Editing Irish Republican Army (1922–1969)
Appearance
Content that violates any copyrights will be deleted. Encyclopedic content must be verifiable through citations to reliable sources.
Latest revision | Your text | ||
Line 150: | Line 150: | ||
Gunther Schuetz, a member of the [[Abwehr]] (German military intelligence), parachuted into Ireland and was almost immediately arrested. On 28 February 1942 he escaped. The IRA intended to send him back to Germany with a request for weapons, ammunition, explosives, radio equipment and money.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.markhumphrys.com/sfira.nazis.html|title=The IRA supported the Nazis in WW2|website=www.markhumphrys.com|access-date=2016-12-01|archive-date=6 December 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161206023253/http://markhumphrys.com/sfira.nazis.html|url-status=live}}</ref> The IRA Army Executive met on 20 April and sanctioned the request. They also approved a plan to "give military information to powers at war with England even before any definite contacts [were] established with these powers", provided the information did not endanger civilians.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://archive.org/details/secretarmyira00bell |url-access=registration |page=[https://archive.org/details/secretarmyira00bell/page/224 224] |quote=to give military information to powers at war with England, which would not endanger civilian lives, even before any definite contacts have been established with these powers. |title=The Secret Army: The IRA |publisher=Transaction Publishers |author=J. Bowyer Bell|year=1997 |isbn=9781560009016 }}</ref> The plan was quickly discovered when an IRA courier was arrested on the Dublin-Belfast train with documentation of the decisions taken, and details of the Nazi contact. This led to the arrest of Schuetz, on 30 April, only hours before he was due to set sail. The boat was seized and the crew arrested.<ref>[[J Bowyer Bell]] – ''The Secret Army'', pages 262–264; also Enno Stephan ''Spies in Ireland'' ({{ISBN|1-131-82692-2}} (reprint)), pages 226, 245 and 275</ref> |
Gunther Schuetz, a member of the [[Abwehr]] (German military intelligence), parachuted into Ireland and was almost immediately arrested. On 28 February 1942 he escaped. The IRA intended to send him back to Germany with a request for weapons, ammunition, explosives, radio equipment and money.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.markhumphrys.com/sfira.nazis.html|title=The IRA supported the Nazis in WW2|website=www.markhumphrys.com|access-date=2016-12-01|archive-date=6 December 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161206023253/http://markhumphrys.com/sfira.nazis.html|url-status=live}}</ref> The IRA Army Executive met on 20 April and sanctioned the request. They also approved a plan to "give military information to powers at war with England even before any definite contacts [were] established with these powers", provided the information did not endanger civilians.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://archive.org/details/secretarmyira00bell |url-access=registration |page=[https://archive.org/details/secretarmyira00bell/page/224 224] |quote=to give military information to powers at war with England, which would not endanger civilian lives, even before any definite contacts have been established with these powers. |title=The Secret Army: The IRA |publisher=Transaction Publishers |author=J. Bowyer Bell|year=1997 |isbn=9781560009016 }}</ref> The plan was quickly discovered when an IRA courier was arrested on the Dublin-Belfast train with documentation of the decisions taken, and details of the Nazi contact. This led to the arrest of Schuetz, on 30 April, only hours before he was due to set sail. The boat was seized and the crew arrested.<ref>[[J Bowyer Bell]] – ''The Secret Army'', pages 262–264; also Enno Stephan ''Spies in Ireland'' ({{ISBN|1-131-82692-2}} (reprint)), pages 226, 245 and 275</ref> |
||
In Belfast, much to the alarm of the Northern Ireland authorities, the city's brigade had developed a "Protestant squad", an intelligence unit, largely recruited by [[John Graham (Irish republican)|John Graham]], a [[Church of Ireland]] devout, from [[Denis Ireland]]'s Ulster Union Club.<ref>{{Cite book|title=The IRA|last=Coogan|first=Tim Pat|publisher=Macmillan|year=2002|location=London|page=178}}.</ref> But while Graham, who opposed cooperation with the Germans, and others in the Belfast command continued to debate the merits of a new [[Northern campaign (Irish Republican Army)|northern campaign]], in April 1942 a diversionary action, intended to draw the [[Royal Ulster Constabulary|RUC]] from an illegal [[Easter Rising|1916]] commemoration, developed into a street gun battle. A police constable, father of four Thomas James Forbes, was killed, in consequence of which six of the eight members of the active unit were sentenced to death. In the event all but one were reprieved.<ref>{{Cite book|title=Northern Ireland: the Orange State|last=Farrell|first=Michael|publisher=Pluto|year=1976|location=London|page=166}}.</ref> On 2 September 1942 [[Tom Williams (Irish republican)|Tom Williams]], nineteen, was hanged |
In Belfast, much to the alarm of the Northern Ireland authorities, the city's brigade had developed a "Protestant squad", an intelligence unit, largely recruited by [[John Graham (Irish republican)|John Graham]], a [[Church of Ireland]] devout, from [[Denis Ireland]]'s Ulster Union Club.<ref>{{Cite book|title=The IRA|last=Coogan|first=Tim Pat|publisher=Macmillan|year=2002|location=London|page=178}}.</ref> But while Graham, who opposed cooperation with the Germans, and others in the Belfast command continued to debate the merits of a new [[Northern campaign (Irish Republican Army)|northern campaign]], in April 1942 a diversionary action, intended to draw the [[Royal Ulster Constabulary|RUC]] from an illegal [[Easter Rising|1916]] commemoration, developed into a street gun battle. A police constable, father of four Thomas James Forbes, was killed, in consequence of which six of the eight members of the active unit were sentenced to death. In the event all but one were reprieved.<ref>{{Cite book|title=Northern Ireland: the Orange State|last=Farrell|first=Michael|publisher=Pluto|year=1976|location=London|page=166}}.</ref> On 2 September 1942 [[Tom Williams (Irish republican)|Tom Williams]], nineteen, was hanged the first, and only, Irish Republican to be judicially executed in the North.<ref>{{Cite book|title=Belfast Battalion: A History of the Belfast IRA 1922-1969|last=O'Neil|first=John|publisher=Letter Press|year=2003|location=Ballygarran, Wexford|isbn=978-1-9993008-0-7|pages=143–147}}.</ref><ref>{{Cite book|title=Ireland in the Twentieth Century|last=Coogan|first=Tim Pat|publisher=Random House|year=2003|location=London|isbn=9780099415220|page=334}}.</ref> |
||
It has been rumoured{{by whom|date=April 2017}} that during the war period IRA members may have attempted to provide intelligence to assist the German aerial bombing of industrial targets in Northern Ireland. However, information recovered from Germany after the war showed that the planning of raids such as the [[Belfast Blitz]] was based exclusively on the aerial reconnaissance of the [[Luftwaffe]]. |
It has been rumoured{{by whom|date=April 2017}} that during the war period IRA members may have attempted to provide intelligence to assist the German aerial bombing of industrial targets in Northern Ireland. However, information recovered from Germany after the war showed that the planning of raids such as the [[Belfast Blitz]] was based exclusively on the aerial reconnaissance of the [[Luftwaffe]]. |