§ Twenty Years on a Knife Edge
¶
… the fate of the province [Northern Ireland] is still, as it has been for so long, poised on a knife-edge between a slow climb back to some form of ordered existence, or a swift plunge into unimaginable anarchy and civil war.1
¶These words – from the closing sentence of F S Lyons’ book,
Ireland Since the Famine – were published as long ago as 1973.
Leaving aside the misuse of the term anarchy
, it is a measure of
how little seems to have changed in the two decades since, that a
similar assessment is the commonplace conclusion to virtually every
present-day commentary on Northern Ireland. Just about the only sign of
movement in this bloody deadlock has been the remorselessly rising death
toll. In 1972 it passes what Lyons described as the appalling
figure
of 600; by 1992 more than 3000 had been killed.
§ Troops Out
¶As the bloodshed continues, year after year, with no end in prospect, it’s not surprising that opinion polls carried out in mainland Britain over the past 20 years have consistently shown that between 50-60% in favour of a British military withdrawal from Northern Ireland.
¶The reasons why such a view is expressed are no doubt diverse.
Britain’s Ireland Problem, or as some prefer, Ireland’s British Problem,
has a complex history stretching back for hundreds of years. Few people
really understand the Irish Question
and most have no answer to
it except to wash their hands of the whole sordid mess. If the Irish
want to shoot and bomb the hell out of each other, they say, why should
we stand in their way – just get our lads
out of there and let
them get on with it.
¶The best that can be said about such people is that at least they are not organised into political groups claiming to represent the interests of the international working class … which is more than can be said for a different element within the 50-60% who want Britain to get out of Ireland, and whose ideas we mainly want to challenge in this pamphlet.
¶We are referring of course to the members and sympathisers of the
left-wing groups who support self-determination for the Irish
people
, and who would regard withdrawal from the Six Counties
as a victory for the Irish people over British Imperialism. Since
Irish self-determination
is these groups’ goal, they naturally
push the idea that it’s not for us Brits
to tell the Irish people
how to conduct their own national liberation struggle. If you oppose the
British state and what it’s doing in Northern Ireland, you must
automatically give unconditional support for republican resistance to
sectarian attacks and British terror
(so say the Anarchist Workers
Group).
¶In this way the left present a mirror image of one of their own
accusations against the British state; while they complain that any
challenge to Britain’s role in Ireland is interpreted as support for the
IRA and therefore subversive
2, they themselves tend to
see any criticism of the IRA as justifying the actions of the British
state and, therefore, as apologising for imperialism.
¶The way we see it, however, these options
– to oppose the
British state and support the IRA, or to oppose the IRA and support the
British state – are both wholly contained within the bounds of
capitalist politics. Instead of looking at the entire range of political
and military groupings critically and arguing that the interests of the
working class lie beyond and against this whole spectrum, they encourage
the working class to line up behind one capitalist faction or another.
This is one of the prime functions of the left, which it performs as
usefully (for capitalism) in relation to Northern Ireland as it does
with regard to many other issues.
§ The British State …
¶It’s certainly not hard to grasp why the British state is regarded with such loathing in certain parts of Northern Ireland. For over twenty years the Catholic population has been on the sharp end of a repression which has been applied in many different ways, but mainly through the use of armed force and the legal system.
¶On a military level this has involved the constant presence of as
many as 30,000 members of the British Army, UDR and RUC, who at their
most ruthless have carried out such acts as the massacre of 14 unarmed
demonstrators on Bloody Sunday
, January 1972, and killing of over
a dozen people (many of them young children) with plastic bullets, and
numerous undercover shoot-to-kill
ambushes aimed at terrorist
suspects
but frequently resulting in the violent execution of
innocent passers-by unwittingly caught up in stake-outs, or of teenage
joy riders speeding through roadblocks. Clearly, there are more
terrorists
operating in Northern Ireland than just the IRA!
¶The legal system has also played a vital role, through the use, at
various times, of mass internment without trial, torture and
ill-treatment of suspects during interrogation, Diplock courts (i.e. no
jury), conviction of defendants on the basis of uncorroborated evidence
provided by supergrasses
, and the sweeping measures of the
Prevention of Terrorism Act. (During the past 10 years – 1982-1991 –
nearly 14,500 people in Northern Ireland and mainland Britain have been
detained under the PTA, supposedly on very real suspicion of
terrorism
; of these only 230 – 1.5% have even been charged with
terrorist offences, let alone convicted.3) On
top of all this, there is also the systematic and calculated everyday
harassment of car drivers and pedestrians being stopped for identity
checks, and the frequent invasion of Catholic areas by the army and RUC
in order to carry out house-to-house searches (amounting in 1990 to an
average of at least one house raid taking place every two hours).
