Ruairí Ó Brádaigh
Ruairí Ó Brádaigh (born October 2 1932) is an Irish republican. He is a former IRA chief of staff, former president of Sinn Féin and currently president of Republican Sinn Féin, an Irish political party.
Early life
Ó Brádaigh (born Rory Brady) was born into a middle-class republican family in Longford and lived at Battery Road. His father, Matt Brady, was an IRA Volunteer and was severely wounded in an encounter with the Royal Irish Constabulary, in 1919. His mother, May Caffrey, was a Cumann na mBan Volunteer. His father died when he was ten. His mother, prominent as the Secretary for the County Longford Board of Health, lived until 1974. Ó Brádaigh was educated at St Mel's College, leaving in 1950, and University College Dublin, from where he graduated with a commerce degree (BComm) and certification in the teaching of the Irish language, in 1954. That year he took a job teaching at Roscommon Vocational School, in Roscommon.
Joins Sinn Féin & IRA
He joined Sinn Féin in 1950. While at university, in 1951, he joined the Irish Republican Army. In September 1951, he marched with the IRA at the unveiling of the Seán Russell monument in Fairview Park, Dublin. A teacher by profession, he was also a Training Officer for the IRA. In 1954, he was appointed to the Military Council of the IRA, a subcommittee set up by the IRA Army Council in 1950 to plan a military campaign against Royal Ulster Constabulary barracks in Northern Ireland.
On 13 August 1955, Ó Brádaigh led a ten-member IRA group in an arms raid on Hazebrouck Barracks, near Arborfield, Berkshire. It was a depot for the No 5 Radar Training Battalion of the Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers. It was the biggest IRA arms raid in Britain and netted 48,000 rounds of .303 ammunition, 38,000 9 mm rounds, 1,300 rounds for .380 weapons, and 1,300 .22 rounds. In addition, a selection of arms were seized, including 55 Sten guns, two Bren guns, two .303 rifles and one .38 pistol. Most if not all of the weapons were recovered in a relatively short period of time. A van, travelling too fast, was stopped by the police and IRA personnel were arrested. Careful police work led to weapons that had been transported in a second van and stored in London.
The IRA Border Campaign commenced on 12 December 1956. As an IRA General Headquarters Staff (GHQ) officer, Ó Brádaigh was responsible for training the Teeling Column (one of the four armed units prepared for the Campaign) in the West of Ireland. During the Campaign, he served as second in command of the Teeling Column.[1] On 30 December 1956, he partook in the Teeling Column attack on Royal Ulster Constabulary barracks in Derrylin, County Fermanagh. He was arrested across the border in County Cavan by the Garda Síochána shortly after, tried, and jailed for six months in Mountjoy Prison.
Although a prisoner, he was elected a Sinn Féin TD for the Longford-Westmeath constituency in the March 1957 Irish general election, winning 5,506 votes (or a 14.10% share). Running on an abstentionist ticket, he refused to recognise the authority of Dáil Éireann and would not have taken his seat had it been possible for him to do so. He did not retain his seat at the 1961 election, and his vote fell to 2,598 (or 7.61%).[2]
Upon completing his prison sentence, he was immediately interned at the Curragh Military Prison, along with other republicans. On 27 September 1958, Ó Brádaigh escaped from the camp along with Dáithí Ó Conaill. While a football match was in progress, the pair cut through a wire fence and crept from the camp under a camouflage grass blanket and went "on the run". This was an official escape, authorised by the officer commanding of the IRA internees, Tomás MacCurtain.
That October, Ó Brádaigh became IRA's Chief of Staff, a position he held until the following year, when he was arrested, refused to answer questions, and jailed under the Offences Against the State Act in Mountjoy. From 1961 to 1962, he was IRA chief of staff for a second time. Although he has always emphasised that it was a collective declaration, he was the primary author of the statement ending the IRA's Border Campaign in 1962.
After his arrest in December 1956, he took a leave from teaching at Roscommon Vocational School. He was re-instated and began teaching again in autumn 1962, just after he had turned over to Cathal Goulding the position of Chief of Staff of the IRA. He remained an active member of Sinn Féin and was also a member of the IRA Army Council throughout the decade.
In the 1966 United Kingdom general election, he ran as an Independent Republican candidate in the Fermanagh and South Tyrone constituency, polling 10,370 votes, or 19.1% of the valid poll. He failed to be elected.
