Misplaced Pages

Provisional Irish Republican Army campaign: Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively← Previous editContent deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 17:42, 3 January 2007 editWeggie (talk | contribs)7,339 edits Poster dates from 2000 - 3 years after the dates this page is concerned with - 1969–1997← Previous edit Latest revision as of 05:33, 21 December 2024 edit undoGreenC bot (talk | contribs)Bots2,548,518 edits Reformat 1 archive link. Wayback Medic 2.5 per WP:USURPURL and JUDI batch #20 
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Short description|PIRA paramilitary campaign aimed at ending UK control of Northern Ireland (1969–97)}}
From 1969 until 1997, the ] (PIRA) conducted an armed campaign (or ]) in the ] aimed at overthrowing British rule in ] to create a ]. The PIRA is widely regarded as a ] organisation and is proscribed in as such in the ] and the ] This article aims to provide details of this campaign.
{{Use British English|date=July 2022}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2020}}
{{Infobox military conflict
| conflict = Provisional IRA campaign
| partof = ]
| image = Mk-15-BB.jpg
| caption = IRA members showing an ] and an ] (1992)
| date = 1969–1997
| place = {{nowrap|Primarily ] and England but also launched}} attacks against British targets in ], Belgium and the Netherlands.
| territory =
| result = Military stalemate<ref>],''Behind the mask: The IRA and Sinn Féin'', Chapter 21: ''Stalemate'', pp. 246–261.</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/northern_ireland/6276416.stm|title=Army paper says IRA not defeated|publisher=BBC News|date=2007-07-06|access-date=2014-03-13}}</ref><br />Ceasefire
| combatant1 = {{flag decoration|Irish Republic}} ] (IRA)


* ]
Other aspects of the PIRA's campaign are covered in the following articles:
* ]
*''For IRA armament, see ]''
* ]
*''For the Provisional's political strategy see ].''
* ]
*''For a chronology see ]


----
==Beginnings==
'''Supported by:'''
] ] depicting of the Battle of the Bogside]]
In the early days of ] from around 1969-71, the Provisional IRA was very poorly armed, having available only a handful of old fashioned weapons left over from the IRA's ] of the ]. The IRA had split in December 1969 into the ] and ] factions, in part over the failure of the IRA to defend nationalist areas of Belfast from loyalist attack - leading to the burning of many Catholic homes during the ] in Derry and in Belfast during the ]. In the first years of the conflict, the Provisionals' main activity was providing firepower to support nationalist rioters, and as they saw it, to defend nationalist areas against attacks from loyalists, the ], the ]. In contrast to the IRA's relative inaction during the rioting of 1969, Provisional IRA members in the summer of 1970 mounted determined armed defences of the nationalist Short Strand and Clonard areas of Belfast against loyalist attackers, killing a number of loyalists in the process. The PIRA gained much of its support from these activities, as they were widely perceived within the nationalist community as being defenders of ] and ] people against aggression.
].


* {{flag|Libya|1977}}
Initially, the ], deployed into Northern Ireland in August 1969, was welcomed in Catholic nationalist areas as a neutral force compared to the Protestant unionist-dominated Northern Ireland security forces, but this perception did not last. The Army was discredited in the eyes of many nationalists by incidents such as the ] Curfew of July 1970, when 3000 British troops imposed a curfew on the nationalist Lower Falls area of ]. After an attack on troops by PIRA members, the British fired over 1500 rounds of ammunition in gun battles with both the ] and Provisional IRA in the area, killing six civilians <ref>(Taylor p72)</ref>. Thereafter, the Provisionals began targeting British soldiers. The first to die was Robert Curtis, killed in a gun battle in February 1971 <ref>(Taylor p88)</ref>.
* {{flag|Palestine Liberation Organization}}
* ]
| combatant2 ={{ubl|{{flag icon|UK}} ]|{{flagicon image|Flag of the Royal Ulster Constabulary.svg}} ]}} (RUC)
| combatant3 ={{ubl|{{flagicon image|Flag of the Ulster Defence Association.svg}} ] (UDA)|{{flagicon image|Flag of the Ulster Volunteer Force.svg}} ]}} (UVF)<br />{{flagicon image|Flag of the Loyalist Volunteer Force.svg}} ] (LVF)<br />] ] (RHC)
Other ] paramilitary groups
----
| commander1 =
| commander2 =
| strength1 =
| strength2 =
| casualties1 = IRA 293 killed<br />over 10,000 imprisoned at different times during the conflict<ref name="Mallie Bishop, p. 12">Mallie Bishop, p. 12</ref>
| casualties2 = British Armed Forces 643–697 killed<br />RUC 270–273 killed
| casualties3 = Loyalist paramilitary groups 28–39 killed
| notes = Others killed by IRA<br />508<ref name=cain-crosstabs2/>–644<ref name="Lost Lives 2004">''Lost Lives'' (2004. Ed's David McKitrick, Seamus Kelters, Brian Feeney, Chris Thornton, David McVea, page 1536)</ref> civilians<br />1 Irish Army soldier<br />6 Gardaí<br />5 other republican paramilitaries
| campaignbox = {{Campaignbox Northern Ireland Troubles}}
{{Campaignbox The Troubles in Britain and Europe}}
{{Campaignbox assassinations Northern Ireland Troubles}}
}}
From 1969 until 1997,<ref name="Moloney, p. 472">Moloney, p. 472</ref> the ] (IRA) conducted an armed ] campaign primarily in ] and England, aimed at ending British rule in Northern Ireland in order to create a ].<ref>''War in the Shadows: The Guerrilla in History Volume 2'' by Robert B. Asprey ({{ISBN|978-0-595-22594-1}}), page 1125</ref><ref>''Global Geopolitics: A Critical Introduction'' by Klaus Dodds ({{ISBN|978-0-273-68609-5}}), page 205</ref><ref>''British Civilization'' by John Oakland ({{ISBN|978-0-415-26150-0}}), page 108</ref><ref>''Northern Ireland'' by Jonathan Tonge ({{ISBN|978-0-7456-3141-7}}), page 2</ref>


The Provisional IRA emerged from a split in the ] in 1969, partly as a result of that organisation's perceived failure to defend ] neighbourhoods from attack in the ]. The Provisionals gained credibility from their efforts to physically defend such areas in 1970 and 1971. From 1971 to 1972, the IRA took to the offensive and conducted a relatively high-intensity campaign against the British and Northern Ireland security forces and the infrastructure of the state. The ] characterised this period as the "insurgency phase" of the IRA's campaign.
The years 1970 and 1971 also saw persistent feuding between the Provisional and Official IRA's in Belfast, as both organisations vied for supremacy in nationalist areas. Five Republicans were killed in such violence before a truce was brokered between the two factions.


The IRA declared a brief ceasefire in 1972 and a more protracted one in 1975, when there was an internal debate over the feasibility of future operations. The armed group reorganised itself in the late 1970s into a smaller, ], which was designed to be harder to penetrate. The IRA then carried out a smaller scale but more sustained campaign, which they characterised as the 'Long War', with the eventual aim of weakening the British government's resolve to remain in Ireland. The British Army called this the "terrorist phase" of the IRA's campaign.
==Early campaign 1970-1980==
In the early 1970s, the IRA imported large quantities of modern weapons and explosives, primarily from supporters in the ] and ].] -obtained by the PIRA from the US in the early 1970s and an emotive symbol of its armed campaign.]]


The IRA made attempts in the 1980s to escalate the conflict with the aid of weapons donated by ]. In the 1990s they also resumed a campaign of bombing economic targets in London and other cities in England.
<!-- Unsourced image removed: ] -->


On 31 August 1994, the IRA called a unilateral ceasefire with the aim of having their associated political party, ], admitted into the ]. The organisation ended its ceasefire in February 1996 but declared another in July 1997. The IRA accepted the terms of the ] in 1998 as a negotiated end to the Northern Ireland conflict. In 2005 the organisation declared a formal end to its campaign and had its weaponry decommissioned under international supervision.
As the conflict escalated in the early 1970s, the numbers recruited by the IRA mushroomed, in response to the nationalist community's anger at events such as the introduction of ] without trial and ] when the ] of the British army shot dead 13 unarmed civil rights marchers in ]. The IRA leadership took the opportunity to launch an Offensive, believing that they could force a British withdrawal from Ireland by inflicting severe casualties, thus undermining public support in Britain for its continued presence.


Other aspects of the Provisional IRA's campaign are covered in the following articles:
The first half of the 1970s was the most intense period of the PIRA campaign. About half the total of 500 or so British soldiers to die in the conflict were killed in the years 1971-1973 <ref>(O'Brien p135)</ref>. In 1972 alone, the IRA killed 100 British soldiers and wounded 500 more. In the same year, they carried out 1,300 explosions and lost over 90 guerrillas killed themselves <ref>(O'Brien p19)</ref>. Up to 1972, The Provisionals controlled large urban areas in Belfast and Derry, but these were eventually re-taken by a major British operation known as ]. Thereafter, fortified Police and military posts were built in republican areas throughout Northern Ireland. During the early 1970s, a typical IRA operation involved sniping at British patrols and engaging them in fire-fights in urban areas of Belfast and Derry. They also killed local police and soldiers when off-duty. These tactics produced many casualties for both sides and for civilian by-standers.
<!-- Image with unknown copyright status removed: ] --><!-- Image with unknown copyright status removed: ] -->


* ''For a chronology, see ]''
Another element of their campaign was the bombing of commercial targets such as shops and businesses. The most effective tactic the IRA developed for its bombing campaign was the ], where large amounts of explosives were packed into a car, which was driven to its target and then exploded. The most spectacular example of the Provisionals' commercial bombing campaign was ] in July 1972 in Belfast city centre, where 22 bombs were exploded, nine people were killed and 130 injured <ref>(Moloney p116)</ref>. While most of the IRA's attacks on commercial targets were not designed to cause casualties, on many occasions they killed civilian bystanders. Other examples include the bombing of the Abercorn restaurant in Belfast in 1972, where two people were killed and 130 wounded <ref>(Mallie Bishop p215)</ref> and the ] in ] in February 1977, where 12 customers were killed by an incendiary bomb <ref>(Mallie, Bishop p337)</ref>.
* ''For the Provisional IRA's armament, see ]''


== Beginnings ==
In rural areas such as South ] (which is a majority Catholic area near the border with the Irish Republic), the IRA units most effective weapon was the "culvert-bomb" - where explosives were planted under drains in country roads. This proved so dangerous for British army patrols that all troops in the area had to be transported by helicopter, a policy which they have continued down to 2006, when the last British Army base was closed in South Armagh. The highest military death toll from an IRA attack came in August 1979, at ], ], when 18 British soldiers from the Parachute Regiment were killed by two "culvert bombs" placed by the ]. On the same day the IRA killed one of their most famous victims, the uncle of ], ], assassinated along with two children and his cousin on ] ] in ], by a bomb placed in his boat. Another very effective IRA tactic devised in the 1970s was the use of home-made ]s mounted on the back of trucks that were fired at police and army bases. These mortars were first tested in 1974 but did not kill anyone until 1979. The most lethal of these attacks came in February 1985, when 9 RUC officers were killed by mortar rounds fired at a police station in ]. As in Warrenpoint, the South Armagh IRA unit was responsible. <ref>(Mallie, Bishop p420)</ref>.


In the early days of ] (1969–72), the ] was poorly armed, with only a handful of old weapons left over from the IRA's ]. The IRA had split in December 1969 into the Provisional IRA and ] factions. In the first two years of the conflict, the Provisionals' main activities were defending ] areas from attacks by loyalist paramilitaries.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=White |first=Robert W. |date=May 1989 |title=From Peaceful Protest to Guerrilla War: Micromobilization of the Provisional Irish Republican Army |journal=American Journal of Sociology |volume=94 |issue=6 |pages=1284 |doi=10.1086/229155 |via=JSTOR}}</ref>
==Ceasefires - 1972 and 1975==
]


In contrast to the IRA's relative inaction during the ], in the summer of 1970, the Provisional IRA mounted determined armed defences of the nationalist areas of Belfast against ] attackers, killing a number of Protestant civilians and loyalists in the process. On 27 June 1970, the IRA killed five Protestant civilians during street disturbances in Belfast.<ref name="Sutton1970"> {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160422085347/http://www.cain.ulst.ac.uk/sutton/chron/1970.html |date=22 April 2016 }} – 1970</ref> Three more were shot in ] in north ] after gun battles broke out during an ] parade. When loyalists retaliated by attacking the nationalist enclave of ] in east Belfast, ], the Provisionals' commander in Belfast, occupied St Matthew's Church and defended it in a five-hour gun battle with the loyalists, in what became known as the ]. One of his men was killed, he was badly wounded, and three loyalists were also killed.<ref>Mallie, Bishop, ''The Provisional IRA'' p157–158</ref> The Provisional IRA gained much of its support from these activities, as they were widely perceived among nationalists as being defenders of nationalist and ] people against aggression.<ref>{{cite book|last=English|first=Richard|title=Armed Struggle: The History of the IRA|publisher=Pan Books|year=2003|pages=134–35|isbn=0-330-49388-4}}</ref>
The Provisional IRA declared two ceasefires in the 1970s, temporarily suspending its armed operations. In 1972, the IRA leadership thought that Britain was on the verge of leaving Northern Ireland. The British government held secret talks with the PIRA leadership in 1972 to try and secure a ceasefire based on a compromise settlement within Northern Ireland. The PIRA agreed to a temporary ceasefire from 26 June to 9 July. In July 1972, Provisional leaders, ], ], ], ], ] and ] met a British delegation led by ]. The IRA leaders refused to consider a peace settlement that did not include a commitment to British withdrawal, a retreat of the British Army to barracks and a release of republican prisoners. The British refused and the talks broke up <ref>(Taylor p139)</ref>.


Initially, the ], deployed into ] in August 1969 to reinforce the ] (RUC) and restore government control, was welcomed in Catholic nationalist areas as a neutral force compared to the Protestant- and ]-dominated RUC and ].<ref>Taylor, pp. 56–59</ref> However, this good relationship with nationalists did not last long. The Army was soon discredited in the eyes of many nationalists by incidents such as the ] of July 1970, when 3,000 British troops imposed ] conditions on the nationalist lower Falls area of west Belfast. After a gun and grenade attack on troops by Provisional IRA members, the British fired over 1,500 rounds of ammunition in gun battles with both the Official IRA and Provisional IRA in the area, killing six civilians.<ref>{{cite book|last=Taylor|first=Peter|author-link=Peter Taylor (journalist)|title=Provos The IRA & Sinn Féin|publisher=Bloomsbury Publishing|year=1997|isbn=0-7475-3818-2|page=72}}</ref> Thereafter, the Provisionals continued targeting British soldiers. The first soldier to die was gunner ], killed by ] in a gun battle in February 1971.<ref>Taylor, p. 88</ref>
By the mid 1970s, it was clear that the hopes of the PIRA leadership for a quick military victory were receding. Secret meetings between IRA leaders ] and ] with British ] ] secured an IRA ceasefire from February 1975 until January of the next year. The republicans believed that this was the start of a long term process of British withdrawal, however, it seems that Rees was trying to bring the Provisionals into peaceful politics without giving them any guarantees. Critics of the IRA leadership, most notably ], felt that the ceasefire was disastrous for the IRA, leading to infiltration by British informers, the arrest of many activists and a breakdown in IRA discipline - leading to sectarian killings (see next section) and a feud with fellow republicans in the ]. The ceasefire broke down in January 1976 <ref>(Taylor p156)</ref>.


1970 and 1971 also saw feuding between the Provisional and Official IRAs in Belfast, as both organisations vied for supremacy in nationalist areas. Charlie Hughes, commander of the Provisionals' D Company in the Lower Falls, was killed before a truce was brokered between the two factions.<ref>Taylor, p. 79</ref>
In response to the 1975 ceasefire and the arrest of many IRA volunteers in its aftermath, the Provisionals re-organised their structures in the late 1970s into small cell based units that were thought to be harder to infiltrate. They also embarked on a strategy known as the "Long War" - a process of attrition based on the indefinite continuation of an armed campaign until the British government grew tired of the political, military and financial costs involved in staying in ].


== Early campaign 1970–72 ==
==Accusations of sectarian attacks==
] rifle, typical of the World War II-era weaponry the ] had in the early 1970s]]
The IRA has always argued that its campaign was aimed not at the Protestant/Unionist community, but at the British presence in Ireland, manifested in the British Army and the Northern Ireland security forces. However, many Unionists believe that the IRA's campaign was ] and there are many incidents where the organisation targeted Protestant civilians.
In the early 1970s, the IRA imported large quantities of modern weapons and explosives, primarily from supporters in the ] and ] communities within the ] as well as the government of ].<ref>The IRA, 1968–2000 By J. Bowyer Bell</ref><ref>{{cite book|author=Gearóid Ó Faoleán|title=A Broad Church: The Provisional IRA in the Republic of Ireland, 1969–1980|date=April 23, 2019|page=172|publisher=Merrion Press|isbn=978-1-7853-7245-2}}</ref>
Leader of the Opposition ] in 1971 secretly met with IRA leaders with the help of ], angering the Irish government; ] wrote 30 years later that "the strength of the feelings of our democratic leaders ... was not, however, publicly ventilated at the time" because Wilson was a former and possible future British prime minister.<ref name="fitzgerald2006">{{cite journal|url=http://www.ria.ie/cgi-bin/ria/papers/100573.pdf|title=The 1974–5 Threat of a British Withdrawal from Northern Ireland|author=FitzGerald, Garret|journal=Irish Studies in International Affairs|year=2006|volume=17|pages=141–50|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070926091138/http://www.ria.ie/cgi-bin/ria/papers/100573.pdf|archive-date=26 September 2007|doi=10.3318/ISIA.2006.17.1.141}}</ref>


As the conflict escalated in the early 1970s, the numbers recruited by the IRA mushroomed, in response to the nationalist community's anger at events such as the introduction of ] without trial and ], when the ] of the British Army shot dead 14 unarmed civil rights marchers in ].<ref>{{cite book | last = Sanders |first = Andrew | title = Inside The IRA: Dissident Republicans and the War For Legitimacy | publisher = Edinburgh University Press | year = 2012 | pages = 52–53 | isbn = 978-0-7486-4696-8}}</ref>
The 1970s were the most violent years of the Troubles. As well as its campaign against the security forces, the IRA became involved, in the middle of the decade, in a "tit for tat" cycle of sectarian killings with ]. The worst examples of this occurred in 1975 and 1976. In September 1975, for example, IRA members machine-gunned an ] in ], killing five Protestants. On January 5 1976, an IRA unit in Armagh shot dead ten ] building workers at ], in reprisal for ] (UVF) killings of six Roman Catholics the previous day <ref> English page 172 </ref>. In similar incidents, the IRA deliberately killed 91 Protestant civilians in 1974-76 (CAIN). The IRA did not officially claim the killings, but justified them in a statement on January 17 1976, "The Irish Republican Army has never initiated sectarian killings ... if loyalist elements responsible for over 300 sectarian assassinations in the past four years stop such killing now, then the question of retaliation from whatever source does not arise" <ref>English page 173</ref>. In late 1976, the IRA leadership met with representatives of the loyalist paramilitary groups and agreed to halt random sectarian killings and car bombings of civilian targets. The loyalists revoked the agreement in 1979, after the IRA killing of Lord Mountbatten but the pact nevertheless halted the cycle of sectarian revenge killings until the late 1980s, when the loyalist groups began killing Catholics again in large numbers <ref>(Mallie, Bishop, page 390)</ref>.


The early 1970s were the most intense period of the Provisional IRA campaign. About half the total of 650 British soldiers to die in the conflict<ref>{{cite web|url=http://cain.ulst.ac.uk/sutton/tables/Status.html#prof|title=CAIN: Sutton Index of Deaths|website=Cain.ulst.ac.uk|access-date=2015-12-23}}</ref> were killed in the years 1971–73.<ref name="O'Brien, p. 135">O'Brien, p. 135</ref> In 1972 alone, the IRA killed 100 British soldiers and wounded 500 more. In the same year, they carried out 1,300 bomb attacks and 90 IRA members were killed.<ref>O'Brien, p. 119</ref>
As the IRA campaign continued through the 1970s and 1980s, the organisation increasingly targeted RUC and ] servicemen&mdash;including when they were off duty. Because these men were almost exclusively Protestant and unionist, these killings were also widely portrayed (and perceived in unionist circles) as a campaign of ] assassination. A former IRA member of the ], Vincent McKenna, has claimed that ]'s military tactics of creating "sanitised zones"&mdash;expelling members of the UDR from their farms to gain territory "a field at a time"&mdash;was "sectarian".<ref>Liam Clarke, IRA accused of 'ethnic cleansing', ''The Sunday Times'', 29 March 1998.</ref> Former Unionist MP and a major in the UDR, ], compiled a record of IRA attacks on the UDR and claimed from this that the IRA's campaign was sectarian and genocidal in that the eldest sons and breadwinners were especially targeted in order to ethnically cleanse Protestants from their farms and jobs west of the ].<ref>Jonathan Bardon, ''A History of Ulster'' (Blackstaff, 2001), p. 807.</ref>


Up to 1972, the IRA controlled large urban areas in Belfast and Derry, but these were eventually re-taken by a major British operation known as ]. Thereafter, fortified police and military posts were built in republican areas throughout Northern Ireland. During the early 1970s, a typical IRA operation involved ] at British patrols and engaging them in firefights in urban areas of Belfast and Derry. They also killed RUC and ] (UDR) soldiers, both on and off-duty, and a number of retired policemen and UDR soldiers. These tactics produced casualties for both sides and for many civilian bystanders. The British Army study of the conflict later described this period (1970–72), as the 'insurgency phase' of the IRA's campaign.<ref name="soldiermagazine.co.uk">] – An analysis of military operations in Northern Ireland, Chapter I, page 2 {{cite web |url=http://www.soldiermagazine.co.uk/op_banner/pages/41-43_soldier.pdf |title=Archived copy |access-date=2009-11-09 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111102204217/http://www.soldiermagazine.co.uk/op_banner/pages/41-43_soldier.pdf |archive-date=2 November 2011}}</ref>
Despite the fact that most of the IRA's Security Force victims by the late 1980s were locally recruited RUC or UDR personnel, the Provisional leadership maintained that the British Army was their preferred target. ] in an interview given in 1988, said it was, "vastly preferable" to target the British Army as it "removes the worst of the agony from Ireland" and "diffuses the sectarian aspects of the conflict because loyalists do not see it as an attack on their community" <ref>(Taylor p337)</ref>.


Another element of their campaign was the bombing of ] targets such as shops and businesses. The most effective tactic the IRA developed for its bombing campaign was the ], where large amounts of explosives were packed into a car, which was driven to its target and then detonated. ], the first ], described the car bomb both as a tactical and strategic weapon. From the tactical point of view, it tied down a great number of British troops in Belfast and other cities and major towns across Northern Ireland. Strategically, it hampered the British administration and government of the country, striking simultaneously at its economic structure.<ref>{{Cite book|title=Revolutionary in Ireland|last=McStiofáin|first=Seán|publisher=G. Cremonesi|year=1975|page=243}}</ref> While most of the IRA's attacks on commercial targets were not intended to cause casualties,<ref>{{cite book|last=Bowyer Bell|first=J.|author-link=J. Bowyer Bell|title=IRA Tactics and Targets: An Analysis of Tactical Aspects of the Armed Struggle 1969–1989|publisher=Poolbeg Press|year=1990|page=87|isbn=1-85371-086-5}}</ref> on many occasions they killed civilians. Examples include the bombing of the ] in Belfast in March 1972, in which two young Catholic women were killed and 130 people injured, attributed to the IRA, which never acknowledged responsibility, as well as the bombing of the ] in ] in February 1978, which resulted in the deaths of twelve Protestant civilian customers, and others maimed and injured.<ref>Mallie Bishop, p. 215, p. 337</ref>
Another example of an IRA sectarian attack happened in 1987, when the IRA placed a bomb near a ] service in ], killing eleven, mostly Protestant, by-standers. (See ]).


In rural areas such as South ] (which is a majority Catholic area near the ]), the IRA unit's most effective weapon was the "culvert bomb", where bombs were planted under drains in country roads. This proved so dangerous for British Army patrols that virtually all troops in the area had to be transported by helicopter,<ref>{{cite book|last=Harnden|first=Toby|author-link=Toby Harnden|title=Bandit Country|publisher=Hodder & Stoughton|year=1999|isbn=0-340-71736-X|page=19}}</ref> a policy which continued until 2007,{{Contradictory inline|date=February 2022}} when the last British Army base was closed in South Armagh.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.sinnfein.ie/news/detail/18130|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070927231015/http://www.sinnfein.ie/news/detail/18130|url-status=dead|archive-date=2007-09-27|title=Sinn Féin: Welcome for end of British Army occupation in South Armagh|date=27 September 2007}}</ref>
Towards the end of the troubles, the Provisionals widened their campaign even further, to include the killing of people who worked in a civilian capacity with the RUC and British Army. The bloodiest example of this came in ], when an IRA bomb killed eight Protestant building workers who were working on a British Army base at ]. Again, since Protestants and Unionists were more likely to work for the British Army and police, this was widely seen as part of a campaign against Protestants.


== Ceasefires – 1972 and 1975 ==
For the IRA, such attacks may have been counter-productive, as incidents such as these facilitated the ]'s aims to "criminalise" the IRA and portray the conflict as one between sectarian gangs, and itself as a neutral arbiter.


The Provisional IRA declared two ceasefires in the 1970s, temporarily suspending its armed operations. In 1972, the IRA leadership believed that Britain was on the verge of leaving Northern Ireland. The British government held secret talks with the Provisional IRA leadership in 1972 to try to secure a ceasefire based on a compromise settlement within Northern Ireland. The Provisional IRA agreed to a temporary ceasefire from 26 June to 9 July. In July 1972, Provisional leaders Seán Mac Stíofáin, ], ], ], ] and ] met a British delegation led by ]. The IRA leaders refused to consider a peace settlement that did not include a commitment to British withdrawal to be completed by 1975, a retreat of the British Army to barracks and a release of republican prisoners. The British refused and the talks ended.<ref>Taylor, p. 139</ref> On ] in July 1972 in Belfast 22 bombs exploded, killing nine people and injuring 130.<ref>Moloney, p. 116</ref> Bloody Friday was intended to be a demonstration of IRA strength following the ceasefire, but was a disaster for the IRA due to the authorities being unable to deal with so many simultaneous bomb alerts in a small area.<ref>Moloney, p. 117</ref>
==Attacks outside Northern Ireland==


By the mid-1970s, it was clear that the hopes of the Provisional IRA leadership for a quick military victory were receding. Secret meetings between IRA leaders ] and ] with British ] ] secured an IRA ceasefire from February 1975 until January of the next year. The republicans believed initially that this was the start of a long-term process of British withdrawal. However, after several months, many in the IRA came to believe that the British were trying to bring the Provisional movement into peaceful politics without giving them any guarantees.<ref>{{cite book|last=Taylor|first=Peter|author-link=Peter Taylor (Journalist)|title=Brits|publisher=Bloomsbury Publishing|year=2001|pages=|isbn=0-7475-5806-X|url=https://archive.org/details/brits00pete/page/184}}</ref>
The PIRA was chiefly active in Northern Ireland, but from the early 1970s, it also took its bombing campaign to ]. At a meeting of the PIRA Army Council in June 1972, Sean MacStiofain proposed bombing targets in England to, "take the heat off Belfast and Derry". However, the Army Council did not consent to a bombing campaign in mainland Britain until early 1973, when talks they had held with the British government in the previous year had broken down <ref>Mallie, Bishop, page 250</ref>. They believed that such bombing would create a demand among the British public for their government to withdraw from Northern Ireland.


