john x
Well-Known Member
fanta said:though I'm sure the Proddies have their experts too.
Kincora Boys Home?
john x
fanta said:though I'm sure the Proddies have their experts too.
Fisher_Gate said:The series was written by Socialist Democracy, Irish Section of the Fourth International
Fisher_Gate said:There are certainly no leftist rose tinted spectacles about the provos here, and the Irish FI section has always remained independent of them and free to criticise. While I would agree there had been some uncritical mutterings about them by some leftists and trotskyists, particularly in the early 1970s, the formal statements and positions of the Fourth International in particular have always opposed individual terrorism and nationalism.
Fisher_Gate said:I can't remember what the section was called at that time though, I think it was the RMG, Revolutionary Marxist Group, though it later became the Movement for a Socialist Republic (MSR), fused with People's Democracy and is called Socialist Democracy today.
Divisive Cotton said:The Republican Movement wasn't defeated - neither did it win.
gilhyle said:Right, so the Troubles were just one of those 'non-competitive games' they do in schools now so noone learns what loosing is.
I don't think so. Call it as it is. Of course they were defeated. Adams & Co. just did the same thing Arthur Scargill did at the end of the Miners Strike, the same thing every manipulative political leadership does to protect itself against the consequences of defeat, they dressed it up as something else and Blair & Ahern helped them do that.
...gilhyle said:Right, so the Troubles were just one of those 'non-competitive games' they do in schools now so noone learns what loosing is.
I don't think so. Call it as it is. Of course they were defeated. Adams & Co. just did the same thing Arthur Scargill did at the end of the Miners Strike, the same thing every manipulative political leadership does to protect itself against the consequences of defeat, they dressed it up as something else and Blair & Ahern helped them do that.
likesfish said:still probably was'nt worth 3000 odd deaths and countless ruined lives .
though could have been a lot lot worse
The single biggest problem the Prod working class have is the same as workers all over Europe: industrial production has moved to China and working in a government subsidized call center does not give a man the same sense of dignity as building ships.john x said:...Is the northern working class better off? I would argue that the nationalist section of it is. Take a look around some of the housing estates around Belfast and you will see that the nationalist community has much better housing now while a lot of the unionist community are still living in slums. While Loyalists were defending their 'orange shitholes' (please don't take offence at that description), nationalists were busy lobbying for better housing and learning to work the system to their advantage. This was all part and parcel of the general resistance to British rule.
cemertyone said:...
I think that`s all a bit of a simplistic reading of events.. But equally so when Blair and Ahern are no longer in the political frame...guess who will still be there for a long time to come and with very much increased political influence both North and South....Step forward Mr Adams...
I'd agree with that but it was the cause of a United Ireland that PIRA fought for not civil rights.cemertyone said:True...but then again it never needed to be that way in the first place. If Catholic`s and had been given an opportunity to be part of civil society in N-ireland with equal rights ( and responsibilites) and the dogmitism of unionist domination had been challenged by the myriad Westminister administrations we would not have found ourselves in the place that the last 25 years have resulted in.
gilhyle said:It is simplified, but it is not simplistic. Look, an 'army' was established to defeat the British army militarily using guerilla tactics - to make N.I. ungovernable. The price of the establishment of that army was the demobilisation of the civil rights movement - the two could not coexist. The justification for that at the time was that there could be no civil rights under British rule and that the IRA could win a military victory. Both claims proved wrong.
The military campaign proceeded in two key waves:
urban bombing campaign 71-74
Rural brit free zones 84-87, meant to lead up to an all-out assault on barrracks etc.
Both campaigns failed, as did the other half-baked UK bombing campaigns and the desperate late 1970s RUC assasination wave etc.
In military terms it was all a failure - a complete failure which has proven, once and for all, that an Irish guerilla army CANNOT defeat the British Army in a long war.
That the IRA were not smashed is beside the point in both military and fundamental political terms. Their continued existence was a blot, not a military threat. WHat happened then is about whether it all gets tidied up or whether it festers.
The war was over in 1988 and the IRA lost. The subtleties are there, but they don't change the fundamentals. So I ignore them.
oi2002 said:dunderheaded eigits .
The armed struggle is not something that republicans took up because they have a fascination with violence or some innate love of armalite rifles, despite what some media commentators would have us believe. IRA volunteers are brave men and women who want to hit back at the forces that have been sticking the boot into their community. They risk jailing, torture and death. If bravery was enough the British Army would have been defeated years ago. Clearly bravery is not enough.