¶Of course, there’s little justification for any expressions of moral outrage by the IRA and its supporters about any of this. To claim, as they do, that there is a war going on in Northern Ireland, and then to criticise the British state for behaving just as any state does in war-time, is like wanting to have your cake and eat it. Nevertheless, as we’ve said, it’s no wonder the British state is hated – and that many on the receiving end of its brutalities want to fight back against it. The question is, though, by what means, and to what end?
§ … And Its Opponents
¶Although our argument is that the Republican struggle is not in
itself a struggle for working class interests, there are certain things
mixed up with it that we would support. Like, for example, the Free
Derry
uprising
of August 1969, when the Catholic Bogsiders
organised themselves to repel attacks by Protestant marchers and the
police with stones, petrol bombs and burning barricades.
¶This is no different to the solidarity we have expressed in the past with the working class inhabitants of inner city areas in Britain such as Toxteth, Brixton or Tottenham, when, fed up with daily police harassment on the streets and with having their homes smashed up in raids for drugs or stolen property (the like of which is part-and-parcel of everyday life for thousands of working class people in Northern Ireland), they have erupted onto the streets and temporarily driven out the police.
¶We support such riots not because we think they are somehow inherently revolutionary, but for the basic reason that they show a spirit of rebellion alive within the working class and an unwillingness to put up with attacks on its conditions of living. A class which doesn’t fight back against the hardships which are imposed on it is unlikely to ever rise up and overthrow its oppressors.
¶We are for the expulsion of all armed gangs from working class areas of Northern Ireland – be they the British army, the loyalist paramilitaries, or the IRA. However, the type of working class self-defence against state oppression and sectarian attacks which mainly took the form of rioting seems to have become less common in Northern Ireland.
¶On one side, the army and the RUC have been less willing to tolerate
the existence of the semi-official barricaded no-go areas
which
were commonplace in the early years of the present day Troubles
.
While on the other side, Sinn Fein and the Provisional IRA have been
equally determined to keep as much resistance to the British state as
possible under their control: This is a special message for young
people – no hijackings, no joy riding, no stone throwing at the Brits.
If you want to do these things, there are organisations to do this for
you.
– Gerry Adams, President of Sinn Fein.4
¶This as an important consequence for the position we adopt towards
events in Northern Ireland, because, when groups like the RCP
(Revolutionary Communist Party) state that Workers who live in the
imperialist heartland have a special duty to back those fighting against
the British oppressor
5, what this largely boils down to at
the present time is that we should support the armed struggle
being waged by the IRA and the other, smaller Republican groups.
§ The Rise of the Provisional IRA
¶In our view the rise of the Provisional IRA represented a tragic step back for the Catholic working class in Northern Ireland.
¶In the late 1960s and early 1970s the Civil Rights Association in Northern Ireland was agitating for an end to discrimination against Catholics. At the origins of the civil rights movement lay genuine working class concerns over issues such as housing and unemployment. If these issues had been taken up on the basis of fighting for working class needs, there would have been a chance of uniting Catholic and Protestant workers, since all workers have a material interest in struggling for better housing and higher wages.
¶However, rather than fighting for more and better resources, which could have achieved real material improvements in conditions for all working class people, the Civil Rights Association’s campaign to establish the so-called rights of a persecuted minority within civil society amounted to merely demanding a more equitable sharing out of the miserable resources which already existed. This movement was, moreover, deeply imbued with liberal illusions about achieving equality and justice – in a system which by its very nature cannot do anything but generate inequality and injustice.
¶The direction of this movement was driven even further away from its
origins by the reaction of the Northern Ireland Unionists, who regarded
the civil rights campaign as a threat to their privileged
position. Northern Ireland was certainly no paradise for working class
Protestants. Their privileges
didn’t amount to much more than
having a slightly less shitty slum to live in or a slightly less
miserably paid job to go to than their Catholic neighbours. As the
Dublin based anarchist Workers’ Solidarity Movement puts it, The
reality of Orange bigotry is one of 2 1/2p looking down on 2p
.6 Nonetheless, the civil rights
movement’s demand that Catholics should have equal access to jobs and
housing previously reserved for Protestants was perceived by Protestant
workers as something that would undermine their own already precarious
standard of living. It’s not hard to see, for example, that if a factory
employed 600 Protestants and no Catholics, where without religious bias
in employment there would be 400 Protestants and 200 Catholics, then 200
Protestants would feel their jobs under threat by any call or an end to
discrimination.
