East Bay Times

Boris Johnson stirs up new Irish Troubles

- By Trudy Rubin Trudy Rubin is a columnist for The Philadelph­ia Inquirer. ©2021 The Philadelph­ia Inquirer. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency.

When I first started covering conflict zones many years ago, I resolved never to bother with the Troubles in Northern Ireland.

I had grown up in Boston, where every bar in Irish neighborho­ods had a box for donations to the Irish Republican Army. The IRA was then fighting with bullets and bombs to remove the six counties on the northeast part of the island of Ireland from their union with Britain and unify them with the Republic of Ireland to the south. I considered the war between Northern Irish Protestant Unionists who wanted to stay with Britain and the Catholic Nationalis­ts to be hopeless.

To the world’s, and my, surprise, the 1998 Good Friday Agreement mostly ended the conflict within Northern Ireland.

So it is disgusting to see British Prime Minister Boris Johnson threaten the future of the agreement, and carelessly provoke renewed violence in Northern Ireland.

What eased the resolution of the Irish conflict was the fact that Britain and the Republic of Ireland were both members of the European Union. Irish Catholic Nationalis­t leaders could assure their followers that, under the Good Friday Agreement, the border between Northern Ireland and the Republic would be fully open for the movement of trade and people. Because they were all part of a larger whole — the European Union — the border between the north and south of Ireland became almost invisible physically.

Then came Brexit, when Johnson pulled Britain and Northern Ireland out of the European Union. The Republic of Ireland remained an EU member.

However, Brexit raised the prospect of renewed checks at the border, which would violate the basics of the Good Friday Agreement.

The EU demanded that the internal Irish border stay open as a part of its trade deal with postBrexit Britain. At first, Johnson agreed to a technical workaround, putting a customs border through the Irish Sea between Britain and Northern Ireland. But this angered Northern Ireland’s hardline Protestant­s because it seems to separate Northern Ireland from Britain.

Protestant demonstrat­ions and bus burnings began again.

Yet instead of working out a deal with the EU, Johnson is fueling the unrest, threatenin­g to abrogate his agreement with the EU. Picking a fight with the “enemy” EU works to stir up his base, and the British leader needs that support because he is under pressure from COVID-19 resurgence and a scandal within his Conservati­ve party.

“The British government has inflamed Unionist opinion on this which is so dangerous,” says Philadelph­ia Congressma­n Brendan Boyle, who has focused on this issue. “Once you whip up hysteria among the Unionist community it is hard to tone it down.”

What’s so tragic about Johnson’s demagoguer­y is that it reverses the truth. Northern Ireland benefits from its dual customs status — which gives it free access to European as well as British markets. Moreover, the EU has already eased customs requiremen­ts for exports across the Irish Sea.

It is Johnson who has refused to help ease genuine Protestant business and political concerns.

Hopefully, Johnson will recognize the risks he faces in fomenting another Irish civil war before it is too late.

President Joe Biden and Congress have made clear the firm, bipartisan U.S. stand against underminin­g of the Good Friday Agreement (which was godfathere­d by negotiator and former U.S. senator George Mitchell, and supported by GOP and Democratic presidents alike).

Ireland’s ambassador to the United States, Daniel Mulhall, notes that the Irish Taoiseach (prime minister) Michael Martin recently said a move by the British government to trigger Article 16 — which would suspend the EU-U.K. agreement on the Irish border — would be “reckless and irresponsi­ble. It could undermine the entire EU-U.K. trade agreement and create a lot of tension between Ireland and the U.K.”

Should he be so foolish as to push Northern Ireland back toward the Troubles, Johnson will go down in history as the man who managed to wreck the Holy Grail of peaceful civil war endings in pursuit of an English nationalis­m that has brought more harm than gains.

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