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Airey Neave

Airey Middleton Sheffield Neave, DSO, OBE, MC, TD (/ˈɛəri ˈnv/;) (23 January 1916 – 30 March 1979) was a British soldier, lawyer and Member of Parliament (MP) from 1953 until his assassination in 1979.

Airey Neave
Neave between May 1940 and May 1941
Shadow Secretary of State for Northern Ireland
In office
4 March 1974 – 30 March 1979
Leader
Preceded byFrancis Pym
Succeeded byAlec Jones
Member of Parliament
for Abingdon
In office
30 June 1953 – 30 March 1979
Preceded bySir Ralph Glyn
Succeeded byThomas Benyon
Personal details
Born
Airey Middleton Sheffield Neave

(1916-01-23)23 January 1916
Knightsbridge, London, England
Died30 March 1979(1979-03-30) (aged 63)
Westminster, London, England
Manner of deathAssassination (car bomb attack)
Political partyConservative
Spouse
(m. 1942)
Children3
Parent(s)Sheffield Airey Neave (father)
Alma materMerton College, Oxford
Occupation
  • Politician
  • Soldier
ProfessionBarrister
Military service
Allegiance British Empire
Branch/service British Army
Years of service1935–1951
RankLieutenant colonel
UnitRoyal Artillery
Battles/wars

During World War II he was the first British prisoner-of-war to succeed in escaping from Oflag IV-C at Colditz Castle, and later worked for MI9. After the war he served with the International Military Tribunal at the Nuremberg trials. He later became Conservative MP for Abingdon.

Neave was assassinated in a car bomb attack at the House of Commons. The Irish National Liberation Army claimed responsibility.

Early life

Neave was the son of Sheffield Airey Neave CMG, OBE (1879–1961),[1] an entomologist, who lived at Ingatestone, Essex, and his wife Dorothy, the daughter of Arthur Thomson Middleton. His father was the grandson of Sheffield Neave, the third son of Sir Thomas Neave, 2nd Baronet (see Neave baronets).

The family came to prominence as merchants in the West Indies during the 18th century and were raised to the baronetage during the life of Richard Neave, Governor of the Bank of England. Neave spent his early years in Knightsbridge in London, before he moved to Beaconsfield. Neave was sent to St. Ronan's School, Worthing, and from there, in 1929, he went to Eton College. He went on to read Jurisprudence at Merton College, Oxford.[2]

While at Eton, Neave composed a prize-winning essay in 1933 that examined the likely consequences of Adolf Hitler's rise to supreme power in Germany, and Neave predicted then that another widespread war would break out in Europe in the near future. Neave had earlier been on a visit to Germany, and he witnessed the Nazi German methods of grasping political and military power. At Eton, Neave served in the school cadet corps as a cadet lance corporal, and received a territorial commission as a second lieutenant in the Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry on 11 December 1935.[3]

When Neave went to Oxford University, he purchased and read the entire written works of the writer Carl von Clausewitz. When Neave was asked why, he answered: "since war [is] coming, it [is] only sensible to learn as much as possible about the art of waging it".[4] During 1938, Neave completed his third-class degree. By his own admission, while at Oxford University, he did only the minimum amount of academic work that was required of him by his tutors.

Second World War

Neave transferred his territorial commission to the Royal Engineers on 2 May 1938[5] and following the outbreak of war he was mobilised. Sent to France in February 1940 with 1st Searchlight Regiment, Royal Artillery, he was wounded and captured by the Germans at Calais on 23 May 1940. He was imprisoned at Oflag IX-A/H near Spangenberg and in February 1941 moved to Stalag XX-A near Thorn in German-occupied western Poland. Meanwhile, Neave's commission was transferred to the Royal Artillery on 1 August 1940.[6]

In April 1941 he escaped from Thorn with Norman Forbes. They were captured near Ilow while trying to enter Soviet-controlled Poland and were briefly in the hands of the Gestapo.[7] In May, they were both sent to Oflag IV-C (often referred to as Colditz Castle because of its location).[8]

While in Colditz, the French military prisoners asked the German to have the Jewish military prisoners separated from the gentile French military prisoners, which resulted in about 80 French Jewish military prisoners being confined in a crowded attic of the castle. Neave and many British officers were appalled at the French prisoners for this request. In demonstration of their solidarity with the French Jews, the British invited the French Jews to dinner in the British mess, where Neave made a speech denouncing the prejudice. [9]

Neave made his first attempt to escape from Colditz on 28 August 1941 disguised as a German NCO. He did not get out of the castle as his hastily contrived German uniform (made from a Polish army tunic and cap painted with scenery paint) was rendered bright green under the prison searchlights.[10] Together with Dutch officer Anthony Luteyn he made a second attempt on 5 January 1942, again in disguise.