¶Protestant working class hostility towards the civil rights movement
was of course fostered by the Northern Ireland ruling class. Ever since
the establishment of the Northern Irish state at the start of the 1920s,
the outlook of the Unionist ruling class had been dominated by a mixture
of aggression and insecurity aptly summed up as the politics of
siege
. It pursued its own survival through a classic policy of
divide and rule
, on the one hand demonising the Catholic
population within Northern Ireland as the treacherous fifth
column
of its southern enemy, and on the other hand tossing just
enough crumbs to the Protestant working class to convince them that
their interests were identical with those of their rulers.
¶Whenever Catholic and Protestant workers did show any signs of joining together, the ruling class was always quick to find a way to whip up renewed sectarian hostility, in order to destroy working class unity. The Outdoor Relief strike of October 1932, for example, when the unemployed of the Falls and Shankhill fought side-by-side against the police, was followed less than three years later by a long summer of bloody sectarian rioting in Belfast which left 11 dead and nearly 600 injured.
¶In the late 1960s, if the Northern Ireland ruling class needed any
extra incentive to crush any signs of working class struggle within its
own territory, then it only needed to look across at mainland Europe,
where in France in 1968 and in Italy in 1969, the working class was
defying all the sociologists and media pundits who said it had been
dissolved in the affluent society
with a series of massive
strikes.
¶It was against this background that the Civil Rights Association’s
mainly peaceful protests were frequently met with savage violence meted
out by the RUC and the notorious B Specials. The IRA did nothing to halt
these attacks; legend has it that its initials were now said to stand
for I Ran Away. Initially Catholics had to organise their own
self-defence – as they did, for example, at the start of Free
Derry
. It was in these circumstances that the Provisional IRA
emerged. Increasingly, Catholics turned to the Provisionals for defence,
first of all against sectarian pogroms, and later against the British
army.
¶Although in recent years Sinn Fein and the IRA have fought a
twin-pronged campaign with the ballot paper in on hand and an
Armalite in the other
, the Provisional IRA initially came together
as a purely military organisation. Unlike the Official IRA, from which
they had split during 1969-70, the Provos had no interest whatsoever in
the sort of reforms demanded by the Civil Rights movement, since the
Provos’ aim was not to modify the Northern Ireland state but to get rid
of it. At first even the Stalinists of the Official IRA were denounced
as too left-wing by the Provos – though when the Provisionals came to
write their own programme after the split (published as Eire
Nua in 1972), they actually based it on an old document that the
Stalinist Coughlan [i.e. Official IRA member Anthony Coughlan] had
written before the split
.7
§ Revolutionary Potential?
¶In a relatively short space of time, therefore, the reaction of the Northern Ireland Unionists and the British army aborted a movement with its origins in working class grievances over jobs and houses, and rejuvenated in its stead, among a section of the population which throughout the 1960s had shown little explicit interest in wider constitutional issues such as partition, a military campaign for the political end of uniting Ireland.
¶What this says to us is that the Provisional IRA did not develop organically out of the struggles of the Catholic working class in Northern Ireland, any more than, say, the Labour Party or the trade unions are a direct outgrowth of the current struggles of the working class in Britain.
¶When we point this out, one response we get is that we should still
support the armed struggle, even though it is controlled by the IRA, in
the same way that we support strikes, even though they may be controlled
by the trade unions. Or as someone who wrote to Class War about
this issue put it: So what if the IRA defends a Catholic, nationalist
community? Would you attack strikers if they supported the Labour
Party?
¶In fact, this analogy only strengthens our case against supporting the armed struggle in Northern Ireland. The basic motivation of workers who join a trade union or the Labour Party thinking that it will fight for working class interests may be sound but their course of action is not. Yet a strike organised be a trade union and involving workers who support the Labour Party does have the potential to go beyond these initial limitations. This is because strikers are pursuing their material interests as members of the working class. Sooner or later this will bring them into conflict with capitalist organisations such as the trade unions and the Labour Party. If their struggle is then to proceed any further, the strikers are forced to go beyond the forms and ideas they started with, by in practice rejecting trades unionism and Labourism.
