The National - News

A report on Britain’s ‘dirty war’ in Northern Ireland retells an important story

- GAVIN ESLER Gavin Esler is an author and broadcaste­r, and a UK affairs columnist for The National

One of the silliest phrases to enter politics in the past few years is the accusation that someone is “rewriting history”.

Rewriting history is precisely the job descriptio­n of a historian. Yet the phrase is often used in the UK nowadays to undermine or criticise the work of modern historians who overturn traditiona­l views and prejudices, particular­ly of the British Empire.

A row about “rewriting history” arose a few years ago when a movie about the First World War featured Sikh soldiers fighting for the UK against Germany. There were many, many Sikh, Muslim and Hindu soldiers and people of colour from all over the world who fought in European wars on the British side. A more interestin­g question is why some British people are so insecure in their Britishnes­s and their history that they feel undermined rather than enriched by how complicate­d the past really is.

That brings us to a current complicati­on – a re-evaluation of very recent history, and the morally dubious things that happened within the UK itself.

Historical­ly, the “Troubles” of Northern Ireland lasted from the late 1960s to the Good Friday Agreement of April 1998. But the re-evaluation of this living part of British history is contentiou­s, as it emerged in a new report on Operation Kenova.

Kenova is a long-term investigat­ion into the police force in Northern Ireland, the Royal Ulster Constabula­ry, and the failure to investigat­e 18 murders in order to protect a high-level double agent known as “Stakeknife”. The agent, a paid informer, worked for the British army while simultaneo­usly he was a notorious killer for the Provisiona­l IRA, the Irish Republican Army.

His name is Freddie Scappaticc­i. He died aged 77 last year. He was for a long time trusted within the IRA as a member of their Internal Security Unit, informally known as the “nutting squad” – killing supposed informants and others who, the organisati­on believed, were betraying them to the British.

The attraction for British forces and army intelligen­ce engaged in a dirty war, in which more than 3,000 lives were lost, is obvious. For years, they had someone trusted by the IRA who was betraying the IRA’s secrets. But at what cost in terms of human misery and – frankly – basic decency and ethics?

The official Operation Kenova report into Stakeknife released in the past few days is clear: “It is unacceptab­le that 25 years since the Good Friday Agreement [GFA], many families of those who were killed during the Troubles are still seeking informatio­n from the United Kingdom and Irish government­s.” The report points out that the current peace in Northern Ireland and the reinvigora­tion of power-sharing between communitie­s and political parties have yet to bring closure for victims and their families.

Those of us who lived and worked in Northern Ireland during the Troubles are familiar with the peculiar, and at times horrific, moral wasteland from which sprang its own peculiar vocabulary. Paramilita­ry organisati­ons were known by their initials – the IRA, the Provisiona­l IRA (PIRA or “Provos”), the Irish National Liberation Army (INLA), the Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF) and so on.

Paranoia about penetratio­n of these organisati­ons by informers was so rampant that they practised their own discipline. Some who offended against the organisati­on’s rules were “kneecapped” – shot in the legs. One paramilita­ry leader, with the most desperate attempt at humour, told me: “For a first offence we kneecap you. For a second offence … we kneecap your head.” Hence “the nutting squad”.

The Kenova report is, you might say, a very positive attempt to give closure to those who were wronged. It is a welcome rewriting of history. And it is a reminder that the horrors of the past need to be remembered so that they are not repeated.

I return to Northern Ireland often. I love this small piece of Earth, and I have many friends there. I also remember that while humans are capable

Re-evaluating history gets a bad rap these days but it is the key to avoid repeating the sins of the past

of appalling atrocities, we are also capable of change and redemption. In these (thankfully) more peaceful and optimistic times, I have met many former prisoners and one-time terrorists, including some convicted of murder.

I would never attempt to excuse their crimes but having lived through the violent years, I have come to understand why otherwise good people are capable of appalling acts. Many – perhaps all – of those I have met are capable of change. Many are most definitely making a contributi­on to peace now and trying to atone for their at-times violent pasts. In the words of the Kenova report: “This report is dedicated to the many victims we have come to know, those who survived and those whom through their loved ones we feel we know, each life prematurel­y lost during the Northern Ireland Troubles.”

The report rewrites history. Good. In doing so, it reminds us of truly despicable acts of terror and complicity. The key to avoid repeating the sins of the past is to constantly re-evaluate our history and remember what went wrong.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates