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<text id=94TT1194>
<title>
Sep. 05, 1994: Northern Ireland:Hope Amid the Rubble
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Sep. 05, 1994 Ready to Talk Now?:Castro
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
NORTHERN IRELAND, Page 50
Hope Amid the Rubble
</hdr>
<body>
<p> Rumors of a cease-fire raise expectations of a settlement that
will finally bring peace to Ulster
</p>
<p>By John F. Stacks/Belfast
</p>
<p> "Trust had gone out of the land," writes Irish novelist Edna
O'Brien, "and brother no longer gasped at the bloodshed of brother."
For the past 25 years, since the "troubles" began in the North,
sectarian killings bore bloody testimony to the truth of that
verdict. Now, following months of secret negotiations, there
appears a glimmer of hope that peace may not be far off.
</p>
<p> Within weeks, perhaps days, the Irish Republican Army is expected
to declare a cease-fire in its war to oust Britain from Northern
Ireland and unite the troubled island. Depending on the duration
and effectiveness of that armistice, Sinn Fein, the political
wing of the I.R.A., could be included in peace talks planned
by the British and Irish governments. Could the age that has
seen the end of the cold war, democracy in South Africa and
real progress toward peace in the Middle East also deliver a
solution to the Irish problem?
</p>
<p> Cynics who have seen I.R.A. cease-fires come and go will not
bet on it--even if the desire for peace is as strong as it
has ever been. Weary of the war and its drain on the exchequer,
the British government would welcome the chance to bring its
troops home from Northern Ireland, where the struggle in Ulster
is increasingly viewed with a sense of distance and disgust,
could do without the headache the confrontation presents. The
majority of people in Northern Ireland itself, be they Roman
Catholic or Protestant, would simply like to get on with their
lives. Even the I.R.A., it seems, is beginning to have second
thoughts about the likelihood of securing a united Ireland at
the point of a gun. Says Martin McGuiness, Sinn Fein's second
in command and reputedly part of the the seven-member group
that runs the I.R.A.: "This is a process that will lead to a
settlement."
</p>
<p> The groundwork has been done. A joint Anglo-Irish initiative
agreed upon last December provides that Britain and the Republic
of Ireland renounce any territorial claims to Ulster and that
some sort of self-government be instituted in its six counties.
Whether Ulster would eventually merge with the Republic or remain
separate would be left to a popular vote in the North sometime
in the future. Judging by opinion polls, the North would probably
remain separate for some time to come.
</p>
<p> The precondition laid down by London for a Sinn Fein presence
at the table is a renunciation of violence by the I.R.A. Official
sources in London, Dublin and Washington believe that the top
republican command, including Sinn Fein leader Gerry Adams,
is ready to move away from the armed struggle for both personal
and strategic reasons--even if some of the local commanders,
mostly from rural districts in the North, remain unconvinced
that it is time to lay down arms. As evidence of the I.R.A.'s
change of heart, sources familiar with the insular and suspicious
community of Catholic nationalists on Belfast's Falls Road cite
the fact that Sinn Fein has begun working the pubs to begin
explaining the need for some sort of cease-fire.
</p>
<p> In military terms the case for continuing armed struggle looks
shaky at best. After 25 years of killing and general mayhem,
the I.R.A. is far from military victory, and it must decide
whether to capitalize on the clear political progress it has
made in convincing Britain that it should pull out. Beyond that,
it looks as if Sinn Fein's leaders are losing their stomach
for bloodshed. Most are well into middle age and have never
known a normal life. "Maybe they want to save their own kids,"
speculates a White House official. In his spare time, Adams
has been writing fiction, and feelers have been put out to get
him a visa to visit the U.S. later this year for a book tour.
Public support for the I.R.A. in both the U.S. and Ireland has
diminished as well, due largely to revulsion at the killing.
U.S. government sources say contributions to the I.R.A. from
sympathetic American citizens are down to a mere $200,000 annually
from millions a few years ago.
</p>
<p> London is more eager than ever before to find a solution. Peacekeeping
and economic aid to Northern Ireland cost the treasury around
$4.5 billion a year, and I.R.A. bombing campaigns in Britain
proper have inflicted further billions in damages. Although
dependent for votes in Parliament on an alliance with Ulster
unionists, Prime Minister John Major's embattled Tory government
would almost certainly win wide popular support for a peace
settlement. Not so long ago, Britain could not have imagined
a united Ireland; now Sir Patrick Mayhew, the Secretary for
Northern Ireland, phrases the government's position more artfully:
"We will never sign up to a conclusion that necessarily leads
to a united Ireland."
</p>
<p> In years gone by, any suggestion that London might be willing
to wash its hands of Ulster would have been met with cries of
treason from Ulster loyalists. Today on both sides of the Catholic-Protestant
divide, people are accepting the idea that they cannot live
with the old dispensation. "This has been an intimate and personal
war," says Queens University's Paul Bew, "and that kind of violence
requires tremendous commitment."
</p>
<p> Still, in both communities there is a growing sense that the
blood feud--and its cycle of violence--must be broken if
anyone is to prosper. Across all segments of society, fatigue
with bombs and death and British army checkpoints and patrols
is providing momentum toward peace. Thanks in part to British
efforts, an expanding Catholic middle class sees peace and stability
as more important than union with the Republic. At the same
time, as the lure of Europe erodes the hold of the Roman Catholic
Church and the Republic gradually becomes more secular, it is
emerging as a less frightening place for Ulster Protestants.
</p>
<p> But what of the men of blood? Even if the I.R.A. is ready to
renounce violence, Protestant extremists may not follow suit.
For a long time loyalist violence came largely in reaction to
I.R.A. terror, but in recent years Protestant extremists have
notched up more killings than the I.R.A. Experts say that is
a reaction to fear that London may abandon the Protestants.
The positive side to such apprehension is that it may induce
moderate loyalists to strike a deal now, while Protestants still
account for 60% of Ulster's population. "We hear two arguments
from the I.R.A.," cracks hard-line unionist leader Peter Robinson.
"The first is `We will wear you down with violence.' The second
is `We will outbreed you.'"
</p>
<p> James Molyneaux, the moderate leader of the largest unionist
party, thinks modest changes in governance--more control to
Ulster citizens, for example, rather than direct rule from London--will isolate the radical fringe on both sides. He rests with
British assurances that Ulster's future will be decided democratically
by its people and cites polls showing no more than 15% to 20%
of the population favoring a united Ireland.
</p>
<p> That leaves the I.R.A. It is not clear how deep the divisions
are inside it and Sinn Fein, or whether a decision for peace
would lead to a split or, perhaps, reprisals. "You and I have
a meeting and disagree," says Irish Foreign Minister Dick Spring.
"We leave the room and go about our business. They disagree
and then worry about who's going to leave the room first." If
the I.R.A. can deliver a cease-fire and convince London and
Dublin that it sees violence as a thing of the past, then Ireland
may find itself united--not under one flag, but in the country's
desire for peace.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>