Brexit putting new strain on historic Irish agreement

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U.S. President Joe Biden is visiting Ireland this week to celebrate an anniversary that almost didn’t happen. April 10 saw the 25th anniversary of the “Good Friday Agreement” of 1998 that ended 30 years of killing in Northern Ireland, but it almost unravelled this year.

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Opinion

Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 11/04/2023 (935 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

U.S. President Joe Biden is visiting Ireland this week to celebrate an anniversary that almost didn’t happen. April 10 saw the 25th anniversary of the “Good Friday Agreement” of 1998 that ended 30 years of killing in Northern Ireland, but it almost unravelled this year.

The “Troubles” saw more than 3,000 people killed in assassinations, ambushes and bombings as the Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA) waged a guerilla and terrorist war against the Protestant majority in Northern Ireland and the British army, seeking to unite the province with the Catholic-majority Republic of Ireland to the south.

Eventually the two sides fought each other to a standstill, and a 1994 ceasefire was followed four years later by the Good Friday Agreement, an intricate structure of balanced concessions, compulsory power-sharing, and of course amnesties for many people who had done terrible things.

A motorist makes their way north along the old Belfast to Dublin road on the Irish border between Northern Ireland and the Irish Republic in 2018. (Peter Morrison / The Associated Press files)

A motorist makes their way north along the old Belfast to Dublin road on the Irish border between Northern Ireland and the Irish Republic in 2018. (Peter Morrison / The Associated Press files)

The Agreement was guaranteed by the United Kingdom, the Republic of Ireland, and the European Union to which both countries then belonged. And for the next quarter-century, Northern Ireland, with just under two million people, about half Protestant, half Catholic, enjoyed both peace and a flourishing economy.

The secret of its success was the ultra-open border it created between the British-ruled province and the Irish republic.

Border controls were being dismantled between many EU members, but even the signposts disappeared along the 500-kilometre frontier between Northern Ireland and the Republic. The only evidence that you had crossed from one country to another was that the speed signs changed from miles per hour to kilometres per hour.

Catholic “nationalists” dreaming of a united Ireland could live their lives as if it were true, and even claim Irish passports. Protestant “loyalists” could still fly the Union Jack and pretend that nothing important had changed.

The British army was withdrawn from Northern Ireland, a new non-sectarian police force was created, and most people lived more or less happily ever after. Unfortunately, this agreeable compromise depended critically on the invisibility of the “virtual” border, so when Brexit came along in 2016, the whole deal was undermined.

With nationalism resurgent everywhere and the British empire gone, an outbreak of English nationalism was quite likely, and the obvious target for it was the European Union. An ambitious journalist named Boris Johnson put himself at the head of the Brexit (“British exit” from the EU) cause, hoping it would make him prime minister — and lo! In 2019, it did.

Johnson neither knew nor cared anything about Irish politics and diplomacy, but some kind of real border with the Republic of Ireland had to reappear if the U.K. left the EU. He denied this fact as long as he could, but in 2019 he signed a “withdrawal agreement” that put the U.K.-EU border in the Irish Sea, between Northern Ireland and the rest of the U.K.

This infuriated the Northern Irish “loyalists,” who believed they were becoming second-class British citizens. It hugely encouraged the more militant “nationalists” among the Catholic population, who imagined that it was the last step before the inevitable unification of all Ireland.

And just coincidentally, the 2021 census revealed that Catholics have finally become a narrow majority of Northern Ireland’s population. So the ancient conflict began to reawaken from its two-decade nap.

Johnson, having lied about the meaning of the treaty with the EU for two years, then threatened to tear it up, but his own Conservative Party dumped him last July over his incessant lying on this and other subjects. After the brief but deranged prime ministership of Liz Truss, the relatively calm and competent Rishi Sunak took over in London in October.

Sunak negotiated a deal with the EU in February that eases the movement of goods between Northern Ireland and the rest of the U.K., but leaves the border in the Irish Sea. Maybe that will lull the monster back to sleep — and maybe not.

There is still no democratically elected government in Northern Ireland, because the biggest “loyalist” party is boycotting the Assembly until the border in the Irish Sea is removed. But put it back on land, and the “nationalists” will revolt.

The “hard men” on both sides are gaining influence, and the next government in the Republic of Ireland, for the first time ever, is likely to be led by Sinn Féin, the political wing of the IRA.

Many good people are striving to head off a collapse of the agreement, and they will probably succeed. But it’s hardly surprising that Joe Biden, of Irish Catholic descent, is starting his Irish visit in Belfast, in Northern Ireland — and that he is not planning to attend the coronation of King Charles III in London next month.

Gwynne Dyer’s new book is ‘The Shortest History of War’.

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