¶We know, both from our own experiences of direct involvement and political intervention in strikes, and from looking at the history of previous high-points of the class struggle in many different countries, that this does frequently happen. So far it has been most noticeable only among a minority of the working class, because only a minority, usually, is ever involved in the class struggle, and it is only this active involvement which is necessary for the old practices and ideas to be challenged and overturned. Nonetheless, such a process does occur.
¶By contrast, the fact that after 20 years of the modern day
Troubles
in Northern Ireland there is still no sign that any
significant minority of the Catholic working class has gone beyond the
outlook which dominated it back in 1969, nor any indication of the armed
struggle developing wider perspectives than those set by the IRA, speaks
volumes about the class nature and potential of the struggle in Northern
Ireland.
§ My Enemy’s Enemy Is My
Friend
¶We don’t shed any tears for the police, soldiers and politicians killed by the IRA; our only regret on seeing someone like Norman Tebbit dug out of the ruins of the Grand Hotel in Brighton after the IRA bombed the 1985 Conservative Party conference was that he was still alive. But this doesn’t mean that we automatically share a common cause with anyone and everyone who opposes the British state besides ourselves. We don’t judge the class nature of a struggle by the targets it attacks. We must also take into account the purposes and intent which motivate such actions.
¶As communists we oppose the state because it is the instrument the capitalist class uses to enforce and maintain its domination over the working class. In overthrowing capitalism the revolutionary struggle we agitate for will abolish ALL nation states and national boundaries. Clearly, the Irish Republican movement’s opposition to the British state is not founded on this basis. It seeks merely to re-arrange the existing national boundaries by establishing a new state with jurisdiction over the whole of the island of Ireland. This new state would be just as much an enemy of the working class struggle as are the existing British and Irish states.
¶The notion that the enemy of my enemy is my friend
, which
leads some people to support the IRA, invariably misjudges who or what
the real enemy is, and so ends up dragging the working class into taking
sides with nice
factions of the capitalist class in its squabbles
with the nasty
factions of the same class. We see this in
anti-fascist fronts where the working class allies itself with
democratic
capitalists against totalitarian
capitalists,
and in anti-imperialist struggles where the working class fights its
present imperialist
bosses in alliance with its future home
grown
bosses. However, the real enemy of the working class is not
any of these different factions of the ruling class but the entire
capitalist system itself.
¶What is wrong with the working class taking sides in struggles among
rival capitalists was neatly summed up during the Spanish Civil War by
the council communists who published the journal International
Council Correspondence, when they said that it amounted to
encouraging the working class to co-operate with one enemy in order
to crush another, in order later to be crushed by the first
… which
is exactly what did happen in Spain, when the social revolution which
also broke out in 1936 was first of all subordinated to, and then
destroyed by, those who sought to preserve one form of capitalist rule
(democracy) against another (fascism), and when, from May 1937 onwards,
members of the POUM and the CNT-FAI were imprisoned, murdered or
generally terrorised by their erstwhile anti-fascist allies, the Spanish
Communist
Party.8
¶The outcome of past national liberation struggles
shows that
the working class always ends up being oppressed just as much by its
so-called liberators
as it was by its old imperialist masters.
IRA supporters, like the RCP, admit that they can see this prospect
taking shape among liberation movements
such as the ANC and the
PLO, as soon as they sniff the scent of state power: Yesterday’s
freedom fighters are everywhere climbing into business suits, talking
diplomacy, and looking for compromise on terms dictated by their
enemies
.9 What makes them think that Gerry
Adams and co. will behave any differently when the British government
invites Sinn Fein to the conference table to settle the war in
Ireland.
§ The Myth of National Self-Determination
¶Many of the left-wing groups who argue for British withdrawal from
Northern Ireland do so because they believe in the principle of
national self-determination
in opposition to imperialism. The
RCP, in the What We Fight For
statement which appeared in every
issue of its newspaper, The Next Step, declares that it
supports Irish self-determination
. The slogan of the Troops Out
Movement (TOM) is self-determination for the Irish people as a
whole
. The Troops Out Movement defines self-determination
as
the right of people within a nation to determine their own political,
social and economic affairs free from external control
.10
¶By promoting this so-called right
left-wing groups such as the
RCP and TOM give credence to two dangerous myths.