Leader of Sinn Féin
He opposed the decision of the IRA and Sinn Féin to drop abstentionism and to recognise Westminster, Stormont [Belfast] and Dáil Éireann at Leinster House in 1969/1970. On 11 January 1970, along with Seán Mac Stiofáin, he led the walkout from the 1970 Sinn Féin Ard Fheis (party convention) after the majority voted to end the policy of abstentionism (though the vote to change the Sinn Féin constitution failed as a two-thirds majority was required to do so, whereas the motion only achieved the support of a simple majority of delegates votes).
He was voted chairman of the Caretaker Executive of Provisional Sinn Féin. That October, he formally became president of the party. He held this position until 1983. He also served on the IRA Army Council of the Provisional IRA until the late 1970s.
In his presidential address to the 1971 Sinn Féin Ard Fheis, Ó Brádaigh said that the first step to achieving a United Ireland was to make Northern Ireland ungovernable.
On 31 May, 1972 he was arrested under the Offences Against the State Act and immediately commenced a hunger-strike. A fortnight later the charges against him were dropped and he was released.
With Dáithí Ó Conaill he developed the Éire Nua policy, which was launched on June 28, 1972. The policy called for a federal Ireland.
On 3 December 1972, he appeared on the London Weekend Television Weekend World programme. He was arrested by the Gardaí again on 29 December 1972 and charged in the newly established Special Criminal Court with Provisional IRA membership. In January, 1973 he was the first person convicted under the Offences Against the State (Amendment) Act 1972 and was sentenced to six months in the Curragh Military Prison.
In 1974, he testified in person before the U.S. Senate Committee on Foreign Relations regarding the treatment of IRA prisoners in Ireland. He also had a meeting with prominent Irish-American congressman Tip O'Neill. The same year, the State Department revoked his multiple entry visa and have since refused to allow Ó Brádaigh to enter the country. 1975 FBI documents describe Ó Brádaigh as a "national security threat" and a "dedicated revolutionary undeterred by threat or personal risk" and show that the visa ban was requested by the British Foreign Office and supported by the Dublin government.[3] In 1997, Canadian authorities refused to allow him board a charter flight to Toronto at Shannon Airport.
During the May 1974 Ulster Workers' Council strike, Ó Brádaigh stated that he would like to see “a phased withdrawal of British troops over a number of years, in order to avoid a Congo situation”.[4]
On 10 December 1974, he participated in the Feakle talks between the IRA Army Council and Sinn Féin leadership and the leaders of the Protestant churches in Ireland. Although the meeting was raided and broken up by the Gardaí, the Protestant churchmen passed on proposals from the IRA leadership to the British government. These proposals called on the British government to declare a commitment to withdraw, the election of an all-Ireland assembly to draft a new constitution and an amnesty for political prisoners.
The IRA subsequently called a "total and complete" ceasefire intended to last from December 22 to January 2, 1975 to allow the British government to respond to proposals. British government officials also held talks with Ó Brádaigh in his position as president of Sinn Féin from late December to 17 January 1975.
On 10 February 1975, the IRA Army Council, which may have included Ó Brádaigh, unanimously endorsed an open-ended cessation of IRA "hostilities against Crown forces", which became known as the 1975 Truce. The IRA Chief of Staff at the time was Seamus Twomey, of Belfast. Another member of the Council at this time was probably Billy McKee, of Belfast. Daithi O'Connell, a prominent Southern Republican, was also a member. It is reported in some quarters that the IRA leaders had mistakenly believed they had persuaded the British Government to withdraw from Ireland and the protracted negotiations between themselves and British officials were the preamble to a public declaration of intent to withdraw. In fact, as British government papers now show, the British entertained talks with the IRA in the hope that this would fragment the movement further, and scored several intelligence coups during the talks. It is argued by some that by the time the truce collapsed in late 1975 the Provisional IRA had been severely weakened. This bad faith embittered many in the republican movement, and another ceasefire was not to happen until 1994.
In 1975-76, he was one of a three-man republican team (which included Billy McKee) which held secret talks with representatives of the British government.