Nigel Irritable said:Gurrier's summary of these jokers is bang on the money. They spent years tailing the Provos, then amazingly tried a brief period of tailing the SWP when the Provos disappointed. Now the four of them spend their time moaning about anyone who actually does anything and arguing that every campaign on any subject should abandon whatever it is doing to picket Liberty Hall instead. Against the war - go picket the trade unions. Against the bin tax - go picket the trade unions.
A remarkable rewriting of history. Not only did the USFI not oppose individual terrorism their international actually supported the establishment of a minor terror group, Saor Eire, resulting in the death of their then leading member in Ireland. Other than that interlude they stuck to cheering on the Provos from the sidelines until the fact that the Provos had given up and taken their ball home finally sank in. Since then they have sat around moaning as described above.
You are forgetting the period when these geniuses traded as the "Irish Committee for a Marxist Programme", one of my all time favourite sectarian names.
Divisive Cotton said:Good post gilhyle.
'an Irish guerilla army CANNOT defeat the British Army in a long war.' But, likewise the British Army cannot defeat an Irish guerilla army in a long war - see Operation Motorman and the Emergency Provisions Act, 1973 and The Prevention of Terrorism Act, 1974 - re: internment and also collusion.
For one of the worlds major military powers this is quite obviously an embarrassment at the very least.
Divisive Cotton said:There did come about in the 80s an 'acceptable level of violence' in Ulster, but this stalemate could only be a temporary conclusion in a modern capitalist economy. In the end, a negotiated settlement was reached. But one which has left the Republican Movement much politically stronger.
Internment should have been introduced?foggypane said:There was never a moment from about 1971 onwards when the entire Republican armed membership could not have been wiped out/rounded up over a 24 hour period. You shouldn't kid yourself that this is not so.
It did not happen because of it's obvious political (and legal) disadvantages, not because the British Army couldn't have done it. (are there too many negatives in that sentence or what?)
And as with most colonial attitudes yours misses the fact that this 'terrorist group' could not have been wiped out without taking on the tens of hundreds who would have come from the host community north and south to make the perpatrators pay in blood.foggypane said:Divisive Cotton equates the lack of an all-out defeat of Irish Republican terrorist groups with an inability by the British Army to bring one about.
bolshiebhoy said:And as with most colonial attitudes yours misses the fact that this 'terrorist group' could not have been wiped out without taking on the tens of hundreds who would have come from the host community north and south to make the perpatrators pay in blood.
No you are not.foggypane said:From a technical point of view I am right in my original post;
Dittofanta said:I grew up there.
So I know what the reality is - and I know who the romantics are.
bolshiebhoy said:And as with most colonial attitudes yours misses the fact that this 'terrorist group' could not have been wiped out without taking on the tens of hundreds who would have come from the host community north and south to make the perpatrators pay in blood.
gilhyle said:What then happened was the Republican Movement faced a choice - opposition politics along the lines of a left-wing Nationalist Party or Power sharing politics alng the lines of the SDLP. Adams wanted to use the arms dumps to achieve power sharing. He used manipulation to exclude all alternatives.
Erm their economic policies seem like the SDLP and quite happily used PFI when given the chance. Apart from that the GFA is a side step from the republican agenda and cpper-fastens partition.Divisive Cotton said:It doesn’t mean they automatically become, by association, the SDLP.
cathal marcs said:Erm their economic policies seem like the SDLP and quite happily used PFI when given the chance. Apart from that the GFA is a side step from the republican agenda and cpper-fastens partition.
That's not really possible though is it as the rest of your post demonstrates. It was of course technically possible but what that ignores is the fact that the provos didn't exist in a vacuum. They had a massive hinterland that gave varying degrees of support practical and moral to the volunteers. The brit securocrats knew that only too well. Which is why despite shoot to kill etc they never did as you suggest they could have done.foggypane said:I personally stay out of the political arguments - the situation over there was expressly designed to be a running sore and has worked as planned.
bolshiebhoy said:That's not really possible though is it as the rest of your post demonstrates. It was of course technically possible but what that ignores is the fact that the provos didn't exist in a vacuum. They had a massive hinterland that gave varying degrees of support practical and moral to the volunteers. The brit securocrats knew that only too well. Which is why despite shoot to kill etc they never did as you suggest they could have done.
In passing I'm not a republican and I've never accepted that the armed struggle was the way to achieve anything in Ireland. But I did recognise that the provos were one expression of a popular movement against oppression.