Critics of the IRA leadership, most notably Gerry Adams, felt that the ceasefire was disastrous for the IRA, leading to infiltration by British informers, the arrest of many activists and a breakdown in IRA discipline, which in turn led to tit-for-tat killings with loyalist groups fearful of a British sell-out and a feud with fellow republicans in the Official IRA. By early 1976, the IRA leadership, short of money, weapons and members, was on the brink of calling off the campaign.<ref>Taylor, pp. 232–233</ref> Instead, the ceasefire broke down in January 1976.<ref>Taylor, p. 156</ref>
The first IRA team sent to England included eleven members of the Belfast Brigade, who hijacked four cars in Belfast, fitted them with explosives and drove them to London via Dublin and ]. The team were betrayed to the ] by an informer and all but one of them were arrested. Nevertheless, two of the bombs exploded, killing one man and injuring 180 people <ref>Mallie, Bishop, page 253</ref>.


=== Late 1970s and the "Long War" ===
Thereafter, control over IRA bombings in Britain was given to ], a Belfast man and member of the Army Council. Keenan, along with ], a former member of the British Parachute regiment, conducted a series of bombings in 1973 on military targets. In March, an IRA team from Belfast planted a bomb on a British Army coach, which exploded on the ], killing nine soldiers along with a woman and two children. Another bomb, planted by McMullen, exploded at a barracks in ], killing a woman canteen worker <ref>Mallie, Bishop, page 255</ref>.


The years 1976 to 1979 under ], ]' replacement as the ], were characterised by a falling death rate for many reasons, including a drop in loyalist violence (attributed to the absence of political initiatives under Mason),<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=0SS_AAAAQBAJ&q=roy+mason+troubles&pg=PA118 |title=Making Sense of the Troubles: The Story of the Conflict in Northern Ireland |author1=David McKittrick |author2=David McVea |page=118 |date=2002-03-18 |publisher=New Amsterdam Books |access-date=2015-12-23|isbn=9781461663331 }}</ref> and a change in IRA tactics after its weakening during the previous year's ceasefire.<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=RpwHBAAAQBAJ&q=roy+mason+troubles&pg=PT45 |title=A Short History of the Troubles |author=Brian Feeney |date=2014-04-28 |publisher=The O'Brien Press |access-date=2015-12-23|isbn=9781847176585 }}</ref>{{page needed|date=July 2020}} Mason developed a policy that rejected a political or military solution in favour of treating paramilitary violence "as a security problem". In addition, RUC Chief Constable ] took advantage of Emergency Powers legislation to subject suspected IRA members to "intensive and frequently rough" seven-day interrogations.<ref name=b321>Bishop, Mallie, p321</ref> British concentration on intelligence-gathering and recruiting of informers, accelerated during the 1975 ceasefire and continued under Mason, meant that arrests of IRA members rose steeply in this period. Between 1976 and 1979, 3,000 people were charged with "terrorist offences".<ref name=b321/> There were 800 republican prisoners in ] alone by 1980.<ref>English, Armed Struggle, p191</ref>
Some of the most indiscriminate bombing attacks of the IRA's bombing campaign were carried out by the so-called "Balcombe street gang", a unit of four IRA members from Dublin, who were sent to London in the summer of 1974. They avoided contact with the Irish community there in order to remain inconspicuous and aimed to carry out one attack a week. In addition to bombings, they carried out several assassinations. ], a right wing politician, was shot dead at his home and the group made attempts on the lives of ], ] and ]. They were eventually arrested after they machine gunned an exclusive restaurant on ]. Pursued by police, they took hostages and barricaded themselves for six days in a house on Balcombe street before they surrendered, an incident known as the ]. They were sentenced to thirty years each for a total of six murders <ref>Mallie, Bishop, page 257</ref>. The Balcombe group later admitted responsibility also for the ] of October 5 1974, which killed 5 people<ref>Retrieved from CAIN 1974 chronology:
*05 October 1974 Ann Hamilton (19) nfNIB
Status: British Army (BA), Killed by: Irish Republican Army (IRA) Off duty. Killed in bomb attack on Horse and Groom public house, Guildford, Surrey, England.
*05 October 1974 Caroline Slater (18) nfNIB
Status: British Army (BA), Killed by: Irish Republican Army (IRA) Off duty. Killed in bomb attack on Horse and Groom public house, Guildford, Surrey, England.
*05 October 1974 William Forsyth (18) nfNIB
Status: British Army (BA), Killed by: Irish Republican Army (IRA) Off duty. Killed in bomb attack on Horse and Groom public house, Guildford, Surrey, England.
*05 October 1974 John Hunter (17) nfNIB
Status: British Army (BA), Killed by: Irish Republican Army (IRA) Off duty. Killed in bomb attack on Horse and Groom public house, Guildford, Surrey, England.
*05 October 1974 Paul Craig (22) nfNIB
Status: Civilian (Civ), Killed by: Irish Republican Army (IRA) Killed in bomb attack on Horse and Groom public house, Guildford, Surrey, England.</ref> and injured 65 and the bombing of a pub in ], which killed another two people<ref>Retrieved from CAIN 1974 chronology:
*07 November 1974 Richard Dunne (42) nfNIB
Status: British Army (BA), Killed by: Irish Republican Army (IRA) Off duty. Killed by bomb thrown through window of King's Arms public house, Woolwich, London.
*07 November 1974 Alan Horsley (20) nfNIB
Status: Civilian (Civ), Killed by: Irish Republican Army (IRA) Killed by bomb thrown through window of King's Arms public house, Woolwich, London.</ref>.


In 1972, there were over 12,000 shooting and bombing attacks in Northern Ireland; by 1977, this was down to 2,800.<ref>Mallie, Bishop, p320-321</ref> In 1976, there were 297 deaths in Northern Ireland; in the next three years the figures were 112, 81, and 113. An IRA man contended that "we were almost beaten by Mason", and Martin McGuinness commented: "Mason beat the shit out of us".{{citation needed|date=August 2015}} Mason's policy of 'criminalisation' led to the ] in the prisons.<ref>{{cite news|author=Anne McHardy |url=https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2015/apr/20/lord-mason-of-barnsley |title=Lord Mason of Barnsley obituary &#124; Politics |newspaper=The Guardian |access-date=2015-12-23}}</ref> When Mason left office in 1979, he predicted the IRA were "weeks away from defeat".<ref>{{cite web|last=Lucas |first=Ian |url=http://www.newstatesman.com/politics/2015/04/rest-peace-roy-mason-and-good-riddance |title=Rest in peace, Roy Mason, and good riddance |website=Newstatesman.com |date=2015-04-23 |access-date=2015-12-23}}</ref>
On November 21, 1974, an IRA unit recruited in ] from among the Irish immigrant community carried out the ], two separate bombings of pubs which killed 21 civilians and injured 162. An inadequate warning was given for one bomb and no warning for the other <ref>English, page 169</ref>. There were no military targets associated with either of the pubs.


After the early years of the conflict, it became less common for the IRA to use large numbers of men in its armed actions. Instead, smaller but more specialised groups carried out sustained attritional attacks. In response to the 1975 ceasefire and the arrest of many IRA volunteers in its aftermath, the IRA re-organised their structures in 1977 into small cell-based units. While these were harder to infiltrate, the greater secrecy also caused a distance to develop between the IRA and sympathetic civilians. They also embarked on a strategy known as the "Long War" – a process of attrition based on the indefinite continuation of an armed campaign until the British government grew tired of the political, military and financial costs involved in staying in Northern Ireland.<ref>Moloney, pp. 149–162</ref> The British Army characterised this change in the IRA campaign as a move from "insurgency" to a "terrorist phase".<ref name="soldiermagazine.co.uk"/>
Two groups of people, the ] and the ], were imprisoned were for the Guildford and Birmingham bombings respectively, but each group protested their innocence. They were eventually released and pardoned after serving lengthy prison sentences.


The highest military death toll from an IRA attack came on 27 August 1979, with the ] in ], when 18 British soldiers from the Parachute Regiment were killed by two culvert bombs placed by the ], a unit that didn't feel the need to adopt the cell structure because of its history of successfully avoiding intelligence failures. On the same day, the IRA killed one of their most famous victims, The ], assassinated along with two teenagers (aged 14 and 15) and The ] in ], by a bomb placed in his boat. Another effective IRA tactic devised in the late 1970s was the use of home-made ]s mounted on the back of trucks which were fired at police and army bases. These mortars were first tested in 1974 but did not kill anyone until 1979.<ref>{{cite book|last=Urban|first=Mark|title=Big Boys' Rules: SAS and the Secret Struggle Against the IRA|publisher=Faber and Faber|year=1993|pages=206–08|isbn=0-571-16809-4}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=An Index of Deaths from the Conflict in Ireland|author=Malcolm Sutton|url=http://cain.ulst.ac.uk/sutton/chron/1983.html|publisher=CAIN|access-date=9 July 2010}}</ref>
Many British civilians were killed during the IRA bombing campaign in England, which was often directed against civilian targets such as pubs and ] such as the ] (]).


== Sectarian attacks ==
After the campaign of the mid 1970s, the IRA did not undertake a major bombing campaign again in Britain until the late 1980s and early 1990s. (See 1990s section for details).


The IRA argued that its campaign was aimed not at Protestant and unionist people, but at the British presence in Northern Ireland, manifested in the state security forces. However, many unionists argue that the IRA's campaign was ] and there are many incidents where the organisation targeted Protestant civilians. The 1970s were the most violent years of the Troubles. As well as its campaign against the security forces, the IRA became involved, in the middle of the decade, in a "tit for tat" cycle of sectarian killings with loyalist paramilitaries. The worst examples of this occurred in 1975 and 1976. In September 1975, for example, IRA members machine-gunned an ] in ], killing five Protestants. On 5 January 1976, in Armagh, IRA members operating under the proxy name ] shot dead ten Protestant building workers in the ].<ref>English, p. 172</ref>
However, throughout the intervening period, they did carry out a number of high profile bombing attacks in Britain.


In similar incidents, the IRA deliberately killed 91 Protestant civilians in 1974–76.<ref name=English173/> The IRA did not officially claim the killings, but justified them in a statement on 17 January 1976, "The Irish Republican Army has never initiated sectarian killings ... if loyalist elements responsible for over 300 sectarian assassinations in the past four years stop such killing now, then the question of retaliation from whatever source does not arise".<ref name=English173>English, p. 173</ref> In late 1976, the IRA leadership met with representatives of the loyalist paramilitary groups and agreed to halt random sectarian killings and car bombings of civilian targets. The loyalists revoked the agreement in 1979, after the IRA killing of Lord Mountbatten, but the pact nevertheless halted the cycle of sectarian revenge killings until the late 1980s, when the loyalist groups began killing Catholics again in large numbers.<ref>Mallie Bishop, p. 390</ref>
In 1982, they exploded two bombs at a British Army parade at ] and ] in London, killing 11 soldiers and wounding 50 soldiers and civilians (see ]).


After the British introduced their policy of "]" from the mid-1970s, IRA victims came increasingly from the ranks of the RUC and ], including off-duty and retired personnel. Most of these were Protestant and unionist, thus the killings were portrayed and perceived by many as a campaign of sectarian assassination. Historian Henry Patterson said about ] "that the killings struck at the Protestant community's morale, sense of security and belonging in the area was undeniable."<ref>{{cite web |url=http://news.ulster.ac.uk/releases/2006/2223.html |title=University of Ulster News Release – Border Killings – Liberation Struggle or Ethnic Cleansing? |website=News.ulster.ac.uk |date=2006-05-29 |access-date=2015-12-23 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160303195508/http://news.ulster.ac.uk/releases/2006/2223.html |archive-date=3 March 2016}}</ref> while ] leader ] claimed that the IRA campaign in Fermanagh was "genocidal".<ref>Bowden, Brett and Davis, Michael T. (2008). ''Terror: From Tyrannicide to Terrorism''. University of Queensland Press, p. 239; {{ISBN|0-7022-3599-7}}</ref>
In 1984, in the ], the IRA tried to assassinate British Prime Minister ]. She survived, but five people including two ] Members of Parliament were killed. Several others including Margaret Tebbit, wife of ] was left permanently disabled.
On several occasions, the PIRA attacked British troops stationed in Britain, the most lethal of which was the ], where 11 ] bandsmen were killed.


Rachel Kowalsaki argues that the IRA did not generally engage in sectarian activities but instead targeted those they deemed responsible for British rule in Northern Ireland and that they generally only targeted members of the military and police and made efforts to avoid civilian deaths. However, Kowalsaki notes that the IRA did not recognise that while they may have thought of themselves as fighting for a united Ireland, their actions were often perceived by the Northern Irish Unionists as sectarian attacks against Protestants.<ref>Kowalski, Rachel Caroline. "The role of sectarianism in the Provisional IRA campaign, 1969–1997." ''Terrorism and political violence'' 30, no. 4 (2018): 658–683.</ref> A similar argument was made by Lewis et al., who argue that the IRA's ideology – which held that Irish Protestants and Unionists were part of the ] of the Irish nation and were simply deluded into thinking themselves British by colonial oppression – meant that the organisation had an ideological restraint against mass sectarianism. However, the authors note that this same belief could also blind them to the actual effects of their campaign, as they did not acknowledge that Northern Irish Unionists regarded themselves as a distinct community and thus would perceive the IRA's activities as sectarian.<ref>Lewis, Matthew, and Shaun McDaid. "Bosnia on the border? Republican Violence in Northern Ireland during the 1920s and 1970s." ''Terrorism and political violence'' 29, no. 4 (2017): 635–655.</ref>
Republicans argued that these bombings "concentrated minds" in the British government far more than the violence in Northern Ireland. The IRA had an official policy of bombing only targets in England (not the ] countries of ] and ]), although they detonated a bomb at an oil terminal in the ] in 1981 while ] was performing the official opening of the terminal.


Timothy Shanahan argues that while the IRA did launch attacks against legitimate targets (defined as members of the security services), many members of the security services, such as the RUC and UDR, would themselves be Protestant, and would be presumed to be Protestant by the IRA. Thus any attacks on these legitimate targets would suffice in killing members of the Protestant community, negating any need for sectarian attacks on Protestant civilians. Shanahan thus argues that while the IRA may not have been sectarian as some loyalist paramilitaries, it may not have been as anti-sectarian as popularly claimed.<ref>Shanahan, Timothy. ''Provisional Irish Republican Army and the Morality of Terrorism''. Edinburgh University Press, 2008, pp.32–39</ref> Similar arguments were made by Steve Bruce, who also argued that Catholic RUC members were disproportionately targeted, which Bruce argues is because they were viewed as betraying their community, which only makes sense in the nature of a sectarian conflict.<ref>Bruce, Steve. ''The Edge of the Union: The Ulster Loyalist Political Vision''. Oxford University Press, UK, 1994, p.124-126</ref> James Dingley argues that the IRA's focus on the idea of a united and independent Ireland made it ''de facto'' sectarian, as it did not recognise Ulster Unionists as a legitimate group and wanted to use violence to pursue goals that were opposed by the majority of the Northern Irish population.<ref>Dingley, James. "A reply to white's non‐sectarian thesis of PIRA targeting." (1998): 106–117.</ref>
The PIRA also carried out attacks in other countries such as ], ], ], the ] and Australia{{fact}}, where British soldiers were based. Between 1979 and 1990, eight soldiers and six civilians died in these attacks, including the British Ambassador to the Netherlands<ref></ref>. On one occasion, the IRA shot and killed two ] tourists mistaken for off duty British soldiers.


Protestants in the rural border areas of counties ] and ], where the number of members of the security forces killed was high, viewed the IRA's campaign as ].<ref name="leahysect">{{cite book | last = Leahy |first = Thomas | title = The Intelligence War against the IRA | publisher = Cambridge University Press | year = 2020 | page = 213 | isbn = 978-1108487504}}</ref> These views have been challenged. Boyle and Hadden argue that the allegations do not stand up to serious scrutiny,<ref>] and Tom Hadden, ''Northern Ireland: The Choice'', Harmondsworth:UK, Penguin Books, 1994, p. 7.</ref> while nationalists object to the term on the grounds that it is not used by unionists to describe similar killings or expulsions of Catholics in areas where they form a minority.<ref>Bowden and Davis, p. 239</ref> Henry Patterson, professor of politics at the ], concludes that while the IRA's campaign was unavoidably sectarian, it did not amount to ethnic cleansing.<ref>{{cite journal | last = Patterson | first = Henry | year = 2010 | title = Sectarianism Revisited: The Provisional IRA Campaign in a Border Region of Northern Ireland | journal = ] | volume = 22 | issue = 3 | pages = 337–356 | doi = 10.1080/09546551003659335| s2cid = 145671577 }}</ref> Although the IRA did not specifically target these people because of their religious affiliation, more Protestants joined the security forces so many people from that community believed the attacks were sectarian.<ref name="leahysect"/> IRA volunteer ] argues that due to the British government's ] policy increasing the role of the locally recruited RUC and UDR, the IRA had no choice but to target them because of their local knowledge, but acknowledges that Protestants viewed this as a sectarian attack on their community.<ref name="leahysect"/><ref>{{cite book | last = McKearney | first = Tommy | author-link = Tommy McKearney | title = The Provisional IRA: From Insurrection to Parliament | publisher = Pluto Press | year = 2011 | pages = 139–140 | isbn = 978-0-7453-3074-7}}</ref> ], in a 1988 interview, claimed it was, "vastly preferable" to target the regular British Army as it "removes the worst of the agony from Ireland" and "diffuses the sectarian aspects of the conflict because loyalists do not see it as an attack on their community".<ref>Taylor, p. 337</ref>
The IRA also sent members on arms importation, logistical support and intelligence operations at different times to continental Europe, Canada, the United States, Australia, the Middle East and Latin America.


Towards the end of the Troubles, the IRA widened their campaign even further, to include the killing of people who worked in a civilian capacity with the RUC and British Army. These workers were mostly, but not exclusively, Protestant, although Catholic judges, magistrates, and contractors were also assassinated by the IRA. In 1992, in Teebane, near Cookstown, an ] who were working on a British Army base at Omagh.<ref>{{cite news|title=Remembering Teebane|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/northern_ireland/1619733.stm|publisher=BBC.co.uk|date=25 October 2001|access-date=21 March 2007}}</ref>
==Libyan arms and the "Tet Offensive"==
] to the PIRA in the 1980s]]


== Attacks outside Northern Ireland ==
In the mid 1980s, the Provisional IRA received large quantities of modern weaponry, including heavy weaponry such as Heavy machine guns, over 1000 rifles, several hundred handguns, ], ], ]s and the ] ] from the Libyan regime of ]. reportedly, Qadaffi donated enough weapons to arm the equivalent of three infantry battalions. (See ]).


=== England ===
The IRA therefore, came to be very well armed by the end of the Troubles, but this did not necessarily correlate with the intensity of its armed campaign. Most of the losses it inflicted on the British Army occurred in the early to mid 1970s, although they continued to inflict substantial casualties on the British military, the RUC and UDR throughout the Troubles. The ] had plans for a dramatic escalation of the conflict in the late 1980s which they likened to the ] of the ] with the aid of the arms obtained from Libya. However, a third of the arms donated were intercepted aboard the ship, the ''Eksund'' by the French and Irish authorities. This brought the PIRA's new capability to the attention of the authorities on either side of the Irish border.


==== 1970s ====
The plan had been to take and hold several areas along the border, forcing the British Army to either withdraw from border areas or use maximum force to re-take them - thus escalating the conflict beyond the point which the PIRA thought that British public opinion would accept. The IRA's expectation was that the British Army would try to re-take these areas with their helicopters which could be shot down due to the ] Surface to Air missiles now in the IRAs hands. The British would then be forced to ground all of their helicopters across Northern Ireland and use heavy armoured transport which would now be very vulnerable to ]s, Semtex and cannons that the IRA had received from Libya. The "Tet offensive" also included plans to bombard and sink a ] vessel that patrolled the ] with 106mm Cannons mounted on motorboats and plans to bomb British embassies and military bases on the continent. However this offensive failed to materialise. IRA sources quoted in The ''Secret History of the IRA'' by ] say that the interception of the ''Eksund'' shipment eliminated the element of surprise which they had hoped to have for this offensive. The role of informers within the IRA seems to have also played a role in the failure of the "Tet Offensive" to get off the ground.


The Provisional IRA was chiefly active in Northern Ireland, but from the early 1970s, it also took its bombing campaign to England. At a meeting of the Provisional IRA Army Council in June 1972, ] proposed bombing targets in England to "take the heat off Belfast and Derry". However, the Army Council did not consent to a bombing campaign in England until early 1973, after talks with the British government the previous year had broken down.<ref>Mallie Bishop, p. 250</ref> They believed that such bombing would help create a demand among the British public for their government to withdraw from Northern Ireland.<ref>English, pp. 163–64</ref>
In the event, much of the IRA's new heavy weaponry, for instance the surface-to-air missiles and flamethrowers, were never, or very rarely, used. The only recorded use of flamethrowers took place in Derryard, County Fermanagh, where a permanent checkpoint manned by the ] was the target of a multiple weapons attack on December 13 1989<ref>Here an excerpt from the ''Newsletter'' paper remembering the IRA assault:


The first IRA team sent to England included eleven members of the Belfast Brigade, who hijacked four cars in Belfast, fitted them with explosives and drove them to London via ] and ]. The team were reported{{who|date=November 2015}} to the ] and all but one of them were arrested. Nevertheless, two of the bombs exploded, killing one man and injuring 180 people.<ref>Mallie Bishop, p. 253</ref>
* ''Tribute Paid To Soldiers Killed In IRA Attack''


Thereafter, control over IRA bombings in England was given to ] from Belfast. Keenan directed Peter McMullen, a former member of the ], to carry out a series of bombings in 1973. A bomb planted by McMullen exploded at a barracks in ], injuring a female canteen worker.<ref>Mallie Bishop, p. 255</ref> On 23 September 1973, a British soldier died of wounds six days after being injured while attempting to defuse an IRA bomb outside an office block in Birmingham.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://cain.ulst.ac.uk/sutton/chron/1973.html |title=CAIN: Sutton Index of Deaths |website=Cain.ulst.ac.uk |access-date=2015-12-23}}</ref>
''By Anne Palmer''


Some of the most indiscriminate bombing attacks and killings of the IRA's bombing campaign were carried out by a unit of eight IRA members, which included the ], who were sent to London in early 1974.<ref>''The Enemy Within'' by Martin Dillon ({{ISBN|0-385-40506-5}}), page 141</ref><ref>Bowyer Bell, page 424</ref> They avoided contact with the Irish community there in order to remain inconspicuous and aimed to carry out one attack a week. In addition to bombings, they carried out several assassination attempts. ], a right wing politician who had offered a £50,000 reward for information leading to the arrest of the bombers, was shot dead at his home. The group later made an assassination attempt on ].<ref>''The Road To Balcombe Street: The IRA Reign of Terror in London'' by Steven Moysey ({{ISBN|978-0-7890-2913-3}}), pages 116–17</ref> They were eventually arrested after a machine-gun attack on an exclusive restaurant on ]. Pursued by police, they took two hostages (a married couple) and barricaded themselves for six days in a flat on Balcombe Street before they surrendered, an incident known as the ]. They were sentenced to thirty years each for a total of six murders.<ref>Mallie Bishop, p. 257</ref> At their trial, the group admitted responsibility for the ] of 5 October 1974, which killed five people (four of whom were off-duty soldiers) and injured 54, as well as the bombing of a pub in ], which killed another two people and injured 28.<ref name="c74">{{cite web|title=A Chronology of the Conflict – 1974|url=http://cain.ulst.ac.uk/othelem/chron/ch74.htm|publisher=CAIN|access-date=22 March 2007}}</ref>
''Tuesday 14th December 2004''


On 21 November 1974, two pubs were bombed in the ] (an act widely attributed to the IRA, but not claimed by them), which killed 21 civilians and injured 162. An inadequate warning was given for one bomb and no warning for the other.<ref>English, p. 169</ref> There were no military targets associated with either of the pubs. The ], and the ], were imprisoned for the Guildford and Birmingham bombings, respectively, but each group protested their innocence. They were eventually exonerated and released after serving lengthy prison sentences, even though the Balcombe Street group had admitted responsibility long before.<ref>{{cite news|title=The IRA campaigns in England|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/1201738.stm|publisher=BBC|date=4 March 2001|access-date=25 March 2007}}</ref>
''Soldiers who died in an IRA attack in Fermanagh 15 years ago have been remembered at a special ceremony.''
''The last post sounded at the site of the former Army checkpoint at Derryard yesterday on the Fermanagh border near Roslea, where two soldiers lost their lives.''
''Pte James Houston, 22, a father-of-one from Essex serving in the King's Own Scottish Borderers, and Lance Corporal Michael Patterson, 21, from Kirkcowan, were killed in the attack.''
''It is believed that up to 12 terrorists were involved and were armed with RPG rocket launchers, a flamethrower, grenades, heavy machine guns and AK47s.''
''Remembering their colleagues, soldiers from the 1st Battalion of The King's Own Scottish Borderers based in Omagh were joined by two survivors of the attack.''
''Company Sergeant Major Robert Duncan, from near Glasgow, was a 24-year-old corporal at the time. Ian Harvey from Glasgow was also a corporal. Both men received the Distinguished Conduct Medal for their bravery.''


==== 1980s ====
* The attack is seen as a partial failure by authors like Ed Moloney, who alleges that the quick reaction of the British troops led to suspicion about a mole infiltrating the top levels of the organisation. However, other sources claim that this and other assaults on border security posts forced the UK Government to close this checkpoint and other facilities:
''Northern Secretary Peter Brooke announced that two permanent cross-border checkpoints in Co. Fermanagh (Boa Island and Derryard) are to be dismantled. This is seen partly as a result of recent "proxy" attacks on such posts, but Mr Brooke made the apparently valid point that increased mobile patrols and random checkpoints are more effective. The decision was welcomed by the Government here and by Seamus Mallon of the SDLP. Unionist MP Ken Maginnis was cautious and hoped that it would not be seen as giving in to violence'' (from , April 25 1991).
</ref>. The SAMs turned out to be out of date models and were unable to shoot down British helicopters equipped with anti-missile technology. The semtex plastic explosive proved the most valuable asset to the IRA's armoury.


After the campaign of the mid-1970s, the IRA did not undertake a major bombing campaign again in England until the late 1980s and early 1990s. However, throughout the intervening period, they did carry out a number of high-profile bombing attacks in England.
As it was, the numbers of members of the British and Northern Ireland military personnel killed by the IRA increased slightly in the years 1988-1990, from 12 in 1986 to 39 in 1988, but dropped to 27 in 1989 and decreased again to 18 in 1990. The death toll by 1991 was similar to that of the mid-80's, with 14 fatalities<ref>Sutton, Malcom: ''Bear in mind these dead...An Index of Deaths from the Conflict in Ireland''. Belfast: Beyond the Pale Publications.().