¶First, to speak of the nation
or the people
as if these
are homogeneous entities flies in the face of the reality that
capitalist society is divided into mutually antagonistic classes. The
people as a whole
have never determined their own political,
social and economic affairs
. In every country, political, social and
economic policies are drawn up by, and in the interests of, the ruling
class. What is presented as being for the good of the nation is purely
for the benefit of the bosses. Any ideology which denies this is so, is
a barrier which must be broken down if the working class is to assert
its own independent class interests.
¶Even the titles of TOM’s own publications – such as In Whose
Name? and Without Consent – with their central argument
that Britain is pursuing a war in Ireland without a political mandate
to do so from its own people
11 tell us that the
object which TOM seeks to win for Ireland doesn’t even exist in Britain.
By agitating for the right of self-determination
TOM encourages
workers to waste their efforts in chasing something which cannot be
achieved.
¶Secondly, it is an illusion to suggest that a nation such as Ireland
– or to be more precise, the ruling class within a united Ireland –
could determine its affairs free from external control
. The
rulers of any newly independent
nation-state immediately find
themselves having to come to terms with a worldwide economic system
dominated by powerful blocs and integrated on a global scale. Their room
for manoeuvre within this framework is extremely limited.
¶In the twentieth century the typical outcome of national liberation
struggles has been one or other of two scenarios. Either the imperialist
power relinquished direct political control but continues to exert its
domination at an economic level; or the client state frees itself
entirely from the domination of one imperialist bloc only by switching
to the all-embracing grip of a rival bloc. In neither of these instances
does even a successful
national liberation struggle result in any
real independence for the local capitalists; nor is there any weakening
of imperialism as a whole.
§ The Irish Free
State
¶Any supporter of Irish self-determination
who believes that
national liberation
is possible in any meaningful sense within
modern capitalism should look at the history of the south of Ireland
since it achieved independence
in 1922.
¶The separation of the Irish Free State from the rest of Britain did
nothing to alter the two states’ economic relationship, in which Ireland
exported agricultural produce to Britain, and Britain sold manufactured
goods to Ireland. At no time before the Second World War did Ireland
send less than 90% of its total exports to British markets. And, as the
south was so dependent on free trade
, it could not risk placing
the sorts of tariffs on imported manufactured goods which might have
encouraged growth in its own feeble industrial sector.
¶In the early 1930s de Valera’s Fianna Fail party came to power
determined to free Ireland from British domination through a policy of
economic nationalism. They believed that Ireland could become a
self-contained unit, providing all the necessities of living in adequate
quantities for the people residing in this island at the moment and
probably for a much larger number
.12
¶Predictably, however, the protectionist policies which were implemented in pursuit of this drew retaliation from the south’s economic competitors. It didn’t help either that the policy of economic nationalism was set in motion in the midst of a global economic depression. The gap between the cost of imports and the income earned from exports widened greatly to Ireland’s disadvantage. This constant trade deficit drained the nation’s foreign currency reserves which further weakened Irish capital’s standing in the world market. Also, even extensive state intervention in the economy, intended to stimulate Irish owned domestic manufacturing, could not provide sufficient capital to build up industries capable of competing against Ireland’s far more advanced rivals on the world market.
¶Between 1931-39 the average income per head in Ireland dropped from
nearly two thirds of what it was in Britain, to just under half. The
Irish people
showed just how much say they had in determining
their own affairs
by deserting their nation
in droves: more
than 300,000 people emigrated during the period 1936-51, followed by a
further 400,000 over the next ten years to 1961. It was only this
massive export of surplus
population which kept standards of
living for those who stayed behind from declining even more steeply.
¶By the late 1950s the dream of economic self-sufficiency had been exposed as an unattainable illusion. Protectionist policies were abandoned and the south set about wooing investment by foreign capital. Ever since then, as had been the case beforehand too, the south of Ireland has been completely bound up with the fortunes of the world market, and no more able to escape from the inevitable booms and slumps of the global economy than any other nation state.
§ The Policies of Sinn Fein
¶We would be stretching our argument beyond credibility, however, if
we gave the impression that the supporters of a united Ireland are fine
idealists whose best intentions would sadly be frustrated by the
economic dictates of world capitalism. Of course Sinn Fein and the IRA
say (as every other national liberation movement has said – before
coming to power) that the working class would be better off in its
Thirty Two County Socialist Republic
. But whereas for us
socialism means the complete abolition of money, wage labour, the market
system and the state, Sinn Fein’s so-called socialism
amounts to
nothing more than a mixture of state capitalism and self-managed (i.e.
self-exploited) agricultural co-operatives which has never been of any
benefit to the working class whenever or wherever such measures have
been implemented in the past.
