The Welland Tribune

Irish border uncertaint­y grows

If a ‘hard border’ is reinstated, renewed violence is a real possibilit­y

- Gwynne Dyer’s new book is “Growing Pains: The Future of Democracy (and Work).” GWYNNE DYER

It was either ignorant or irresponsi­ble for those campaignin­g for Brexit (British exit from the European Union) two years ago to claim that the Irish border would not be a problem. In fact, it may lead to a catastroph­ic “no deal” Brexit in which the United Kingdom crashes out of the EU without an agreement of any kind.

Both the British negotiator­s and their EU counterpar­ts say that the deal is “95 per cent agreed,” but the other 5 per cent is the border between the Republic of Ireland (an EU member) and Northern Ireland (part of the U.K. and therefore soon NOT part of the EU). Time is running out, and agreement on that last 5 per cent is far from certain.

The border has been invisible since the signing of the Good Friday agreement in 1998 ended 30 years of bloody conflict between the Protestant and Catholic communitie­s in Northern Ireland. Three thousand people had been killed, but the situation had reached a stalemate. The Good Friday deal let both sides accept that fact.

For the (Catholic) nationalis­ts in Northern Ireland, a completely open border with the (Catholic) Republic was a vital part of the deal. It implicitly acknowledg­ed that the two parts of the island might one day be reunited, although not now.

It was a brave, imaginativ­e deal that has given Northern Ireland 20 years of peace, but it is now at risk. When the “Leave” side narrowly won the Brexit referendum in the U.K. and Theresa May replaced David Cameron as prime minister in 2016, she had a credibilit­y problem. Like Cameron, she had supported “Remain,” but the Conservati­ve Party she now led was dominated by triumphant Brexiters.

So she became an enthusiast­ic Brexiter herself. The English nationalis­ts who ran the Brexit campaign had said nothing about leaving the EU’s “single market” and customs union, but within weeks of taking office May declared that Britain must leave both of them.

She even made this demand part of her famous “red lines,” the non-negotiable minimum that the British government would accept in the divorce settlement. Unfortunat­ely, ending the customs union would mean re-creating a “hard” border between Northern Ireland and the Republic — and that might lead to a renewal of the sectarian civil war between Catholics and Protestant­s in the North.

It’s not clear when the Conservati­ve government in London realized that the Irish border was going to be the biggest stumbling block on the road to Brexit, and the party’s more extreme Brexiters are still in denial about it. But the Republic will stay in the EU, and it insists that there must be no hard border after Brexit. Ireland has seen enough killing.

So the EU suggested a “backstop.” If London and Brussels can’t come up with a free-trade deal to keep the border soft (i.e., invisible), then Northern Ireland could stay in the customs union, and the rest of the U.K. could leave. The real border, for customs purposes, could run down the middle of the Irish Sea.

Theresa May actually signed up to

The Republic will stay in the EU, and it insists that there must be no hard border after Brexit. Ireland has seen

enough killing.

this solution last December, because the only real alternativ­e is a hostile Brexit that simply ignores the EU’s position. But no sooner had she agreed the “backstop” with the EU than rebels in her own camp — extreme Brexiters and members of a small Northern Ireland-based Protestant party whose votes are all that keeps the Conservati­ves in power — forced her to repudiate it.

Now May’s position is pure fantasy: no customs border with the EU either on land or in the Irish Sea. Which is why the probabilit­y of a chaotic “no deal” Brexit is growing daily, and the prospect of renewed war in the North is creeping closer.

Is renewed war really possible? Last year Sinn Fein, the leading Catholic party in Northern Ireland, withdrew from the “power-sharing” government mandated by the Good Friday agreement. That could be seen as clearing the decks for action once it became clear that Brexit would undermine all existing arrangemen­ts in Ireland.

And if the U.K. crashes out of the EU without a deal, the ratings agency Standard and Poor’s predicted on Tuesday, unemployme­nt in the U.K. will almost double, house prices will fall by 10 per cent in two years and the British pound will fall even further. First impoverish­ment for the British, then war for the Irish.

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