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<text id=94TT0539>
<title>
Mar. 28, 1994: The Irish Puzzle
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Mar. 28, 1994 Doomed:The Regal Tiger and Extinction
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
NORTHERN IRELAND, Page 34
The Irish Puzzle
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Gerry Adams talks peace, but does Sinn Fein's silver tongue
really mean it?
</p>
<p>By Barry Hillenbrand/Belfast
</p>
<p> Explaining away violence is a Gerry Adams specialty. Whenever
Irish Republican Army bombs dismember innocent victims, it is
Adams, president of the I.R.A.'s political wing, Sinn Fein,
who sits down before the microphones and attempts to transform
atrocities into regrettable but necessary collateral damage
in a just war against British oppression. The calm, reasonable,
well-spoken Adams is good at the job.
</p>
<p> Last week he was called to an expository task more complicated
than usual. In three separate attacks, the I.R.A. had dropped
12 mortar shells into London's Heathrow Airport. Puzzlingly,
none of them exploded. The only damage was to British nerves
as flights were canceled and police shut down terminals to conduct
security sweeps.
</p>
<p> But the unexploded shells did shatter a fragile optimism in
Britain and Ireland that serious negotiations to settle the
25-year conflict in Northern Ireland were about to begin. Major
players in the Roman Catholic-vs.-Protestant struggle had been
talking peace since last December, when British Prime Minister
John Major and his Irish counterpart Albert Reynolds issued
their Downing Street Declaration affirming that both countries
would abide by any settlement democratically agreed upon by
the people of Ireland, north and south.
</p>
<p> The main sticking point was the I.R.A. Would it now agree to
lay down its guns and talk? The British government admitted
it had been holding secret talks with I.R.A. and Sinn Fein representatives
prior to the declaration. Transcripts of notes from the meetings
suggested a new willingness to deal with long-festering differences.
All that was needed to open full-scale peace talks was a statement
from the I.R.A. denouncing violence -- which has not arrived.
</p>
<p> Did the Heathrow mortar shells ruin those hopes? Not at all,
says Adams. The shells came during a "stalemate" in the process,
and the attack might "have an accelerating effect upon the British
government." Sinn Fein and the I.R.A. still want what they call
"clarifications" from Britain before joining any talks. Until
that happens, says Adams, "every so often there will be something
spectacular to remind the world" that the conflict continues
to boil.
</p>
<p> As has happened so often in the past, Adams' measured words
somehow turned violence into a plea for peace. His emergence
as one of the key men to reckon with in Northern Ireland has
brought him a long way from the rough streets of Belfast, where
he began his activist career. Only two days before the attacks,
he was rambling through the streets of west Belfast in a cold
drizzle. He paused in front of a rubble heap, which for him
was a monument to a heroic political struggle, not just the
remnants of a high-rise public housing project. "These new houses
are an improvement," he said, pointing to the neat brick homes
surrounding the demolition site. His voice was mellow as he
recounted his long battle with British authorities to get the
dreary apartment blocks torn down and replaced by more livable
bungalows.
</p>
<p> Sectarian bombings and assassinations have so dominated the
news from Northern Ireland that it is easy to forget how the
current cycle of the Troubles began in 1969 as civil rights
protests over discrimination against Catholics in jobs, education
and housing. But Adams has not forgotten. These were the issues
that first drew him into the vortex of political battle.
</p>
<p> In Catholic west Belfast, Adams, 45, is a hero. But outside
those confines, his image is far more ambiguous. Is he an ardent
civil rights protester inspired by Martin Luther King? Or is
he just a third-generation nationalist bruiser following in
the footsteps of a father who was jailed by the British and
a grandfather who stood shoulder to shoulder with James Connolly?
Is he a peacemaker who has gradually pruned away the violent
rhetoric of his party to prepare the way for compromise and
reconciliation? Or is he a former -- even present -- I.R.A.
member who sits on the Army Council and coldly plans terrorist
attacks on civilian targets? Adams is, to one degree or another,
all these things. His power lies partly in this very lack of
clear definition: he is at once a mouthpiece for I.R.A. terror
and a moderate voice for peace.