Better uniforms and escape route (they made a quick exit from a theatrical production using the trap door beneath the stage) got them out of the prison and by train and on foot they travelled to Leipzig and Ulm and finally reached the border to Switzerland near Singen. Via France, Spain and Gibraltar, Neave returned to England in April 1942. Neave was the first British officer to escape from Colditz Castle.[7] On 12 May 1942, shortly after his return to England, he was decorated with the Military Cross.[11] He was subsequently promoted to war substantive captain and to the permanent rank of captain on 11 April 1945.[12] A temporary major at the war's end, he was appointed an MBE (Military Division) on 30 August 1945,[13] and awarded the DSO on 18 October.[14] As a result, the earlier MBE appointment was cancelled on 25 October 1945.[15]

After his escape from the Germans, Neave was recruited as an intelligence officer for MI9, supporting underground escape organizations, such as the Pat O'Leary Line and Comet Line in occupied Europe, with equipment, agents, and money; assisting downed Allied airmen and other Allied military personnel evade and escape capture by the Germans. In Western Europe, about 5,000 British and American military personnel were rescued by the escape organizations and repatriated to the United Kingdom, mostly through neutral Spain, before D-Day. After D-Day in Operation Marathon, Neave journeyed to France and Belgium and, with help from the Comet Line and the Resistance, rescued more than 300 allied airmen who had taken refuge in forest camps after being shot down.[16][17] While at MI9, he was the immediate superior of the future comedian Michael Bentine, also an Old Etonian.

He also served with the International Military Tribunal at the Nuremberg trials, investigating Krupp. He was supported by the work of his secretary Joan Tutte.[18] As a well-known war hero – as well as a qualified lawyer who spoke fluent German – he was honoured with the role of reading the indictments to the Nazi leaders on trial.[19] He wrote several books about his war experiences including an account of the trials.[20]

A temporary lieutenant-colonel by 1947, he was appointed an OBE (Military Division) in that year's Birthday Honours.[21] He was awarded the Bronze Star by the US government on 20 July 1948,[22] and was promoted to lieutenant-colonel on 1 April 1950,[23] At the same time, his promotion to acting major was gazetted, with retroactive effect from 16 April 1948.[23] He entered the reserves on 21 September 1951.[24]

Political career

Neave stood for the Conservative Party at the 1950 election in Thurrock and at Ealing North in 1951. He was elected for Abingdon in a by-election in June 1953, but his career was held back by a heart attack he suffered in 1959.

He was a Governor of Imperial College between 1963 and 1971 and was a member of the House of Commons select committee on Science and Technology between 1965 and 1970. He was on the governing body of Abingdon School from 1953 to 1979.[25]

Edward Heath, when Chief Whip, was alleged to have told Neave that after he suffered his heart attack his career was finished[citation needed] but in his 1998 autobiography, Heath strongly denied ever making such a remark. He admitted that in December 1974 Neave had told him to stand down for the good of the party. During the final two months of 1974, Neave had asked Keith Joseph, William Whitelaw and Edward du Cann to stand against Heath, and said that in the case of any of them challenging for the party leadership, he would be their campaign manager. When all three refused to stand, Neave agreed to be the campaign manager for Margaret Thatcher's attempt to become leader of the Conservative Party, that was eventually successful.

When Thatcher was elected leader in February 1975, Neave was rewarded by becoming head of her private office. He was then appointed Shadow Secretary of State for Northern Ireland and, at the time of his death, was poised to attain the equivalent Cabinet position in the event of the Conservatives winning the general election of 1979. In opposition, Neave was a strong supporter of Roy Mason, who had extended the policy of Ulsterisation.

Neave was author of the new and radical Conservative policy of abandoning devolution in Northern Ireland if there was no early progress in that regard, and concentrating on local government reform instead. This integrationist policy was hastily abandoned by Humphrey Atkins, who became Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, the role Neave had shadowed.

Politician Tony Benn records in his diary (17 February 1981) that a journalist from the New Statesman, Duncan Campbell, told him that he had received information two years previously, from an intelligence agent, that Neave had planned to have Benn assassinated if, following the election of Labour government, Labour leader James Callaghan resigned and there was a possibility that Benn might be elected in his place.