¶If Sinn Fein’s economic programme leaves everything to be desired,
its stance on many social issues is equally unattractive. In February
1992, amidst all furore which followed the Irish Attorney General’s
initial decision to prevent a 14 year old rape victim from travelling to
England to have an abortion, Sinn Fein’s annual conference endorsed a
women’s policy document which stated: We accept the need for abortion
only where a woman’s life is at risk or in grave danger.
13
§ Popular Justice
¶It’s not just the long-term aims the IRA is fighting for which make it an enemy of the working class. There’s also the IRA’s present-day role in policing Catholic communities in Northern Ireland.
¶According to an article which appeared in The Guardian on 22
October 1990, the IRA had so far that year carried out 89 punishment
shootings (a bullet in the ankles, knees, wrists or the base of the
spine) and 56 beatings (prolonged assaults with iron bars or baseball
bats producing multiple injuries). In addition it had also ordered
another 20 or 30 offenders
to get out of Northern Ireland – or
else face the consequences. Since then expulsion orders
have been
on the increase and by February 1992 they were said to be running at 3 a
week (i.e. 150 a year).14
¶Recently the IRA has also developed less thuggish ways of policing
the Catholic communities, such as manipulating the courts and social
services into administering what are in effect custodial sentences.
Youths who it has been made clear are under threat of punishment by the
IRA are given place of safety
orders by the magistrates courts
for their own protection and have to serve their time in young offenders
centres until the IRA decides that it is safe for them to return to
their home.15
¶We ourselves see nothing wrong with working class communities
organising themselves to take direct action against anti-social elements
such as drug pushers or burglars who rob from working class people’s
houses. Some of the petty criminals
dealt with by the IRA may
well fall into this category and deserve some sort of punishment – then
again, you could say the same about some of the people punished by the
ruling class’s legal system. The point is that a lot of them don’t
deserve it. There’s nothing necessarily anti-social
about, for
example, people who steal from shops – yet they too fall foul of the
swift, brutal, self-appointed policing of the IRA.
¶Many of the victims of IRA punishments are joyriders. The police are
reluctant to respond to reports of stolen vehicles for fear of IRA
ambushes and booby trap bombs. The IRA steps into this vacuum and takes
action against joyriders under the guise of reluctantly responding to
community pressure
.16 In this way the IRA takes credit
for clearing up a mess which it has largely contributed to creating in
the first place!
¶Once again though we must look not at the IRA’s targets so much as it
s reasons for attacking them. The IRA’s main reason for carrying out
punishments is to reinforce its rule over the territory it controls.
People are encouraged to contact the Republican movement
if they
are concerned about crime, rather than calling the police (or doing
something about it themselves). The less the RUC enters the Catholic
ghettos, the better the IRA likes it, since it gives their members
greater freedom to go about their activities. Anyone who, even
inadvertently, fouls up an IRA operation by calling the police into a
Catholic area instantly turns themselves into an informer and faces the
ultimate penalty: death.
¶The IRA’s so-called popular justice
may be an alternative
within the Catholic communities to the policing carried out by the RUC,
but only in the same sense that the Labour Party is an alternative to
the Tories: it is not qualitatively different. This conclusion – that
there is nothing to choose between being policed by the IRA or by the
RUC – is one that has been voiced within the Catholic community itself:
When you have Sinn Fein and the IRA talking about human rights abuses
in the likes of Castlereagh (the RUC interrogation centre), its
sickening for them to dish out summary so-called justice like
this
.17
¶We might also point out that at the same time as it is going around crippling petty thieves and teenage joyriders, the IRA itself is raising funds through all sorts of rackets which, far from being petty, net it an income amounting, according to one estimate, to around 10 million pounds a year.18 But then again, the whole of capitalism is based on robbery, it’s just that the ruling class decides what sorts are legal and what sorts are not.
§ The Future
¶While both the IRA’s present actions and the goals it is fighting for
mark it out in our eyes as an anti-working class organisation,
speculation about what a united Ireland governed by Sinn Fein would be
like is largely academic – because it’s highly unlikely to come about.