In October 1981 the IRA carried out the ], the nail bomb was aimed at soldiers returning to ], but the blast killed two civilians passing by, 40 people were injured in the attack including 23 British soldiers.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1981/10/11/world/london-bomb-kills-o-ne-hurts-up-to-50.html|title=LONDON BOMB KILLS O NE, HURTS UP TO 50 |author=<!--Not stated-->|newspaper=The New York Times|date=11 October 1981}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://cain.ulster.ac.uk/cgi-bin/dyndeaths.pl?querytype=date&day=10&month=10&year=1981|title=CAIN: Sutton Index of Deaths|website=cain.ulster.ac.uk}}</ref>
See the following link for the fatalities between 1986 and 1990. Produce tabulation by introducing ''Status'' and ''Year'':
The same month a British bomb disposal expert ], was killed trying to defuse an IRA bomb on ], London.<ref>{{cite magazine |title=Britain: Once More, Terror in the Streets |url=https://content.time.com/time/subscriber/article/0,33009,922647,00.html |magazine=Time |access-date=26 September 2022 |date=9 November 1981}}</ref>
*http://cain.ulst.ac.uk/sutton/crosstabs.html </ref>. Of these deaths, the numbers of the regular British Army killed by the IRA in the years 1988-1990, were as follows; 5 in 1986, 22 in 1988, 24 in 1989 10 in 1990 and five by 1991 <ref>(Moloney p338)</ref>. This was politically significant, as the deaths of locally recruited RUC and UDR members had little impact on public opinion in Britain.


In 1982 the ] killed 11 soldiers and wounded some 50 soldiers and civilians at a British Army ceremonial parade at ], and a British Army band performance in ] in London.<ref>{{cite news|title=London: past terror attacks|author=Donald MacLeod|url=https://www.theguardian.com/terrorism/story/0,12780,1523526,00.html|newspaper=The Guardian|date=7 July 2005|access-date=22 March 2007}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|title=1982: IRA bombs cause carnage in London|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/july/20/newsid_2515000/2515343.stm|publisher=BBC|date=20 July 1982|access-date=22 March 2007}}</ref>
The failure to intensify the conflict in the mid 1980s meant that while the PIRA, in the judgement of journalist and author Brendan O'Brien, "could not be beaten, it could be contained. Politically and militarily, that was the most significant factor. It was why the IRA had to decide whether to put away their guns for another day as they had done in previous decades, or continue with a long and 'sickening' war" <ref>O'Brien, page 158. 'Sickening' is derived from a speech ] made in 1988, when he said, "I believe the...Irish Republican Army has got the capability, the ways and the means of bringing about the defeat of the British forces, both militarily and politically in the Six Counties. But in saying that I am not saying that the IRA have the ability to drive every last British soldier out of Belfast, Derry...or anywhere else. But they have the ability to sicken the British forces of occupation", cited in O'Brien, p152</ref>. By the late 1980s and early 1990s, roughly 9 put of every 10 IRA attacks were aborted or failed to cause casualties <ref>(O'Brien page 157)</ref> Such republican sources as ] and ] argued by the early 1990s the PIRA could not attain their objectives by military means <ref>(Taylor p 314)</ref>.


In 1984, in the ], the IRA tried to assassinate British ] ] and her cabinet. She survived, but five people including Sir ], a ] ], Eric Taylor, the northwest party chairman, and three wives (Muriel Maclean, Jeanne Shattock, and Roberta Wakeham) of party officials were killed. Margaret Tebbit, wife of ], was left permanently ].<ref>{{cite news|title=Freedom for the Brighton bomber|author=John Mullin|url=https://www.theguardian.com/Northern_Ireland/Story/0,2763,204987,00.html|newspaper=The Guardian|date=23 June 1999|access-date=25 March 2007|location=London, UK|author-link=John Mullin (journalist)}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|title=I regret the deaths but military campaign was necessary, says the Brighton bomber|author=David McKittrick|url=http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/ulster/article270724.ece|archive-url=https://archive.today/20120714071315/http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/ulster/article270724.ece|url-status=dead|archive-date=14 July 2012|newspaper=The Independent|date=28 August 2000|access-date=25 March 2007|location=London, UK}}</ref>
==War with British special forces==
Despite the relative failure of the "Tet offensive" the IRA campaign continued up to 1994. However the costs of this campaign for both the Provisional IRA and the community which supported the PIRA were increased by the actions of British special forces units and the ].


In 1985 the IRA planned a sustained bombing campaign in London and English ] including ], ] and ].<ref name="dillon1985">{{cite book | last = Dillon | first = Martin | author-link = Martin Dillon | title = 25 Years of Terror: The IRA's war against the British | publisher = Bantam Books | year = 1996 | pages = 220–223 | isbn = 0-553-40773-2}}</ref> The IRA planned for bombs to explode on sixteen consecutive days beginning in July, excluding Sundays.<ref name="mcgladdery1985">{{cite book | last = McGladdery | first = Gary | title = The Provisional IRA in England: The Bombing Campaign 1973–1997 | publisher = Irish Academic Press | year = 2006 | pages = 134–135 | isbn = 9780716533733}}</ref><ref name="mallie1985">{{cite book | last1 = Mallie | first1 = Eamonn | last2 = Bishop | first2 = Patrick | title = The Provisional IRA | publisher = Corgi Books | year = 1988 | pages = 427–430 | isbn = 0-7475-3818-2}}</ref> As well as damaging the ], the IRA hoped to take advantage of police resources being stretched and launch an assassination campaign against political and military targets including General ].<ref name="mcgladdery1985"/> ], who was wanted in connection with the Brighton hotel bombing after his ] was found on the hotel register, was under police surveillance, with police hoping he would lead them to other IRA members.<ref name="dillon1985"/> He met with an IRA member at ], and they were followed to ], where they were arrested on 24 June 1985 at a ] along with three other people, including ] and Gerry McDonnell, who had ].<ref name="dillon1985"/><ref name="mcgladdery1985"/> On 11 June 1986 they were sentenced for ] to cause explosions and received ]s, Magee was also convicted of the Brighton hotel bombing and received a life sentence with a minimum recommended sentence of 35 years.<ref name="taylor1985">{{cite book | last = Taylor | first = Peter | author-link = Peter Taylor (journalist) | title = Brits | publisher = Bloomsbury Publishing | year = 2001 | page = 265 | isbn = 978-0-7475-5806-4}}</ref><ref>{{cite news | title = Five guilty of IRA plot | author = Michael Rhodes| url = https://www.yorkshirepost.co.uk/news/latest-news/five-guilty-of-ira-plot-1-2374423| newspaper = Yorkshire Post | date = 12 June 1986 | access-date = 21 August 2020 | url-status = dead | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190712170947/https://www.yorkshirepost.co.uk/news/latest-news/five-guilty-of-ira-plot-1-2374423 | archive-date = 12 July 2019}}</ref>
The IRA suffered some heavy losses at the hands of British special forces like the SAS (]), the most spectacular being the ambush and killing of eight armed IRA members at ] in 1987 as the IRA gunmen attempted to destroy Loughgall police station and kill the policemen stationed there. The ] was particularly hard hit by British killings of their volunteers in this period, losing 28 members killed by British forces in the period 1987-1992, out of 53 dead in the whole Troubles. <ref>(Moloney p319)</ref>. In many of these cases, PIRA members were lured into ambushes by British forces and then killed. Republicans alleged that this amounted to a campaign of targeted assassination on the part of state forces (see ]).


On several more occasions, the Provisional IRA attacked British troops stationed in England, the most lethal of which was the ], in which 11 ] bandsmen were killed in 1989.<ref>{{cite news|title=1989: Ten dead in Kent barracks bomb|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/september/22/newsid_2528000/2528223.stm|publisher=BBC|date=22 September 1989|access-date=21 March 2007}}</ref>
Another high profile incident took place in ] in March 1988, when three unarmed IRA volunteers were shot dead by an SAS unit while scouting out a bombing target <ref>(Moloney page330)</ref> (See also ]). The subsequent funerals of these IRA members in Belfast were attacked by loyalist gunman ]. At a funeral of one of Stone's victims, two un-uniformed British Army corporals were lynched <ref>(O'Brien p164)
</ref>. See also ]. This kind of reactions, both in the increasing level of violence and in the propaganda front, exposed that the use of preventive killings of republicans were counterproductive to both the British and Unionist interests<ref>In 1995, the European Court of Human Rights ruled that there has been a violation of Article 2 of the Convention but rejected claims for compensation as the three had been engaged in terrorism under domestic UK laws:
*http://www.hartford-hwp.com/archives/61/009.html</ref>{{dubious}}.


Republicans argued that these bombings "concentrated minds" in the British government far more than the violence in Northern Ireland. The IRA made a point of only striking at targets in England (not Scotland or Wales),<ref name="jbb243">{{cite book | last = Bowyer Bell | first = J. | author-link = J. Bowyer Bell | title = The IRA, 1968–2000: An Analysis of a Secret Army | publisher = Routledge | year = 2000 | page = 243 | isbn = 978-0714681191}}</ref> although they once planted a small bomb on an ] in the ] in May 1981 on the same day that ] was attending a nearby function to mark the opening of the terminal. The bomb detonated, damaging a boiler but no one was injured and the ceremony continued.<ref>{{cite news|title=Queen enjoys robust health|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/2653479.stm|publisher=BBC|date=13 January 2003|access-date=21 March 2007}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|title=The IRA campaigns in England|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/1201738.stm|publisher=BBC|date=4 March 2001|access-date=12 January 2009}}</ref> During the IRA's 25-year campaign in England, 115 deaths and 2,134 injuries were reported, from a total of almost 500 incidents.<ref>{{cite book|last=English|first=Richard|title=Irish Freedom|publisher=Pan Books|year=2006|page=375|isbn=978-0-330-42759-3}}</ref>
==Loyalists and the IRA - killing and reprisals==


==== Early 1990s ====
The IRA and also its political wing, Sinn Féin also suffered from a campaign of assassination launched against their members by ] from the late 1980s. These latter attacks killed about 12 IRA and 15 Sinn Féin members between 1987 and 1995 <ref>(Geraghty, p320)</ref>. In addition, the loyalists murdered family members of known republicans. However, the vast majority of loyalist victims were innocent Catholic civilians. According to recently released documents the British Government knew since 1973 that British Army units such as the ] were partisan and actively helping loyalist paramilitaries with arms and membership. Despite knowing this the British Government stepped up the role of the UDR in "maintaining order" within Northern Ireland.<ref>Recently released (3 May 2006) British Government documents show that overlapping membership between British Army units like the Ulster Defence Regiment (UDR) and loyalist paramilitary groups was a wider problem than a "few bad apples" as was often claimed. The documents include a report titled "Subversion in the UDR" which details the problem. In 1973; an estimated 5-15% of UDR soldiers were directly linked to loyalist paramilitary groups, it was believed that the "best single source of weapons, and the only significant source of modern weapons, for Protestant extremist groups was the UDR", it was feared UDR troops were loyal to "Ulster" alone rather than to "Her Majesty's Government", the British Government knew that UDR weapons were being used in the assassination and attempted assassination of Roman Catholic civilians by loyalist paramilitaries. May 2, 2006 edition of the Irish News available </ref>


In the early 1990s the IRA intensified the bombing campaign in England, planting 15 bombs in 1990, 36 in 1991, and 57 in 1992.<ref>{{cite book | last = White | first = Robert | title = Out of the Ashes: An Oral History of the Provisional Irish Republican Movement | publisher = Merrion Press | year = 2017 | page = 264 | isbn = 9781785370939}}</ref> In February 1991 ] in ] in London during a Cabinet meeting, which was a propaganda boost for the IRA.<ref>{{cite news|title=IRA shells the War Cabinet|author1=Cook, Stephen |author2=Michael White |name-list-style=amp |url=http://century.guardian.co.uk/1990-1999/Story/0,,112630,00.html|newspaper=The Guardian|date=8 February 1991|access-date=26 March 2007|location=London, UK}}</ref>
It has also been confirmed that the loyalists were aided in this campaign by elements of the security forces including the British Army and RUC Special Branch (see ]). Loyalist sources have since confirmed that they received intelligence files on republicans from Army and Police intelligence in this period and an Army agent within the ] (UDA), ], was convicted in 1992 of the killings of Catholic civilians. It was later revealed that Nelson, while working as a British Army agent, was also involved in the importation of arms for loyalists from ] in 1988 <ref>(O'Brien p231)</ref>. In ], for the first time, Loyalist paramilitaries killed more people than Republican paramilitaries. While the difference was only two, in the following year, Loyalists killed eleven more people than Republicans, and in ], they killed twelve more<ref>In the latter case (1995 period), it should be note that the PIRA 1994's cease-fire was still in place:
*</ref>.


During this period, the IRA also launched a highly damaging economic bombing campaign in English cities, particularly London, which caused a huge amount of physical and economic damage to property. Among their targets were the ], ] and ] in London, with the ] causing damage initially estimated at £1&nbsp;billion and the ] £800&nbsp;million of damage.<ref name="dillon">{{cite book|last=Dillon|first=Martin|author-link=Martin Dillon|title=25 Years of Terror: The IRA's war against the British|publisher=Bantam Books|year=1996|isbn=0-553-40773-2|page=292}}</ref><ref>''Provos The IRA & Sinn Féin'', p. 327.</ref> A particularly notorious bombing was the ] in 1993, which killed two young children, Tim Parry and Johnathan Ball. In early March 1994, there were three mortar attacks on ] in London, which forced the authorities to shut it down.<ref>{{cite web|title=A Draft Chronology of the Conflict – 1994|url=http://cain.ulst.ac.uk/othelem/chron/ch94.htm#Mar|publisher=CAIN.ulst.ac.uk|access-date=26 March 2007}}</ref>
In response to these attacks, the IRA began a reactive assassination campaign against leading members of the UDA and ] (UVF). In the mid-1970s, from 1974, the IRA had a policy of retaliating to loyalist attacks on Catholics with attacks on Protestants such as the ] of 1976 (see section above). However, by the late 1980s, the IRA Army Council would not sanction attacks on Protestant civilians, but only at named, identified loyalist targets. The main reason for this was the negative impact of attacks on civilians on the Republican movement's electoral appeal. The IRA issued a statement in 1986 saying: "At no time will we involve ourselves in the execution of ordinary Protestants, but at all times we reserve the right to take armed action against those who attempt to terrorise or intimidate our people into accepting British/unionist rule" <ref>English page 246 </ref> ] reiterated the point in 1989; "Sinn Féin does not condone the deaths of people who are non combatants" <ref>(Moloney p321)</ref>.


It has been argued that this bombing campaign convinced the British government (who had hoped to contain the conflict to Northern Ireland with its ] policy) to negotiate with ] after the IRA ceasefires of August 1994 and July 1997.<ref>{{cite book | last = Leahy |first = Thomas | title = The Intelligence War against the IRA | publisher = Cambridge University Press | year = 2020 | pages = 195–196 | isbn = 978-1108487504}}</ref>
To maximise the impact of such killings, the IRA targeted senior loyalist figures. Among such leading loyalists killed were ], ], ] and ] of the UDA and ], ], ] and ] of the UVF <ref>(Moloney p321, O'Brien p 314)</ref>. One ] to kill the entire leadership of the UDA on October 23rd 1993 caused many civilian casualties, when a bomb planted at a ] fish shop killed 10 people. The bomb was intended to kill the entire senior leadership of the UDA, including ], who were meeting in a room above the shop. Instead, the bomb ended up killing only nine Protestant civilians and also the bomber (]) himself, whose device exploded prematurely. In addition, 58 more people were injured <ref>(Coogan p437)</ref>. This provoked a series of retaliatory murders of Catholic civilians, none of them with political or paramilitary connections, by the UVF and UDA, <ref>(Moloney p415)</ref>.


=== Elsewhere ===
According to the , ] statistics, the PIRA killed 35 loyalist militants in total. ''Lost Lives'' gives a figure of 28 <ref>(Lost Lives p1536)</ref> out of a total number of loyalists killed in the Troubles of 126 <ref>(Lost Lives p1531)</ref>. According to "The Irish War" by Tony Geraghty, the IRA killed 45 loyalists <ref>(Geraghty p235)</ref>. Such killings intensified just before the IRA ceasefire of 1994 and it has been speculated that this assassination programme against Loyalist leaders helped convince the leadership of both the UDA and UVF, to call ceasefires at this point. However the Loyalists called their ceasefire six weeks after the IRA ceasefire of that year and indeed argued that it was their murder campaign against Catholic civilians in general that had forced the IRA ceasefire by placing intolerable pressure on the nationalist community. Republicans deny this - citing how few of the loyalist victims were republican paramilitaries. They argue that the republican political strategy was unaffected by loyalist actions.


The Provisional IRA also carried out attacks in other countries such as West Germany, Belgium, and the Netherlands, where British soldiers were based.<ref>{{cite news|title=1987: 30 hurt as car bomb hits Army base|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/march/23/newsid_4287000/4287075.stm|publisher=BBC|date=23 March 1987|access-date=25 March 2007}}</ref> Between 1979 and 1990, eight soldiers and six civilians died in these attacks, including the British Ambassador to the Netherlands Sir ] and his valet, Karel Straub.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://cain.ulst.ac.uk/sutton |title=CAIN: Sutton Index of Deaths – menu page |website=Cain.ulst.ac.uk |access-date=2015-12-23}}</ref> In May 1988 the IRA killed three RAF men & injured three others ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://cain.ulst.ac.uk/othelem/chron/ch88.htm#1588|title=CAIN: Chronology of the Conflict 1988|first=Dr Martin|last=Melaugh|website=cain.ulst.ac.uk}}</ref> On one occasion, the IRA ] in the Netherlands, claiming its members mistook them for off-duty British soldiers.<ref>{{cite news|title=From occupiers and protectors to guests|author=Chris Summers|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/3842031.stm|publisher=BBC.co.uk|date=20 July 2004|access-date=21 March 2007}}</ref> On another occasion an IRA gunman shot dead ], a German woman, as she sat alone in her car.<ref>Thatcher, Margaret (1997). ''The collected speeches of Margaret Thatcher''. HarperCollins Publishers, p. 357; {{ISBN|0060187344}}</ref> She was parked near a British Army married quarter in ]. They claimed she had been shot "in the belief that she was a member of the British Army garrison at ]". Her husband was a British Army staff sergeant. ], West Germany's ] called it "the insane act of a blind fanatic."<ref>{{cite news|author=FERDINAND PROTZMAN|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1989/09/09/world/ira-gunman-kills-wife-of-a-briton.html |title=I.R.A. Gunman Kills Wife of a Briton |location=West Germany; Ireland, Northern |website=] |date=1989-09-09 |access-date=2015-12-23}}</ref>
While neither SAS operations nor loyalist killings "defeated" the PIRA, they heightened the costs to the IRA of carrying on an indefinite armed campaign (the "Long War" in their terminology) and contributed to the war-weariness of their host community.


The IRA also sent members on arms importation, logistical support and intelligence operations at different times to continental Europe, Canada, the United States, Australia, Africa, Western Asia and Latin America. On at least one occasion IRA members traveled to ].<ref>''The Daily Telegraph'', 14 Aug 2001, {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160228080343/http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/1337338/Three-suspected-IRA-men-arrested-in-Colombia.html |date=28 February 2016 }}; retrieved 3 March 2013.</ref>
==Campaign up to and after the 1994 ceasefire==
''See also ]''


==Irish arms==
]
{{Main|Provisional IRA in the Republic of Ireland}}
] was a common explosive obtained by the IRA in the Republic of Ireland for use in Northern Ireland. For example, it was behind the 48,000lbs of explosives detonated in Northern Ireland in the first six months of 1973 alone.<ref>{{citation|url=https://www.newsletter.co.uk/news/republic-ireland-played-integral-role-supporting-ira-says-historian-988519|title=Republic of Ireland played integral role in supporting IRA, says historian|date=5 April 2019|website=]}}</ref>]]
In the early 1970s, the IRA gained control of a majority of the stockpiled weaponry still held from previous IRA campaigns. The stockpiles consisted mostly of pre-World War II small firearms from British and Irish armories ranging from Lee–Enfield, plus Bren light machine guns (LMG), a Thompson submachine gun (SMG), and Webley revolvers from British and Irish armories. In May 1970, Irish politicians ], ], and ], ] Captain ], and Belgian businessman ] were acquitted during the ] of smuggling weapons to the IRA during the beginning of the conflict.


The primary and prominent source of arms in the Republic of Ireland for the IRA was explosives.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.wired.com/2008/12/book-club-fight/|title=Inside the Longest Insurgency's Lethal Arsenal|author=David Hambling|date=December 10, 2008|work=]}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|title=Support in Republic during Troubles 'key for IRA', book claims|url=https://www.irishnews.com/news/northernirelandnews/2019/04/06/news/headline-1591367/|author=John Manley|date=6 April 2019|work=]}}</ref> Mines, quarries, farms, and construction sites were where the explosive, ], as well as detonators and safe fuses located.<ref>{{cite report|url=https://nap.nationalacademies.org/read/24862/chapter/4#27|title=Reducing the Threat of Improvised Explosive Device Attacks by Restricting Access to Explosive Precursor Chemicals|page=27|date=2018|publisher=]}}</ref> ], MP for ], said that "there is virtually a gelignite trail across the border", comparing it with the famous ] during the ].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://citymonitor.ai/transport/1971-uk-government-closed-100-irish-border-crossings-and-cratered-them-explosives-4295|title=In 1971, the UK government closed 100 Irish border crossings and cratered them with explosives|date=October 22, 2018|website=City Monitor}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|author=Gearóid Ó Faoleán|title=A Broad Church: The Provisional IRA in the Republic of Ireland, 1969–1980|date=April 23, 2019|page=54|publisher=Merrion Press|isbn=978-1-7853-7245-2}}</ref> Mills stated that:
===Early 1990s===
By the early to mid 1990s, the IRA found it more difficult to kill British military personnel in Northern Ireland, who were by now familiar with operating there and well protected by ]. One of several methods the IRA used to counter this, was the use of high velocity ] ], several of which the Provisionals imported from the USA.


<blockquote>
A grisly IRA technique used in the early 1990s was the "]" -a sort of involuntary ], where a victim was kidnapped and forced to drive a ] into its target. In one infamous operation in ] in October 1990, the PIRA chained a Catholic civilian to a car laden with explosives, held his family hostage and forced him to drive to an Army checkpoint as a "human bomb" where the bomb exploded, killing himself and five soldiers. Another "human bomb" killed one soldier the same day, but the driver saved his own life by jumping from the moving car. This practice was stopped due to the revulsion its caused among the nationalist community. ]
ome 60 percent of the gelignite used in Northern Ireland has come from Southern Ireland, and the security authorities believe that the figure might well be higher than that because of the difficulty of definite identification in all cases. In Northern Ireland steps are taken to control the use and distribution of gelignite. Certain steps have been taken recently in the South, but there is a great need for much tighter measures.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://api.parliament.uk/historic-hansard/commons/1971/dec/15/adjournment-christmas#S5CV0828P0_19711215_HOC_258|title=ADJOURNMENT (CHRISTMAS)|date=15 December 1971|work=]}}</ref>
</blockquote>


After the Irish government began cracking down on commercial explosives, IRA engineers began moving "to develop alternative supplies of explosives" in the Republic of what the media termed "bomb factories", the source for the vast majority of the explosions in the north and against England for the remainder of the conflict. By spring 1972, they successfully manufactured quantities of two types of ] (HMEs), using mostly commercially available ]s and ] (a mixture of ] and ]). The British Army estimated by the summer of that year, 90% of the bombings involving HMEs originated from the South. These earliest crude devices were unreliable and many IRA volunteers were killed due to premature explosions. As a result, the IRA centralised manufacture of the chief components, and IRA engineers were required to have the training necessary to complete the devices properly. '']'' reported that over 48,000&nbsp;lbs of explosives had been detonated in Northern Ireland in the first six months of 1973, most of them IRA bombs.<ref>{{cite book|author=Gearóid Ó Faoleán|title=A Broad Church: The Provisional IRA in the Republic of Ireland, 1969–1980|date=April 23, 2019|page=59|publisher=Merrion Press|isbn=978-1-7853-7245-2}}</ref>
However, the number of British soldiers killed had dropped significantly from the worst years of the 1970s.


In the 1980s, HMEs of Southern Irish origin continued to flow into Northern Ireland and England. In 1981, a British Home Office report said that 88.7% of explosives used in Northern Ireland originated from the Republic of Ireland: 88% from fertilizers and 0.7% from commercial explosives. As with the previous decade, the IRA relied mostly on fertilizer bombs for the vast majority of its bombing campaign throughout the conflict.<ref>{{cite book|title=A Broad Church 2: The Provisional IRA in the Republic of Ireland, 1980–1989|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Yui3EAAAQBAJ&pg=PT67|author=Gearóid Ó Faoleán| date=8 March 2023 |pages=167–168|publisher=Merrion Press|isbn=9-7817-8537-4456}}</ref>
Nevertheless, the IRA campaign, while not as lethal as previously, continued to severely disrupt normal life in Northern Ireland. In 1987, for instance, the IRA carried out 140 shooting attacks and 154 bombings, killing 31 RUC, UDR and British Army personnel and injuring over 100 more. It also killed 20 civilians and injured roughly 150 <ref>O'Brien page 157 </ref>. In 1990, in 193 shootings and 187 bombings, IRA attacks killed 10 British Army soldiers, 8 UDR members, 12 RUC members and injured 190 soldiers and 150 police, along with more civilians <ref> O'Brien, page 203 & Sutton index. Once again, see the following link for the 1990
fatalities and produce tabulation by introducing ''Status'' and ''Year'':
*http://cain.ulst.ac.uk/sutton/crosstabs.html


== Libyan arms ==
One of the bombings carried out that year shattered and flooded the engine room of an ] ship, the '']'', recently built in ]'s shipyards, and at anchor in Belfast harbour at the time. This action delayed her commissioning for almost three years. See this issue of '']'':
*http://republican-news.org/archive/2000/September13/13back.html
For another
reference about the bombing:
*http://business.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,17709-2082768_2,00.html</ref>.


