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- <text id=94TT1227>
- <title>
- Sep. 12, 1994: Northern Ireland:Sudden Rush of Peace
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Sep. 12, 1994 Revenge of the Killer Microbes
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NORTHERN IRELAND, Page 46
- A Sudden Rush of Peace
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> After 25 years of civil strife, the I.R.A. ignites hopes for
- peace by agreeing to lay down its arms
- </p>
- <p>By James Walsh--Reported by Tony Connelly/Dublin and Helen Gibson/London
- </p>
- <p> According to an old story, the pilot of an airliner flying
- into Belfast once advised his passengers to turn their watches
- back to local time--1690. The Irish on board surely savored
- this morsel of black humor. But last week, as the sorrows of
- centuries marched in review before Irish eyes, the gallows wit
- gave way to the fugitive elixir of hope. In Northern Ireland,
- 25 years of civil strife punctuated by acts of mayhem seemed
- nearer than ever to expiring, when one side in the struggle
- agreed to lay down its arms.
- </p>
- <p> In announcing "a complete cessation of military operations,"
- the Irish Republican Army apparently undertook to turn legitimate
- and pursue its goals by peaceful means. Suspicions about the
- I.R.A.'s motives coursed through British-ruled Ulster's majority
- Protestants. But the balance of judgment fell on the side of
- optimism: a belief that this promising scent of peace could
- help end a long-running conflict carried to explosive extremes
- with bullets, bombs and bigotry.
- </p>
- <p> "We've won! Up the I.R.A.!" cried cheering paraders in impromptu
- motorcades down the Falls Road, home ground of Belfast's Roman
- Catholics. The celebrators took the brightest possible view
- of things. Said Maura Collins, 28: "I have known little else
- but the Troubles. I am optimistic this will bring peace for
- my children to grow up in a better environment." Conversely,
- the unseen hand of some Protestant militant scrawled an ominous
- piece of graffiti: WAR HAS ONLY BEGUN.
- </p>
- <p> Begun? With 3,168 killed and more than 36,000 wounded in political
- violence since 1969, this brutalized society could hardly expect
- the momentum of vengeance to shift gears sharply as the result
- of a single proposal. The next day, assailants from the Protestant
- paramilitary Ulster Defense Association shot dead a Catholic
- in northern Belfast, and claimed responsibility for an attempt
- to kill a taxi driver. Unsurprisingly, the Rev. Ian Paisley,
- the firebrand Protestant orator, rejected the I.R.A. truce offer
- as pure eyewash.
- </p>
- <p> But apprehensiveness was not confined to the extreme fringes.
- Unionist mutterings last week found no joy in the prospect that
- the I.R.A.'s political wing, Sinn Fein, may soon have a say
- about the six counties' future. Dark talk about a secret agenda
- was widespread.
- </p>
- <p> The Loyalists would be wrong, however, in thinking that defiance
- remains their ultimate trump. What distinguishes this latest
- chance for peace is the opinion among all the players that they
- should grope for understanding. In the Republic, most Irish
- have grown sick of the bloodshed and its drain on the island's
- energies and conscience. In the U.S., public feeling ran in
- favor of President Bill Clinton's words of encouragement and
- more substantial offer of reconstruction aid. In fact, the Administration
- was rightly claiming some credit for helping the process along.
- </p>
- <p> If the cease-fire holds, it will qualify the Sinn Fein as an
- accepted partner in talks with Dublin and London about the North's
- future. Such a course was outlined in broad brushstrokes last
- December in the Downing Street Declaration, under which Prime
- Ministers John Major of Britain and Albert Reynolds of Ireland
- offered Sinn Fein a seat at the bargaining table if the republican
- guerrillas permanently renounced violence. But a lingering question
- hovered over just how far the armed brotherhood had really gone.
- I.R.A. cease-fires in 1972 and 1975 seemed promising but collapsed
- after only a few weeks or months. Near the end of the week,
- Sinn Fein vice president Martin McGuinness spelled out more
- plainly that the offer was for a "complete" cease-fire "under
- all circumstances," which seemingly ruled out even "defensive"
- reprisals for any Protestant acts of terrorism. The I.R.A. has
- to live up to its promise for three months before talks will
- begin. London has yet to say whether it is satisfied with the
- I.R.A. truce statements. A spokesman for the British government
- would only say, "We felt the I.R.A. was nudging toward meeting
- our concerns."
- </p>
- <p> At midweek Downing Street was furious at the transfer from Britain
- to Belfast of four I.R.A. terrorists convicted of key roles
- in the 1984 Brighton bombing that nearly killed Prime Minister
- Margaret Thatcher. In Sinn Fein's cease-fire announcement, Adams
- had called for the return of Irish prisoners. To Major, the
- shifts--which officials said had been approved last June--looked certain to inflame suspicions that he had cooked up secret
- deals with the I.R.A.
- </p>
- <p> Any immediate British pullout of its 17,500 troops there--another demand by Sinn Fein--on the basis of a frail promise
- of peace would only increase the Unionists' fear of abandonment.
- The British government emphasized that no withdrawals would
- occur anywhere near so prematurely. But the crux of Protestant
- alarm was that Britain's publicly avowed and consistently re-emphasized
- support for majority rule in Northern Ireland would become fatally
- diluted. The I.R.A. has never made any secret of its ultimate
- goal--unification with the Republic.
- </p>
- <p> Perhaps the most telling verdict on last week's initiative was
- handed in by John Carmichael, a Catholic businessman in Belfast.
- Said he: "I can't see that the Provisional I.R.A. will go back.
- They are answerable to me. They are answerable to the people.
- We have had enough." Crossed fingers, unspoken prayers: it may
- be that three centuries after the Battle of the Boyne, when
- the British established dominion over Northern Ireland, the
- silent majorities of Catholics and Protestants see within their
- grasp their wish to turn the clock forward.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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