Campbell said that the agent was ready to give his name and the New Statesman was going to print the story. Benn, however, discounted the validity of the story, writing in his diary: "No one will believe for a moment that Airey Neave would have done such a thing."[26] The magazine printed the story on 20 February 1981, naming the agent as Lee Tracey. Tracey said he had met Neave, who asked him to join a team of intelligence and security specialists which would "make sure Benn was stopped". A planned second meeting never took place because Neave was murdered with a car bomb.[27]

Assassination

 
Memorial plaque to Airey Neave at his alma mater, Merton College, Oxford
 
Memorial stained glass window to Airey Neave in Fryerning parish church, Essex

Airey Neave was critically wounded on 30 March 1979 when a car bomb fitted with a tilt-switch exploded under his Vauxhall Cavalier[28] at 14:58 as he drove out of the Palace of Westminster car park.[29] He lost both legs in the explosion and died of his wounds at Westminster Hospital an hour after being rescued from the wrecked car. He was 63.

The Irish National Liberation Army (INLA) afterwards claimed responsibility for the assassination. Neave had been pressing within Conservative Party circles and in Parliament throughout the Troubles for the British Government to abandon its strategy of containment (including "Ulsterisation") of Irish republican paramilitarism within Northern Ireland, and switch to one of pursuing its military defeat. It is believed that this is what led to his being targeted.[30]

Following his death, Conservative leader Margaret Thatcher said of Neave:

He was one of freedom's warriors. No one knew of the great man he was, except those nearest to him. He was staunch, brave, true, strong; but he was very gentle and kind and loyal. It's a rare combination of qualities. There's no one else who can quite fill them. I, and so many other people, owe so much to him and now we must carry on for the things he fought for and not let the people who got him triumph.[31][32]

Labour Prime Minister James Callaghan said: "No effort will be spared to bring the murderers to justice and to rid the United Kingdom of the scourge of terrorism."[29]

The INLA issued a statement regarding the murder in the August 1979 edition of The Starry Plough:[33]

In March, retired terrorist and supporter of capital punishment, Airey Neave, got a taste of his own medicine when an INLA unit pulled off the operation of the decade and blew him to bits inside the 'impregnable' Palace of Westminster. The nauseous Margaret Thatcher snivelled on television that he was an 'incalculable loss'—and so he was—to the British ruling class.

Neave's death came two days after the vote of no confidence which brought down Callaghan's government and a few weeks before the general election, which brought about a Conservative victory and saw Thatcher come to power as Prime Minister. Neave's wife Diana, whom he married on 29 December 1942, was subsequently elevated to the House of Lords as Baroness Airey of Abingdon.

Neave's biographer Paul Routledge met a member of the Irish Republican Socialist Party (the political wing of INLA) who was involved in the killing of Neave and who told Routledge that Neave "would have been very successful at that job [Northern Ireland Secretary]. He would have brought the armed struggle to its knees".[34]

As a result of Neave's assassination the INLA was declared illegal across the whole of the United Kingdom on 2 July 1979.[35]

Neave was buried in the graveyard of St. Margaret's Church at Hinton Waldrist, in Oxfordshire.[36][better source needed]

Fictional portrayal of murder

In 2014, 35 years after Neave's death, a fictionalised account of Neave's murder was depicted in the Channel 4 drama Utopia, where he is portrayed as a drinker who colluded with spies and whose assassination was perpetrated by MI5. This led to condemnation of the broadcaster, with Norman Tebbit, a friend and political colleague of Neave, saying "To attack a man like that who is dead and cannot defend himself is despicable".[37]

Media depictions

Neave was portrayed by Geoffrey Pounsett in Nuremberg (2000), Dermot Crowley in Margaret (2009), Nicholas Farrell in The Iron Lady (2011) (in a piece of dramatic licence Thatcher is shown in that film as an eyewitness to his death) and Tim McInnerny in Utopia (2014).

Works

  • 1953 – They Have Their Exits
  • 1954 – Little Cyclone
  • 1969 – Saturday at MI9 (U.S. title: The Escape Room)
  • 1972 – The Flames of Calais: A Soldier's Battle, 1940
  • 1978 – Nuremberg (U.S. title: On Trial at Nuremberg)