] to the Provisional IRA in the 1980s]]
In the 1980s, the Provisional IRA received large quantities of modern weaponry, including heavy weaponry such as heavy machine guns, over 1,000 rifles, several hundred handguns, ]s, ], ]s and the ] ], from the Libyan regime of ]. There were four successful shipments between 1985 and 1986; three of these trips were carried out by the trawler ''Casamara'' and a fourth by the oil-rig replenisher ''Villa''. All told, they brought in 110 tons of weaponry.<ref>Harnden, pp. 239–45</ref><ref>Geraghty, p. 182</ref><ref>O'Brien, p. 137</ref> A fifth arms cargo on board the coaster ''Eksund'' was intercepted by the ] in 1987.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/events/northern_ireland/paramilitaries/162714.stm|title=Provisional IRA's history of violence|access-date=9 July 2010|date=1 September 1998|publisher=BBC}}</ref> This brought the Provisional IRA's new capability to the attention of the authorities on either side of the Irish border. Five men were captured with the boat; three IRA members, including ], received jail sentences.<ref name="tet">Moloney, pp. 18–23</ref> Reportedly, Gaddafi donated enough weapons to arm the equivalent of two infantry battalions.<ref>{{cite news|author=Henry McDonald|url=https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2006/apr/23/uk.northernireland |title=Gadaffi sued by 160 victims of IRA |newspaper=The Guardian |access-date=2015-12-23}}</ref>


The IRA therefore came to be very well armed in the latter part of the Troubles. Most of the losses it inflicted on the British Army, however, occurred in the early 1970s, although they continued to cause substantial casualties to the British military, the RUC and UDR throughout the conflict. According to author ], the ] had plans for a dramatic escalation of the conflict in the late 1980s, which they likened to the ] of the ], with the aid of the arms obtained from Libya.{{citation needed|date=December 2015}}
By 1992, the figure for IRA gun attacks was 144 and the number of bombings had increased to 282 <ref>O'Brien page 168 </ref>. The evidence strongly suggests, therefore, that the IRA was capable of carrying on a significant level of violence for the foreseeable future. Moreover, it can be argued that the real attrition for the UK was not in the number of soldiers or RUC members killed, but in the enormous budget needed to keep their huge security system in Northern Ireland working indefinitely.


The plan had been to take and hold several areas along the border, forcing the British Army to either withdraw from border areas or use maximum force to re-take them – thus escalating the conflict beyond the point which the Provisional IRA thought that British public opinion would accept.<ref>Moloney, pages 20 to 22</ref> However, this offensive failed to materialise. IRA sources quoted in the ''Secret History of the IRA'' by Ed Moloney say that the interception of the ''Eksund'' shipment eliminated the element of surprise which they had hoped to have for this offensive. The role of informers within the IRA seems to have also played a role in the failure of the "Tet Offensive" to get off the ground.<ref name="tet"/> Nevertheless, the shipments which got through enabled the IRA to begin a vigorous campaign in the 1980s.<ref>Welch, Robert and Stewart, Bruce (1996). ''The Oxford companion to Irish literature''. Oxford University Press, p. 396; {{ISBN|0-19-866158-4}}</ref> The success of the arms smuggling was a defeat for British intelligence and marked a turning point in the conflict in Northern Ireland.<ref>Geraghty, p. 183</ref> The Libyan weaponry allowed the IRA to wage war indefinitely.<ref>Taylor, p. 323</ref>
The attacks and bombings in the early 1990s forced the UK government to dismantle several bases and security posts, whose maintenance or reconstruction was not affordable<ref> The list included:


]-H and ] ]s]]
* Three permanent checkpoints at Boa Island, Derryard and Cloghogue (Harnden, p. 263-264).
In the event, much of the IRA's new heavy weaponry, for instance the ]s (SAMs) and ]s, were never, or very rarely, used. The only recorded use of flamethrowers took place in the ], when two soldiers were killed when a permanent checkpoint manned by the ] was the target of a multiple weapons attack on 13 December 1989.<ref>{{cite news|title=Tribute Paid To Soldiers Killed in IRA Attack|author=Anne Palmer|url=http://www.newsletter.co.uk/story/17138|newspaper=The News Letter|date=14 December 2004|access-date=30 March 2007|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20041225202231/http://www.newsletter.co.uk/story/17138|archive-date=25 December 2004}}</ref><ref>{{cite book | last = Oppenheimer | first = A.R. | author-link = Andy Oppenheimer | title = IRA: The Bombs and the Bullets: A History of Deadly Ingenuity | publisher = Irish Academic Press | year = 2008 | page = 295 | isbn = 978-0716528951}}</ref> The SAMs turned out to be out of date models, unable to shoot down British helicopters equipped with ].<ref>Taylor, pp. 277–278</ref> The missiles were eventually rendered useless when their batteries wore out.<ref>Moloney, p. 569</ref> The ] ] proved the most valuable addition to the IRA's armoury.<ref>Moloney, p. 23</ref>


As it was, the numbers of members of the British and Northern Ireland military personnel killed by the IRA increased in the years 1988–1990, from 12 in 1986 to 39 in 1988, but dropped to 27 in 1989 and decreased again to 18 in 1990. The death toll by 1991 was similar to that of the mid-1980s, with 14 fatalities. 32 members of the RUC were killed in the same period.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://cain.ulst.ac.uk/sutton/index.html |title=CAIN: Sutton Index of Deaths – menu page |website=Cain.ulst.ac.uk |access-date=2015-12-23}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://cain.ulst.ac.uk/sutton/crosstabs.html |title=CAIN: Sutton Index of Deaths – crosstabulations |website=Cain.ulst.ac.uk |access-date=2015-12-23}}</ref>
* The UDR base at Glenanne.</ref>.


By the late 1980s, the Provisional IRA, in the judgement of journalist and author ], "could not be beaten, it could be contained". Politically and militarily, that was the most significant factor.<ref>O'Brien, p. 158. 'Sickening' is derived from a speech ] made in 1988, when he said, "I believe the...Irish Republican Army has got the capability, the ways and the means of bringing about the defeat of the British forces, both militarily and politically in the Six Counties. But in saying that I am not saying that the IRA have the ability to drive every last British soldier out of Belfast, Derry...or anywhere else. But they have the ability to sicken the British forces of occupation", cited in O'Brien, p. 152</ref> By the late 1980s and early 1990s, roughly nine out of every ten IRA attacks were aborted or failed to cause casualties.<ref name="O'Brien, p. 157">O'Brien, p. 157</ref> Republican sources such as ] and ] argued that by the early 1990s, the Provisional IRA could not attain their objectives by purely military means.<ref>Interviewer "Did you actually say that to the IRA-that they weren't going to drive the British out of Ireland?" McLaughlin "I probably didn't use that language but certainly I used that rationale on more than one occasion, yes." Taylor, pp. 365–66</ref>


A campaign to pressure Libya to pay compensation to IRA victims was derailed by the ].<ref>{{cite news|last=Clarke |first=Liam |url=http://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/news/northern-ireland/libya-unlikely-to-pay-compensation-to-victims-of-ira-28921798.html |title=Libya unlikely to pay compensation to victims of IRA |newspaper=BelfastTelegraph.co.uk |date=2012-11-14 |access-date=2015-12-23}}</ref>
In South Armagh, in contrast to other IRA brigade areas, militant activity actually increased in the early 1990s. The IRA there shot down three helicopters (one of them really in 1988) and damaged at least another three in this period, using ] heavy machine guns and improvised mortars<ref>(Harnden, p.361,p.398)</ref>. Another one was brought down in early 1990 in County Tyrone, wounding three of the crew<ref>See this two-pages British Commons account about the NI violence for the period of 1989-90:
*http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm198990/cmhansrd/1990-07-10/Writtens-7.html
*http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm198990/cmhansrd/1990-07-10/Writtens-8.html


== Incidents with British special forces ==
For some details on the helicopter crash-landing, go to this archive page of the ''New York Times'':


The IRA suffered some heavy losses at the hands of British special forces like the ] (SAS), the heaviest being the killing of eight IRA members in the ] in 1987, as they attempted to destroy the ] RUC station.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/crime/site-of-iras-biggest-loss-blossoms-as-bestkept-village-1821605.html |title=Site of IRA's biggest loss blossoms as best-kept village &#124; Crime &#124; News |newspaper=The Independent |access-date=2015-12-23}}</ref> The ] was hit particularly hard by British killings of their members in this period, losing 28 members killed by British forces in the period 1987–1992, out of 53 dead in the whole conflict.<ref>Moloney, p. 319</ref> In many of these cases, Provisional IRA members were killed after being ambushed by British special forces. Some authors alleged that this amounted to a campaign of ] on the part of state forces (see ]).<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=jTooVE-mv-EC&q=shoot%20to%20kill%20policy&pg=PA48 |title=Human Rights in Northern Ireland |page=48 |access-date=2015-12-23|isbn=9780300056235 |year=1991 |publisher=Human Rights Watch }}</ref>
*</ref>.


Another high-profile incident took place in ] in March 1988, when three unarmed IRA members were shot dead by an SAS unit while scouting out a bombing target (see ]).<ref>Moloney, p. 330</ref> The subsequent funerals of these IRA members in Belfast were attacked by loyalist gunman ]. At a funeral of one of Stone's victims, two plainsclothes British Army corporals were abducted, beaten and shot dead by the IRA after driving into the funeral procession (see ]).<ref>O'Brien, p. 164</ref>


There were, however, a number of incidents in which undercover operations ended in failure, such as a shoot-out at the village of ] on 24 March 1990, where plain-clothes members of the security forces were ambushed by an IRA unit, and, just two month later, ], which was thwarted by the IRA's South Armagh Brigade, A British soldier in an undercover position was shot dead in a counter-ambush.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://api.parliament.uk/historic-hansard/written-answers/1990/may/03/cappagh-incident |title=Cappagh (Incident) (Hansard, 3 May 1990) |website=] |date=1990-05-03 |access-date=2015-12-23}}</ref> On 2 May 1980, ], ], ] and another IRA member were arrested after being cornered by the SAS in a house in Belfast.<ref name="jbb488">{{cite book | last = Bowyer Bell | first = J. | author-link = J. Bowyer Bell | title = The Secret Army: The IRA | publisher = Transaction Publishers | year = 1997 | page = | isbn = 978-1-56000-901-6 | url-access = registration | url = https://archive.org/details/secretarmyira00bell/page/488 }}</ref> SAS commander Captain ] was hit by fire from an ] and killed instantly.<ref>{{cite book|last=Murray|first=Raymond|title=The SAS in Ireland|publisher=Mercier Press|year=2004|page=256|isbn=1-85635-437-7}}</ref>
In the first days of June 1993, the South Armagh IRA unit took control for two hours of the village of ], near the border with the Republic. The fact that the Republican militants executed the action despite the presence of a British Army watchtower nearby, caused outrage among the British security and the Unionist public opinion. The parliamentary debates of the time also reflect a mounting pressure on the UK government to find a negotiated solution to the 25 years old conflict<ref>See these transcripts of the Commons debate over the security situation in NI and the Cullaville incident ('''Column 196''' in the first link and '''Column 184''' in the second one):
*http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm199293/cmhansrd/1993-06-08/Debate-5.html
*http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm199293/cmhansrd/1993-06-08/Debate-4.html
For the increasing pressure over the British government, check the following debate about the ], in particular the words of the Prime Minister :
*http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm199394/cmhansrd/1993-12-15/Debate-1.html</ref>.
]


== Loyalists and the IRA – killing and reprisals ==
During this period, the IRA also established a highly damaging economic bombing campaign against the British mainland, particularly ], and other major British cities, which caused a huge amount of physical and economic damage to property. Among their targets were the ], ] and ] in London. There was also a propaganda boost for the Republicans when three mortar rounds flew over the British Prime minister's office on Downing street in London during a Cabinet's meeting in February 1991. A particularly notorious bombing was the ] of 1993, which killed two young children. In early March 1994 there were three mortar attacks on Heathrow airport in London, which forced the authorities to shut down the facility<ref>See CAIN chronology online:
*http://cain.ulst.ac.uk/othelem/chron/ch94.htm#Mar</ref>. It has been argued that this bombing campaign was decisive to convince the British government (who had hoped to contain the conflict to Northern Ireland with its ] policy) to negotiate with ] after the IRA ceasefires of August 1994 and July 1997<ref>In the latter case, while the British Government remained adamant during the 1994-95 cease-fire period on its demand of the PIRA decommissioning of weapons before the beginning of any meetings, just three weeks after the ] Bombing (February 1996), British First Minister ] and his Irish counterpart, ], made the announcement of multi-party talks for June 10, with the only precondition of the PIRA restoring the cease-fire, therefore dropping the idea of a previous disarmament. The Army Council and Sinn Féin choose to await until the next year UK elections to accept the offer. (Taylor, pp. 406-407)</ref>.


The IRA and ] suffered from a campaign of assassination launched against their members by ] from the late 1980s. These attacks killed about 12 IRA and 15 Sinn Féin members between 1987 and 1994.<ref>Geraghty, p. 320</ref> This tactic was unusual as the vast majority of loyalist victims were Catholic civilians.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://cain.ulst.ac.uk/issues/violence/cts/tables.htm |title=CAIN: Violence – 'Mapping Troubles-Related Deaths in Northern Ireland 1969–1994', Tables |website=Cain.ulst.ac.uk |access-date=2015-12-23}}</ref> In addition, loyalists killed family members of known republicans; John (or Jack) McKearney and his nephew, Kevin McKearney, and Kevin's parents-in-law, Charles and Teresa Fox (whose son, Peter, was an IRA volunteer) were all targeted by the UVF. Two of Kevin's brothers, ] and Sean, were IRA volunteers killed during the Troubles.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-northern-ireland-19741103 |title=McKearney murders – RUC 'did not do enough to stop shootings' |publisher=BBC News |date=2012-09-27 |access-date=2015-12-23}}</ref><ref>Taylor, Peter (2000). ''Loyalists''. p. 213. Bloomsbury; {{ISBN|0747545197}}.</ref> According to recently released documents, British military intelligence stated in a secret 1973 draft report that within the ] (UDR) it was likely there were soldiers who were also loyalist paramilitaries. Despite knowing this, the British Government stepped up the role of the UDR in "maintaining order" within Northern Ireland. British Government documents released on 3 May 2006 show that overlapping membership between British Army units like the UDR and loyalist paramilitary groups was a wider problem than a "]" as was often claimed.
===The ceasefires===
In August 1994, the PIRA announced a "complete cessation of military operations". This was the culmination of several years of negotiations between the Republican leadership, led by ] and ] with various figures in the local political parties, the Irish government and British government. It was informed by the view that neither the UK forces, nor the IRA could win the war and that greater progress towards the Republican objectives might be achieved by negotiations. While many PIRA volunteers were (and are) reportedly unhappy with the end of armed struggle short of the achievement of a united Ireland, the peace strategy has since resulted in substantial electoral and political gains for ], the movement's political wing. It may now be argued that the Sinn Féin political party has eclipsed the Provisional IRA as the most important part of the republican movement. The ceasefire of 1994 therefore, while not a definitive end to PIRA operations, marks the effective end of its full scale armed campaign.


The documents include a draft report titled "Subversion in the UDR" which detailed the problem. In 1973; an estimated 5–15% of UDR soldiers were directly linked to loyalist paramilitary groups, it was believed that the "best single source of weapons, and the only significant source of modern weapons, for Protestant extremist groups was the UDR", it was feared UDR troops were loyal to "Ulster" alone rather than to "Her Majesty's Government", the British Government knew that UDR weapons were being used in the assassination and attempted assassination of Roman Catholic civilians by loyalist paramilitaries.<ref name="Subversion in the UDR">{{cite web|url=http://cain.ulst.ac.uk/publicrecords/1973/subversion_in_the_udr.htm|title=Subversion in the UDR|publisher=CAIN|access-date=14 June 2014}}</ref>
The Provisional IRA called off its 1994 ceasefire on February 9 1996 because of its dissatisfaction with the state of negotiations. They signalled the end of the ceasefire by detonating a truck bomb at ] in London, which caused the deaths of two civilians and massive damage to property. In the summer of 1996, another truck bomb devastated ]. However the PIRA campaign when the ceasefire was suspended during this period never reached the intensity of previous years. In total the IRA killed 2 British soldiers, 2 RUC men, 2 British civilians, and 1 Garda according to the CAIN project <ref>(Moloney p459) </ref>. They resumed their ceasefire on July 20 1997. These PIRA military activities of 1996-97 were widely believed to have been used to gain leverage in negotiations with the British government during the period. Whereas in 1994-95, the British ] government had refused to enter public talks with ] until the IRA had given up its weapons, the ] government in power by 1997 was prepared to include Sinn Féin in peace talks before IRA decommissioning. Another widespread interpretation of the temporary breakdown in the first IRA ceasefire is that the leadership of ] and ] tolerated a limited return to violence in order to avoid a split between hardliners and moderates in the IRA Army Council. Once they had won over or removed the militarists from the Council, they re-instated the ceasefire <ref>(Moloney p472)</ref>.


Loyalists were aided in this campaign by elements of the security forces, including the British Army and ] (see ]). Loyalist sources have since confirmed that they received intelligence files on republicans from members of British Army and police intelligence in this period. A British Army agent within the ] (UDA), ], was convicted in 1992 of the killings of Catholic civilians. It was later revealed that Nelson, while working as a British Army agent, was also involved in the importation of arms for loyalists from South Africa in 1988.<ref>O'Brien, p. 231</ref>
==Casualties==
]


In 1993, for the first time since the 1960s, loyalist paramilitaries killed two more people than republican paramilitaries. In 1994, loyalists killed eleven more people than republicans, and in 1995, they killed twelve more. In the latter case (1995 period), the Provisional IRA 1994's cease-fire was still in place.{{citation needed|date=December 2015}}
According to the CAIN research project at the ] <ref></ref>, the Provisional IRA was responsible for the deaths of 1,821 people during ] up to 2001. This figure represents 48.4 percent of the total fatalities in the conflict. 621 of these casualties were civilians. A total of 1,013 were British forces; 465 from the ], 190 were from the ] (a part time local British Army reserve unit), 272 were members of the ], 14 were former Royal Ulster Constabulary members, six were British Police, 20 were Northern Ireland prison officers, two were former prison officers. A further 35 were loyalist paramilitaries (21 ] (UDA), three former UDA, 11 ]). Six were ] and one was ]. About 180 were republican paramilitaries, including 12 ] members, one ] member, 63 alleged informers and 103 accidental deaths of PIRA members due to premature explosions.


In response to these attacks, the IRA began a reactive assassination campaign against leading members of the UDA and UVF. By the late 1980s, the IRA Army Council would not sanction attacks on Protestant areas with a high likelihood of civilian casualties, but only on named, identified loyalist targets. The main reason for this was the negative impact of attacks on civilians on the republican movement's electoral appeal. The IRA issued a statement in 1986 saying: "At no time will we involve ourselves in the execution of ordinary Protestants, but at all times we reserve the right to take armed action against those who attempt to terrorise or intimidate our people into accepting British/unionist rule".<ref>English, p. 246</ref> ] stressed his party's point of view in 1989; "Sinn Féin does not condone the deaths of people who are non-combatants".<ref name="m321">Moloney, p. 321</ref>
One study calculates that of 1706 victims, 340 were Northern Irish ], 794 were Northern Irish ] and 572 were not from ]. {{fact}}


To maximise the impact of the tactic, the IRA targeted senior loyalist paramilitary figures. Among the leading loyalists killed were ], ], ] and ] of the UDA and ] and ] of the UVF.<ref name="m321"/><ref>O'Brien, p. 314</ref> Mechanic Leslie Dallas, shot dead by the IRA along with two elderly Protestants in 1989, was also claimed by the IRA to be a member of the UVF<ref name="Moloney">Moloney, p. 314</ref> but his family and the UVF denied this. He is listed in the Sutton Index as a civilian.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://cain.ulst.ac.uk/sutton/chron/1989.html |title=CAIN: Sutton Index of Deaths |website=Cain.ulst.ac.uk |access-date=2015-12-23}}</ref>
Another very detailed study, <ref>''Lost Lives'' (2004. Ed's David McKitrick, Seamus Kelters, Brian Feeney, Chris Thornton, David McVea)</ref> gives the following figures for people killed by the Provisional IRA up to 2004: 644 civilians, 456 British military (including British Army, RAF, Royal Navy, and Territorial Army), 273 ] (including RUC reserve), 182 ], 163 Republican paramilitary members (including from the IRA), 28 loyalist paramilitary members, 23 Northern Ireland prison officers, 7 ] or ], and five British police officers (''Lost Lives'', page 1536). ''Lost Lives'' therefore concludes that the Provisional IRA was responsible for a total of 1781 deaths to date. It has also been estimated that the IRA injured 6000 British Army, UDR and RUC and up to 14,000 civilians, during the Troubles <ref>(O'Brien p135)</ref>.


One ] on 23 October 1993 caused civilian casualties, when a bomb was planted at a ] fish shop. The bomb was intended to kill the entire senior leadership of the UDA, including ], who sometimes met in a room above the shop. Instead, the bomb killed eight Protestant civilians, a low-level UDA member and also one of the bombers, ], when the device exploded prematurely. In addition, 58 more people were injured.<ref>Coogan, p. 437</ref> This provoked a series of retaliatory killings by the UVF and UDA of Catholic civilians with no political or paramilitary connections.<ref>Moloney, p. 415</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.irishecho.com/search/searchstory.cfm/|archiveurl=https://archive.today/20070928081540/http://www.irishecho.com/search/searchstory.cfm?id=2897&issueid=69|url-status=dead|title=A View North Collusion? Maybe, but at a low level|archivedate=28 September 2007}}</ref>
The IRA lost 276 members during ] according to the CAIN figures. ''Lost Lives'' states that 294 PIRA members died in the Troubles <ref>(Lost Lives p1531)</ref>. In addition, many members of ] were killed, some of whom were also IRA members, but this was not publicly acknowledged. ] gives a figure of 341 IRA and Sinn Féin members killed in the Troubles, indicating between 50-60 Sinn Féin deaths if the IRA deaths are subtracted <ref>(cited in O'Brien, Long War p26)</ref>.
According to the Conflict Archive on the Internet (CAIN), ] statistics, the Provisional IRA killed 30 loyalist paramilitaries in total. ''Lost Lives'' gives a figure of 28<ref name="Lost Lives, p. 1536">Lost Lives, p. 1536</ref> out of a total number of loyalists killed in the Troubles of 126.<ref name="Lost Lives, p. 1531">Lost Lives, p. 1531</ref>
In roughly 123 of these cases, IRA members either caused their own deaths. Eight IRA members died on ]. Another hundred or so were killed by their own explosives in premature bombing accidents - 103 deaths according to CAIN, 105 according to an RUC report of 1993 <ref>(O'Brien p160)</ref>. Thirteen were killed on allegations of having worked for the security forces (CAIN). Lost Lives gives a figure of 163 killings of republican paramilitary members (but this includes bombing accidents and feuds with republicans from other organisations) <ref>(''Lost Lives'', p 1536)</ref>. Most of the remaining 200 or so IRA deaths were at the hands of the British army, followed by the RUC and then the loyalist paramilitaries.


According to ''The Irish War'' by Tony Geraghty, the IRA killed 45 loyalists.<ref>Geraghty, p. 235</ref> These killings intensified just before the IRA ceasefire of 1994, with UDA members Ray Smallwoods being killed on 11 July, Joe Bratty & Raymond Elder on 31 July & a UVF commander ] had been seriously injured by the IRA in June. As well as these IRA killings the other Republican paramilitary the ] killed three UVF men during the same period including UVF Belfast commander ]. The loyalist groups called their ceasefire six weeks after the IRA ceasefire of that year and they argued that it was the killing of Catholic civilians and republicans that had forced the IRA ceasefire by placing intolerable pressure on nationalists, a view echoed by former deputy leader of the ], ].<ref>Taylor, Peter (2000). ''Loyalists''. p.231-232, p.234. Bloomsbury; {{ISBN|0747545197}}.</ref>
Far more common than the killing of IRA Volunteers however, was their imprisonment. Journalists Eamonn Mallie and Patrick Bishop estimate in ''The Provisional IRA'' (1988), that between 8-10,000 PIRA members were, up until that point, imprisoned during the course of the conflict, a number they also give as the total number of IRA members during the Troubles <ref>(Mallie, Bishop p12)</ref>. The total number of PIRA members imprisoned must therefore be considerably higher, once the figures from 1988-1998 are included.


== Campaign up to and after the 1994 ceasefire ==
==Other activities==
{{see also|Northern Ireland peace process}}
]
Apart from its armed campaign, the Provisional IRA has also been involved in many other activities, including "policing", robberies and kidnapping for the purposes of raising funds.


=== Early 1990s ===
The IRA looked on itself as the police force of nationalist areas of Northern Ireland during the Troubles instead of the RUC, during a time when the Catholic community had little confidence in the neutrality of the state forces. Some Catholic civilians have been killed by the IRA for collaboration with the British security forces (i.e., the British Army or the RUC). The IRA also summarily executed or otherwise punished suspected drug dealers and other suspected criminals in the past, sometimes after ]. In addition the PIRA habitually carried out beatings, known as "punishment beatings" and "knee cappings" (shootings in the knees) of petty criminals until recently. IRA members suspected of being British or Irish government informers were also executed, often after interrogation and torture and a kangaroo trial. The IRA had a special unit for this purpose, known in republican circles as the "]".


]
The PIRA has also targeted other republican paramilitary groups. In 1972, 1975 and 1977, the ] and Provisional IRA fought a feud with each other in Belfast, leaving several Volunteers dead on either side. In 1992, The PIRA eliminated the ] (IPLO), which was widely involved in drug dealing and other criminality. One IPLO member was killed, several more shot and wounded (kneecapped) and still more beaten and told to disband and in some cases to leave the country. Most recently, there has been at least one case, in 2000, of the IRA shooting dead a ] member for his opposition to the Provisionals' political strategy .
By the early 1990s, although the death toll had dropped significantly from the worst years of the 1970s, the IRA campaign continued to severely disrupt normal life in Northern Ireland.


* In 1987, the IRA carried out almost 300 shooting and bombing attacks, killing 31 RUC, UDR and British Army personnel and 20 civilians, while injuring 100 security forces and 150 civilians.<ref name="O'Brien, p. 157"/>
Although the IRA's General Order No. 8 forbids military action "against ] forces under any circumstances whatsoever" <ref>(O'Brien p121)</ref>, members of the ] (the Republic of Ireland's police force) have also been killed; most notorious was the killing of Detective Garda ], who was killed by sustained machine-gun fire while sitting in his car in ] ] while escorting a post office delivery in 1996. Sinn Féin has called for the release of his killers under the terms of the ]. The Provisionals have killed six Gardaí and one ] soldier, mostly during robberies. These killings as well as sectarian attacks against Protestant civilians lost the Provisional's much sympathy in the Republic.
* In 1990, IRA attacks killed 30 soldiers and RUC members and injured 340.<ref>O'Brien, p. 203</ref><ref>Sutton index. See the following link for the 1990 fatalities and produce tabulation by introducing ''Status'' and ''Year'':
* {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160324044004/http://cain.ulst.ac.uk/sutton/crosstabs.html |date=24 March 2016 }}</ref>
* In 1992, the figure for IRA attacks was 426.<ref>O'Brien, p. 168</ref>


The IRA was capable of carrying on with a significant level of violence for the foreseeable future. On the other hand, the goal of the British government in the 1980s was to destroy the IRA, rather than find a political solution.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.patfinucanecentre.org/misc/opbanner.pdf|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20070926091152/http://www.patfinucanecentre.org/misc/opbanner.pdf|url-status=dead|title=Operation Banner: An analysis of military operations in Northern Ireland. Prepared under the direction of the Chief of the General Staff, Ministry of Defence (United Kingdom), July 2006, Chapter II, page 15: "The British Government's main military objective in the 1980s was the destruction of PIRA, rather than resolving the conflict."|archivedate=26 September 2007}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book|last=Kelly|first=Stephen|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mI9GDQAAQBAJ&q=%22a+military+solution%22+&pg=PP121|title=A Failed Political Entity: Charles Haughey and the Northern Ireland Question, 1945–1992|publisher=Merrion Press|year=2016|isbn=978-1-78537-102-8}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal|date=1992|title=Time to Stop Using the I-Word|journal=Fortnight|volume=302-312|pages=28}}</ref> Moreover, in addition to those killed and injured, the conflict had a substantial economic cost. The UK had to devote an enormous budget to keep their security system in Northern Ireland running indefinitely.<ref>{{cite book|last=Toolis|first=Kevin|title=Rebel Hearts: Journeys Within the IRA's Soul|publisher=St. Martin's Griffin|year=1997|isbn=0-312-15632-4|page=|url=https://archive.org/details/rebelheartsjourn00tool/page/56}}</ref><ref>"These statistics do not trivialize the seriousness of the problem, but instead indicate that terrorist violence was contained at manageable levels. What these statistics fail to indicate was the expense of the conflict. Perpetually deploying large, well-trained security forces was very expensive in simple monetary terms." {{cite book|last=Goodspeed|first=Michael|title=When reason fails: portraits of armies at war: America, Britain, Israel, and the future|publisher=Greenwood Publishing Group|year=2002|isbn=0-275-97378-6|page=61}}</ref>
The IRA has carried out many robberies of bank and post offices over the 30 or so years of its existence. In 1982-83, the RUC estimated that the IRA stole roughly £700,000 in such raids <ref>(O'Brien p121)</ref>. It is strongly suspected to have carried out the ] of December 2004, although this is unproven.


