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Northern Ireland: More evidence of MI5s network of informers
and provocateurs in the IRA
By Steve James
13 March 2008
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According to the Observer, shortly before taking him
into protective custody, it was MI5 itself that warned
Roy McShane that he was in danger of being exposed as another
British spy close to leadership of the Irish Republican Army (IRA).
MI5 apparently knew of an internal IRA investigation that had
revealed McShanes affiliations. How it knew the article
did not say, but McShanes exposure in February this year
sheds further light on the criminal and murderous operation mounted
by British intelligence against the IRA and Sinn Fein.
Alongside the more well-known British state collusion with
loyalist paramilitary gangs, state infiltration and manipulation
of the IRA, particularly its security unit, was a vital component
of the dirty war in Northern Ireland.
McShane was one of a pool of drivers for Sinn Fein President
Gerry Adams, from 1994 onwards. He was apparently always vociferous
in denouncing informers and would inevitably have been privy to
many crucial conversations. The drivers pool was headed
by a close ally of Adams, Terence Clarke. In 1998 the Labour governments
then Northern Ireland Secretary, Mo Mowlam, authorised the bugging
of a car used to transport Irelands present Deputy First
Minister Martin McGuinness to and from negotiations to set up
devolved government in Northern Ireland.
Greater significance should be attached to McShanes previous
role. He would appear to have links to the IRAs former internal
security unit, the so-called nutting squad. It emerged
in 2003 that this internal security unit, established by Adams
in the 1970s in response to a number of security disasters, was
rapidly subverted by the British Army. The security units
deputy leader, Freddie Scappaticci, was exposed as the British
agent Stakeknife.
Scappaticci was the focal point of an entire operation run
by the British Armys Force Research Unit (FRU). McShane,
according to the Irish News, used to work with Scappaticci
in the nutting squad, only being moved to the drivers
pool when the IRA leadership came to have concerns about the security
unit itself.
According to British Irish Rights Watch, an NGO, the IRA reportedly
killed around 50 individuals accused of being informers. Of these,
any number of those targeted by the nutting squad
could have been entirely innocent and the victims of real informers
such as Scappatichi and McShane, because they either had suspicions
about the units real agenda or were becoming an obstacle
to the FRU operation.
When British agent Kevin Fulton came under suspicion within
the IRA, he considered his life was about to be sacrificed in
order to protect Stakeknife. Fulton bailed out and
has since sought to embarrass his former handlers into providing
him with a decent pension.
The Stakeknife operation also coincided with some
of the IRAs worst operational disasters, including the Loughall
and Gibraltar massacres where IRA members were killed by British
forces through what appeared to be serious security breaches.
At the time Stakeknife was exposed, British Irish
Rights Watch made the point that the operation around Scappaticci,
run with Whitehall approval, had also provided the British government
with accusations that one leading high-profile republican
had shot an informer in the head. The operation undoubtedly provided
a rich supply of valuable compromising information to the British
government and intelligence services with which to apply pressure
to the Sinn Fein leadership.
The Stakeknife revelations were followed in 2006
by the exposure of Denis Donaldson, the former head of the IRAs
international relations. As an agent, Donaldson, who was said
to have distanced himself from his security handlers, was assassinated
later in 2006 in an isolated border cottage. No one has ever been
charged with his murder.
There were perhaps hundreds of state informers in both republican
and loyalist paramilitary groups. Many of these people are undoubtedly
still operating, in the pay of MI5 or the Police Service of Northern
Ireland (PSNI). Many more will have been stood down, hoping that
details of their role will remain buried.
On January 21, the inquiry into the killing of Billy Wright,
reputed loyalist killer and opponent of power-sharing with Sinn
Fein, issued a 75-page statement accusing the PSNI of refusing
to provide it with relevant information on Wrights killing.
Many documents had been destroyed or gone missing, including thousands
of security files relating to prisoners held in the Maze prison,
where Wright was murdered. However, the inquiry stated that it
was in possession of a file making clear that it was a Special
Branch informer amongst the Maze prisoners who smuggled a gun
into the hands of Wrights killers, Irish National Liberation
Army members John Glennon and Christopher McWilliams. The PSNI
says this informer, whose name has not been released, is now dead.
A number of very serious questions arise.
It now seems that for a long time, counted in decades, the
British government not only had a window into the IRAs internal
discussion and organisation but the means to pull levers and eliminate
opponents within it.
At least from the date of Scappaticci offering his services
to MI5, reportedly in 1978, and the consolidation of the security
unit around him, it is difficult to see how any major IRA operation
could have taken place without some level of British knowledge,
conceivably before and certainly after the event. The atmosphere
of internal distrust over that period is well documented in journalist
Ed Moloneys A Secret History of the IRA.
It is also clear that the military disasters suffered served
to strengthen the influence of the leadership around Adams and
McGuinness, who were advocating a constitutional settlement with
the British government.
However, Britains spies would not have simply been used
to thwart IRA operations. They would have colluded with many of
them and allowed them to be successful if this was considered
to be politically expedient.
The conflicts worst single atrocity, the Omagh bombing
in 1998, left 29 dead and 220 injured. The bombs maker is
alleged to have been an intelligence asset along with the man
who stole the car used for the attack. Omaghallegedly carried
out by the hard-line splinter group, the Real IRA, in an effort
to sabotage the Good Friday Agreement establishing the Northern
Ireland Assemblyhad the opposite effect.
The horrific deaths of both Protestants and Catholics prompted
even greater popular support for an end to the conflict and Sinn
Feins first-ever condemnation of republican violence. The
INLA soon declared its own ceasefire, and the Real IRA suspended
its operations. It subsequently issued a statement claiming that
its own involvement was minimal and that the bombing
was the work of two MI5 agentsan allegation lent credence
by BBCs Panorama, which insisted that police
on both sides of the Irish border had knowledge of the bomb plot.
How many similar attacks were allowed to go ahead? What was
known beforehand of Bloody Friday, July 21, 1972, when 22 bombs
were exploded in central Belfast killing nine bystanders; or of
the series of pub bombings in the UK in the 1970s; the 1982 Hyde
Park and Regents Park bombs; the 1987 Remembrance Day attack
on Enniskillen; or the 1990s London and Manchester bombings? How
many of the countless sectarian killings in Northern Ireland were
carried out with at least some level of insight, foreknowledge
or even approval from the British authorities?
IRA bombings were seized on by successive British governments
and the military to legitimise all manner of undemocratic measuresthe
maintenance of a large standing army in Northern Ireland and the
creation of a special apparatus skilled in surveillance, infiltration,
entrapment, assassination, and psychological operations, as well
as to manipulate public opinion and justify repressive and undemocratic
measures in the name of combating terrorism.
Just as fundamentally, terrorist outrages and killings served
to deepen the sectarian divisions in the working class in Northern
Ireland. Belfast is still divided along religious lines by concrete
walls, a precursor to the policy now pursued by the UK and the
United States in Iraq. Northern Ireland has thus provided British
imperialism with a vital training ground in which to hone its
counterinsurgency techniques.
Notwithstanding Sinn Feins intermittent left rhetoric,
the IRA complemented the loyalist gangs and death squads in dividing
and terrorising ordinary working people. For decades, the IRA
recruited on the most minimal basisfamily ties, opposition
to British rule, and the willingness to shoot soldiers. It is
this that allowed the likes of British Spy Kevin Fulton, having
served in the British Army, to infiltrate the organisation after
mouthing a few nationalist phrases and playing on his penchant
for guns and trouble.
As to the scale of such infiltration, some indication has been
provided by material shown to members of the Consultative Group
on the Past (CGP), established in 2007 by then Northern Ireland
Secretary Peter Hain and claiming to be dedicated to building
a shared future that is not overshadowed by the events of the
past.
The group, led by Lord Robin Eames, a former bishop and primate
with the Church of Ireland, and Denis Bradley, a former priest,
journalist and member of the Northern Ireland policing board,
was reportedly shown 10 filing cabinets containing records relating
to agents and informers in both loyalist and republican groups.
Three related to informers within the IRA.
See Also:
Omagh bombing trial: Hoey
cleared, but little else clarified
[19 January 2008]
Northern Ireland:
Apparent suicide and destruction of records mark opening of Billy
Wright inquiry
[26 June 2007]
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