</p>
<p> The leader of Sinn Fein came early to this dual role. In 1972,
as street battles between Catholic Republicans and Protestant
Unionists raged in Belfast, Adams was arrested by the British
army and interned without charge. "There is nothing like being
in an interrogation room to test your commitment," he says.
He became a prison leader, and at 23 he was plucked out of jail
with other I.R.A. veterans to negotiate a cease-fire in London.
The peace pact was short-lived, and soon Adams was back behind
bars, where he settled down to a "monastic regimen of studying,
research and writing." He came out of prison a skillful writer
with a sound intellectual foundation for his political beliefs.
</p>
<p> Back on the streets of Belfast, Adams turned his energies toward
revitalizing Sinn Fein. "He is a political genius," says Bernadette
Devlin McAliskey, a fiery Republican activist in the 1970s.
"He has great patience. I've seen him under pressure, and he
never loses his temper. He encourages debate and slowly builds
consensus so he can take the whole movement along."
</p>
<p> Adams gradually moved Sinn Fein into electoral politics. The
party won some local elections, and in 1983 Adams was elected
to Britain's House of Commons from the Belfast West constituency.
He refused to take up his seat, since it required him to pledge
allegiance to the Queen, but he relished the prestige of being
a British M.P. In 1992 Adams lost the seat and was bitterly
disappointed. "It was our own fault," he says. "We were complacent,
and I was skating around the country doing other work."
</p>
<p> While Adams gained a thin veneer of respectability from his
participation in electoral politics, he and his followers command
attention mainly because of their links to the I.R.A. Yet Adams
firmly denies being a member. "It's illegal," he says. "I could
get 10 years. But I am at pains not to distance myself from
them. Even if I did, no one will believe me, and besides, I
accept that I have a responsibility to the same constituency."
Catholics in Belfast stick together for protection and support;
Adams was formed by the ethos of a community under siege. At
least four of his brothers have served time in prison; he has
been shot and his home has been fire bombed.
</p>
<p> Sinn Fein, the I.R.A. and other Republican organizations constantly
bicker over goals and tactics, but when trouble strikes and
there are funerals to attend, the intertwining relationships
pull everyone together. Adams felt no compunction about attending
the funeral of I.R.A. member Thomas Begley, who died last October
when the bomb he was planting in a fishmonger's shop in a Protestant
neighborhood went off prematurely, killing nine men, women and
children besides himself. As is the custom at Irish funerals,
Adams "took a lift," shouldering the coffin for a short time
on the way to the cemetery. That picture stirred outrage in
Britain, where it was regarded as proof that Adams was an I.R.A.
boss. "It would have been seen as a cynical political maneuver
not to attend," he says. "I accept the criticism of the families
who were killed. I think the operation was totally wrong."
</p>
<p> In recent years Adams has gingerly modified his position on
violence. "I don't defend the idea of armed struggle," he says.
"I used to, but the situation has moved on. Our task is not
to defend armed struggle but to bring an end to all aspects
of struggle." He claims that if he moves too quickly toward
a peace compromise, some of those who live by the gun may split
off and take their weapons with them, as has frequently happened
in the past in the Irish Republican movement. "We are trying
to undo centuries of history here," he says. "We have to move
carefully and leave no one behind."
</p>
<p> The recurring question about this man is whether he is truly
leading the move toward peace. His rhetoric of moderation, which
so charmed Americans during a recent two-day visit to New York
City, shows a new adaptability. "I am prepared to compromise,
not only with the British but with the Unionists," says Adams.
"I want to see a unified Irish state and the British out, but
if it is going to take more years than I would like, then let's
be flexible about it."
</p>
<p> Such verbal flexibility has served him and his cause well. But
his efforts to make himself all things to all people leave many
wondering just where Gerry Adams really stands when it comes
to the hard job of making peace. His calculated ambiguity could
prove as damaging to hopes of progress as the mixed message
of the unexploded shells at Heathrow.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>