You are here
Announcements
Recent blog posts
- Male Sex Trade Worker
- Communities resisting UK company's open pit coal mine
- THE ANARCHIC PLANET
- The Future Is Anarchy
- The Implosion Of Capitalism And The Nation-State
- Anarchy as the true reality
- Globalization of Anarchism (Anti-Capital)
- Making Music as Social Action: The Non-Profit Paradigm
- May the year 2007 be the beginning of the end of capitalism?
- The Future is Ours Anarchic
Ireland - An Open Letter to Physical Force Republicans
November 6, 2001 - 12:50am -- Stenglander
hydrarchist writes: "
... the following article was written by two respected Republicans who have each served long sentences for Irish republican activity. They are also representative of the section of the movement which has most radically reorientated itself towards social radicality and an embrace of a concept of republicanism which goes far beyond the limits of nationalism. There is a lot of spin around the negoiations in Ireland and anyone interested in the subject is strongly advised to treat only the official statements of the protagonists as indicative of current thinking. In tis context, Gerry Adams speech just before last weeks act of decommissioning, and the IRA statement which accompanied the same act are important documents.
Other articles and analysis by these two commentators and otheres are available from Fourthwrite and The Blanket.
Tommy Gorman & Anthony McIntyre
Belfast Irish News, 3 November 2001
In the immediate wake of Provisional IRA decommissioning the Continuity IRA launched a 1971 style bomb attack against a RUC base in West Belfast. On the same day a former loyalist prisoner was killed in front of his partner in Strabane. There have been suggestions that others from the physical force tradition were responsible for this. Alex Maskey and Pat Doherty of Sinn Fein quickly condemned both attacks. Perhaps those who carried them out will only take consolation from that condemnation feeling that such activity is one up the nose for Sinn Fein. If so they need to think again. There are many republicans, not just in Sinn Fein, who view such actions as futile. What purpose do they serve? In whose name are they carried out? What possible freedom can they advance? Have people only the right to be free from British rule but not from the methods used by physical force republicanism to achieve such freedom? Is the courageous tradition from which you hail going to be perpetually remembered for what it kills rather than creates, for what it inflicts rather than endures?
The Good Friday Agreement and IRA decommissioning may be a bitter pill for many republicans to swallow. But if adherents of physical force republicanism think that support shall be forthcoming for strategies which can finish off people but not finish off British state policy then you inhabit a self-referential and precarious intellectual world. The Provisional IRA have decommissioned some of their weapons. In your anger are you going to overshadow that act by decommissioning people's lives and safety?
Why should physical force republicanism and the British state both subvert Irish democracy? Why should either impose their version of democracy on the rest of us? We repudiate the presence of Britain in this country. But we reject the notion that moral right is on the side of those who feel that without any reference to other Irish people it is their birthright to take up arms against the British as long as they remain here. However, we accept that we can never persuade you to cede such a fundamental tenet of the physical force tradition. But we urge most strongly that if you choose to persist in your belief then you must draw a distinction between the right to use such force and the intention to do so.
There is no possible justification, moral or strategic, for armed actions by republicans. Not only shall you take the lives of your victims but you also stand to see your own volunteers and innocent civilians needlessly killed in pursuit of an unattainable goal. Has it not been learned by now that the unrepresentative secret seven of army councils only ever deliver 'Bloody Fridays' or 'Good Fridays' and never 'The Republic'?
"
hydrarchist writes: "
... the following article was written by two respected Republicans who have each served long sentences for Irish republican activity. They are also representative of the section of the movement which has most radically reorientated itself towards social radicality and an embrace of a concept of republicanism which goes far beyond the limits of nationalism. There is a lot of spin around the negoiations in Ireland and anyone interested in the subject is strongly advised to treat only the official statements of the protagonists as indicative of current thinking. In tis context, Gerry Adams speech just before last weeks act of decommissioning, and the IRA statement which accompanied the same act are important documents.
Other articles and analysis by these two commentators and otheres are available from Fourthwrite and The Blanket.
Tommy Gorman & Anthony McIntyre
Belfast Irish News, 3 November 2001
In the immediate wake of Provisional IRA decommissioning the Continuity IRA launched a 1971 style bomb attack against a RUC base in West Belfast. On the same day a former loyalist prisoner was killed in front of his partner in Strabane. There have been suggestions that others from the physical force tradition were responsible for this. Alex Maskey and Pat Doherty of Sinn Fein quickly condemned both attacks. Perhaps those who carried them out will only take consolation from that condemnation feeling that such activity is one up the nose for Sinn Fein. If so they need to think again. There are many republicans, not just in Sinn Fein, who view such actions as futile. What purpose do they serve? In whose name are they carried out? What possible freedom can they advance? Have people only the right to be free from British rule but not from the methods used by physical force republicanism to achieve such freedom? Is the courageous tradition from which you hail going to be perpetually remembered for what it kills rather than creates, for what it inflicts rather than endures?
The Good Friday Agreement and IRA decommissioning may be a bitter pill for many republicans to swallow. But if adherents of physical force republicanism think that support shall be forthcoming for strategies which can finish off people but not finish off British state policy then you inhabit a self-referential and precarious intellectual world. The Provisional IRA have decommissioned some of their weapons. In your anger are you going to overshadow that act by decommissioning people's lives and safety?
Why should physical force republicanism and the British state both subvert Irish democracy? Why should either impose their version of democracy on the rest of us? We repudiate the presence of Britain in this country. But we reject the notion that moral right is on the side of those who feel that without any reference to other Irish people it is their birthright to take up arms against the British as long as they remain here. However, we accept that we can never persuade you to cede such a fundamental tenet of the physical force tradition. But we urge most strongly that if you choose to persist in your belief then you must draw a distinction between the right to use such force and the intention to do so.
There is no possible justification, moral or strategic, for armed actions by republicans. Not only shall you take the lives of your victims but you also stand to see your own volunteers and innocent civilians needlessly killed in pursuit of an unattainable goal. Has it not been learned by now that the unrepresentative secret seven of army councils only ever deliver 'Bloody Fridays' or 'Good Fridays' and never 'The Republic'?
"