From 1985 onward, the IRA carried out a five-year campaign against RUC and Army bases that resulted in 33 British security facilities destroyed and nearly a hundred seriously damaged.<ref>Toolis, Kevin (1995). ''Rebel Hearts: journeys within the IRA's soul''. Picador, p. 53; {{ISBN|0-330-34243-6}}</ref> The attacks and bombings in the early 1990s forced the UK government to dismantle several bases and security posts, whose maintenance or reconstruction was not affordable.<ref>The list included:
In the 1980s, IRA members are suspected to have kidnapped the racehorse ] and attempted to ransom it. It has also been involved in the kidnapping and ransom of businessmen Gael Weston, ] and Don Tidey in the early 1980s. Activities such as these were linked to the IRA's fund-raising. ] estimate that the PIRA got up to £1.5 million from these activities <ref>(O'Brien p121)</ref>.


* Three permanent checkpoints:
The PIRA was (and according to the Irish Minister of Justice, ], still is) involved in organised crime on both sides of the Irish border. These activities include smuggling, sale of contraband cigarettes, extortion and money laundering.
** Boa Island (1991)
** ] (1991) {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160303200547/http://www.emigrant.ie/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=36958&Itemid=200 |date=3 March 2016 }}
** ] (1991) (Harnden, p. 263-264)
* The UDR base at ]</ref><ref>{{Cite web|title=The Duke of Edinburghs Royal Regiment (Berkshire and Wiltshire) :: The Wardrobe|url=https://www.thewardrobe.org.uk/research/history-regiments/duke-edinburghs-royal-regiment-berkshire-and-wiltshire|access-date=2020-08-10|website=www.thewardrobe.org.uk}}</ref> The presence of the British Army in the region increased from its lowest ebb of 9,000 men in 1985 to 10,500 by 1992 after an escalation of the IRA's mortar attacks.<ref>Ripley, Tim and Chappel, Mike: ''Security forces in Northern Ireland (1969–92)''. Osprey, 1993, p. 20. {{ISBN|1-85532-278-1}}</ref>


In South Armagh, in contrast to other brigade areas, IRA activity increased in the early 1990s. Travelling by road in South Armagh became so dangerous for the British Army that by 1975 they began using helicopters to transport troops and supply its bases, a practice continued until the late 1990s.<ref>Harnden, p. 19</ref>{{Contradictory inline|date=February 2022}} The IRA there shot down five helicopters (one in 1978,<ref>Dewar, Michael (1985). ''The British Army in Northern Ireland''. Arms and Armour Press, p. 156; {{ISBN|0853687161}}</ref> another one in 1988 and 1991<ref>{{Cite book|last=Taylor|first=Steven|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=zQPMDwAAQBAJ&q=%22noticed+a+flash%22&pg=PT114|title=Air War Northern Ireland: Britain's Air Arms and the 'Bandit Country' of South Armagh, Operation Banner 1969–2007|publisher=Pen and Sword|year=2018|isbn=978-1-5267-2155-6}}</ref> and two in 1994), and damaged at least another three in this period, using ] heavy machine guns and improvised mortars.<ref>Harnden, pp. 361, 398</ref> Another one was brought down in early 1990 in County Tyrone by the IRA's ], wounding three crew members.<ref>{{cite book | last = Taylor | first = Steven | title = Air War Northern Ireland: Britain's Air Arms and the 'Bandit Country' of South Armagh, Operation Banner 1969–2007 | date = 2018 | publisher = Pen and Sword Books | isbn = 978-1526721549}}</ref><ref> '']'', 12 February 1990</ref>
Recently, there have been many allegations of in-discipline and intimidation of the Catholic community against the IRA. The most high profile of these cases is the ] killing in late 2004. In February 2005, the IRA was denounced by relatives of Robert McCartney, who was murdered in a brawl in a ] in ] by IRA members, who subsequently destroyed the evidence at the scene and intimidated the witnesses. The resulting controversy saw US Political backing for Sinn Féin was badly damaged. ] advised republicans to give evidence against those IRA members who were involved, a first for the republican leader. Three IRA members were expelled from the organisation following the murder and an offer was made by the organisation to shoot those responsible for the killing. The family of Mr. McCartney allege that, notwithstanding public calls for information by Sinn Féin leaders, no one has come forward with information that would allow a prosecution to go further. They also allege that republican intimidation of witnesses has continued and that even the friend of Mr. McCartney who was stabbed with him is too afraid to make a police statement.


One of several methods the IRA used to counter British body armour was the use of high velocity ] and ] ], several of which the IRA imported from the USA. Two ] of the South Armagh Brigade killed nine members of the security forces in this way. To avoid the jamming of wireless-triggered detonators, the organisation began to employ radar beacons to prime their explosive devices, improving dramatically the effectiveness of the attacks.<ref>Harnden, p. 265.</ref><ref>Geraghty. p. 209.</ref> By 1992, the use of long-range weapons like mortars and heavy machine guns by the IRA had forced the British Army to build its checkpoints one to five miles from the border in order to avoid attacks launched from the Republic.<ref>{{cite web|agency=Associated Press|work=Waycross Journal-Herald|via=Google News Archive Search|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=O1ZaAAAAIBAJ&pg=6780,6577778&dq=checkpoint+northern-ireland&hl=en|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://archive.today/20120711224130/http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=O1ZaAAAAIBAJ&sjid=u0wNAAAAIBAJ&pg=6780,6577778&dq=checkpoint+northern-ireland&hl=en|archive-date=11 July 2012|access-date=1 February 2011|title=Official Describes British–Ireland Border As '300-Mile Difficulty'}}</ref>


Another IRA technique used on several occasions<ref>''Irish Independent'', 30 November 1990.</ref><ref>{{Cite book|last=Stone|first=David|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=TP_RAwAAQBAJ&q=Annaghmartin|title=Cold War Warriors: The Story of the Duke of Edinburgh's Royal Regiment (Berkshire and Wiltshire), 1959–1994|date=1998-09-01|publisher=Pen and Sword|isbn=978-1-4738-1325-0}}</ref> between October 1990 and late 1991 was the "]", where a victim was kidnapped and forced to drive a ] to its target. In the first series of attacks in October 1990, all three victims were Catholic men employed by the security forces. Their families were held hostage to ensure the proxies did as they were directed. The first proxy, at Coshquin (near Derry), died, along with six soldiers. The second proxy, at Cloghoge (or Cloghogue; near Newry), escaped but a soldier was killed. The third incident, at ], produced no casualties due to a faulty detonator. Proxy bomb attacks continued for months afterwards; very large bombs ({{convert|8000|lb|abbr=on}}) were used in two attacks in November 1990 and September 1991.<ref>'']'', No. 291, p. 20-22. Fortnight Publications, 1991.</ref> The proxy-bomb tactic was dropped, reportedly due to the revulsion it caused among nationalists.<ref>English, pp. 347–50</ref>


In the early 1990s the IRA intensified its campaign against commercial and economic targets in Northern Ireland. For example, in May 1993 over four days the IRA detonated car bombs in Belfast, ], and ], County Londonderry, causing millions of pounds worth of damage.<ref>'']'', Issue 319–323, p. 33. Fortnight Publications, 1993.</ref> On 1 January 1994, the IRA planted eleven incendiary devices in shops and other premises in the Greater Belfast area in a "firebomb blitz" that caused millions of pounds worth of damage.<ref>{{cite web|title=IRA Firebombs Hit 11 Belfast-Area Stores|author=Los Angeles Times|website=]|url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1994-01-02-mn-7756-story.html|date=2 January 1994|access-date=2 September 2020}}</ref> In 1991, the IRA used a total of 142 cassette-type incendiary devices against shops and warehouses in Northern Ireland.<ref>''Sunday Life'', 26 January 1992.</ref>
==References==
<references/>


===Sources=== === The ceasefires ===
*Martin Dillon, ''25 Years of Terror - the IRA's War against the British''
*Richard English, ''Armed Struggle - the History of the IRA''
*Peter Taylor, ''Provos - the IRA and Sinn Féin''
*Ed Moloney, ''The Secret History of the IRA''
*Eamonn Mallie and Patrick Bishop, ''The Provisional IRA''
*Toby Harnden, ''Bandit Country -The IRA and South Armagh''
*Brendan O'Brien, ''The Long War - The IRA and Sinn Féin''
*Tim Pat Coogan, ''The Troubles''
*Tony Geraghty, ''The Irish War''
*David McKitrick, Seamus Kelters, Brian Feeney, Chris Thornton, David McVea, ''Lost Lives''.


In August 1994, the Provisional IRA announced a "complete cessation of military operations". This was the culmination of several years of negotiations between the Republican leadership, led by ] and ], various figures in the local political parties, the Irish government and British government. It was informed by the view that neither the UK forces, nor the IRA could win the conflict and that greater progress towards Republican objectives might be achieved by negotiation.{{citation needed|date=December 2015}}
]

]
]
While many Provisional IRA volunteers were reportedly unhappy with the end of armed struggle short of the achievement of a united Ireland, the peace strategy has since resulted in substantial electoral and political gains for ], the movement's political wing. It may now be argued that the Sinn Féin political party has eclipsed the Provisional IRA as the most important part of the republican movement. The ceasefire of 1994 therefore, while not a definitive end to Provisional IRA operations, marked the effective end of its full scale armed campaign.{{citation needed|date=December 2015}}

The Provisional IRA called off its 1994 ceasefire on 9 February 1996 because of its dissatisfaction with the state of negotiations. They signaled the end of the ceasefire by detonating a truck bomb at ] in London, which caused the deaths of two civilians and massive damage to property. In the summer of 1996, another truck bomb devastated ]. However, the Provisional IRA campaign after the ceasefire was suspended during this period and never reached the intensity of previous years. In total, the IRA killed 2 British soldiers, 2 RUC officers, 2 British civilians, and 1 ] in 1996–1997 according to the CAIN project.<ref>Moloney, p. 459</ref> They resumed their ceasefire on 19 July 1997.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/july/19/newsid_2450000/2450845.stm|title=IRA declares ceasefire|work=]|access-date=18 July 2011|date=19 July 1997}}</ref>

These Provisional IRA military activities of 1996–97 were widely believed to have been used to gain leverage in negotiations with the British government during the period.<ref>O'Brien, pp. 370–371</ref> Whereas in 1994–95, the British ] government had refused to enter public talks with ] until the IRA had given up its weapons, the ] government in power by 1997 was prepared to include Sinn Féin in peace talks before IRA decommissioning. This precondition was officially dropped in June 1997.<ref name=ines>Maillot Agnès (2005). ''New Sinn Féin: Irish republicanism in the twenty-first century''. Routledge, p. 32; {{ISBN|0-415-32197-2}}</ref>

Another widespread interpretation of the temporary breakdown in the first IRA ceasefire is that the leadership of Gerry Adams and Martin McGuinness tolerated a limited return to violence in order to avoid a split between hardliners and moderates in the IRA Army Council. Nevertheless, they emphasized in every public statement since the fall of 1996 the need for a second truce. Once they had won over or removed the militarists from the council, they re-instated the ceasefire.<ref name="Moloney, p. 472"/>

== Casualties ==

According to the ] (CAIN), a research project at the ], the IRA was responsible for 1,705 deaths, about 48% of the total conflict deaths.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://cain.ulst.ac.uk/sutton/tables/Organisation_Responsible.html |title=Sutton Index of Deaths: Organisation responsible for the death |publisher=] (CAIN) |access-date=1 March 2016}}</ref> Of that figure:

* 1,009 (59.2%) were members or former members of the British security forces, including:
** 697 British military personnel: 644 from the ] (including the ]/]), 4 from the ], 1 from the ], and 43 former British military personnel.<ref name=cain-crosstabs2>{{cite web|url=http://cain.ulst.ac.uk/sutton/crosstabs.html|title=Sutton Index of Deaths: Crosstabulations (two-way tables)|publisher=] (CAIN)|access-date=1 March 2016}} (choose "organization" and "status" as the variables)</ref>
** 312 British law enforcement personnel: 270 ] (RUC) officers, 14 former RUC officers, 20 ] (NIPS) officers, 2 former NIPS officers, and 6 English police officers.<ref name=cain-crosstabs2/>
* 508 (29%) were classed as civilians, including 17 ].<ref name=cain-crosstabs2/>
* 133 (7.8%) were members of the IRA, killed as informers or in premature explosions of bombs.<ref name=cain-crosstabs2/>
* 39 (2.2%) were ] paramilitary members: 26 ] (UDA) members, 12 ] (UVF) members and 1 ] member.<ref name=cain-crosstabs2/>
* 8 (0.4%) were members of the Irish security forces, including 6 ], 1 ] officer, and 1 ] soldier.<ref name=cain-crosstabs2/>
* 5 (0.2%) were members of other republican paramilitary groups: 4 ] members and 1 ] member.<ref name=cain-crosstabs2/>

Another detailed study, ''Lost Lives'',<ref name="Lost Lives 2004"/> states the Provisional IRA was responsible for the deaths of 1,781 people up to 2004. It says that, of this figure:

* 944 (53%) were members of the British security forces, including: 638 British military (including the UDR), 273 ] (including RUC reserve), 23 Northern Ireland Prison Service officers, five British police officers and five former British soldiers.
* 644 (36%) were civilians.
* 163 (9%) were Republican paramilitary members (including IRA members, most caused their own deaths when bombs they were transporting exploded prematurely).
* 28 (1.5%) were loyalist paramilitary members.
* 7 (0.3%) were members of the Irish security forces (6 Gardaí and one Irish Army).

''Lost Lives'' states that 294 Provisional IRA members died in the Troubles.<ref name="Lost Lives, p. 1531"/> The IRA lost 276 members during the Troubles according to the CAIN figures. In addition, a number of ] activists or councillors were killed, some of whom were also IRA members. '']'' gives a figure of 341 IRA and Sinn Féin members killed in the Troubles, indicating between 50 and 60 Sinn Féin deaths if the IRA deaths are subtracted.<ref>O'Brien, p. 26</ref>

About 120 Provisional IRA members caused their own deaths, almost all when they were killed by their own explosives in premature bombing accidents – 103 deaths according to CAIN, 105 according to an RUC report of 1993. Nine IRA members died on ].<ref>''Lost Lives'', p. 1479</ref> ''Lost Lives'' gives a figure of 163 killings of republican paramilitary members (this includes bombing accidents and feuds with republicans from other organisations).<ref name="Lost Lives, p. 1536"/> Of the remaining 200 or so IRA dead, around 150 were killed by the British Army, with the remainder killed by loyalist paramilitaries, the RUC and the UDR.

Far more common than the killing of IRA volunteers however, was their imprisonment. Journalists Eamonn Mallie and Patrick Bishop estimate in ''The Provisional IRA'' (1988), that between 8–10,000 Provisional IRA members were, up until that point, imprisoned during the course of the conflict, a number they also give as the total number of IRA members during the Troubles.<ref name="Mallie Bishop, p. 12"/> The total number of Provisional IRA members imprisoned must be higher, once the figures from 1988 onwards are included.

== Assessments ==

]

=== British Army official report ===

An internal British Army document released under the ] in 2007 stated an expert opinion that the British Army had failed to defeat the IRA by force of arms but also claims to have "shown the IRA that it could not achieve its ends through violence".<ref>Jackson, Mike (2006). '' {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160303215447/http://www.vilaweb.cat/media/attach/vwedts/docs/op_banner_analysis_released.pdf |date=3 March 2016 }}''. ], Army Code 71842</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/northern_ireland/6276416.stm |title=UK &#124; Northern Ireland &#124; Army paper says IRA not defeated |publisher=BBC News |date=2007-07-06 |access-date=2015-12-23}}</ref> The report examined 37 years of British troop deployment and was compiled following a six-month study by a team of three officers carried out in early 2006 for General Sir ], the British Army's Chief of the General Staff. The military assessment describes the IRA as "professional, dedicated, highly skilled and resilient".<ref>Chapter I, page 3</ref>

The paper divides the IRA activity and tactics in two main periods: The "insurgency" phase (1971–1972), and the "terrorist" phase (1972–1997).<ref name=ban>''Operation Banner'', Chapter I, page 2</ref> The British Army claims to have curbed the IRA ] by 1972, after ], but IRA members fled to the nearby Republic of Ireland safe from British capture where they continued to carry out cross-border attacks into Northern Ireland with weapons made in the South or sourced overseas.<ref>{{cite book|title=Democracy and Counterterrorism: Lessons from the Past|last2=Art|first2=Robert|last1=Richardson|first1=Louise|date=2007|page=74|publisher=]|isbn=9-7819-2922-3947|quote=The nearby Republic of Ireland not only provided legal and illegal venues for raising funds and a place to train and organize but also allowed IRA members to flee across the border, where British security forces could not follow.}}</ref> As a result, the IRA remerged as a cell-structured group.<ref name=ban/> The report also asserts that the government efforts by the 1980s were aimed to destroy the IRA, rather than negotiate a political solution,<ref>''Operation Banner'', Chapter II, page 15: "The British Government's main military objective in the 1980s was the destruction of PIRA, rather than resolving the conflict."</ref> and that the British campaign produced no final victory "in any recognisable way".<ref>''Operation Banner'', Chapter VIII, p. 15</ref> One of the conclusions from the paper reveals the failure of the British Army to engage the IRA at strategic level and the lack of a single campaign authority and plan.<ref>''Operation Banner'', Chapter VIII, p. 4</ref>

=== Other analyses ===

Some authors, including Brendan O'Brien, Patrick McCarthy, ], ], ] and Timothy J. White, also concluded that, unlike previous IRA campaigns, the Provisionals had not been defeated but had arrived at the conclusion of a bloody stalemate in which neither side could destroy the other.<ref>Taylor (1997), p. 381</ref><ref>McCarthy, Patrick (2002). ''Language, Politics and Writing: Stolentelling in Western Europe''. Palgrave Macmillan, p. 120; {{ISBN|1403960240}}</ref><ref>Hayden, Tom'' ''(2003). ''Irish on the Inside: In Search of the Soul of Irish America''. Verso, p. 179; {{ISBN|1859844774}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://tomhayden.com/home/the-fate-of-revolutionaries-northern-ireland.html|title=The Fate of Revolutionaries: Northern Ireland|date=28 February 2011|access-date=11 January 2015|publisher=The Peace and Justice Resource Center|last=Hayden|first=Tom}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book|title=New Sinn Fein: Irish Republicanism in the Twenty-First Century|last=Maillot|first=Agnès|publisher=Routledge|year=2005|isbn=1134355009|page=183}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book|title=Theories of International Relations and Northern Ireland|last=White|first=Timothy J.|publisher=Oxford University Press|year=2017|isbn=978-1526113955|pages=22}}</ref> According to O'Brien, the IRA "could end its armed campaign from a avowed position of strength, discipline and military capacity. They had not been defeated."<ref>O'Brien, p. 322</ref> Political analysts Brian Barton and ] maintain that while the IRA, although undefeated, fell short of their ultimate goal of a united Ireland, the IRA campaign was eventually legitimised by the peace process and the Good Friday Agreement.<ref>{{Cite book|title=The Northern Ireland Question: The Peace Process and the Belfast Agreement|last1=Barton|first1=Brian|last2=Roche|first2=Patrick|publisher=Springer|year=2009|isbn=978-0230594807|pages=266}}</ref>

== Other activities ==

Apart from its armed campaign, the Provisional IRA was also involved in many other activities, including "policing" of nationalist communities, ] and ] for the purposes of raising funds, fund raising in other countries, involvement in community events and parades, and intelligence gathering. The ] (IMC), a body supervising the ceasefire and activities of paramilitary groups in Northern Ireland has judged the Provisional IRA to have ceased all of the above activities. The IMC issues a bi-yearly public report on the activities of all paramilitary groups operating and known of in Northern Ireland.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2007-02-02 |title=Independent Monitoring Commission |url=http://www.independentmonitoringcommission.org/ |access-date=2022-11-18 |url-status=usurped |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070202034106/http://www.independentmonitoringcommission.org/ |archive-date=2 February 2007 }}</ref>

=== Paramilitary policing ===
{{see also|Paramilitary punishment attacks in Northern Ireland}}
Activities deemed punishable by the Provisional IRA (often described as "anti-social activities"), included collaboration with the RUC and/or British Army i.e. ], drug dealing, criminal activity outside of the Provisional IRA, ], spreading of dissent, and any other activities which might either damage the Provisional IRA or interests of the community as defined by the Provisional IRA. For the most part, the list of activities deemed punishable by the Provisional IRA coincided with those deemed punishable by the community at large. Punishments ranged in severity from verbal warnings to physical attacks, through to wounding by gunshot, progressing to forcing the suspect to flee Ireland for their lives and death. This process was often described as "]" by the political establishment and media. In the majority of cases the Provisional IRA claimed that there had been a full investigation and that guilt had been established before their sentence was carried out. The process, which was widely known of in nationalist communities, worked on a sliding scale of severity – in the case of a petty thief a warning to stop may initially be issued, escalating to a physical attack known as a "punishment beating" usually with baseball bats or similar tools. If the behaviour continued then a more serious physical assault known as a "]" (gunshot wounds to limbs, hands, joints) would occur. The final level would be a threat of death against the suspect if they did not leave the island of Ireland, and if this order was not adhered to, death. The IMC has noted that the Provisional IRA has repeatedly come under pressure from nationalist community members since its cessation of violence to resume such policing but has resisted such requests.<ref name="imc13">{{cite web|title=Thirteenth report of the Independent Monitoring Commission|url=https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/231414/0260.pdf|publisher=]|date=30 January 2007|access-date=19 January 2020}}{{page needed|date=July 2022}}</ref>{{page needed|date=July 2022}}

Suspected ] and those who cooperated with the RUC and British Army (sometimes referred to as ]) were generally dealt with by a ] unit titled the ] (ISU), sometimes referred to as the "nutting squad". Typically, the ISU would abduct and interrogate suspects frequently using torture to extract confessions. The interrogations would often be recorded and played back to senior Provisional IRA members at a secretly held board of inquiry. This board would then pronounce judgement, usually a fatal gunshot to the head. A judgement as severe as death was frequently made public in the form of a communique released to the media but in some cases, for reasons of political expediency, the Provisional IRA did not announce responsibility. The bodies of killed informers were usually found shot dead by roadsides in isolated areas. On occasion recordings of their confessions were released to the media.{{citation needed|date=December 2015}}

This style of summary justice, often meted out based on evidence of dubious quality, by untrained investigators and self-appointed judges frequently led to what the Provisional IRA has acknowledged as horrific mistakes.{{citation needed|date=July 2020}} As of February 2007, the IMC has stated that the Provisional IRA has issued "instructions to members not to use physical force" and noted what it describes as "the leadership's maintenance of a firm stance against the involvement of members in criminality." Where criminality has been engaged in by Provisional IRA, members of the IMC note that "we were satisfied these individual activities were contrary to the express injunctions of the leadership".<ref name="imc13"/>{{page needed|date=July 2022}}

=== Internal republican feuds ===

The Provisional IRA has also targeted other republican paramilitary groups and dissenting members of the Provisional IRA who refuse or disregard orders. In 1972, 1975 and 1977, the ] and Provisional IRA engaged in attacks on the opposing organisation leaving several dead on either side. In 1992, The Provisional IRA attacked and eliminated the ] (IPLO), which was widely perceived as being involved in drug dealing and other criminality in West Belfast. One IPLO member was killed, several knee-capped and more ordered to disband. The last known example of this practise as of February 2007 took place in 2000 and involved the shooting dead of a ] member for his opposition to the Provisionals' ceasefire.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Deaths since ceasefire|url=http://www.birw.org/Deaths%20since%20ceasefire/deaths%2000.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20050312003253/http://www.birw.org/Deaths%20since%20ceasefire/deaths%2000.html|archive-date=12 March 2005|access-date=28 July 2020|website=British Irish Rights Watch}}</ref>

=== Activities in Republic of Ireland ===
{{Further information|Provisional IRA in the Republic of Ireland}}
Although the Provisional IRA's General Order No.8 forbids military action "against ] forces under any circumstances whatsoever",<ref name="o121">O'Brien, p. 121</ref> members of the ] (the Republic of Ireland's police force) have also been killed, including Detective Garda Jerry McCabe. ] by machine-gun fire as he sat in his patrol car in ] ] during the escort of a ] delivery in 1996. Sinn Féin has called for the release of his killers under the terms of the ]. In total, the Provisional IRA killed six Gardaí and one ] soldier, mostly during robberies.{{Citation needed|date=June 2019}}

==== Robberies and criminal enterprise ====
{{See also|Paramilitary finances in the Troubles}}
The Provisional IRA has carried out numerous bank and post office robberies across Ireland throughout its existence. An RUC estimate from 1982 to 1983, puts the amount stolen in such raids by the Provisional IRA at around £700,000 (sterling).<ref name="o121"/> Also in the 1980s, the Provisional IRA were involved in the kidnapping and ransom of businessmen Gaelen Weston, ] and Don Tidey. Activities such as these were linked to the IRA's fund-raising. Gardaí estimate that the Provisional IRA got up to £1.5&nbsp;million from these activities.<ref name="o121"/> Activities include ], sale of stolen items and ] including cigarettes, ], ], protection rackets, and ]. Most recently, the Provisional IRA have been blamed for carrying out the ] in December 2004, although no proof was ever forwarded and this crime remains unsolved. The IMC note that in their view the Provisional IRA has not had any "organisational involvement in robbery or other such organised crime".<ref name="imc13"/>

], a prominent Provisional IRA leader from South Armagh, has been the subject of repeated rumours of organised crime including diesel smuggling and tax evasion. In 2006 both Irish and British security forces mounted a major joint raid on his farm, and in December 2015 he was arrested and put on trial in Dublin's ] charged with tax evasion.<ref>{{cite web|author=Colm Keena |url=http://www.irishtimes.com/news/crime-and-law/slab-murphy-and-gang-betrayed-by-prosecution-says-source-1.2474317 |title='Slab' Murphy and gang 'betrayed' by prosecution, says source |work=Irish Times |date=2015-12-18 |access-date=2015-12-23}}</ref> He was found guilty of tax evasion on 17 December 2015.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.irishtimes.com/news/ireland/irish-news/thomas-slab-murphy-guilty-of-tax-evasion-after-32-day-trial-1.2470415 |title=Thomas 'Slab' Murphy guilty of tax evasion after 32-day trial |work=Irish Times |date=2015-12-17 |access-date=2015-12-23}}</ref>

== See also ==

* ]
* ]
* ]

== References ==
{{Reflist}}

=== Sources ===

* ], ''The Secret Army: the IRA''. {{ISBN|0-8156-0597-8}}
* ], ''25 Years of Terror – the IRA's War against the British''. {{ISBN|0-553-40773-2}}
* ], ''Armed Struggle – the History of the IRA''. {{ISBN|0-330-49388-4}}
* ], ''Behind the Mask – the IRA and Sinn Féin''. {{ISBN|1-57500-061-X}}
* ], ''The Secret History of the IRA''. {{ISBN|0-393-05194-3}}
* Eamonn Mallie and Patrick Bishop, ''The Provisional IRA''. {{ISBN|0-552-13337-X}}
* ], ''Bandit Country – The IRA and South Armagh''. {{ISBN|0-340-71736-X}}
* Brendan O'Brien, ''The Long War – The IRA and Sinn Féin''. {{ISBN|0-8156-0319-3}}
* ], ''The Troubles''. {{ISBN|0-312-29418-2}}
* ], ''The Irish War''. {{ISBN|0-8018-6456-9}}
* Kevin Toolis, ''Rebel Hearts''. {{ISBN|0-312-15632-4}}
* David McKitrick, Seamus Kelters, Brian Feeney, Chris Thornton, David McVea, ''Lost Lives''. {{ISBN|1-84018-227-X}}

{{Commons category|Northern Ireland Troubles}}
{{PIRA}}
{{The Troubles|state=collapsed}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Provisional Ira Campaign 1969-1972}}
]
]
] ]
]
]
]

Latest revision as of 05:33, 21 December 2024

PIRA paramilitary campaign aimed at ending UK control of Northern Ireland (1969–97)

Provisional IRA campaign
Part of the Troubles

IRA members showing an improvised mortar and an RPG (1992)
Date1969–1997
LocationPrimarily Northern Ireland and England but also launched attacks against British targets in West Germany, Belgium and the Netherlands.
Result Military stalemate
Ceasefire
Belligerents

Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA)


Supported by:

(RUC) (UVF)
Loyalist Volunteer Force (LVF)
Red Hand Commando (RHC)

Other loyalist paramilitary groups


Casualties and losses
IRA 293 killed
over 10,000 imprisoned at different times during the conflict
British Armed Forces 643–697 killed
RUC 270–273 killed
Loyalist paramilitary groups 28–39 killed
Others killed by IRA
508–644 civilians
1 Irish Army soldier
6 Gardaí
5 other republican paramilitaries
The Troubles
in Ireland
1960s and 1970s

1980s


1990s


See also: The Troubles in Britain & Europe, Assassinations during the Troubles, and Loyalist feud
The Troubles
in Britain and continental Europe
1970 – 1981

1982 – 1998

See also: The Troubles in Ireland and Assassinations during the Troubles
The Troubles
Assassinations in Ireland, Britain and mainland Europe
1970s

1980s

1990s

acronyms

see also: The Troubles in Ireland See also: The Troubles in Britain and Europe

From 1969 until 1997, the Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA) conducted an armed paramilitary campaign primarily in Northern Ireland and England, aimed at ending British rule in Northern Ireland in order to create a united Ireland.

