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- <text id=93TT0761>
- <title>
- Dec. 13, 1993: No Secrets Among Enemies
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Dec. 13, 1993 The Big Three:Chrysler, Ford, and GM
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NORTHERN IRELAND, Page 55
- No Secrets Among Enemies
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The search for peace between the I.R.A. and Britain breaks into
- the open
- </p>
- <p>By Barry Hillenbrand/Dublin
- </p>
- <p> The message echoed with the melancholic fatalism that pervades
- much of Irish literature. "It is with total sadness that we
- have to accept responsibility for the recent action," the statement
- from the Irish Republican Army said two days after one of its
- bombs killed two boys, ages 3 and 12, in the English town of
- Warrington in March. "The last thing we needed at this sensitive
- time was what has happened."
- </p>
- <p> The time was sensitive indeed. The I.R.A. and the British had
- just begun a secret exchange of messages aimed at opening peace
- talks to end the violence that has rent Northern Ireland for
- 25 years and left thousands dead. Despite outrage over these
- killings and others that followed, the contacts continued and
- the two sides edged toward full-scale negotiations. Then last
- week the Observer newspaper uncovered the secret talks.
- </p>
- <p> Although many were delighted at the possibility of peace, others
- were shocked that Prime Minister John Major had been dealing
- with terrorists, especially leaders of the hard-line Ulster
- Protestants who reject any change in Northern Ireland's union
- with Britain. But the British government rode out the storm,
- arguing that it would have been remiss had it not responded
- to the I.R.A.'s overtures. Major insisted that he would only
- begin full negotiations after the I.R.A. had demonstrated that
- it had renounced terrorism permanently.
- </p>
- <p> The Observer's scoop was clearly untimely. "Had the talks remained
- secret," said a Downing Street aide, "much more progress could
- have been made." Now Major's government will have to feel its
- way forward under a barrage of criticism from Ulster's Unionists,
- while the I.R.A. leadership fends off Republican extremists
- who consider any contact with the British a betrayal of the
- cause. Still, the revelations brought a sense of lift to the
- disheartening problems of Ireland. Most important, they disclosed
- that the I.R.A. may at last be willing to renounce violence
- and participate in further negotiations for a political resolution
- of the Ulster problem. They also demonstrated that the British,
- under Major's leadership, are willing to go beyond a peacekeeping
- role in Ulster and try their hand at peacemaking.
- </p>
- <p> Neither side would admit to initiating the talks, but Tom Hartley,
- a Sinn Fein official, conceded that "there's lots of support
- for negotiation these days." That also applies in London where
- the government has made clear that finding a solution to the
- Irish problem is close to the top of its agenda.
- </p>
- <p> In fact, there seems to be a new determination to go beyond
- damage control and consider fundamental changes in the political
- status of the province. At the end of last week, Major flew
- to Dublin to meet with Irish Prime Minister Albert Reynolds.
- The first order of business for Major was to soothe Irish annoyance
- over Britain's failure to inform Dublin of the secret contacts
- with the I.R.A. That was accomplished in what Reynolds called
- "a strong exchange of views." But despite seven hours of talks,
- the two leaders were less successful in devising a joint declaration
- outlining a new political formula for Northern Ireland that
- would involve altering the republic's constitutional claims
- to the north and confirming British willingness ultimately to
- relinquish control over the province. The two leaders will meet
- again this week in Brussels to continue their talks. "We will
- go on and on and on until we have a solution," said Major.
- </p>
- <p> Despite the new mood of optimism, the road to any lasting peace
- will surely be bumpy and bloodstained. As the I.R.A. was considering
- London's demand for a permanent cease-fire as a precondition
- to formal talks, Republican operatives continued their bombing
- and assassination campaign. Even if the I.R.A. calls off its
- gunmen--and they obey--there is no guarantee that the extremists
- on the other side will stop fighting. Protestant paramilitary
- units, dedicated to keeping Northern Ireland in the United Kingdom,
- have become increasingly active. In the past two years, they
- killed more people in Northern Ireland than did the I.R.A. Says
- Peter Robinson, a hard-line Unionist politician: "If they believe
- that the British are about to abandon them, you can expect more
- violence."
- </p>
- <p> The question now is whether politicians can devise a framework
- that will satisfy the conflicting loyalties in the minority
- Catholic and majority Protestant communities. The British have
- said they will not stand in the way of a united Ireland should
- the majority of the people in the north one day agree to a shift
- in sovereignty. Dublin has pledged that it will respect the
- desires of the Protestant majority in the north to maintain
- its links with the United Kingdom as long as the aspiration
- for ultimate Irish unity is recognized. The devil will be in
- the details, and those have yet to be addressed.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-