kainedamo
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The IRA first appeared in the 1910s to fight off the British for independence. Somewhat similar to America's own war against the British. In 1916 the IRA took over key locations in Dublin in a rebellion that was called 'the Easter Rising'. The rebellion was quashed six days later. This fight however laid the seeds for later attempts at independence. So then there came the Irish War of Independence which went from 1919 to 1921. The IRA of this time is often referred to as the 'old IRA' to distinguish it from later forms.
The British, recieving growing criticism from home and abroad for their retalitary house burnings and raids, and realizing the growing cost of the war, decided on a peace treaty with the other side. This led to the south of Ireland becoming a free state, while the North remained in control of the British.
Later in the century, the next stage of the conflict began - what is referred to as 'the Troubles'. In the 60s, many Irish Catholics marched for Civil Rights, taking great influence from the American Civil Rights movement and Martin Luther King. They wanted moderate reforms of the system, at this point they weren't screaming from the rooftops for a united Ireland. Ian Paisley, a figure that has been part of the whole history of the Troubles from the beginning to it's end, vehemently and very audibly opposed the civil rights movement, and labelled the then Prime Minister of Northern Ireland a coward for even thinking about giving any concessions.
I genuinely believe Ian Paisley bears a large amount of responsibility for not only triggering the Troubles, but for having the Troubles drag out for as long as it did. His hate filled bigoted speeches added fuel to the fire, time and time again. He got the Protestant people paranoid at a time when it wasn't necassary. People currently praise Ian Paisley for having finally talked with Sinn Fein and help put an end to the conflict. But without Paisley, a deal could have been met a decade earlier, if not long before that. Paisley has been a huge influence in the Protestant community for decades and his rhetoric has put hate and bigotry into each new generation. People conveniently forget his ugly speeches, and how he didn't want even the slightest of rights to make Catholics more equal in society.
From wikipedia...
So their paranoia gave them exactly what they didn't want. They fulfilled their own prophecy.
In the 70s through to the 80s is considered the most violent of the Troubles.
Wikipedia...
30 years later, people grew tired of groups on both sides murdering people purely for being Catholic or Protestant, tired of random bombings, riots, etc. The politicians from both sides finally managed to sit down and work out what became the Good Friday Agreement, which laid down the foundation for working out concessions for both sides. One of the conditions of the agreement would be for the IRA to completely give up all weapons and allow Sinn Fein to drive the movement through purely peaceful means.
They decommissioned their weapons, with several witnesses from both sides of the conflict confirming and checking every step of the way. The DUP led by Ian Paisley decided this wasn't good enough, which led to a few more years of pointless frustration. But through both political pressure and pressure from the people, the DUP were effectively backed into a corner and had no choice but to enter the political arena side by side with Sinn Fein. The last few years have been considrered peace time.
So was the IRA war at any time morally correct?
The British, recieving growing criticism from home and abroad for their retalitary house burnings and raids, and realizing the growing cost of the war, decided on a peace treaty with the other side. This led to the south of Ireland becoming a free state, while the North remained in control of the British.
Later in the century, the next stage of the conflict began - what is referred to as 'the Troubles'. In the 60s, many Irish Catholics marched for Civil Rights, taking great influence from the American Civil Rights movement and Martin Luther King. They wanted moderate reforms of the system, at this point they weren't screaming from the rooftops for a united Ireland. Ian Paisley, a figure that has been part of the whole history of the Troubles from the beginning to it's end, vehemently and very audibly opposed the civil rights movement, and labelled the then Prime Minister of Northern Ireland a coward for even thinking about giving any concessions.
I genuinely believe Ian Paisley bears a large amount of responsibility for not only triggering the Troubles, but for having the Troubles drag out for as long as it did. His hate filled bigoted speeches added fuel to the fire, time and time again. He got the Protestant people paranoid at a time when it wasn't necassary. People currently praise Ian Paisley for having finally talked with Sinn Fein and help put an end to the conflict. But without Paisley, a deal could have been met a decade earlier, if not long before that. Paisley has been a huge influence in the Protestant community for decades and his rhetoric has put hate and bigotry into each new generation. People conveniently forget his ugly speeches, and how he didn't want even the slightest of rights to make Catholics more equal in society.
From wikipedia...
Much of the hostile loyalist reaction to the Civil Rights Movement was linked to the ability of leaders to provoke fear within the Unionist populace that the IRA was not only behind the NICRA, but was also planning a renewed armed campaign.[citation needed] In fact, the IRA was moribund, had few weapons, fewer members, negligible support, and was increasingly committed (out of necessity) to non-violent politics.[citation needed] The first bombing campaign of the Troubles (largely directed against power stations and other infrastructure) was staged by the Loyalist Ulster Volunteer Force in 1969 to try to implicate the IRA.
So their paranoia gave them exactly what they didn't want. They fulfilled their own prophecy.
In the 70s through to the 80s is considered the most violent of the Troubles.
Wikipedia...
The years 1970-1972 saw an explosion of political violence in Northern Ireland, peaking in 1972, when nearly 500 people lost their lives. There are several reasons why violence escalated in these years.
Unionists claim the main reason was the formation of the Provisional Irish Republican Army (Provisional IRA), a group formed when the IRA split into the Provisional and Official factions. While the older IRA had embraced non-violent civil agitation,[citation needed] the new Provisional IRA was determined to wage "armed struggle" against British rule in Northern Ireland. The new IRA was willing to take on the role of "defenders of the Catholic community",[31] rather than seeking working-class unity across both communities which had become the aim of the "Officials".
Nationalists argued that the upsurge in violence was caused by the disappointment of the hopes engendered by the civil rights movement and the repression subsequently directed at their community.[citation needed] They point to a number of events in these years to support this opinion. One such incident was the Falls Curfew in July 1970, when 3,000 troops imposed a curfew on the nationalist Lower Falls area of Belfast, firing more than 1,500 rounds of ammunition in gun battles with the IRA and killing four people. Another was the 1971 introduction of internment without trial--out of over 350 initial detainees, not a single one was a Protestant.[32] Moreover, due to poor intelligence,[33] very few of those interned were actually republican activists, but some went on to become republicans as a result of their unfortunate experiences.[citation needed] Between 1971 and 1975, 1,981 people were detained; 1,874 were Catholic/republican, while 107 were Protestant/loyalist.[34] There were widespread allegations from the nationalist community of abuse and even torture of detainees. Most emotionally of all, nationalists also point to the fatal shootings of 14 unarmed nationalist civil rights demonstrators by the British Army in Derry in January 1972 on what became known as Bloody Sunday.
The Provisional IRA (or "Provos", as they became
30 years later, people grew tired of groups on both sides murdering people purely for being Catholic or Protestant, tired of random bombings, riots, etc. The politicians from both sides finally managed to sit down and work out what became the Good Friday Agreement, which laid down the foundation for working out concessions for both sides. One of the conditions of the agreement would be for the IRA to completely give up all weapons and allow Sinn Fein to drive the movement through purely peaceful means.
They decommissioned their weapons, with several witnesses from both sides of the conflict confirming and checking every step of the way. The DUP led by Ian Paisley decided this wasn't good enough, which led to a few more years of pointless frustration. But through both political pressure and pressure from the people, the DUP were effectively backed into a corner and had no choice but to enter the political arena side by side with Sinn Fein. The last few years have been considrered peace time.
So was the IRA war at any time morally correct?