Although high-ranking British military officers have admitted on many
occasions that they are never likely to be able to wipe out the IRA
completely, the British state can still just about manage to sustain the
political, social and economic costs of containing the impact of the
Troubles
at a tolerable level.
¶There is no way that any Dublin government could cope in the same way
with 900,000 hostile Protestants in the north of a united Ireland. Even
the IRA doesn’t expect that the Protestants would integrate themselves
happily into a 32 County Republic, and has to concede lamely that
They are a tiny national minority who must be given guarantees within
any united Ireland
19 – which is about as plausible as
arguing that if the Catholic minority in Northern Ireland was given
guarantees
by the British state the IRA would agree to the
continuation of British rule in the north. This is the main reason,
then, why British troops remain in Northern Ireland: to prevent an
escalation of the Troubles
which would plunge Ireland into chaos,
thus threatening NATO’s strategic interests and British, U.S. and EEC
economic interests.
¶So, we do not foresee any change in the constitutional set-up in
Northern Ireland in the near future. Nor are there many signs – at the
moment – of any resurgence in the currently very low level of the class
struggle there. The two communities, Catholic and Protestant, seem to be
pitted against each other every bit as much as the ruling class wants
them to be, since there is every advantage for British capitalists in
maintaining the policy of divide and rule
which keeps workers’
living standards in Northern Ireland so much lower than in the rest of
Britain.
¶This isn’t to say that these divisions couldn’t be overcome in the
course of massive class struggle, but where this mass struggle will come
from is hard to foresee. At present, the fear once expressed by some
members of the ruling class, that If we lose in Belfast, we may have
to fight in Brixton or Birmingham
20 –
in other words, that the struggle in Northern Ireland could be the spark
which ignites the flames of insurrection on the mainland – seems less
well-founded than the prospect of a working class revolution which
spreads from the Republic, Britain and the rest of Europe. But this
doesn’t mean that the prospects for the class struggle in Northern
Ireland can be written off. The inherent instability and
unpredictability of capitalism, and the impossibility of eradicating the
class struggle altogether, means that we can never predict for certain
where or when the next upsurge in working class struggle will occur.
¶Until this happens, no doubt the war in Northern Ireland will drag on. But we should be in no doubts about what sort of war it is. The fact that thousands of Protestant workers have sided with the British state and its Loyalist appendages or that thousands of Catholic workers give their support to Sinn Fein and the IRA does not alter the capitalist nature of the conflict. The ruling class – or those who aspire to become the ruling class – have always been able to rope the working class into fighting their battles for them. Our attitude to the situation in Northern Ireland may not find much of an echo among workers there at present, but for genuine revolutionaries there can be no alternative to calling for a united working class struggle against both sides!
F S Lyons, Ireland Since the Famine (revised edition, 1973), page 780.↩︎
Troops Out Movement, In Whose Name? Britain’s Denial of Peace in Ireland, page 22.↩︎
Home Secretary, Kenneth Baker, speaking on
The World Tonight
, BBC Radio 4, 24.2.1992; figures from The Guardian, 24.2.1992.↩︎Quoted in Organise! no. 20, Aug.-Nov. 1990.↩︎
What We Fight For
, The Next Step, 16.6.1989.↩︎Getting to Grips With Sinn Fein’s Socialism
, Workers’ Solidarity no. 28, Summer 1988, reprinted in Workers’ Solidarity Movement, Northern Ireland and British Imperialism.↩︎The Shame of Irish Communism
, The Next Step, February 1985.↩︎International Council Correspondence, Sept. 1937.↩︎
Can the IRA Survive?
, Living Marxism no. 23, August 1991.↩︎Troops Out Movement, In Whose Name? Britain’s Denial of Peace in Ireland, page 5.↩︎
Ibid, page 29.↩︎
Sean Lemass, quoted in F S Lyons, Ireland Since the Famine, page 610.↩︎
The Independent, 24.2.92.↩︎
The Observer, 23.2.92.↩︎
The Observer, 23.2.92. New Statesman and Society, 28.2.92.↩︎
Alex Maskey, Sinn Fein member of Belfast City Council, quoted in The Guardian, 22.10.1990.↩︎
Henry Robinson of Families Against Intimidation and Terror, quoted in The Guardian, 2.1.92.↩︎
The Guardian, October 1990.↩︎
IRA spokesman quoted in The Observer, 2.2.92.↩︎
John Biggs-Davidson, quoted in R Faligot, The Kitson Experiment (1983).↩︎