References

  1. ^ "The London Gazette, 23 February 1962".
  2. ^ Levens, R. G. C., ed. (1964). Merton College Register 1900–1964. Oxford: Basil Blackwell. pp. 257–258.
  3. ^ "The London Gazette, 10 December 1935".
  4. ^ Paul Routledge (2002). Public Servant, Secret Agent: The elusive life and violent death of Airey Neave. Fourth Estate. p. 35. ISBN 9781841152448. from the original on 25 July 2020. Retrieved 16 March 2016.
  5. ^ "The London Gazette, 24 May 1938". from the original on 1 February 2014. Retrieved 6 November 2013.
  6. ^ "The London Gazette, 1 April 1941". from the original on 1 February 2014. Retrieved 6 November 2013.
  7. ^ a b Richards, Lee. . Archived from the original on 7 February 2015.
  8. ^ "Home – Yesterday Channel". from the original on 22 April 2020. Retrieved 24 March 2017.
  9. ^ MacIntyre, Ben (2022). Colditz: Prisoners of the Castle. New York: Penguin Random House. p. 47-48. ISBN 978-0241408520.
  10. ^ Airey Neave, They Have Their Exits (Beagle Books, Inc., 1971) pp. 69–76.
  11. ^ "The London Gazette, 8 May 1942". from the original on 13 January 2014. Retrieved 6 November 2013.
  12. ^ "London Gazette, 6 November 1945". from the original on 13 January 2014. Retrieved 6 November 2013.
  13. ^ "Page 4371 – Supplement 37244, 28 August 1945 – London Gazette – The Gazette". from the original on 13 January 2014. Retrieved 6 November 2013.
  14. ^ "The London Gazette, 18 October 1945". from the original on 13 January 2014. Retrieved 6 November 2013.
  15. ^ "The London Gazette, 25 October 1945". from the original on 13 January 2014. Retrieved 6 November 2013.
  16. ^ Neave, Airey (1970), The Escape Room, New York: Doubleday, pp. viii-xiv, 288-295
  17. ^ Clutton-Brock, Oliver (2009), RAF Evaders, London: Grub Street, pp. 424-426.
  18. ^ thewomenwhomademe (4 July 2017). "Joan T's story". The Women Who Made Me. from the original on 20 November 2020. Retrieved 20 November 2020.
  19. ^ Sereny, Gitta (1995). Albert Speer: His Battle With Truth. London: Macmillan. p. 567. ISBN 0333645197.
  20. ^ Neave, Airey (1 October 1982). Nuremberg. Hodder & Stoughton Ltd. ASIN 0340254505.
  21. ^ "The London Gazette, 12 June 1947". p. 2579.
  22. ^ "The London Gazette, 20 July 1948". p. 4190.
  23. ^ a b "The London Gazette, 4 July 1950, supplement 38958". pp. 3442–3. from the original on 9 August 2014. Retrieved 26 July 2014.
  24. ^ "The London Gazette, 20 November 1951". p. 6041.
  25. ^ "Mrs Thatcher's visit to Abingdon School" (PDF). The Abingdonian. (PDF) from the original on 19 October 2018. Retrieved 1 March 2019.
  26. ^ Tony Benn, The Benn Diaries (Arrow, 1996), pp. 506–507.
  27. ^ Routledge, pp. 299–300.
  28. ^ Pallister, David; Hoggart, Simon (31 March 2009). "From the archive: Airey Neave assassinated". The Guardian. London. from the original on 27 August 2018. Retrieved 16 December 2016.
  29. ^ a b "BBC ON THIS DAY – 30 – 1979: Car bomb kills Airey Neave". 30 March 1979. from the original on 7 March 2008. Retrieved 14 October 2007.
  30. ^ Interview with Norman Tebbit, 'The Victoria Derbyshire Programme', British Broadcasting Corporation, 21 March 2017.
  31. ^ Wharton, Ken (19 August 2014). Wasted Years, Wasted Lives Volume 2: The British Army in Northern Ireland 1978–79. Helion and Company. p. 164. ISBN 978-1909982178.
  32. ^ "Margaret Thatcher speaking to the press immediately after the assassination of Airey Neave". iconic. 8 November 2010. from the original on 12 August 2015. Retrieved 4 February 2016 – via YouTube.
  33. ^ Holland, Jack; McDonald, Henry (1996). INLA Deadly Divisions. Poolbeg. p. 221. ISBN 1-85371-263-9.
  34. ^ Routledge, p. 360.
  35. ^ Wharton, Ken (2014). Wasted Years Wasted Lives: British Army in Northern Ireland 1978–79 v. 2. Helion & Company. p. 214. ISBN 978-1909982178.
  36. ^ Entry for Neave's grave in the Findagrave website. http://www.findagrave.com/memorial/108412973/airey-neave 10 July 2018 at the Wayback Machine
  37. ^ "Utopia: Channel 4 'will not change' drama depicting MP's death". BBC News. 13 July 2014. from the original on 25 September 2015. Retrieved 4 February 2016.