The Provisional IRA emerged from a split in the Irish Republican Army in 1969, partly as a result of that organisation's perceived failure to defend Catholic neighbourhoods from attack in the 1969 Northern Ireland riots. The Provisionals gained credibility from their efforts to physically defend such areas in 1970 and 1971. From 1971 to 1972, the IRA took to the offensive and conducted a relatively high-intensity campaign against the British and Northern Ireland security forces and the infrastructure of the state. The British Army characterised this period as the "insurgency phase" of the IRA's campaign.

The IRA declared a brief ceasefire in 1972 and a more protracted one in 1975, when there was an internal debate over the feasibility of future operations. The armed group reorganised itself in the late 1970s into a smaller, cell-based structure, which was designed to be harder to penetrate. The IRA then carried out a smaller scale but more sustained campaign, which they characterised as the 'Long War', with the eventual aim of weakening the British government's resolve to remain in Ireland. The British Army called this the "terrorist phase" of the IRA's campaign.

The IRA made attempts in the 1980s to escalate the conflict with the aid of weapons donated by Libya. In the 1990s they also resumed a campaign of bombing economic targets in London and other cities in England.

On 31 August 1994, the IRA called a unilateral ceasefire with the aim of having their associated political party, Sinn Féin, admitted into the Northern Ireland peace process. The organisation ended its ceasefire in February 1996 but declared another in July 1997. The IRA accepted the terms of the Good Friday Agreement in 1998 as a negotiated end to the Northern Ireland conflict. In 2005 the organisation declared a formal end to its campaign and had its weaponry decommissioned under international supervision.

Other aspects of the Provisional IRA's campaign are covered in the following articles:

Beginnings

In the early days of the Troubles (1969–72), the Provisional IRA was poorly armed, with only a handful of old weapons left over from the IRA's Border campaign of 1956–1962. The IRA had split in December 1969 into the Provisional IRA and Official IRA factions. In the first two years of the conflict, the Provisionals' main activities were defending Irish nationalist areas from attacks by loyalist paramilitaries.

In contrast to the IRA's relative inaction during the 1969 Northern Ireland riots, in the summer of 1970, the Provisional IRA mounted determined armed defences of the nationalist areas of Belfast against loyalist attackers, killing a number of Protestant civilians and loyalists in the process. On 27 June 1970, the IRA killed five Protestant civilians during street disturbances in Belfast. Three more were shot in Ardoyne in north Belfast after gun battles broke out during an Orange Order parade. When loyalists retaliated by attacking the nationalist enclave of Short Strand in east Belfast, Billy McKee, the Provisionals' commander in Belfast, occupied St Matthew's Church and defended it in a five-hour gun battle with the loyalists, in what became known as the Battle of St Matthew's. One of his men was killed, he was badly wounded, and three loyalists were also killed. The Provisional IRA gained much of its support from these activities, as they were widely perceived among nationalists as being defenders of nationalist and Irish Catholic people against aggression.

Initially, the British Army, deployed into Northern Ireland in August 1969 to reinforce the Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC) and restore government control, was welcomed in Catholic nationalist areas as a neutral force compared to the Protestant- and unionist-dominated RUC and Ulster Special Constabulary. However, this good relationship with nationalists did not last long. The Army was soon discredited in the eyes of many nationalists by incidents such as the Falls Curfew of July 1970, when 3,000 British troops imposed martial law conditions on the nationalist lower Falls area of west Belfast. After a gun and grenade attack on troops by Provisional IRA members, the British fired over 1,500 rounds of ammunition in gun battles with both the Official IRA and Provisional IRA in the area, killing six civilians. Thereafter, the Provisionals continued targeting British soldiers. The first soldier to die was gunner Robert Curtis, killed by Billy Reid in a gun battle in February 1971.

1970 and 1971 also saw feuding between the Provisional and Official IRAs in Belfast, as both organisations vied for supremacy in nationalist areas. Charlie Hughes, commander of the Provisionals' D Company in the Lower Falls, was killed before a truce was brokered between the two factions.

Early campaign 1970–72

The M1 Garand rifle, typical of the World War II-era weaponry the Provisional IRA had in the early 1970s

In the early 1970s, the IRA imported large quantities of modern weapons and explosives, primarily from supporters in the Republic of Ireland and Irish diaspora communities within the Anglosphere as well as the government of Libya. Leader of the Opposition Harold Wilson in 1971 secretly met with IRA leaders with the help of John O'Connell, angering the Irish government; Garret FitzGerald wrote 30 years later that "the strength of the feelings of our democratic leaders ... was not, however, publicly ventilated at the time" because Wilson was a former and possible future British prime minister.

As the conflict escalated in the early 1970s, the numbers recruited by the IRA mushroomed, in response to the nationalist community's anger at events such as the introduction of internment without trial and Bloody Sunday, when the 1st Battalion, Parachute Regiment of the British Army shot dead 14 unarmed civil rights marchers in Derry.

The early 1970s were the most intense period of the Provisional IRA campaign. About half the total of 650 British soldiers to die in the conflict were killed in the years 1971–73. In 1972 alone, the IRA killed 100 British soldiers and wounded 500 more. In the same year, they carried out 1,300 bomb attacks and 90 IRA members were killed.

Up to 1972, the IRA controlled large urban areas in Belfast and Derry, but these were eventually re-taken by a major British operation known as Operation Motorman. Thereafter, fortified police and military posts were built in republican areas throughout Northern Ireland. During the early 1970s, a typical IRA operation involved sniping at British patrols and engaging them in firefights in urban areas of Belfast and Derry. They also killed RUC and Ulster Defence Regiment (UDR) soldiers, both on and off-duty, and a number of retired policemen and UDR soldiers. These tactics produced casualties for both sides and for many civilian bystanders. The British Army study of the conflict later described this period (1970–72), as the 'insurgency phase' of the IRA's campaign.

Another element of their campaign was the bombing of commercial targets such as shops and businesses. The most effective tactic the IRA developed for its bombing campaign was the car bomb, where large amounts of explosives were packed into a car, which was driven to its target and then detonated. Seán Mac Stíofáin, the first Chief of Staff of the Provisional IRA, described the car bomb both as a tactical and strategic weapon. From the tactical point of view, it tied down a great number of British troops in Belfast and other cities and major towns across Northern Ireland. Strategically, it hampered the British administration and government of the country, striking simultaneously at its economic structure. While most of the IRA's attacks on commercial targets were not intended to cause casualties, on many occasions they killed civilians. Examples include the bombing of the Abercorn restaurant in Belfast in March 1972, in which two young Catholic women were killed and 130 people injured, attributed to the IRA, which never acknowledged responsibility, as well as the bombing of the La Mon restaurant in County Down in February 1978, which resulted in the deaths of twelve Protestant civilian customers, and others maimed and injured.

In rural areas such as South Armagh (which is a majority Catholic area near the Irish border), the IRA unit's most effective weapon was the "culvert bomb", where bombs were planted under drains in country roads. This proved so dangerous for British Army patrols that virtually all troops in the area had to be transported by helicopter, a policy which continued until 2007, when the last British Army base was closed in South Armagh.

Ceasefires – 1972 and 1975

The Provisional IRA declared two ceasefires in the 1970s, temporarily suspending its armed operations. In 1972, the IRA leadership believed that Britain was on the verge of leaving Northern Ireland. The British government held secret talks with the Provisional IRA leadership in 1972 to try to secure a ceasefire based on a compromise settlement within Northern Ireland. The Provisional IRA agreed to a temporary ceasefire from 26 June to 9 July. In July 1972, Provisional leaders Seán Mac Stíofáin, Dáithí Ó Conaill, Ivor Bell, Seamus Twomey, Gerry Adams and Martin McGuinness met a British delegation led by William Whitelaw. The IRA leaders refused to consider a peace settlement that did not include a commitment to British withdrawal to be completed by 1975, a retreat of the British Army to barracks and a release of republican prisoners. The British refused and the talks ended. On Bloody Friday in July 1972 in Belfast 22 bombs exploded, killing nine people and injuring 130. Bloody Friday was intended to be a demonstration of IRA strength following the ceasefire, but was a disaster for the IRA due to the authorities being unable to deal with so many simultaneous bomb alerts in a small area.

By the mid-1970s, it was clear that the hopes of the Provisional IRA leadership for a quick military victory were receding. Secret meetings between IRA leaders Ruairí Ó Brádaigh and Billy McKee with British Secretary of State for Northern Ireland Merlyn Rees secured an IRA ceasefire from February 1975 until January of the next year. The republicans believed initially that this was the start of a long-term process of British withdrawal. However, after several months, many in the IRA came to believe that the British were trying to bring the Provisional movement into peaceful politics without giving them any guarantees.

Critics of the IRA leadership, most notably Gerry Adams, felt that the ceasefire was disastrous for the IRA, leading to infiltration by British informers, the arrest of many activists and a breakdown in IRA discipline, which in turn led to tit-for-tat killings with loyalist groups fearful of a British sell-out and a feud with fellow republicans in the Official IRA. By early 1976, the IRA leadership, short of money, weapons and members, was on the brink of calling off the campaign. Instead, the ceasefire broke down in January 1976.

Late 1970s and the "Long War"

The years 1976 to 1979 under Roy Mason, Merlyn Rees' replacement as the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, were characterised by a falling death rate for many reasons, including a drop in loyalist violence (attributed to the absence of political initiatives under Mason), and a change in IRA tactics after its weakening during the previous year's ceasefire. Mason developed a policy that rejected a political or military solution in favour of treating paramilitary violence "as a security problem". In addition, RUC Chief Constable Kenneth Newman took advantage of Emergency Powers legislation to subject suspected IRA members to "intensive and frequently rough" seven-day interrogations. British concentration on intelligence-gathering and recruiting of informers, accelerated during the 1975 ceasefire and continued under Mason, meant that arrests of IRA members rose steeply in this period. Between 1976 and 1979, 3,000 people were charged with "terrorist offences". There were 800 republican prisoners in Long Kesh alone by 1980.

In 1972, there were over 12,000 shooting and bombing attacks in Northern Ireland; by 1977, this was down to 2,800. In 1976, there were 297 deaths in Northern Ireland; in the next three years the figures were 112, 81, and 113. An IRA man contended that "we were almost beaten by Mason", and Martin McGuinness commented: "Mason beat the shit out of us". Mason's policy of 'criminalisation' led to the blanket protest in the prisons. When Mason left office in 1979, he predicted the IRA were "weeks away from defeat".

After the early years of the conflict, it became less common for the IRA to use large numbers of men in its armed actions. Instead, smaller but more specialised groups carried out sustained attritional attacks. In response to the 1975 ceasefire and the arrest of many IRA volunteers in its aftermath, the IRA re-organised their structures in 1977 into small cell-based units. While these were harder to infiltrate, the greater secrecy also caused a distance to develop between the IRA and sympathetic civilians. They also embarked on a strategy known as the "Long War" – a process of attrition based on the indefinite continuation of an armed campaign until the British government grew tired of the political, military and financial costs involved in staying in Northern Ireland. The British Army characterised this change in the IRA campaign as a move from "insurgency" to a "terrorist phase".

The highest military death toll from an IRA attack came on 27 August 1979, with the Warrenpoint ambush in County Down, when 18 British soldiers from the Parachute Regiment were killed by two culvert bombs placed by the South Armagh Brigade, a unit that didn't feel the need to adopt the cell structure because of its history of successfully avoiding intelligence failures. On the same day, the IRA killed one of their most famous victims, The Earl Mountbatten of Burma, assassinated along with two teenagers (aged 14 and 15) and The Dowager Lady Brabourne in County Sligo, by a bomb placed in his boat. Another effective IRA tactic devised in the late 1970s was the use of home-made mortars mounted on the back of trucks which were fired at police and army bases. These mortars were first tested in 1974 but did not kill anyone until 1979.

Sectarian attacks

The IRA argued that its campaign was aimed not at Protestant and unionist people, but at the British presence in Northern Ireland, manifested in the state security forces. However, many unionists argue that the IRA's campaign was sectarian and there are many incidents where the organisation targeted Protestant civilians. The 1970s were the most violent years of the Troubles. As well as its campaign against the security forces, the IRA became involved, in the middle of the decade, in a "tit for tat" cycle of sectarian killings with loyalist paramilitaries. The worst examples of this occurred in 1975 and 1976. In September 1975, for example, IRA members machine-gunned an Orange Hall in Newtownhamilton, killing five Protestants. On 5 January 1976, in Armagh, IRA members operating under the proxy name South Armagh Republican Action Force shot dead ten Protestant building workers in the Kingsmill massacre.

In similar incidents, the IRA deliberately killed 91 Protestant civilians in 1974–76. The IRA did not officially claim the killings, but justified them in a statement on 17 January 1976, "The Irish Republican Army has never initiated sectarian killings ... if loyalist elements responsible for over 300 sectarian assassinations in the past four years stop such killing now, then the question of retaliation from whatever source does not arise". In late 1976, the IRA leadership met with representatives of the loyalist paramilitary groups and agreed to halt random sectarian killings and car bombings of civilian targets. The loyalists revoked the agreement in 1979, after the IRA killing of Lord Mountbatten, but the pact nevertheless halted the cycle of sectarian revenge killings until the late 1980s, when the loyalist groups began killing Catholics again in large numbers.

After the British introduced their policy of "Ulsterisation" from the mid-1970s, IRA victims came increasingly from the ranks of the RUC and Ulster Defence Regiment, including off-duty and retired personnel. Most of these were Protestant and unionist, thus the killings were portrayed and perceived by many as a campaign of sectarian assassination. Historian Henry Patterson said about Fermanagh "that the killings struck at the Protestant community's morale, sense of security and belonging in the area was undeniable." while Democratic Unionist Party leader Ian Paisley claimed that the IRA campaign in Fermanagh was "genocidal".

Rachel Kowalsaki argues that the IRA did not generally engage in sectarian activities but instead targeted those they deemed responsible for British rule in Northern Ireland and that they generally only targeted members of the military and police and made efforts to avoid civilian deaths. However, Kowalsaki notes that the IRA did not recognise that while they may have thought of themselves as fighting for a united Ireland, their actions were often perceived by the Northern Irish Unionists as sectarian attacks against Protestants. A similar argument was made by Lewis et al., who argue that the IRA's ideology – which held that Irish Protestants and Unionists were part of the imagined community of the Irish nation and were simply deluded into thinking themselves British by colonial oppression – meant that the organisation had an ideological restraint against mass sectarianism. However, the authors note that this same belief could also blind them to the actual effects of their campaign, as they did not acknowledge that Northern Irish Unionists regarded themselves as a distinct community and thus would perceive the IRA's activities as sectarian.

Timothy Shanahan argues that while the IRA did launch attacks against legitimate targets (defined as members of the security services), many members of the security services, such as the RUC and UDR, would themselves be Protestant, and would be presumed to be Protestant by the IRA. Thus any attacks on these legitimate targets would suffice in killing members of the Protestant community, negating any need for sectarian attacks on Protestant civilians. Shanahan thus argues that while the IRA may not have been sectarian as some loyalist paramilitaries, it may not have been as anti-sectarian as popularly claimed. Similar arguments were made by Steve Bruce, who also argued that Catholic RUC members were disproportionately targeted, which Bruce argues is because they were viewed as betraying their community, which only makes sense in the nature of a sectarian conflict. James Dingley argues that the IRA's focus on the idea of a united and independent Ireland made it de facto sectarian, as it did not recognise Ulster Unionists as a legitimate group and wanted to use violence to pursue goals that were opposed by the majority of the Northern Irish population.

Protestants in the rural border areas of counties Fermanagh and Tyrone, where the number of members of the security forces killed was high, viewed the IRA's campaign as ethnic cleansing. These views have been challenged. Boyle and Hadden argue that the allegations do not stand up to serious scrutiny, while nationalists object to the term on the grounds that it is not used by unionists to describe similar killings or expulsions of Catholics in areas where they form a minority. Henry Patterson, professor of politics at the University of Ulster, concludes that while the IRA's campaign was unavoidably sectarian, it did not amount to ethnic cleansing. Although the IRA did not specifically target these people because of their religious affiliation, more Protestants joined the security forces so many people from that community believed the attacks were sectarian. IRA volunteer Tommy McKearney argues that due to the British government's Ulsterisation policy increasing the role of the locally recruited RUC and UDR, the IRA had no choice but to target them because of their local knowledge, but acknowledges that Protestants viewed this as a sectarian attack on their community. Gerry Adams, in a 1988 interview, claimed it was, "vastly preferable" to target the regular British Army as it "removes the worst of the agony from Ireland" and "diffuses the sectarian aspects of the conflict because loyalists do not see it as an attack on their community".

Towards the end of the Troubles, the IRA widened their campaign even further, to include the killing of people who worked in a civilian capacity with the RUC and British Army. These workers were mostly, but not exclusively, Protestant, although Catholic judges, magistrates, and contractors were also assassinated by the IRA. In 1992, in Teebane, near Cookstown, an IRA bomb killed eight Protestant building workers who were working on a British Army base at Omagh.

Attacks outside Northern Ireland

England

1970s

The Provisional IRA was chiefly active in Northern Ireland, but from the early 1970s, it also took its bombing campaign to England. At a meeting of the Provisional IRA Army Council in June 1972, Seán Mac Stíofáin proposed bombing targets in England to "take the heat off Belfast and Derry". However, the Army Council did not consent to a bombing campaign in England until early 1973, after talks with the British government the previous year had broken down. They believed that such bombing would help create a demand among the British public for their government to withdraw from Northern Ireland.

The first IRA team sent to England included eleven members of the Belfast Brigade, who hijacked four cars in Belfast, fitted them with explosives and drove them to London via Dublin and Liverpool. The team were reported to the London Metropolitan Police and all but one of them were arrested. Nevertheless, two of the bombs exploded, killing one man and injuring 180 people.

Thereafter, control over IRA bombings in England was given to Brian Keenan from Belfast. Keenan directed Peter McMullen, a former member of the British Parachute Regiment, to carry out a series of bombings in 1973. A bomb planted by McMullen exploded at a barracks in Yorkshire, injuring a female canteen worker. On 23 September 1973, a British soldier died of wounds six days after being injured while attempting to defuse an IRA bomb outside an office block in Birmingham.

Some of the most indiscriminate bombing attacks and killings of the IRA's bombing campaign were carried out by a unit of eight IRA members, which included the Balcombe Street Gang, who were sent to London in early 1974. They avoided contact with the Irish community there in order to remain inconspicuous and aimed to carry out one attack a week. In addition to bombings, they carried out several assassination attempts. Ross McWhirter, a right wing politician who had offered a £50,000 reward for information leading to the arrest of the bombers, was shot dead at his home. The group later made an assassination attempt on Edward Heath. They were eventually arrested after a machine-gun attack on an exclusive restaurant on Mayfair. Pursued by police, they took two hostages (a married couple) and barricaded themselves for six days in a flat on Balcombe Street before they surrendered, an incident known as the Balcombe Street Siege. They were sentenced to thirty years each for a total of six murders. At their trial, the group admitted responsibility for the Guildford pub bombings of 5 October 1974, which killed five people (four of whom were off-duty soldiers) and injured 54, as well as the bombing of a pub in Woolwich, which killed another two people and injured 28.

On 21 November 1974, two pubs were bombed in the Birmingham pub bombings (an act widely attributed to the IRA, but not claimed by them), which killed 21 civilians and injured 162. An inadequate warning was given for one bomb and no warning for the other. There were no military targets associated with either of the pubs. The Guildford Four and Maguire Seven, and the Birmingham Six, were imprisoned for the Guildford and Birmingham bombings, respectively, but each group protested their innocence. They were eventually exonerated and released after serving lengthy prison sentences, even though the Balcombe Street group had admitted responsibility long before.

1980s

After the campaign of the mid-1970s, the IRA did not undertake a major bombing campaign again in England until the late 1980s and early 1990s. However, throughout the intervening period, they did carry out a number of high-profile bombing attacks in England.

In October 1981 the IRA carried out the Chelsea Barracks bombing, the nail bomb was aimed at soldiers returning to Chelsea Barracks, but the blast killed two civilians passing by, 40 people were injured in the attack including 23 British soldiers. The same month a British bomb disposal expert Kenneth Robert Howorth, was killed trying to defuse an IRA bomb on Oxford Street, London.

In 1982 the Hyde Park and Regent's Park bombings killed 11 soldiers and wounded some 50 soldiers and civilians at a British Army ceremonial parade at Hyde Park, and a British Army band performance in Regent's Park in London.

In 1984, in the Brighton hotel bombing, the IRA tried to assassinate British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher and her cabinet. She survived, but five people including Sir Anthony Berry, a Conservative Party Member of Parliament, Eric Taylor, the northwest party chairman, and three wives (Muriel Maclean, Jeanne Shattock, and Roberta Wakeham) of party officials were killed. Margaret Tebbit, wife of Norman Tebbit, was left permanently disabled.

In 1985 the IRA planned a sustained bombing campaign in London and English seaside resorts including Bournemouth, Southend and Great Yarmouth. The IRA planned for bombs to explode on sixteen consecutive days beginning in July, excluding Sundays. As well as damaging the tourist industry, the IRA hoped to take advantage of police resources being stretched and launch an assassination campaign against political and military targets including General Frank Kitson. Patrick Magee, who was wanted in connection with the Brighton hotel bombing after his palm print was found on the hotel register, was under police surveillance, with police hoping he would lead them to other IRA members. He met with an IRA member at Carlisle railway station, and they were followed to Glasgow, where they were arrested on 24 June 1985 at a safe house along with three other people, including Martina Anderson and Gerry McDonnell, who had escaped from the Maze Prison in 1983. On 11 June 1986 they were sentenced for conspiring to cause explosions and received life sentences, Magee was also convicted of the Brighton hotel bombing and received a life sentence with a minimum recommended sentence of 35 years.

On several more occasions, the Provisional IRA attacked British troops stationed in England, the most lethal of which was the Deal barracks bombing, in which 11 Royal Marines Band Service bandsmen were killed in 1989.

Republicans argued that these bombings "concentrated minds" in the British government far more than the violence in Northern Ireland. The IRA made a point of only striking at targets in England (not Scotland or Wales), although they once planted a small bomb on an oil terminal in the Shetland Isles in May 1981 on the same day that Queen Elizabeth II was attending a nearby function to mark the opening of the terminal. The bomb detonated, damaging a boiler but no one was injured and the ceremony continued. During the IRA's 25-year campaign in England, 115 deaths and 2,134 injuries were reported, from a total of almost 500 incidents.

Early 1990s

In the early 1990s the IRA intensified the bombing campaign in England, planting 15 bombs in 1990, 36 in 1991, and 57 in 1992. In February 1991 three mortar rounds were fired at the British Prime minister's office in Downing Street in London during a Cabinet meeting, which was a propaganda boost for the IRA.

During this period, the IRA also launched a highly damaging economic bombing campaign in English cities, particularly London, which caused a huge amount of physical and economic damage to property. Among their targets were the City of London, Bishopsgate and Baltic Exchange in London, with the Bishopsgate bombing causing damage initially estimated at £1 billion and the Baltic Exchange bombing £800 million of damage. A particularly notorious bombing was the Warrington bomb attack in 1993, which killed two young children, Tim Parry and Johnathan Ball. In early March 1994, there were three mortar attacks on Heathrow Airport in London, which forced the authorities to shut it down.

It has been argued that this bombing campaign convinced the British government (who had hoped to contain the conflict to Northern Ireland with its Ulsterisation policy) to negotiate with Sinn Féin after the IRA ceasefires of August 1994 and July 1997.

