the least from so-called ‘peace dividends’.
The peace process is placed in the context of the ‘end of history’ thesis proclaimed by Fukuyama and the defeat of what was called ‘actually existing socialism’ in general and ‘actually existing national liberation movements’ in particular. It is this international context which made the process possible. Despite its defeat, this study is seeking to maintain the universal and emancipatory content of Irish republicanism.
It is based on what is most serious and advanced on the subject, many university journals the general reader is probably not familiar with. The many references to those publications in this study are to encourage the reader to look up those references and become familiar with their content.
The author would like to develop for the Northern Irish situations analyses similar to those made in the context of Palestine by Edward W. Said, Noam Chomsky, Ilan Pappé, Joseph A. Massad and Norman Finkelstein. This study certainly shares their values and has an ‘affiliation’ with those of Edward W. Said in particular.
Said noted he desired ‘a connection between Fanon and Adorno that is totally missing’: ‘In other words, activism, nationalism, revolution, insurrection on the one hand, and on the other, the excessive kind of theoretical reflection and speculation of the sort one associates with the Frankfurt school...’ In that spirit this study aspires to ‘thinking about the future in ways that are not simply insurrectionary or reactive¹’.
Liam Ó Ruairc, 4 July 2018
Footnote
1Edward W. Said (2004), Power, Politics and Culture: Interviews with Edward W. Said , London: Bloomsbury, 51
Part One. Insular problem or universal cause?
You must remember that the cause of human freedom is as wide as the world.
Roger Casement, Letter to E.D. Morel, 8 April 1911
I am so grateful to Ireland...You have had many more years of imperialism than we have had, and you have produced a fabulous culture of resistance and an extraordinary spirit, which I desperately hope we (the Palestinian people) can measure up to by about 10 per cent...There are three places that have meant a great deal to me; one is South Africa, another is Ireland, and the third is India. These places have meant a great deal to me culturally, not just because there was always a spirit of resistance, but because out of it, there is this huge cultural effort which I think is much more important than arms, and armed struggle.
Edward W. Said, Interview with Kevin Whelan, Dublin, 24 June 1999
Peace process
The term ‘peace process’ in the context of Northern Ireland refers to a series of major political developments since the early 1990s. It is the process that led to the IRA ceasefire in 1994, the negotiations that led to the 1998 Agreement, and all subsequent developments until former adversaries agreed to share power in 2007. All these developments have laid the foundations of where Northern Ireland is politically today. The ‘peace process’ is generally presented as a success and a model to emulate in other conflict zones elsewhere in the world. In 2018, researchers for the University of Edinburgh set up a database called PA-X (Peace Agreement Access Tool) recording more than 140 peace processes which have produced more than 1,500 agreements aimed at resolving conflicts between 1990 and 2015, demonstrating the lasting impact of the Irish peace process on subsequent agreements worldwide¹. For governments, the process shows how ‘talking to terrorists’ can lead to historic compromises. For insurgents it is an example of why governments should dialogue with them and negotiate a solution. It is those references to the Northern Irish model and the proposal to emulate it that makes it a politically relevant issue. The Northern Irish ‘model’ is, however, not well understood if not misunderstood and makes a critical analysis all the more imperative.
Before developing this critical analysis, this chapter will first explain why and how Northern Ireland was created as a political entity, and the nature of the conflict that was its consequence. It will show that this is not just some ‘insular’ problem but that it has global significance, making it politically relevant. It will outline the political perspective from which this analysis is written, and will attempt