Further reading

  • Bishop, Patrick (2019). The Man Who Was Saturday: The Extraordinary Life of Airey Neave. London: Collins. ISBN 978-0-00-830904-6.

External links

  • Hansard 1803–2005: contributions in Parliament by Airey Neave
  • Airey Neave Trust
  • Margaret Thatcher speech at Neave's memorial service in 1979
  • Parliamentary Archives, Papers of Airey Middleton Sheffield Neave (1916-1979) 31 March 2022 at the Wayback Machine
Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Abingdon
19531979
Succeeded by

airey, neave, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, march, 2011, . This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Airey Neave news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message Airey Middleton Sheffield Neave DSO OBE MC TD ˈ ɛer i ˈ n iː v 23 January 1916 30 March 1979 was a British soldier lawyer and Member of Parliament MP from 1953 until his assassination in 1979 Lieutenant ColonelAirey NeaveDSO OBE MC TDNeave between May 1940 and May 1941Shadow Secretary of State for Northern IrelandIn office 4 March 1974 30 March 1979LeaderEdward HeathMargaret ThatcherPreceded byFrancis PymSucceeded byAlec JonesMember of Parliamentfor AbingdonIn office 30 June 1953 30 March 1979Preceded bySir Ralph GlynSucceeded byThomas BenyonPersonal detailsBornAirey Middleton Sheffield Neave 1916 01 23 23 January 1916Knightsbridge London EnglandDied30 March 1979 1979 03 30 aged 63 Westminster London EnglandManner of deathAssassination car bomb attack Political partyConservativeSpouseDiana Giffard m 1942 wbr Children3Parent s Sheffield Airey Neave father Alma materMerton College OxfordOccupationPoliticianSoldierProfessionBarristerMilitary serviceAllegiance British EmpireBranch service British ArmyYears of service1935 1951RankLieutenant colonelUnitRoyal ArtilleryBattles warsSecond World War Battle of France Siege of Calais POW During World War II he was the first British prisoner of war to succeed in escaping from Oflag IV C at Colditz Castle and later worked for MI9 After the war he served with the International Military Tribunal at the Nuremberg trials He later became Conservative MP for Abingdon Neave was assassinated in a car bomb attack at the House of Commons The Irish National Liberation Army claimed responsibility Contents 1 Early life 2 Second World War 3 Political career 4 Assassination 5 Fictional portrayal of murder 6 Media depictions 7 Works 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksEarly life EditNeave was the son of Sheffield Airey Neave CMG OBE 1879 1961 1 an entomologist who lived at Ingatestone Essex and his wife Dorothy the daughter of Arthur Thomson Middleton His father was the grandson of Sheffield Neave the third son of Sir Thomas Neave 2nd Baronet see Neave baronets The family came to prominence as merchants in the West Indies during the 18th century and were raised to the baronetage during the life of Richard Neave Governor of the Bank of England Neave spent his early years in Knightsbridge in London before he moved to Beaconsfield Neave was sent to St Ronan s School Worthing and from there in 1929 he went to Eton College He went on to read Jurisprudence at Merton College Oxford 2 While at Eton Neave composed a prize winning essay in 1933 that examined the likely consequences of Adolf Hitler s rise to supreme power in Germany and Neave predicted then that another widespread war would break out in Europe in the near future Neave had earlier been on a visit to Germany and he witnessed the Nazi German methods of grasping political and military power At Eton Neave served in the school cadet corps as a cadet lance corporal and received a territorial commission as a second lieutenant in the Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry on 11 December 1935 3 When Neave went to Oxford University he purchased and read the entire written works of the writer Carl von Clausewitz When Neave was asked why he answered since war is coming it is only sensible to learn as much as possible about the art of waging it 4 During 1938 Neave completed his third class degree By his own admission while at Oxford University he did only the minimum amount of academic work that was required of him by his tutors Second World War EditNeave transferred his territorial commission to the Royal Engineers on 2 May 1938 5 and following the outbreak of war he was mobilised Sent to France in February 1940 with 1st Searchlight Regiment Royal Artillery he was wounded and captured by the Germans at Calais on 23 May 1940 He was imprisoned at Oflag IX A H near Spangenberg and in February 1941 moved to Stalag XX A near Thorn in German occupied western Poland Meanwhile Neave s commission was transferred to the Royal Artillery on 1 August 1940 6 In April 1941 he escaped from Thorn with Norman Forbes They were captured near Ilow while trying to enter Soviet controlled Poland and were briefly in the hands of the Gestapo 7 In May they were both sent to