Drogheda Independent

Ignoring the very real dangers of a hard border won’t solve anything

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TTaoiseach’s comments on the possible deployment of troops on the border in the event of a ‘ hard’ Brexit have been roundly criticised days but on this occasion the opprobrium directed at Mr Varadkar feels misplaced. To be absolutely clear no one north or south – except the murderous drug smuggling crime gangs euphemisti­cally referred to as ‘dissident’ republican­s – wants to see a return of a militarise­d border between the north and the Republic.

As uncertaint­y over Brexit mounts and the UK’s divorce from the EU looms ever closer anyone who doesn’t at least acknowledg­e the possibilit­y is naive in the extreme.

Last week at the World Economic Forum in Davos, when asked about the worst case scenario after a hard Brexit, Mr Varadkar said that the Irish military may need to patrol and protect potential border infrastruc­ture – and the customs and police operating them – from dissident attacks.

His comments drew a swift response from political opponents. Fianna Fáil leader Michael Martin – who has been warning about the huge risks of Brexit for far longer than most Irish politician­s and who has been a rock of sense on the issue in the Dáil – said the Taoiseach’s comments “contradict­ed” everything the public has been told about Government efforts to avoid a hard border.

Sinn Féin and unionists – in a rare display of political consensus – also went on the attack.

Sinn Féin leader Mary Lou McDonald called Mr Varadkar “reckless and irresponsi­ble” while the Ulster Unionist Party accused the Taoiseach of “ramping up tensions”. Many media commentato­rs also piled pressure on Mr Vardakar over his supposed “gaffe”.

When it comes to putting both feet in his mouth while on a foreign jaunt Leo Varadkar certainly has form.

His cringe inducing comments about the film ‘ Love actually’ during his first official visit to Downing Street and his grossly ill advised boast about helping Donald Trump block a wind farm near his Clare golf course are two particular­ly bad examples of this unfortunat­e habit.

However unwelcome they were his comments about a potential army presence on the border do not fall into the same category.

As politician­s of all shades do their utmost to bury their heads in the sand and try to ignore what could happen on the border Mr Varadkar has been refreshing­ly honest.

No one wants to see it but the worrying reality that we all must face is that should there be a hard Brexit a hard border – at least for a time – seems inevitable.

Such a border would certainly be a target for attacks by dissidents who – as seen in Derry recently – are already ramping up their campaign.

In an important interventi­on former PSNI Chief Constable Hugh Orde – a man who knows more than most about border security – agreed with Mr Varadkar’s worst case scenario.

Both men need to be listened to. Simply ignoring the danger that a hard border would create won’t magically make it go away.

As the old sporting adage goes “fail to prepare, prepare to fail’. In this case that failure is literally a matter of life and death.

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