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The Armed Peace Brian Rowan

The Armed Peace par Brian Rowan

The Armed Peace Brian Rowan


€33.00
État - Très bon état
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Résumé

In The Armed Peace, Brian Rowan looks at life and death after the ceasefires in Northern Ireland. He examines the armed peace, the struggle between guns and government and the intelligence war during which the IRA ventured behind enemy lines.

The Armed Peace Résumé

The Armed Peace Brian Rowan

1994 marked a seminal point in the Irish peace process. The IRA and the Combined Loyalist Military Command had just announced their ceasefires. This was the new beginning - or so it seemed. Much has happened since, both good and bad. The original IRA ceasefire was blown away by the London Docklands bomb explosion in February 1996. The loyalists killed again, and the largest of the paramilitary organizations in this community - the Ulster Defence Association - became an enemy of the peace process. This is a group now steeped in drugs crime and linked to sectarian murder. The most prominent and probably the most feared of its leaders, the Belfast loyalist Johnny Adair, has twice been thrown back into jail since the Good Friday Agreement and remains there today, deserted by his own. Amid the fog of all that has been bad, much progress has been hidden. The IRA restored its ceasefire. From the defiant writing on the wall, which shouted out not a bullet - not an ounce, it has moved to put some of its arms beyond use and the republican hawk Martin McGuinness has travelled from the table of the IRA Army Council to the seat of government in Belfast. Some on the loyalist side have also grown into the new politics of peace. David Ervine and Billy Hutchinson - one-time members of the UVF and prisoners in Northern Ireland's past - are now part of the political mainstream. They have given a new and progressive voice to loyalism. In The Armed Peace, Brian Rowan looks at life and death after the ceasefires. He examines the armed peace, the struggle between guns and government and the intelligence war during which the IRA ventured behind enemy lines. Long after 1994, the spooks, the spies and the IRA's director of intelligence were still at play. Rowan writes on his contacts with the IRA's P O'Neill and uses his republican, loyalist and security sources to tell the inside story of the ceasefires and Northern Ireland's long journey from war towards peace.

À propos de Brian Rowan

Brian Rowan was born in Belfast in 1959 and is the BBC's Northern Ireland security editor. In 2001, he was named specialist journalist of the year in Northern Ireland for his reporting on the loyalists, on the IRA's decision to put arms beyond use and his exclusive report on the Police Ombudsman's review of the Omagh bomb investigation. He was the BBC's nominated journalist for the 2003 Sony News Award for his work on the Castlereagh and Stormont investigations.

Informations supplémentaires

GOR004830208
9781840187540
1840187549
The Armed Peace Brian Rowan
Occasion - Très bon état
Relié
Transworld Publishers Ltd
20030821
260
N/A
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