Oflag IV C often referred to as Colditz Castle because of its location 8 While in Colditz the French military prisoners asked the German to have the Jewish military prisoners separated from the gentile French military prisoners which resulted in about 80 French Jewish military prisoners being confined in a crowded attic of the castle Neave and many British officers were appalled at the French prisoners for this request In demonstration of their solidarity with the French Jews the British invited the French Jews to dinner in the British mess where Neave made a speech denouncing the prejudice 9 Neave made his first attempt to escape from Colditz on 28 August 1941 disguised as a German NCO He did not get out of the castle as his hastily contrived German uniform made from a Polish army tunic and cap painted with scenery paint was rendered bright green under the prison searchlights 10 Together with Dutch officer Anthony Luteyn he made a second attempt on 5 January 1942 again in disguise Better uniforms and escape route they made a quick exit from a theatrical production using the trap door beneath the stage got them out of the prison and by train and on foot they travelled to Leipzig and Ulm and finally reached the border to Switzerland near Singen Via France Spain and Gibraltar Neave returned to England in April 1942 Neave was the first British officer to escape from Colditz Castle 7 On 12 May 1942 shortly after his return to England he was decorated with the Military Cross 11 He was subsequently promoted to war substantive captain and to the permanent rank of captain on 11 April 1945 12 A temporary major at the war s end he was appointed an MBE Military Division on 30 August 1945 13 and awarded the DSO on 18 October 14 As a result the earlier MBE appointment was cancelled on 25 October 1945 15 After his escape from the Germans Neave was recruited as an intelligence officer for MI9 supporting underground escape organizations such as the Pat O Leary Line and Comet Line in occupied Europe with equipment agents and money assisting downed Allied airmen and other Allied military personnel evade and escape capture by the Germans In Western Europe about 5 000 British and American military personnel were rescued by the escape organizations and repatriated to the United Kingdom mostly through neutral Spain before D Day After D Day in Operation Marathon Neave journeyed to France and Belgium and with help from the Comet Line and the Resistance rescued more than 300 allied airmen who had taken refuge in forest camps after being shot down 16 17 While at MI9 he was the immediate superior of the future comedian Michael Bentine also an Old Etonian He also served with the International Military Tribunal at the Nuremberg trials investigating Krupp He was supported by the work of his secretary Joan Tutte 18 As a well known war hero as well as a qualified lawyer who spoke fluent German he was honoured with the role of reading the indictments to the Nazi leaders on trial 19 He wrote several books about his war experiences including an account of the trials 20 A temporary lieutenant colonel by 1947 he was appointed an OBE Military Division in that year s Birthday Honours 21 He was awarded the Bronze Star by the US government on 20 July 1948 22 and was promoted to lieutenant colonel on 1 April 1950 23 At the same time his promotion to acting major was gazetted with retroactive effect from 16 April 1948 23 He entered the reserves on 21 September 1951 24 Political career EditNeave stood for the Conservative Party at the 1950 election in Thurrock and at Ealing North in 1951 He was elected for Abingdon in a by election in June 1953 but his career was held back by a heart attack he suffered in 1959 He was a Governor of Imperial College between 1963 and 1971 and was a member of the House of Commons select committee on Science and Technology between 1965 and 1970 He was on the governing body of Abingdon School from 1953 to 1979 25 Edward Heath when Chief Whip was alleged to have told Neave that after he suffered his heart attack his career was finished citation needed but in his 1998 autobiography Heath strongly denied ever making such a remark He admitted that in December 1974 Neave had told him to stand down for the good of the party During the final two months of 1974 Neave had asked Keith Joseph William Whitelaw and Edward du Cann to stand against Heath and said that in the case of any of them challenging for the party leadership he would be their campaign manager When all three refused to stand Neave agreed to be the campaign manager for Margaret Thatcher s attempt to become leader of the Conservative Party that was eventually successful When Thatcher was elected leader in February 1975 Neave was rewarded by becoming head of her private office He was then appointed Shadow Secretary of State for Northern Ireland and at the time of his death was poised to attain the equivalent Cabinet position in the event of the Conservatives winning the general election of 1979 In opposition Neave was a strong supporter of Roy Mason who had extended the policy of Ulsterisation Neave was author of the new and radical Conservative policy of abandoning devolution in Northern Ireland if there was no early progress in that regard and concentrating on local government reform instead This integrationist policy was hastily abandoned by Humphrey Atkins who became Secretary of State for Northern Ireland the role Neave had shadowed Politician Tony Benn records in his diary 17 February 1981 that a journalist from the New Statesman Duncan Campbell told him that he had received information two years previously from an intelligence agent that Neave had planned to have Benn assassinated if following the election of Labour government Labour leader James Callaghan resigned and there was a possibility that Benn might be elected in his place Campbell said that the agent was ready to give his name and the New Statesman was going to print the story Benn however discounted the validity of the story writing in his diary No one will believe for a moment that Airey Neave would have done such a thing 26 The magazine printed the story on 20 February 1981 naming the agent as Lee Tracey Tracey said he had met Neave who asked him to join a team of intelligence and security specialists which would make sure Benn was stopped A planned second meeting never took place because Neave was murdered with a car bomb 27 Assassination EditMain article Assassination of Airey Neave Memorial plaque to Airey Neave at his alma mater Merton College Oxford Memorial stained glass window to Airey Neave in Fryerning parish church Essex Airey Neave was critically wounded on 30 March 1979 when a car bomb fitted with a tilt switch exploded under his Vauxhall Cavalier 28 at 14 58 as he drove out of the Palace of Westminster car park 29 He lost both legs in the explosion and died of his wounds at Westminster Hospital an hour after being rescued from the wrecked car He was 63 The Irish National Liberation Army INLA afterwards claimed responsibility for the assassination Neave had been pressing within Conservative Party circles and in Parliament throughout the Troubles for the British Government to abandon its strategy of containment including Ulsterisation of Irish republican paramilitarism within Northern Ireland and switch to one of pursuing its military defeat It is believed that this is what led to his being targeted 30 Following his death Conservative leader Margaret Thatcher said of Neave He was one of freedom s warriors No one knew of the great man he was except those nearest to him He was staunch brave true strong but he was very gentle and kind and loyal It s a rare combination of qualities There s no one else who can quite fill them I and so many other people owe so much to him and now we must carry on for the things he fought for and not let the people who got him triumph 31 32 Labour Prime Minister James Callaghan said No effort will be spared to bring the murderers to justice and to rid the United Kingdom of the scourge of terrorism 29 The INLA issued a statement regarding the murder in the August 1979 edition of The Starry Plough 33 In March retired terrorist and supporter of capital punishment Airey Neave got a taste of his own medicine when an INLA unit pulled off the operation of the decade and blew him to bits inside the impregnable Palace of Westminster The nauseous Margaret Thatcher snivelled on television that he was an incalculable loss and so he was to the British ruling class Neave s death came two days after the vote of no confidence which brought down Callaghan s government and a few weeks before the general election which brought about a Conservative victory and saw Thatcher come to power as Prime Minister Neave s wife Diana whom he married on 29 December 1942 was subsequently elevated to the House of Lords as Baroness Airey of Abingdon Neave s biographer Paul Routledge met a member of the Irish Republican Socialist Party the political wing of INLA who was involved in the killing of Neave and who told Routledge that Neave would have been very successful at that job Northern Ireland Secretary He would have brought the armed struggle to its knees 34 As a result of Neave s assassination the INLA was declared illegal across the whole of the United Kingdom on 2 July 1979 35 Neave was buried in the graveyard of St Margaret s Church at Hinton Waldrist in Oxfordshire 36 better source needed Fictional portrayal of murder EditIn 2014 35 years after Neave s death a fictionalised account of Neave s murder was depicted in the Channel 4 drama Utopia where he is portrayed as a drinker who colluded with spies and whose assassination was perpetrated by MI5 This led to condemnation of the broadcaster with Norman Tebbit a friend and political colleague of Neave saying To attack a man like that who is dead and cannot defend himself is despicable 