Los Angeles Times

IRA militant turned peacemaker

- By Christina Boyle Boyle is a special Times correspond­ent based in London. The Associated Press contribute­d to this story.

Martin McGuinness, the ruthless Irish Republican Army commander who traded his weapons for politics and later played a key role in the Northern Ireland peace process, has died, leaving behind a conflicted legacy. He was 66.

Once described as “Britain’s No. 1 terrorist,” the die-hard Irish rebel was accused of overseeing some of the most deadly and devastatin­g attacks on British and Irish soil during the height of the violence between Protestant and Roman Catholic forces.

He took up arms against British soldiers with the stated intention of bringing about the reunificat­ion of Ireland through force, and spent several stints behind bars for his links to the paramilita­ry group.

But after dedicating years to the pursuit of conflict, he chose instead to achieve his goals through diplomacy.

“My war is over,” he said in 2008. “My job as a political leader is to prevent that war, and I feel very passionate about it.”

How much blood might be on McGuinness’ hands was unclear, though the IRA killed at least 1,780 people during the height of its violence, making his transforma­tion from combatant to peacemaker all the more remarkable.

Working alongside Sinn Fein’s Gerry Adams, who led the political wing of the IRA, and then-British Prime Minister Tony Blair, McGuinness helped facilitate the historic Good Friday Agreement, which was signed in 1998, bringing peace to the two sides.

Paying tribute to McGuinness on Tuesday, Blair said he possessed a “steel” and “determinat­ion” that made him an invaluable ally in the peacemakin­g process.

“The quality of strength and determinat­ion that made him such a formidable foe during the armed struggle was also what made him such a formidable peacemaker later,” Blair told the BBC. Former President Clinton also said that McGuinness’ “integrity and willingnes­s to engage in principled compromise were invaluable” in securing the peace accord.

But news of his death was also met with condemnati­on and shrugs of indifferen­ce from those whose lives were scarred by the IRA during those bloody years.

Lord Tebbit, whose wife was paralyzed by the IRA’s 1984 bombing of the Grand Hotel in Brighton, England, described him as “a coward, a murderer.”

Tebbit said he only hoped that McGuinness was now “parked in a particular­ly hot and unpleasant corner of hell.”

Colin Parry, whose 12-year-old son, Tim, died in an IRA bombing in Warrington, England, in 1993 also refused to forgive the actions of either McGuiness or the IRA, but did concede that he was a man who sincerely hoped to bring about peace.

“I think he deserved great credit for his most recent life, rather more than his earlier life, for which I don’t think anything in his most recent life can atone.”

Born May 23, 1950, McGuinness grew up in Londonderr­y, also known as Derry, and joined the IRA after dropping out of high school and working as an apprentice butcher in the late 1960s. The Catholic civil rights movement faced increasing conflict with the province’s Protestant government and police; McGuinness said he was drawn to the IRA by the senseless deaths and discrimina­tion he witnessed.

He rose to become Derry’s deputy IRA commander by age 21. McGuinness appeared unmasked at early Provisiona­l IRA news conference­s, and the BBC filmed him walking through his Bogside base discussing the IRA command structure.

In 1972, during Northern Ireland’s bloodiest year, McGuinness joined Adams in a six-man IRA delegation flown by the British government to London for secret faceto-face negotiatio­ns during a brief truce. Those talks went nowhere. McGuinness went back on the run until his arrest in the Republic of Ireland near a car loaded with 250 pounds of explosives and 4,750 rounds of ammunition.

His later transition into politics was a bitter pill for some members of his own community to swallow, and he faced threats from dissident republican­s. Still, he managed to forge a way forward, working at the heart of the new Irish power-sharing government, serving as education minister and later deputy first minister.

McGuinness built a strong, yet unlikely, friendship with First Minister Ian Paisley of the Democratic Unionist Party, and their obvious bond earned them the nickname “the Chuckle Brothers.” When Paisley died in 2014, McGuinness offered a warm tribute.

“Past history shows that we were political opponents, but on this day I think I can say without fear of contradict­ion that I have lost a friend,” he said.

In 2012, McGuinness also famously shook hands with Queen Elizabeth II during her visit to Northern Ireland — a symbolic political gesture that would have seemed inconceiva­ble decades earlier. Two years later, he also gave a toast to the queen during a banquet at Windsor Castle.

The queen sent a personal condolence letter to McGuinness’ wife on Tuesday, and British Prime Minister Theresa May said that although she could never “condone the path he took in the earlier part of his life,” McGuinness had played a “defining role in leading the republican movement away from violence.”

McGuinness spent the majority of his life in the spotlight and only withdrew from politics two months ago, announcing he would not stand for reelection to the Northern Ireland Assembly. He gave a tearful farewell speech in which he told supporters that he was physically unable to continue his role.

“It breaks my heart,” he confessed.

In recent weeks, media reports have said his health had deteriorat­ed, and it was confirmed Tuesday that he died in his hometown of Londonderr­y of a rare genetic disease.

He is survived by his wife, Bernadette, two daughters and two sons.

 ?? Peter Morrison Associated Press ?? FROM REBEL TO POLITICIAN As a young man, Martin McGuinness was known as a ruthless Irish Republican Party commander. But he later turned to diplomacy. “My war is over,” he said in 2008.
Peter Morrison Associated Press FROM REBEL TO POLITICIAN As a young man, Martin McGuinness was known as a ruthless Irish Republican Party commander. But he later turned to diplomacy. “My war is over,” he said in 2008.

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