Elsewhere

The Provisional IRA also carried out attacks in other countries such as West Germany, Belgium, and the Netherlands, where British soldiers were based. Between 1979 and 1990, eight soldiers and six civilians died in these attacks, including the British Ambassador to the Netherlands Sir Richard Sykes and his valet, Karel Straub. In May 1988 the IRA killed three RAF men & injured three others in two separate attacks in the Netherlands. On one occasion, the IRA shot dead two Australian tourists in the Netherlands, claiming its members mistook them for off-duty British soldiers. On another occasion an IRA gunman shot dead Heidi Hazell, a German woman, as she sat alone in her car. She was parked near a British Army married quarter in Unna. They claimed she had been shot "in the belief that she was a member of the British Army garrison at Dortmund". Her husband was a British Army staff sergeant. Hans Engelhard, West Germany's justice minister called it "the insane act of a blind fanatic."

The IRA also sent members on arms importation, logistical support and intelligence operations at different times to continental Europe, Canada, the United States, Australia, Africa, Western Asia and Latin America. On at least one occasion IRA members traveled to Colombia.

Irish arms

Main article: Provisional IRA in the Republic of Ireland
Gelignite was a common explosive obtained by the IRA in the Republic of Ireland for use in Northern Ireland. For example, it was behind the 48,000lbs of explosives detonated in Northern Ireland in the first six months of 1973 alone.

In the early 1970s, the IRA gained control of a majority of the stockpiled weaponry still held from previous IRA campaigns. The stockpiles consisted mostly of pre-World War II small firearms from British and Irish armories ranging from Lee–Enfield, plus Bren light machine guns (LMG), a Thompson submachine gun (SMG), and Webley revolvers from British and Irish armories. In May 1970, Irish politicians Charles Haughey, Neil Blaney, and John Kelly, Irish Army Captain James Kelly, and Belgian businessman Albert Luykx were acquitted during the Arms Crisis of smuggling weapons to the IRA during the beginning of the conflict.

The primary and prominent source of arms in the Republic of Ireland for the IRA was explosives. Mines, quarries, farms, and construction sites were where the explosive, gelignite, as well as detonators and safe fuses located. Stratton Mills, MP for Belfast North, said that "there is virtually a gelignite trail across the border", comparing it with the famous Ho Chi Minh trail during the Vietnam War. Mills stated that:

ome 60 percent of the gelignite used in Northern Ireland has come from Southern Ireland, and the security authorities believe that the figure might well be higher than that because of the difficulty of definite identification in all cases. In Northern Ireland steps are taken to control the use and distribution of gelignite. Certain steps have been taken recently in the South, but there is a great need for much tighter measures.

After the Irish government began cracking down on commercial explosives, IRA engineers began moving "to develop alternative supplies of explosives" in the Republic of what the media termed "bomb factories", the source for the vast majority of the explosions in the north and against England for the remainder of the conflict. By spring 1972, they successfully manufactured quantities of two types of homemade explosives (HMEs), using mostly commercially available fertilizers and ANFO (a mixture of ammonium nitrate and fuel oil). The British Army estimated by the summer of that year, 90% of the bombings involving HMEs originated from the South. These earliest crude devices were unreliable and many IRA volunteers were killed due to premature explosions. As a result, the IRA centralised manufacture of the chief components, and IRA engineers were required to have the training necessary to complete the devices properly. The Hibernia Magazine reported that over 48,000 lbs of explosives had been detonated in Northern Ireland in the first six months of 1973, most of them IRA bombs.

In the 1980s, HMEs of Southern Irish origin continued to flow into Northern Ireland and England. In 1981, a British Home Office report said that 88.7% of explosives used in Northern Ireland originated from the Republic of Ireland: 88% from fertilizers and 0.7% from commercial explosives. As with the previous decade, the IRA relied mostly on fertilizer bombs for the vast majority of its bombing campaign throughout the conflict.

Libyan arms

An AK-47 rifle, over 1,000 of which were smuggled by Muammar Gaddafi to the Provisional IRA in the 1980s

In the 1980s, the Provisional IRA received large quantities of modern weaponry, including heavy weaponry such as heavy machine guns, over 1,000 rifles, several hundred handguns, rocket-propelled grenades, flamethrowers, surface-to-air missiles and the plastic explosive Semtex, from the Libyan regime of Muammar Gaddafi. There were four successful shipments between 1985 and 1986; three of these trips were carried out by the trawler Casamara and a fourth by the oil-rig replenisher Villa. All told, they brought in 110 tons of weaponry. A fifth arms cargo on board the coaster Eksund was intercepted by the French Navy in 1987. This brought the Provisional IRA's new capability to the attention of the authorities on either side of the Irish border. Five men were captured with the boat; three IRA members, including Gabriel Cleary, received jail sentences. Reportedly, Gaddafi donated enough weapons to arm the equivalent of two infantry battalions.

The IRA therefore came to be very well armed in the latter part of the Troubles. Most of the losses it inflicted on the British Army, however, occurred in the early 1970s, although they continued to cause substantial casualties to the British military, the RUC and UDR throughout the conflict. According to author Ed Moloney, the IRA Army Council had plans for a dramatic escalation of the conflict in the late 1980s, which they likened to the Tet Offensive of the Vietnam War, with the aid of the arms obtained from Libya.

The plan had been to take and hold several areas along the border, forcing the British Army to either withdraw from border areas or use maximum force to re-take them – thus escalating the conflict beyond the point which the Provisional IRA thought that British public opinion would accept. However, this offensive failed to materialise. IRA sources quoted in the Secret History of the IRA by Ed Moloney say that the interception of the Eksund shipment eliminated the element of surprise which they had hoped to have for this offensive. The role of informers within the IRA seems to have also played a role in the failure of the "Tet Offensive" to get off the ground. Nevertheless, the shipments which got through enabled the IRA to begin a vigorous campaign in the 1980s. The success of the arms smuggling was a defeat for British intelligence and marked a turning point in the conflict in Northern Ireland. The Libyan weaponry allowed the IRA to wage war indefinitely.

Samples of Semtex-H and C4 plastic explosives

In the event, much of the IRA's new heavy weaponry, for instance the surface-to-air missiles (SAMs) and flamethrowers, were never, or very rarely, used. The only recorded use of flamethrowers took place in the attack in Derryard, County Fermanagh, when two soldiers were killed when a permanent checkpoint manned by the King's Own Scottish Borderers was the target of a multiple weapons attack on 13 December 1989. The SAMs turned out to be out of date models, unable to shoot down British helicopters equipped with anti-missile technology. The missiles were eventually rendered useless when their batteries wore out. The Semtex plastic explosive proved the most valuable addition to the IRA's armoury.

As it was, the numbers of members of the British and Northern Ireland military personnel killed by the IRA increased in the years 1988–1990, from 12 in 1986 to 39 in 1988, but dropped to 27 in 1989 and decreased again to 18 in 1990. The death toll by 1991 was similar to that of the mid-1980s, with 14 fatalities. 32 members of the RUC were killed in the same period.

By the late 1980s, the Provisional IRA, in the judgement of journalist and author Brendan O'Brien, "could not be beaten, it could be contained". Politically and militarily, that was the most significant factor. By the late 1980s and early 1990s, roughly nine out of every ten IRA attacks were aborted or failed to cause casualties. Republican sources such as Mitchel McLaughlin and Danny Morrison argued that by the early 1990s, the Provisional IRA could not attain their objectives by purely military means.

A campaign to pressure Libya to pay compensation to IRA victims was derailed by the Libyan Crisis.

Incidents with British special forces

The IRA suffered some heavy losses at the hands of British special forces like the Special Air Service (SAS), the heaviest being the killing of eight IRA members in the Loughgall Ambush in 1987, as they attempted to destroy the Loughgall RUC station. The East Tyrone Brigade was hit particularly hard by British killings of their members in this period, losing 28 members killed by British forces in the period 1987–1992, out of 53 dead in the whole conflict. In many of these cases, Provisional IRA members were killed after being ambushed by British special forces. Some authors alleged that this amounted to a campaign of assassination on the part of state forces (see shoot-to-kill policy in Northern Ireland).

Another high-profile incident took place in Gibraltar in March 1988, when three unarmed IRA members were shot dead by an SAS unit while scouting out a bombing target (see Operation Flavius). The subsequent funerals of these IRA members in Belfast were attacked by loyalist gunman Michael Stone. At a funeral of one of Stone's victims, two plainsclothes British Army corporals were abducted, beaten and shot dead by the IRA after driving into the funeral procession (see Corporals killings).

There were, however, a number of incidents in which undercover operations ended in failure, such as a shoot-out at the village of Cappagh on 24 March 1990, where plain-clothes members of the security forces were ambushed by an IRA unit, and, just two month later, Operation Conservation, which was thwarted by the IRA's South Armagh Brigade, A British soldier in an undercover position was shot dead in a counter-ambush. On 2 May 1980, Joe Doherty, Angelo Fusco, Paul Magee and another IRA member were arrested after being cornered by the SAS in a house in Belfast. SAS commander Captain Herbert Westmacott was hit by fire from an M60 machine gun and killed instantly.

Loyalists and the IRA – killing and reprisals

The IRA and Sinn Féin suffered from a campaign of assassination launched against their members by loyalist paramilitaries from the late 1980s. These attacks killed about 12 IRA and 15 Sinn Féin members between 1987 and 1994. This tactic was unusual as the vast majority of loyalist victims were Catholic civilians. In addition, loyalists killed family members of known republicans; John (or Jack) McKearney and his nephew, Kevin McKearney, and Kevin's parents-in-law, Charles and Teresa Fox (whose son, Peter, was an IRA volunteer) were all targeted by the UVF. Two of Kevin's brothers, Pádraig and Sean, were IRA volunteers killed during the Troubles. According to recently released documents, British military intelligence stated in a secret 1973 draft report that within the Ulster Defence Regiment (UDR) it was likely there were soldiers who were also loyalist paramilitaries. Despite knowing this, the British Government stepped up the role of the UDR in "maintaining order" within Northern Ireland. British Government documents released on 3 May 2006 show that overlapping membership between British Army units like the UDR and loyalist paramilitary groups was a wider problem than a "few bad apples" as was often claimed.

The documents include a draft report titled "Subversion in the UDR" which detailed the problem. In 1973; an estimated 5–15% of UDR soldiers were directly linked to loyalist paramilitary groups, it was believed that the "best single source of weapons, and the only significant source of modern weapons, for Protestant extremist groups was the UDR", it was feared UDR troops were loyal to "Ulster" alone rather than to "Her Majesty's Government", the British Government knew that UDR weapons were being used in the assassination and attempted assassination of Roman Catholic civilians by loyalist paramilitaries.

Loyalists were aided in this campaign by elements of the security forces, including the British Army and RUC Special Branch (see Stevens Report). Loyalist sources have since confirmed that they received intelligence files on republicans from members of British Army and police intelligence in this period. A British Army agent within the Ulster Defence Association (UDA), Brian Nelson, was convicted in 1992 of the killings of Catholic civilians. It was later revealed that Nelson, while working as a British Army agent, was also involved in the importation of arms for loyalists from South Africa in 1988.

In 1993, for the first time since the 1960s, loyalist paramilitaries killed two more people than republican paramilitaries. In 1994, loyalists killed eleven more people than republicans, and in 1995, they killed twelve more. In the latter case (1995 period), the Provisional IRA 1994's cease-fire was still in place.

In response to these attacks, the IRA began a reactive assassination campaign against leading members of the UDA and UVF. By the late 1980s, the IRA Army Council would not sanction attacks on Protestant areas with a high likelihood of civilian casualties, but only on named, identified loyalist targets. The main reason for this was the negative impact of attacks on civilians on the republican movement's electoral appeal. The IRA issued a statement in 1986 saying: "At no time will we involve ourselves in the execution of ordinary Protestants, but at all times we reserve the right to take armed action against those who attempt to terrorise or intimidate our people into accepting British/unionist rule". Gerry Adams stressed his party's point of view in 1989; "Sinn Féin does not condone the deaths of people who are non-combatants".

To maximise the impact of the tactic, the IRA targeted senior loyalist paramilitary figures. Among the leading loyalists killed were John McMichael, Joe Bratty, Raymond Elder and Ray Smallwoods of the UDA and John Bingham and Robert Seymour of the UVF. Mechanic Leslie Dallas, shot dead by the IRA along with two elderly Protestants in 1989, was also claimed by the IRA to be a member of the UVF but his family and the UVF denied this. He is listed in the Sutton Index as a civilian.

One IRA bomb on 23 October 1993 caused civilian casualties, when a bomb was planted at a Shankill Road fish shop. The bomb was intended to kill the entire senior leadership of the UDA, including Johnny Adair, who sometimes met in a room above the shop. Instead, the bomb killed eight Protestant civilians, a low-level UDA member and also one of the bombers, Thomas Begley, when the device exploded prematurely. In addition, 58 more people were injured. This provoked a series of retaliatory killings by the UVF and UDA of Catholic civilians with no political or paramilitary connections. According to the Conflict Archive on the Internet (CAIN), University of Ulster statistics, the Provisional IRA killed 30 loyalist paramilitaries in total. Lost Lives gives a figure of 28 out of a total number of loyalists killed in the Troubles of 126.

According to The Irish War by Tony Geraghty, the IRA killed 45 loyalists. These killings intensified just before the IRA ceasefire of 1994, with UDA members Ray Smallwoods being killed on 11 July, Joe Bratty & Raymond Elder on 31 July & a UVF commander Billy Wright had been seriously injured by the IRA in June. As well as these IRA killings the other Republican paramilitary the Irish National Liberation Army killed three UVF men during the same period including UVF Belfast commander Trevor King. The loyalist groups called their ceasefire six weeks after the IRA ceasefire of that year and they argued that it was the killing of Catholic civilians and republicans that had forced the IRA ceasefire by placing intolerable pressure on nationalists, a view echoed by former deputy leader of the Ulster Unionist Party, John Taylor, Baron Kilclooney.

Campaign up to and after the 1994 ceasefire

See also: Northern Ireland peace process

Early 1990s

The improvised mortar was the weapon of choice for the Provisional IRA during the 1990s.

By the early 1990s, although the death toll had dropped significantly from the worst years of the 1970s, the IRA campaign continued to severely disrupt normal life in Northern Ireland.

  • In 1987, the IRA carried out almost 300 shooting and bombing attacks, killing 31 RUC, UDR and British Army personnel and 20 civilians, while injuring 100 security forces and 150 civilians.
  • In 1990, IRA attacks killed 30 soldiers and RUC members and injured 340.
  • In 1992, the figure for IRA attacks was 426.

The IRA was capable of carrying on with a significant level of violence for the foreseeable future. On the other hand, the goal of the British government in the 1980s was to destroy the IRA, rather than find a political solution. Moreover, in addition to those killed and injured, the conflict had a substantial economic cost. The UK had to devote an enormous budget to keep their security system in Northern Ireland running indefinitely.

From 1985 onward, the IRA carried out a five-year campaign against RUC and Army bases that resulted in 33 British security facilities destroyed and nearly a hundred seriously damaged. The attacks and bombings in the early 1990s forced the UK government to dismantle several bases and security posts, whose maintenance or reconstruction was not affordable. The presence of the British Army in the region increased from its lowest ebb of 9,000 men in 1985 to 10,500 by 1992 after an escalation of the IRA's mortar attacks.

In South Armagh, in contrast to other brigade areas, IRA activity increased in the early 1990s. Travelling by road in South Armagh became so dangerous for the British Army that by 1975 they began using helicopters to transport troops and supply its bases, a practice continued until the late 1990s. The IRA there shot down five helicopters (one in 1978, another one in 1988 and 1991 and two in 1994), and damaged at least another three in this period, using DShK heavy machine guns and improvised mortars. Another one was brought down in early 1990 in County Tyrone by the IRA's East Tyrone Brigade, wounding three crew members.

One of several methods the IRA used to counter British body armour was the use of high velocity Barrett Light 50 and Belgian FN sniper rifles, several of which the IRA imported from the USA. Two snipers teams of the South Armagh Brigade killed nine members of the security forces in this way. To avoid the jamming of wireless-triggered detonators, the organisation began to employ radar beacons to prime their explosive devices, improving dramatically the effectiveness of the attacks. By 1992, the use of long-range weapons like mortars and heavy machine guns by the IRA had forced the British Army to build its checkpoints one to five miles from the border in order to avoid attacks launched from the Republic.

Another IRA technique used on several occasions between October 1990 and late 1991 was the "proxy bomb", where a victim was kidnapped and forced to drive a car bomb to its target. In the first series of attacks in October 1990, all three victims were Catholic men employed by the security forces. Their families were held hostage to ensure the proxies did as they were directed. The first proxy, at Coshquin (near Derry), died, along with six soldiers. The second proxy, at Cloghoge (or Cloghogue; near Newry), escaped but a soldier was killed. The third incident, at Omagh, produced no casualties due to a faulty detonator. Proxy bomb attacks continued for months afterwards; very large bombs (8,000 lb (3,600 kg)) were used in two attacks in November 1990 and September 1991. The proxy-bomb tactic was dropped, reportedly due to the revulsion it caused among nationalists.

In the early 1990s the IRA intensified its campaign against commercial and economic targets in Northern Ireland. For example, in May 1993 over four days the IRA detonated car bombs in Belfast, Portadown, and Magherafelt, County Londonderry, causing millions of pounds worth of damage. On 1 January 1994, the IRA planted eleven incendiary devices in shops and other premises in the Greater Belfast area in a "firebomb blitz" that caused millions of pounds worth of damage. In 1991, the IRA used a total of 142 cassette-type incendiary devices against shops and warehouses in Northern Ireland.

The ceasefires

In August 1994, the Provisional IRA announced a "complete cessation of military operations". This was the culmination of several years of negotiations between the Republican leadership, led by Gerry Adams and Martin McGuinness, various figures in the local political parties, the Irish government and British government. It was informed by the view that neither the UK forces, nor the IRA could win the conflict and that greater progress towards Republican objectives might be achieved by negotiation.

The devastation on Corporation Street in Manchester after the IRA bombing of 1996

While many Provisional IRA volunteers were reportedly unhappy with the end of armed struggle short of the achievement of a united Ireland, the peace strategy has since resulted in substantial electoral and political gains for Sinn Féin, the movement's political wing. It may now be argued that the Sinn Féin political party has eclipsed the Provisional IRA as the most important part of the republican movement. The ceasefire of 1994 therefore, while not a definitive end to Provisional IRA operations, marked the effective end of its full scale armed campaign.

The Provisional IRA called off its 1994 ceasefire on 9 February 1996 because of its dissatisfaction with the state of negotiations. They signaled the end of the ceasefire by detonating a truck bomb at Canary Wharf in London, which caused the deaths of two civilians and massive damage to property. In the summer of 1996, another truck bomb devastated Manchester city centre. However, the Provisional IRA campaign after the ceasefire was suspended during this period and never reached the intensity of previous years. In total, the IRA killed 2 British soldiers, 2 RUC officers, 2 British civilians, and 1 Garda in 1996–1997 according to the CAIN project. They resumed their ceasefire on 19 July 1997.

These Provisional IRA military activities of 1996–97 were widely believed to have been used to gain leverage in negotiations with the British government during the period. Whereas in 1994–95, the British Conservative Party government had refused to enter public talks with Sinn Féin until the IRA had given up its weapons, the Labour Party government in power by 1997 was prepared to include Sinn Féin in peace talks before IRA decommissioning. This precondition was officially dropped in June 1997.

Another widespread interpretation of the temporary breakdown in the first IRA ceasefire is that the leadership of Gerry Adams and Martin McGuinness tolerated a limited return to violence in order to avoid a split between hardliners and moderates in the IRA Army Council. Nevertheless, they emphasized in every public statement since the fall of 1996 the need for a second truce. Once they had won over or removed the militarists from the council, they re-instated the ceasefire.

Casualties

According to the Conflict Archive on the Internet (CAIN), a research project at the University of Ulster, the IRA was responsible for 1,705 deaths, about 48% of the total conflict deaths. Of that figure:

Another detailed study, Lost Lives, states the Provisional IRA was responsible for the deaths of 1,781 people up to 2004. It says that, of this figure:

  • 944 (53%) were members of the British security forces, including: 638 British military (including the UDR), 273 Royal Ulster Constabulary (including RUC reserve), 23 Northern Ireland Prison Service officers, five British police officers and five former British soldiers.
  • 644 (36%) were civilians.
  • 163 (9%) were Republican paramilitary members (including IRA members, most caused their own deaths when bombs they were transporting exploded prematurely).
  • 28 (1.5%) were loyalist paramilitary members.
  • 7 (0.3%) were members of the Irish security forces (6 Gardaí and one Irish Army).

Lost Lives states that 294 Provisional IRA members died in the Troubles. The IRA lost 276 members during the Troubles according to the CAIN figures. In addition, a number of Sinn Féin activists or councillors were killed, some of whom were also IRA members. An Phoblacht gives a figure of 341 IRA and Sinn Féin members killed in the Troubles, indicating between 50 and 60 Sinn Féin deaths if the IRA deaths are subtracted.

About 120 Provisional IRA members caused their own deaths, almost all when they were killed by their own explosives in premature bombing accidents – 103 deaths according to CAIN, 105 according to an RUC report of 1993. Nine IRA members died on hunger strike. Lost Lives gives a figure of 163 killings of republican paramilitary members (this includes bombing accidents and feuds with republicans from other organisations). Of the remaining 200 or so IRA dead, around 150 were killed by the British Army, with the remainder killed by loyalist paramilitaries, the RUC and the UDR.

Far more common than the killing of IRA volunteers however, was their imprisonment. Journalists Eamonn Mallie and Patrick Bishop estimate in The Provisional IRA (1988), that between 8–10,000 Provisional IRA members were, up until that point, imprisoned during the course of the conflict, a number they also give as the total number of IRA members during the Troubles. The total number of Provisional IRA members imprisoned must be higher, once the figures from 1988 onwards are included.

Assessments

IRA poster

British Army official report

An internal British Army document released under the Freedom of Information Act 2000 in 2007 stated an expert opinion that the British Army had failed to defeat the IRA by force of arms but also claims to have "shown the IRA that it could not achieve its ends through violence". The report examined 37 years of British troop deployment and was compiled following a six-month study by a team of three officers carried out in early 2006 for General Sir Mike Jackson, the British Army's Chief of the General Staff. The military assessment describes the IRA as "professional, dedicated, highly skilled and resilient".

The paper divides the IRA activity and tactics in two main periods: The "insurgency" phase (1971–1972), and the "terrorist" phase (1972–1997). The British Army claims to have curbed the IRA insurgency by 1972, after Operation Motorman, but IRA members fled to the nearby Republic of Ireland safe from British capture where they continued to carry out cross-border attacks into Northern Ireland with weapons made in the South or sourced overseas. As a result, the IRA remerged as a cell-structured group. The report also asserts that the government efforts by the 1980s were aimed to destroy the IRA, rather than negotiate a political solution, and that the British campaign produced no final victory "in any recognisable way". One of the conclusions from the paper reveals the failure of the British Army to engage the IRA at strategic level and the lack of a single campaign authority and plan.

Other analyses

Some authors, including Brendan O'Brien, Patrick McCarthy, Peter Taylor, Tom Hayden, Fergus Finlay and Timothy J. White, also concluded that, unlike previous IRA campaigns, the Provisionals had not been defeated but had arrived at the conclusion of a bloody stalemate in which neither side could destroy the other. According to O'Brien, the IRA "could end its armed campaign from a avowed position of strength, discipline and military capacity. They had not been defeated." Political analysts Brian Barton and Patrick Roche maintain that while the IRA, although undefeated, fell short of their ultimate goal of a united Ireland, the IRA campaign was eventually legitimised by the peace process and the Good Friday Agreement.

Other activities

Apart from its armed campaign, the Provisional IRA was also involved in many other activities, including "policing" of nationalist communities, robberies and kidnapping for the purposes of raising funds, fund raising in other countries, involvement in community events and parades, and intelligence gathering. The Independent Monitoring Commission (IMC), a body supervising the ceasefire and activities of paramilitary groups in Northern Ireland has judged the Provisional IRA to have ceased all of the above activities. The IMC issues a bi-yearly public report on the activities of all paramilitary groups operating and known of in Northern Ireland.

Paramilitary policing

See also: Paramilitary punishment attacks in Northern Ireland

Activities deemed punishable by the Provisional IRA (often described as "anti-social activities"), included collaboration with the RUC and/or British Army i.e. informing, drug dealing, criminal activity outside of the Provisional IRA, joy riding, spreading of dissent, and any other activities which might either damage the Provisional IRA or interests of the community as defined by the Provisional IRA. For the most part, the list of activities deemed punishable by the Provisional IRA coincided with those deemed punishable by the community at large. Punishments ranged in severity from verbal warnings to physical attacks, through to wounding by gunshot, progressing to forcing the suspect to flee Ireland for their lives and death. This process was often described as "summary justice" by the political establishment and media. In the majority of cases the Provisional IRA claimed that there had been a full investigation and that guilt had been established before their sentence was carried out. The process, which was widely known of in nationalist communities, worked on a sliding scale of severity – in the case of a petty thief a warning to stop may initially be issued, escalating to a physical attack known as a "punishment beating" usually with baseball bats or similar tools. If the behaviour continued then a more serious physical assault known as a "knee-capping" (gunshot wounds to limbs, hands, joints) would occur. The final level would be a threat of death against the suspect if they did not leave the island of Ireland, and if this order was not adhered to, death. The IMC has noted that the Provisional IRA has repeatedly come under pressure from nationalist community members since its cessation of violence to resume such policing but has resisted such requests.

Suspected informers and those who cooperated with the RUC and British Army (sometimes referred to as collaborators) were generally dealt with by a counter-intelligence unit titled the Internal Security Unit (ISU), sometimes referred to as the "nutting squad". Typically, the ISU would abduct and interrogate suspects frequently using torture to extract confessions. The interrogations would often be recorded and played back to senior Provisional IRA members at a secretly held board of inquiry. This board would then pronounce judgement, usually a fatal gunshot to the head. A judgement as severe as death was frequently made public in the form of a communique released to the media but in some cases, for reasons of political expediency, the Provisional IRA did not announce responsibility. The bodies of killed informers were usually found shot dead by roadsides in isolated areas. On occasion recordings of their confessions were released to the media.

This style of summary justice, often meted out based on evidence of dubious quality, by untrained investigators and self-appointed judges frequently led to what the Provisional IRA has acknowledged as horrific mistakes. As of February 2007, the IMC has stated that the Provisional IRA has issued "instructions to members not to use physical force" and noted what it describes as "the leadership's maintenance of a firm stance against the involvement of members in criminality." Where criminality has been engaged in by Provisional IRA, members of the IMC note that "we were satisfied these individual activities were contrary to the express injunctions of the leadership".