37 Media depictions EditNeave was portrayed by Geoffrey Pounsett in Nuremberg 2000 Dermot Crowley in Margaret 2009 Nicholas Farrell in The Iron Lady 2011 in a piece of dramatic licence Thatcher is shown in that film as an eyewitness to his death and Tim McInnerny in Utopia 2014 Works Edit1953 They Have Their Exits 1954 Little Cyclone 1969 Saturday at MI9 U S title The Escape Room 1972 The Flames of Calais A Soldier s Battle 1940 1978 Nuremberg U S title On Trial at Nuremberg References Edit The London Gazette 23 February 1962 Levens R G C ed 1964 Merton College Register 1900 1964 Oxford Basil Blackwell pp 257 258 The London Gazette 10 December 1935 Paul Routledge 2002 Public Servant Secret Agent The elusive life and violent death of Airey Neave Fourth Estate p 35 ISBN 9781841152448 Archived from the original on 25 July 2020 Retrieved 16 March 2016 The London Gazette 24 May 1938 Archived from the original on 1 February 2014 Retrieved 6 November 2013 The London Gazette 1 April 1941 Archived from the original on 1 February 2014 Retrieved 6 November 2013 a b Richards Lee IS9 Historical Report Airey Neave Escape Report Arcre Archived from the original on 7 February 2015 Home Yesterday Channel Archived from the original on 22 April 2020 Retrieved 24 March 2017 MacIntyre Ben 2022 Colditz Prisoners of the Castle New York Penguin Random House p 47 48 ISBN 978 0241408520 Airey Neave They Have Their Exits Beagle Books Inc 1971 pp 69 76 The London Gazette 8 May 1942 Archived from the original on 13 January 2014 Retrieved 6 November 2013 London Gazette 6 November 1945 Archived from the original on 13 January 2014 Retrieved 6 November 2013 Page 4371 Supplement 37244 28 August 1945 London Gazette The Gazette Archived from the original on 13 January 2014 Retrieved 6 November 2013 The London Gazette 18 October 1945 Archived from the original on 13 January 2014 Retrieved 6 November 2013 The London Gazette 25 October 1945 Archived from the original on 13 January 2014 Retrieved 6 November 2013 Neave Airey 1970 The Escape Room New York Doubleday pp viii xiv 288 295 Clutton Brock Oliver 2009 RAF Evaders London Grub Street pp 424 426 thewomenwhomademe 4 July 2017 Joan T s story The Women Who Made Me Archived from the original on 20 November 2020 Retrieved 20 November 2020 Sereny Gitta 1995 Albert Speer His Battle With Truth London Macmillan p 567 ISBN 0333645197 Neave Airey 1 October 1982 Nuremberg Hodder amp Stoughton Ltd ASIN 0340254505 The London Gazette 12 June 1947 p 2579 The London Gazette 20 July 1948 p 4190 a b The London Gazette 4 July 1950 supplement 38958 pp 3442 3 Archived from the original on 9 August 2014 Retrieved 26 July 2014 The London Gazette 20 November 1951 p 6041 Mrs Thatcher s visit to Abingdon School PDF The Abingdonian Archived PDF from the original on 19 October 2018 Retrieved 1 March 2019 Tony Benn The Benn Diaries Arrow 1996 pp 506 507 Routledge pp 299 300 Pallister David Hoggart Simon 31 March 2009 From the archive Airey Neave assassinated The Guardian London Archived from the original on 27 August 2018 Retrieved 16 December 2016 a b BBC ON THIS DAY 30 1979 Car bomb kills Airey Neave 30 March 1979 Archived from the original on 7 March 2008 Retrieved 14 October 2007 Interview with Norman Tebbit The Victoria Derbyshire Programme British Broadcasting Corporation 21 March 2017 Wharton Ken 19 August 2014 Wasted Years Wasted Lives Volume 2 The British Army in Northern Ireland 1978 79 Helion and Company p 164 ISBN 978 1909982178 Margaret Thatcher speaking to the press immediately after the assassination of Airey Neave iconic 8 November 2010 Archived from the original on 12 August 2015 Retrieved 4 February 2016 via YouTube Holland Jack McDonald Henry 1996 INLA Deadly Divisions Poolbeg p 221 ISBN 1 85371 263 9 Routledge p 360 Wharton Ken 2014 Wasted Years Wasted Lives British Army in Northern Ireland 1978 79 v 2 Helion amp Company p 214 ISBN 978 1909982178 Entry for Neave s grave in the Findagrave website http www findagrave com memorial 108412973 airey neave Archived 10 July 2018 at the Wayback Machine Utopia Channel 4 will not change drama depicting MP s death BBC News 13 July 2014 Archived from the original on 25 September 2015 Retrieved 4 February 2016 Further reading EditBishop Patrick 2019 The Man Who Was Saturday The Extraordinary Life of Airey Neave London Collins ISBN 978 0 00 830904 6 External links EditHansard 1803 2005 contributions in Parliament by Airey Neave Airey Neave Trust Margaret Thatcher speech at Neave s memorial service in 1979 Parliamentary Archives Papers of Airey Middleton Sheffield Neave 1916 1979 Archived 31 March 2022 at the Wayback MachineParliament of the United KingdomPreceded bySir Ralph Glyn Member of Parliament for Abingdon1953 1979 Succeeded byThomas Benyon Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Airey Neave amp oldid 1152435932, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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