In late December 1976, along with Joe Cahill, he met two representatives of the Ulster Loyalist Central Coordinating Committee, John McKeague and John McClure, at the request of the latter body. Their purpose was to try to find a way to accommodate the ULCCC proposals for an independent Northern Ireland with the Sinn Féin’s Éire Nua programme. It was agreed that if this could be done, a joint Loyalist-Republican approach could then be made to request the British government to leave Ireland. Desmond Boal QC and Seán MacBride SC were requested and accepted to represent the loyalist and republican positions. For months they had meetings in various places including Paris. The dialogue eventually collapsed when Conor Cruise O'Brien, then Irish Minister for Posts & Telegraphs and vociferous opponent of the Provisional IRA, became aware of it and condemned it on RTÉ Radio. As the loyalists had insisted on absolute secrecy, they felt unable to continue with the talks as a result. [5]
In the aftermath of the 1975 Truce, the Ó Brádaigh/Ó Conaill leadership came under severe criticism from a younger generation of activists from Northern Ireland, headed by Gerry Adams, who became a vice-president of Sinn Féin in 1978. By the early 1980s, Ó Brádaigh’s position as president of Sinn Féin was openly under challenge and the Éire Nua policy was targeted in an effort to oust him. The policy was rejected at the 1981 Sinn Féin Ard Fheis and finally removed from the Sinn Féin constitution at the 1982 Ard Fheis. At the following year's ard fheis, Ó Brádaigh and Ó Conaill resigned from their leadership positions, voicing opposition to the dropping of the Éire Nua policy by the party
Leader of Republican Sinn Féin
When the majority of delegates to the 1986 Sinn Féin Ard Fheis voted on 2 November to drop the policy of abstentionism if elected to Dáil Eireann (but not the House of Commons or the Northern Ireland parliament at Stormont), thus ending the self-imposed ban on Sinn Féin elected representatives from taking seats at Leinster House, Ó Brádaigh and a small number of supporters walked out and immediately set up Republican Sinn Féin (RSF). As an ordinary member, he had earlier spoken out against the motion (resolution 162) in an impassioned speech beforehand.
Ó Brádaigh believes RSF to be the sole legitimate continuation of the pre-1986 Sinn Féin, arguing that RSF has kept the original Sinn Féin constitution. RSF readopted and enhanced Ó Brádaigh’s Éire Nua policy. His party has had electoral success in local elections only, and few at that.
He remains a vociferous opponent of the Good Friday Agreement, viewing it as a programme to copperfasten Irish partition and entrench sectarian divisions in the north. He has condemned his erstwhile comrades in Sinn Féin and the IRA for decommissioning weapons while British troops remain in the country. In his opinion, "the Provo sell-out is the worst yet - unprecedented in Irish history". He has condemned the IRA’s decision to seal of a number of its arms dumps as "an overt act of treachery", "treachery punishable by death" under IRA General Army Order Number 11.
In July 2005, he handed over a portion of his personal political papers detailing discussions between Irish Republican leaders and representatives of the British Government during 1974/1975 to the James Hardiman Library, National University of Ireland, Galway.
He has been described as “a quiet, courteous man with a strong will and an unshakeable belief in the correctness of his own views”. Critics say he is legalistic, dogmatic and intolerant of other traditions. Colleagues speak of his “basic honesty and lack of pretension”.[6]
See also
- "Ruairí Ó Brádaigh's speech to the 1986 Sinn Féin Ard Fheis", CAIN Web Service.
- "Transcript of interview" SWR Interview with Ruairi O'Bradaigh
- "Transcript of interview" with Ruairí Ó Brádaigh on the question of the legitimacy of the Republic of Ireland and its institutions on RTÉ Radio 1’s News at One programme, March 3, 2002
Writings
- Ruairí Ó Brádaigh, What is Irish Republicanism, Dec 1970
- Ruairí Ó Brádaigh, Restore the means of production to the people, Dec 1970
- Ruairí Ó Brádaigh, Our people, our future, Dublin 1973
- Ruairí Ó Brádaigh, Dílseacht - The Story of Comdt General Tom Maguire and the Second (All-Ireland) Dáil, Dublin: Irish Freedom Press, 1997, ISBN 0951856790
Further reading
- Robert W. White, Ruairí Ó Brádaigh: The Life and Politics of an Irish Revolutionary, (Indiana University Press, 2006), ISBN 0253347084