Internal republican feuds

The Provisional IRA has also targeted other republican paramilitary groups and dissenting members of the Provisional IRA who refuse or disregard orders. In 1972, 1975 and 1977, the Official IRA and Provisional IRA engaged in attacks on the opposing organisation leaving several dead on either side. In 1992, The Provisional IRA attacked and eliminated the Irish People's Liberation Organisation (IPLO), which was widely perceived as being involved in drug dealing and other criminality in West Belfast. One IPLO member was killed, several knee-capped and more ordered to disband. The last known example of this practise as of February 2007 took place in 2000 and involved the shooting dead of a Real Irish Republican Army member for his opposition to the Provisionals' ceasefire.

Activities in Republic of Ireland

Further information: Provisional IRA in the Republic of Ireland

Although the Provisional IRA's General Order No.8 forbids military action "against 26 County forces under any circumstances whatsoever", members of the Garda Síochána (the Republic of Ireland's police force) have also been killed, including Detective Garda Jerry McCabe. McCabe was killed by machine-gun fire as he sat in his patrol car in Adare County Limerick during the escort of a post office delivery in 1996. Sinn Féin has called for the release of his killers under the terms of the Good Friday Agreement. In total, the Provisional IRA killed six Gardaí and one Irish Army soldier, mostly during robberies.

Robberies and criminal enterprise

See also: Paramilitary finances in the Troubles

The Provisional IRA has carried out numerous bank and post office robberies across Ireland throughout its existence. An RUC estimate from 1982 to 1983, puts the amount stolen in such raids by the Provisional IRA at around £700,000 (sterling). Also in the 1980s, the Provisional IRA were involved in the kidnapping and ransom of businessmen Gaelen Weston, Ben Dunne and Don Tidey. Activities such as these were linked to the IRA's fund-raising. Gardaí estimate that the Provisional IRA got up to £1.5 million from these activities. Activities include smuggling, sale of stolen items and contraband including cigarettes, red diesel, extortion, protection rackets, and money laundering. Most recently, the Provisional IRA have been blamed for carrying out the Northern Bank Robbery in December 2004, although no proof was ever forwarded and this crime remains unsolved. The IMC note that in their view the Provisional IRA has not had any "organisational involvement in robbery or other such organised crime".

Thomas Murphy, a prominent Provisional IRA leader from South Armagh, has been the subject of repeated rumours of organised crime including diesel smuggling and tax evasion. In 2006 both Irish and British security forces mounted a major joint raid on his farm, and in December 2015 he was arrested and put on trial in Dublin's Special Criminal Court charged with tax evasion. He was found guilty of tax evasion on 17 December 2015.

See also

References

  1. Taylor, Peter,Behind the mask: The IRA and Sinn Féin, Chapter 21: Stalemate, pp. 246–261.
  2. "Army paper says IRA not defeated". BBC News. 6 July 2007. Retrieved 13 March 2014.
  3. ^ Mallie Bishop, p. 12
  4. ^ "Sutton Index of Deaths: Crosstabulations (two-way tables)". Conflict Archive on the Internet (CAIN). Retrieved 1 March 2016. (choose "organization" and "status" as the variables)
  5. ^ Lost Lives (2004. Ed's David McKitrick, Seamus Kelters, Brian Feeney, Chris Thornton, David McVea, page 1536)
  6. ^ Moloney, p. 472
  7. War in the Shadows: The Guerrilla in History Volume 2 by Robert B. Asprey (ISBN 978-0-595-22594-1), page 1125
  8. Global Geopolitics: A Critical Introduction by Klaus Dodds (ISBN 978-0-273-68609-5), page 205
  9. British Civilization by John Oakland (ISBN 978-0-415-26150-0), page 108
  10. Northern Ireland by Jonathan Tonge (ISBN 978-0-7456-3141-7), page 2
  11. White, Robert W. (May 1989). "From Peaceful Protest to Guerrilla War: Micromobilization of the Provisional Irish Republican Army". American Journal of Sociology. 94 (6): 1284. doi:10.1086/229155 – via JSTOR.
  12. Sutton Index of Deaths Archived 22 April 2016 at the Wayback Machine – 1970
  13. Mallie, Bishop, The Provisional IRA p157–158
  14. English, Richard (2003). Armed Struggle: The History of the IRA. Pan Books. pp. 134–35. ISBN 0-330-49388-4.
  15. Taylor, pp. 56–59
  16. Taylor, Peter (1997). Provos The IRA & Sinn Féin. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 72. ISBN 0-7475-3818-2.
  17. Taylor, p. 88
  18. Taylor, p. 79
  19. The IRA, 1968–2000 By J. Bowyer Bell
  20. Gearóid Ó Faoleán (23 April 2019). A Broad Church: The Provisional IRA in the Republic of Ireland, 1969–1980. Merrion Press. p. 172. ISBN 978-1-7853-7245-2.
  21. FitzGerald, Garret (2006). "The 1974–5 Threat of a British Withdrawal from Northern Ireland" (PDF). Irish Studies in International Affairs. 17: 141–50. doi:10.3318/ISIA.2006.17.1.141. Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 September 2007.
  22. Sanders, Andrew (2012). Inside The IRA: Dissident Republicans and the War For Legitimacy. Edinburgh University Press. pp. 52–53. ISBN 978-0-7486-4696-8.
  23. "CAIN: Sutton Index of Deaths". Cain.ulst.ac.uk. Retrieved 23 December 2015.
  24. O'Brien, p. 135
  25. O'Brien, p. 119
  26. ^ Operation Banner – An analysis of military operations in Northern Ireland, Chapter I, page 2 "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 November 2011. Retrieved 9 November 2009.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  27. McStiofáin, Seán (1975). Revolutionary in Ireland. G. Cremonesi. p. 243.
  28. Bowyer Bell, J. (1990). IRA Tactics and Targets: An Analysis of Tactical Aspects of the Armed Struggle 1969–1989. Poolbeg Press. p. 87. ISBN 1-85371-086-5.
  29. Mallie Bishop, p. 215, p. 337
  30. Harnden, Toby (1999). Bandit Country. Hodder & Stoughton. p. 19. ISBN 0-340-71736-X.
  31. "Sinn Féin: Welcome for end of British Army occupation in South Armagh". 27 September 2007. Archived from the original on 27 September 2007.
  32. Taylor, p. 139
  33. Moloney, p. 116
  34. Moloney, p. 117
  35. Taylor, Peter (2001). Brits. Bloomsbury Publishing. pp. 184–85. ISBN 0-7475-5806-X.
  36. Taylor, pp. 232–233
  37. Taylor, p. 156
  38. David McKittrick; David McVea (18 March 2002). Making Sense of the Troubles: The Story of the Conflict in Northern Ireland. New Amsterdam Books. p. 118. ISBN 9781461663331. Retrieved 23 December 2015.
  39. Brian Feeney (28 April 2014). A Short History of the Troubles. The O'Brien Press. ISBN 9781847176585. Retrieved 23 December 2015.
  40. ^ Bishop, Mallie, p321
  41. English, Armed Struggle, p191
  42. Mallie, Bishop, p320-321
  43. Anne McHardy. "Lord Mason of Barnsley obituary | Politics". The Guardian. Retrieved 23 December 2015.
  44. Lucas, Ian (23 April 2015). "Rest in peace, Roy Mason, and good riddance". Newstatesman.com. Retrieved 23 December 2015.
  45. Moloney, pp. 149–162
  46. Urban, Mark (1993). Big Boys' Rules: SAS and the Secret Struggle Against the IRA. Faber and Faber. pp. 206–08. ISBN 0-571-16809-4.
  47. Malcolm Sutton. "An Index of Deaths from the Conflict in Ireland". CAIN. Retrieved 9 July 2010.
  48. English, p. 172
  49. ^ English, p. 173
  50. Mallie Bishop, p. 390
  51. "University of Ulster News Release – Border Killings – Liberation Struggle or Ethnic Cleansing?". News.ulster.ac.uk. 29 May 2006. Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 23 December 2015.
  52. Bowden, Brett and Davis, Michael T. (2008). Terror: From Tyrannicide to Terrorism. University of Queensland Press, p. 239; ISBN 0-7022-3599-7
  53. Kowalski, Rachel Caroline. "The role of sectarianism in the Provisional IRA campaign, 1969–1997." Terrorism and political violence 30, no. 4 (2018): 658–683.
  54. Lewis, Matthew, and Shaun McDaid. "Bosnia on the border? Republican Violence in Northern Ireland during the 1920s and 1970s." Terrorism and political violence 29, no. 4 (2017): 635–655.
  55. Shanahan, Timothy. Provisional Irish Republican Army and the Morality of Terrorism. Edinburgh University Press, 2008, pp.32–39
  56. Bruce, Steve. The Edge of the Union: The Ulster Loyalist Political Vision. Oxford University Press, UK, 1994, p.124-126
  57. Dingley, James. "A reply to white's non‐sectarian thesis of PIRA targeting." (1998): 106–117.
  58. ^ Leahy, Thomas (2020). The Intelligence War against the IRA. Cambridge University Press. p. 213. ISBN 978-1108487504.
  59. Kevin Boyle and Tom Hadden, Northern Ireland: The Choice, Harmondsworth:UK, Penguin Books, 1994, p. 7.
  60. Bowden and Davis, p. 239
  61. Patterson, Henry (2010). "Sectarianism Revisited: The Provisional IRA Campaign in a Border Region of Northern Ireland". Terrorism and Political Violence. 22 (3): 337–356. doi:10.1080/09546551003659335. S2CID 145671577.
  62. McKearney, Tommy (2011). The Provisional IRA: From Insurrection to Parliament. Pluto Press. pp. 139–140. ISBN 978-0-7453-3074-7.
  63. Taylor, p. 337
  64. "Remembering Teebane". BBC.co.uk. 25 October 2001. Retrieved 21 March 2007.
  65. Mallie Bishop, p. 250
  66. English, pp. 163–64
  67. Mallie Bishop, p. 253
  68. Mallie Bishop, p. 255
  69. "CAIN: Sutton Index of Deaths". Cain.ulst.ac.uk. Retrieved 23 December 2015.
  70. The Enemy Within by Martin Dillon (ISBN 0-385-40506-5), page 141
  71. Bowyer Bell, page 424
  72. The Road To Balcombe Street: The IRA Reign of Terror in London by Steven Moysey (ISBN 978-0-7890-2913-3), pages 116–17
  73. Mallie Bishop, p. 257
  74. "A Chronology of the Conflict – 1974". CAIN. Retrieved 22 March 2007.
  75. English, p. 169
  76. "The IRA campaigns in England". BBC. 4 March 2001. Retrieved 25 March 2007.
  77. "LONDON BOMB KILLS O NE, HURTS UP TO 50". The New York Times. 11 October 1981.
  78. "CAIN: Sutton Index of Deaths". cain.ulster.ac.uk.
  79. "Britain: Once More, Terror in the Streets". Time. 9 November 1981. Retrieved 26 September 2022.
  80. Donald MacLeod (7 July 2005). "London: past terror attacks". The Guardian. Retrieved 22 March 2007.
  81. "1982: IRA bombs cause carnage in London". BBC. 20 July 1982. Retrieved 22 March 2007.
  82. John Mullin (23 June 1999). "Freedom for the Brighton bomber". The Guardian. London, UK. Retrieved 25 March 2007.
  83. David McKittrick (28 August 2000). "I regret the deaths but military campaign was necessary, says the Brighton bomber". The Independent. London, UK. Archived from the original on 14 July 2012. Retrieved 25 March 2007.
  84. ^ Dillon, Martin (1996). 25 Years of Terror: The IRA's war against the British. Bantam Books. pp. 220–223. ISBN 0-553-40773-2.
  85. ^ McGladdery, Gary (2006). The Provisional IRA in England: The Bombing Campaign 1973–1997. Irish Academic Press. pp. 134–135. ISBN 9780716533733.
  86. Mallie, Eamonn; Bishop, Patrick (1988). The Provisional IRA. Corgi Books. pp. 427–430. ISBN 0-7475-3818-2.
  87. Taylor, Peter (2001). Brits. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 265. ISBN 978-0-7475-5806-4.
  88. Michael Rhodes (12 June 1986). "Five guilty of IRA plot". Yorkshire Post. Archived from the original on 12 July 2019. Retrieved 21 August 2020.
  89. "1989: Ten dead in Kent barracks bomb". BBC. 22 September 1989. Retrieved 21 March 2007.
  90. Bowyer Bell, J. (2000). The IRA, 1968–2000: An Analysis of a Secret Army. Routledge. p. 243. ISBN 978-0714681191.
  91. "Queen enjoys robust health". BBC. 13 January 2003. Retrieved 21 March 2007.
  92. "The IRA campaigns in England". BBC. 4 March 2001. Retrieved 12 January 2009.
  93. English, Richard (2006). Irish Freedom. Pan Books. p. 375. ISBN 978-0-330-42759-3.
  94. White, Robert (2017). Out of the Ashes: An Oral History of the Provisional Irish Republican Movement. Merrion Press. p. 264. ISBN 9781785370939.
  95. Cook, Stephen & Michael White (8 February 1991). "IRA shells the War Cabinet". The Guardian. London, UK. Retrieved 26 March 2007.
  96. Dillon, Martin (1996). 25 Years of Terror: The IRA's war against the British. Bantam Books. p. 292. ISBN 0-553-40773-2.
  97. Provos The IRA & Sinn Féin, p. 327.
  98. "A Draft Chronology of the Conflict – 1994". CAIN.ulst.ac.uk. Retrieved 26 March 2007.
  99. Leahy, Thomas (2020). The Intelligence War against the IRA. Cambridge University Press. pp. 195–196. ISBN 978-1108487504.
  100. "1987: 30 hurt as car bomb hits Army base". BBC. 23 March 1987. Retrieved 25 March 2007.
  101. "CAIN: Sutton Index of Deaths – menu page". Cain.ulst.ac.uk. Retrieved 23 December 2015.
  102. Melaugh, Dr Martin. "CAIN: Chronology of the Conflict 1988". cain.ulst.ac.uk.
  103. Chris Summers (20 July 2004). "From occupiers and protectors to guests". BBC.co.uk. Retrieved 21 March 2007.
  104. Thatcher, Margaret (1997). The collected speeches of Margaret Thatcher. HarperCollins Publishers, p. 357; ISBN 0060187344
  105. FERDINAND PROTZMAN (9 September 1989). "I.R.A. Gunman Kills Wife of a Briton". The New York Times. West Germany; Ireland, Northern. Retrieved 23 December 2015.
  106. The Daily Telegraph, 14 Aug 2001, "Three Suspected IRA Men Arrested In Colombia" Archived 28 February 2016 at the Wayback Machine; retrieved 3 March 2013.
  107. "Republic of Ireland played integral role in supporting IRA, says historian", News Letter, 5 April 2019
  108. David Hambling (10 December 2008). "Inside the Longest Insurgency's Lethal Arsenal". Wired.
  109. John Manley (6 April 2019). "Support in Republic during Troubles 'key for IRA', book claims". The Irish News.
  110. Reducing the Threat of Improvised Explosive Device Attacks by Restricting Access to Explosive Precursor Chemicals (Report). National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. 2018. p. 27.
  111. "In 1971, the UK government closed 100 Irish border crossings and cratered them with explosives". City Monitor. 22 October 2018.
  112. Gearóid Ó Faoleán (23 April 2019). A Broad Church: The Provisional IRA in the Republic of Ireland, 1969–1980. Merrion Press. p. 54. ISBN 978-1-7853-7245-2.
  113. "ADJOURNMENT (CHRISTMAS)". Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). 15 December 1971.
  114. Gearóid Ó Faoleán (23 April 2019). A Broad Church: The Provisional IRA in the Republic of Ireland, 1969–1980. Merrion Press. p. 59. ISBN 978-1-7853-7245-2.
  115. Gearóid Ó Faoleán (8 March 2023). A Broad Church 2: The Provisional IRA in the Republic of Ireland, 1980–1989. Merrion Press. pp. 167–168. ISBN 9-7817-8537-4456.
  116. Harnden, pp. 239–45
  117. Geraghty, p. 182
  118. O'Brien, p. 137
  119. "Provisional IRA's history of violence". BBC. 1 September 1998. Retrieved 9 July 2010.
  120. ^ Moloney, pp. 18–23
  121. Henry McDonald. "Gadaffi sued by 160 victims of IRA". The Guardian. Retrieved 23 December 2015.
  122. Moloney, pages 20 to 22
  123. Welch, Robert and Stewart, Bruce (1996). The Oxford companion to Irish literature. Oxford University Press, p. 396; ISBN 0-19-866158-4
  124. Geraghty, p. 183
  125. Taylor, p. 323
  126. Anne Palmer (14 December 2004). "Tribute Paid To Soldiers Killed in IRA Attack". The News Letter. Archived from the original on 25 December 2004. Retrieved 30 March 2007.
  127. Oppenheimer, A.R. (2008). IRA: The Bombs and the Bullets: A History of Deadly Ingenuity. Irish Academic Press. p. 295. ISBN 978-0716528951.
  128. Taylor, pp. 277–278
  129. Moloney, p. 569
  130. Moloney, p. 23
  131. "CAIN: Sutton Index of Deaths – menu page". Cain.ulst.ac.uk. Retrieved 23 December 2015.
  132. "CAIN: Sutton Index of Deaths – crosstabulations". Cain.ulst.ac.uk. Retrieved 23 December 2015.
  133. O'Brien, p. 158. 'Sickening' is derived from a speech Martin McGuinness made in 1988, when he said, "I believe the...Irish Republican Army has got the capability, the ways and the means of bringing about the defeat of the British forces, both militarily and politically in the Six Counties. But in saying that I am not saying that the IRA have the ability to drive every last British soldier out of Belfast, Derry...or anywhere else. But they have the ability to sicken the British forces of occupation", cited in O'Brien, p. 152
  134. ^ O'Brien, p. 157
  135. Interviewer "Did you actually say that to the IRA-that they weren't going to drive the British out of Ireland?" McLaughlin "I probably didn't use that language but certainly I used that rationale on more than one occasion, yes." Taylor, pp. 365–66
  136. Clarke, Liam (14 November 2012). "Libya unlikely to pay compensation to victims of IRA". BelfastTelegraph.co.uk. Retrieved 23 December 2015.
  137. "Site of IRA's biggest loss blossoms as best-kept village | Crime | News". The Independent. Retrieved 23 December 2015.
  138. Moloney, p. 319
  139. Human Rights in Northern Ireland. Human Rights Watch. 1991. p. 48. ISBN 9780300056235. Retrieved 23 December 2015.
  140. Moloney, p. 330
  141. O'Brien, p. 164
  142. "Cappagh (Incident) (Hansard, 3 May 1990)". Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). 3 May 1990. Retrieved 23 December 2015.
  143. Bowyer Bell, J. (1997). The Secret Army: The IRA. Transaction Publishers. p. 488. ISBN 978-1-56000-901-6.
  144. Murray, Raymond (2004). The SAS in Ireland. Mercier Press. p. 256. ISBN 1-85635-437-7.
  145. Geraghty, p. 320
  146. "CAIN: Violence – 'Mapping Troubles-Related Deaths in Northern Ireland 1969–1994', Tables". Cain.ulst.ac.uk. Retrieved 23 December 2015.
  147. "McKearney murders – RUC 'did not do enough to stop shootings'". BBC News. 27 September 2012. Retrieved 23 December 2015.
  148. Taylor, Peter (2000). Loyalists. p. 213. Bloomsbury; ISBN 0747545197.
  149. "Subversion in the UDR". CAIN. Retrieved 14 June 2014.
  150. O'Brien, p. 231
  151. English, p. 246
  152. ^ Moloney, p. 321
  153. O'Brien, p. 314
  154. Moloney, p. 314
  155. "CAIN: Sutton Index of Deaths". Cain.ulst.ac.uk. Retrieved 23 December 2015.
  156. Coogan, p. 437
  157. Moloney, p. 415
  158. "A View North Collusion? Maybe, but at a low level". Archived from the original on 28 September 2007.
  159. ^ Lost Lives, p. 1536
  160. ^ Lost Lives, p. 1531
  161. Geraghty, p. 235
  162. Taylor, Peter (2000). Loyalists. p.231-232, p.234. Bloomsbury; ISBN 0747545197.
  163. O'Brien, p. 203
  164. Sutton index. See the following link for the 1990 fatalities and produce tabulation by introducing Status and Year:
  165. O'Brien, p. 168
  166. "Operation Banner: An analysis of military operations in Northern Ireland. Prepared under the direction of the Chief of the General Staff, Ministry of Defence (United Kingdom), July 2006, Chapter II, page 15: "The British Government's main military objective in the 1980s was the destruction of PIRA, rather than resolving the conflict."" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 September 2007.
  167. Kelly, Stephen (2016). A Failed Political Entity: Charles Haughey and the Northern Ireland Question, 1945–1992. Merrion Press. ISBN 978-1-78537-102-8.
  168. "Time to Stop Using the I-Word". Fortnight. 302–312: 28. 1992.
  169. Toolis, Kevin (1997). Rebel Hearts: Journeys Within the IRA's Soul. St. Martin's Griffin. p. 56. ISBN 0-312-15632-4.
  170. "These statistics do not trivialize the seriousness of the problem, but instead indicate that terrorist violence was contained at manageable levels. What these statistics fail to indicate was the expense of the conflict. Perpetually deploying large, well-trained security forces was very expensive in simple monetary terms." Goodspeed, Michael (2002). When reason fails: portraits of armies at war: America, Britain, Israel, and the future. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 61. ISBN 0-275-97378-6.
  171. Toolis, Kevin (1995). Rebel Hearts: journeys within the IRA's soul. Picador, p. 53; ISBN 0-330-34243-6
  172. The list included:
  173. "The Duke of Edinburghs Royal Regiment (Berkshire and Wiltshire) :: The Wardrobe". www.thewardrobe.org.uk. Retrieved 10 August 2020.
  174. Ripley, Tim and Chappel, Mike: Security forces in Northern Ireland (1969–92). Osprey, 1993, p. 20. ISBN 1-85532-278-1
  175. Harnden, p. 19
  176. Dewar, Michael (1985). The British Army in Northern Ireland. Arms and Armour Press, p. 156; ISBN 0853687161
  177. Taylor, Steven (2018). Air War Northern Ireland: Britain's Air Arms and the 'Bandit Country' of South Armagh, Operation Banner 1969–2007. Pen and Sword. ISBN 978-1-5267-2155-6.
  178. Harnden, pp. 361, 398
  179. Taylor, Steven (2018). Air War Northern Ireland: Britain's Air Arms and the 'Bandit Country' of South Armagh, Operation Banner 1969–2007. Pen and Sword Books. ISBN 978-1526721549.
  180. "Copter forced down in Ulster" The New York Times, 12 February 1990
  181. Harnden, p. 265.
  182. Geraghty. p. 209.
  183. "Official Describes British–Ireland Border As '300-Mile Difficulty'". Waycross Journal-Herald. Associated Press. Archived from the original on 11 July 2012. Retrieved 1 February 2011 – via Google News Archive Search.
  184. Irish Independent, 30 November 1990.
  185. Stone, David (1 September 1998). Cold War Warriors: The Story of the Duke of Edinburgh's Royal Regiment (Berkshire and Wiltshire), 1959–1994. Pen and Sword. ISBN 978-1-4738-1325-0.
  186. Fortnight Magazine, No. 291, p. 20-22. Fortnight Publications, 1991.
  187. English, pp. 347–50
  188. Fortnight Magazine, Issue 319–323, p. 33. Fortnight Publications, 1993.
  189. Los Angeles Times (2 January 1994). "IRA Firebombs Hit 11 Belfast-Area Stores". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2 September 2020.
  190. Sunday Life, 26 January 1992.
  191. Moloney, p. 459
  192. "IRA declares ceasefire". BBC Online. 19 July 1997. Retrieved 18 July 2011.
  193. O'Brien, pp. 370–371
  194. Maillot Agnès (2005). New Sinn Féin: Irish republicanism in the twenty-first century. Routledge, p. 32; ISBN 0-415-32197-2
  195. "Sutton Index of Deaths: Organisation responsible for the death". Conflict Archive on the Internet (CAIN). Retrieved 1 March 2016.
  196. O'Brien, p. 26
  197. Lost Lives, p. 1479
  198. Jackson, Mike (2006). Operation Banner: An Analysis of Military Operations in Northern Ireland Archived 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine. MoD, Army Code 71842
  199. "UK | Northern Ireland | Army paper says IRA not defeated". BBC News. 6 July 2007. Retrieved 23 December 2015.
  200. Chapter I, page 3
  201. ^ Operation Banner, Chapter I, page 2
  202. Richardson, Louise; Art, Robert (2007). Democracy and Counterterrorism: Lessons from the Past. United States Institute of Peace. p. 74. ISBN 9-7819-2922-3947. The nearby Republic of Ireland not only provided legal and illegal venues for raising funds and a place to train and organize but also allowed IRA members to flee across the border, where British security forces could not follow.
  203. Operation Banner, Chapter II, page 15: "The British Government's main military objective in the 1980s was the destruction of PIRA, rather than resolving the conflict."
  204. Operation Banner, Chapter VIII, p. 15
  205. Operation Banner, Chapter VIII, p. 4
  206. Taylor (1997), p. 381
  207. McCarthy, Patrick (2002). Language, Politics and Writing: Stolentelling in Western Europe. Palgrave Macmillan, p. 120; ISBN 1403960240
  208. Hayden, Tom (2003). Irish on the Inside: In Search of the Soul of Irish America. Verso, p. 179; ISBN 1859844774
  209. Hayden, Tom (28 February 2011). "The Fate of Revolutionaries: Northern Ireland". The Peace and Justice Resource Center. Retrieved 11 January 2015.
  210. Maillot, Agnès (2005). New Sinn Fein: Irish Republicanism in the Twenty-First Century. Routledge. p. 183. ISBN 1134355009.
  211. White, Timothy J. (2017). Theories of International Relations and Northern Ireland. Oxford University Press. p. 22. ISBN 978-1526113955.
  212. O'Brien, p. 322
  213. Barton, Brian; Roche, Patrick (2009). The Northern Ireland Question: The Peace Process and the Belfast Agreement. Springer. p. 266. ISBN 978-0230594807.
  214. "Independent Monitoring Commission". 2 February 2007. Archived from the original on 2 February 2007. Retrieved 18 November 2022.
  215. ^ "Thirteenth report of the Independent Monitoring Commission" (PDF). Independent Monitoring Commission. 30 January 2007. Retrieved 19 January 2020.
  216. "Deaths since ceasefire". British Irish Rights Watch. Archived from the original on 12 March 2005. Retrieved 28 July 2020.
  217. ^ O'Brien, p. 121
  218. Colm Keena (18 December 2015). "'Slab' Murphy and gang 'betrayed' by prosecution, says source". Irish Times. Retrieved 23 December 2015.
  219. "Thomas 'Slab' Murphy guilty of tax evasion after 32-day trial". Irish Times. 17 December 2015. Retrieved 23 December 2015.

Sources

Provisional Irish Republican Army
General
Organisation
Actions
1970–1979
1980–1989
1990–1991
1992–1997
Personalities
(Volunteers)
Espionage and
Supergrasses
Associates
Derivatives
Prominent
killings
The Troubles
Participants
State security forces
United Kingdom
Ireland
Irish republican paramilitaries
Vigilantes
Ulster loyalist paramilitaries
Vigilantes
Major events
Political parties
Irish republican parties
Ulster loyalist parties
Other parties

Category

Categories: