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Irish Vote
Could Lead to Terror
Martin Sieff
The
triumph of Protestant and Catholic hard-line political
parties in Northern Ireland's Assembly elections last
week is a stunning setback for President Bush's war on
terror. And it is likely to lead to the rapid emergence
of a new terrorist threat from a direction he never
expected.
For the
past three years, Bush has treated the Northern Irish
peace process with a neglect that was supposed to be
benign but has proven anything but. Former State
Department Policy Planning Chief Richard Haass was the
only Bush Administration senior official who made a
serious effort to maintain U.S. involvement in bringing
both sides together and forcing new compromises. But he
received no support from the White House and eventually
resigned in frustration.
Now,
Rev. Ian Paisley's hard-line Democratic Unionist Party,
after 32 years of trying, has finally displaced the old
Ulster Unionist Party as the main political body in
Northern Ireland's 900,000-strong Protestant community
with 30 seats compared to the UUP's 27 in the 108-seat
Northern Ireland Assembly.
But the
hard-liners' dominance is far greater than that, as 13
of the UUP's 27 Assembly members also oppose
power-sharing with Sinn Fein, the political wing of the
Irish Republican Army. They are likely to force the
toppling of their leader David Trimble, one of the
architects of the 1998 Good Friday peace accord, and
make common cause with
Paisley's
DUP on key issues.
British
Prime Minister Tony Blair has made clear Britain is
prepared to continue its Direct Rule over
Northern Ireland.
But Paisley and the DUP have already said they will not
be satisfied with this and will present it as an
anti-democratic plot by the British and Irish
governments to prevent the democratic majority asserting
its will.
The
object of their wrath on the streets of Belfast is very
likely to be the controversial new Police Service of
Northern Ireland, which Blair reshaped to replace the
old Royal Ulster Constabulary. This means that for the
first time in the 35-year history of the current
Northern Irish conflict, the majority Protestants are
likely to clash directly with the British Army rather
than enjoy its full support against the terrorism and
guerrilla attacks of the Catholic nationalist IRA.
If that
happens, the British in Northern Ireland could find
themselves, for the first time, facing escalating
clashes that rapidly escalate into full-scale guerrilla
attacks from the hard-line Protestant paramilitary
organizations. Ironically, these received an enormous
boost thanks to the peace process as hundreds of their
most experienced veteran gunmen and extremist leaders
were released on to the streets as part of it.
Then
Northern Ireland could rapidly become ungovernable,
forcing the British government to consider a unilateral
withdrawal. That has certainly been the goal for many
years of some hard-line Protestant or Loyalist
extremists. Up until now, they have always been a
marginalized minority within their own community. But
the DUP's hard-line victory last week is likely to
greatly magnify their influence.
Veteran
Irish historian and pundit Conor Cruise O'Brien
predicted many years ago that if this state of affairs
ever happened, it could rapidly spark a full-scale civil
war far worse than anything Ireland has seen in its
modern history. In the past, Protestant paramilitary
terrorism, while often extremely vicious, was targeted
on the minority Catholic community. The British Army,
regular police and domestic British targets were spared.
But if the Protestant majority becomes increasingly
alienated from Britain as Direct Rule continues, British
soldiers and even civilians on the British Mainland may
become their main victims. Even American civilians or
officials in Ireland could become targets as Protestant
hard-liners have always interpreted U.S. involvement in
Northern Irish peace efforts as cynical maneuvers to
undermine their independence and security.
Bush
Administration hard-liners have long demonized the IRA
and opposed making any concessions to it or to its
political wing, Sinn Fein. But none of them ever
anticipated the eruption of a new wave of terrorism from
Northern Ireland's Protestant majority. Yet since the
1998 peace accord was signed, Protestant paramilitaries
have killed far more people than their Catholic
counterparts.
Over
the past half decade,
Northern Ireland's
peace process has been a beacon of hope that intractable
ethnic conflicts around the world could be peacefully
resolved. But if the Protestant community rapidly
radicalizes following last week's vote, it could swiftly
become a symbol of despair instead.
Martin
Sieff is chief news analyst for United Press
International. This piece is used with the permission
of UPI.
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