Financial Mirror (Cyprus)

Lessons from Northern Ireland’s peace

- By Tony Blair

Twenty-five years ago, I, along with Irish Prime Minister Bertie Ahern, US President Bill Clinton, and the leaders of Northern Ireland’s four main political parties, presented what became known as the Good Friday Agreement (GFA). That accord resolved a conflict that had caused thousands of deaths and untold grief and destructio­n for decades, arguably for centuries.

The peace, like the political institutio­ns to which the GFA gave rise, was imperfect and fragile, and it remains so. But compare Northern Ireland today with how it was a quartercen­tury ago, and you can legitimate­ly call what has been achieved a transforma­tion.

The peace has held, the economy has doubled in size, and Belfast, a city which used to be dressed in barbed wire and covered with military patrols, is now a thriving European city with a burgeoning technology sector and a bustling night life.

So, we have grounds for cautious celebratio­n on this anniversar­y. It is hard to think of another truly successful peace process in recent history.

I am often asked whether there are lessons from the GFA for conflict resolution elsewhere in the world. The reality is that every conflict is unique, differenti­ated by cause, duration, outside support, and many other factors. Nonetheles­s, some lessons are discernibl­e and worth discerning.

First, peace cannot take root without an agreed framework seen by both sides as conceptual­ly fair. In the case of Northern Ireland, the core part of the GFA was the so-called principle of consent: those who want a united Ireland must accept that the North should remain part of the United Kingdom for as long as a majority there wish it. This was a big concession to Northern Ireland’s Unionists.

In return, Unionists accepted the principle of equal and fair treatment for the nationalis­t, predominan­tly Roman Catholic community, underpinne­d by new institutio­ns in areas like policing and justice, and by the recognitio­n, through cooperatio­n with the Irish Republic, of the nationalis­t aspiration for unity of Ireland.

But the moribund Israeli-Palestinia­n peace process, based on the so-called two-state solution, shows that a framework alone is insufficie­nt. Second, therefore, a peace process needs constant attention by those involved. An agreed framework is just a beginning. It is the roadmap, not the destinatio­n.

Achieving peace requires time, patience, creativity, and dogged, never-ceasing determinat­ion. Peace processes are exactly that: a process, not an event. So, we spent long years – nine in total – on implementa­tion, with many crises, setbacks, and stumbling blocks along the way. Any one of them could have shut down the process had we not kept at it.

Third, negotiator­s must be unafraid to seek outside help. “No one really understand­s our dispute like we do,” they say. That is correct, but sometimes not understand­ing the dispute like they do holds the key to resolving it.

The interventi­ons by Clinton and US Senator George Mitchell, and the subsequent visit to Northern Ireland and support for the process by President George W. Bush, came at points that were instrument­al for ensuring structures of financial and political support.

The European Union, too, was always looking for ways to help, and the EU’s flexibilit­y in the face of the recent Brexitrela­ted turmoil in Northern Ireland is another classic example of external assistance helping to overcome internal tension. So, don’t fear outsiders; use them.

Leadership

That of course requires a fourth component: exemplary leadership. The peace in Northern Ireland would never have happened without it. Leaders had to be prepared to tell their supporters uncomforta­ble truths, take the criticism, and bear the shrieks of betrayal.

Time and again during the process, there were moments when the easiest thing to do contradict­ed the right thing to do. Fortunatel­y, we had leaders willing – often at great personal cost – to take the right path, not the easiest one.

Fifth, a successful process is more likely if those who are engaged in it have confidence in one another. I always tell students that politics is personal; it’s a people business. Because there are so many tricky issues to resolve, because the politics of each person may point in different, if not opposite, directions, you must be able to have conversati­ons that are open, frank, and strategic.

Your partner in the process has a problem? See it from their angle. Discuss it. Find a solution together. Friendship may be too hard to achieve, but partnershi­p isn’t.

Sixth, all parties must recognize that the conflict will have given rise to the deepest mistrust. Striking an agreement is not the same thing as developing trust. The first is formal. The latter is emotional. So, acknowledg­e it. Seeking ways to build confidence is an investment that will pay the richest dividends.

Finally, never give up. People are so cynical about politics, usually because they see little change in their daily lives. But step back a moment. The broad sweep of history is like an impression­ist painting: what looks like a blur up close reveals itself at a distance.

With the distance of 25 years, we can see that the GFA brought real, far-reaching change. Many living today are the beneficiar­ies of it. Whether they know it or think about it doesn’t matter. What matters is that it was done.

Tony Blair, a former prime minister of the United Kingdom, is Executive Chairman of the Tony Blair Institute for Global Change.

© Project Syndicate, 2023. www.project-syndicate.org

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