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Conor Cruise O'Brien

Donal Conor David Dermot Donat Cruise O'Brien (3 November 1917 – 18 December 2008[1]), often nicknamed "The Cruiser",[2] was an Irish diplomat, politician, writer, historian and academic, who served as Minister for Posts and Telegraphs from 1973 to 1977, a Senator for Dublin University from 1977 to 1979, a Teachta Dála (TD) for the Dublin North-East constituency from 1969 to 1977, and a Member of the European Parliament (MEP) from January 1973 to March 1973.

Conor Cruise O'Brien
Minister for Posts and Telegraphs
In office
14 March 1973 – 5 July 1977
TaoiseachLiam Cosgrave
Preceded byGerry Collins
Succeeded byPádraig Faulkner
Senator
In office
27 October 1977 – 13 June 1979
ConstituencyDublin University
Teachta Dála
In office
June 1969 – June 1977
ConstituencyDublin North-East
Member of the European Parliament
In office
1 January 1973 – 23 March 1973
ConstituencyOireachtas
Vice-Chancellor of the University of Ghana
In office
1962–1965
Preceded byRaymond Henry Stoughton
Succeeded byAlexander Kwapong
Personal details
Born
Donal Conor David Dermot Donat Cruise O'Brien

(1917-11-03)3 November 1917
Rathmines, Dublin, Ireland
Died18 December 2008(2008-12-18) (aged 91)
Howth, Dublin, Ireland
Political partyLabour Party
Other political
affiliations
UK Unionist Party (1996–1998)
Spouse(s)
Christine Foster
(m. 1939; div. 1959)

(m. 1962)
Children5, including Kate
Alma materTrinity College Dublin

His opinion of Britain's role in Ireland subsequent to the partition of the island and the independence of the Free State in 1921 changed during the 1970s, in response to the outbreak of The Troubles. He now saw opposing nationalist and unionist traditions as irreconcilable, and switched from a nationalist to a unionist view of Irish politics and history, and from opposition to support for partition. Cruise O'Brien's outlook was radical and seldom orthodox. He summarised his position as intending "to administer an electric shock to the Irish psyche".[3]

Internationally, though a long-standing member of the Irish Anti-Apartheid Movement, he opposed in person the African National Congress's academic boycott of the apartheid regime in South Africa.[4] Views that he espoused during and after the 1970s contrasted with those he articulated during the 1950s and 1960s.

During his 1945–61 career as a civil servant, Cruise O'Brien promoted the government's anti-partition campaign. In the 1960s he was associated with the 'New Left' and opposition to US military involvement in Viet Nam. At the 1969 general election he was elected to Dáil Éireann as a Labour Party TD for Dublin North-East. He served as Minister for Posts and Telegraphs, with responsibility for broadcasting, between 1973 and 1977 in a coalition government.[5] During those years he was also the Labour Party's Northern Ireland spokesman. Cruise O'Brien was later known primarily as an author and as an Irish Independent and Sunday Independent columnist.

Early life

Conor Cruise O'Brien was born at 44 Leinster Road, Rathmines, Dublin, to Francis ("Frank") Cruise O'Brien and the former Kathleen Sheehy.[6] Frank was a journalist with the Freeman's Journal and Irish Independent newspapers, and had edited an essay written 50 years earlier by William Lecky concerning the influence of the clergy on Irish politics.[7] Kathleen was a teacher of the Irish language. She was the daughter of David Sheehy, a member of the Irish Parliamentary Party and organiser of the Irish National Land League. She had three sisters, Hanna, Margaret and Mary. Hanna's husband, the well-known pacifist and supporter of women's suffrage Francis Sheehy-Skeffington, was executed by firing squad on the orders of Captain J.C Bowen Colthurst during the 1916 Easter Rising.[8][9] Soon afterwards Mary's husband, Thomas Kettle, an officer of the Royal Dublin Fusiliers in the First World War, was killed during the Battle of the Somme. These women, Hanna and Kathleen in particular, were a major influence on Cruise O'Brien's upbringing, alongside Hanna's son, Owen Sheehy-Skeffington.[10]

Cruise O'Brien's father died in 1927. He wanted Conor educated, like Conor's cousin Owen, in Sandford Park School that had a predominantly Protestant ethos, a wish Kathleen honoured.[11] despite objections from Catholic clergy.[12] Cruise O'Brien subsequently attended Trinity College Dublin, which played the British national anthem until 1939. While others stood, he and Sheehy-Skeffington sat in protest on such occasions.[13] Cruise O'Brien was elected a scholar in Modern Languages at Trinity in 1937 and was editor of Trinity's weekly, TCD: A College Miscellany.

His first wife, Christine Foster, from a Belfast Presbyterian family, was, like her father, a member of the Gaelic League. Her parents, Alexander (Alec) Roulston Foster and Anne (Annie) Lynd, were, in Cruise O'Brien's description, "Home Rulers; a very advanced position for any Protestants in the period".[14] Alec Foster was at the time headmaster of Belfast Royal Academy; he was later a founding member of the Wolfe Tone Society,[15] and was a strong supporter of the Irish Anti-Apartheid movement.[16] He was a former Ulster, Ireland and British & Irish Lions rugby player, having captained Ireland three times between 1912 and 1914. Cruise O'Brien and Christine Foster were married in a registry office in 1939. The couple had three children: Donal, Fedelma, and Kathleen (Kate), who died in 1998. The marriage ended in divorce after 20 years.

In 1962, Cruise O'Brien married the Irish-language writer and poet Máire Mhac an tSaoi in a Roman Catholic church. Cruise O'Brien's divorce, though contrary to Roman Catholic teaching, was not an issue because that church did not recognise the validity of his 1939 civil wedding. He referred to this action, which in effect formally de-recognised the legitimacy of his former wife and their children, as "hypocritical … and otherwise distasteful, but I took it, as preferable to the alternatives".[17] Mac an tSaoi was five years his junior, and the daughter of Seán MacEntee, who was Tánaiste (deputy prime minister) at the time. The couple subsequently adopted two children of Irish-African parentage, a son (Patrick) and a daughter (Margaret).

Department of External Affairs

Cruise O'Brien's university education led to a career in the public service, most notably in the Department of External Affairs. He achieved distinction as managing director of the state-run Irish News Agency and later as part of the fledgling Irish delegation to the United Nations. He later claimed he was something of an anomalous iconoclast in post-1922 Irish politics, particularly in the context of Fianna Fáil governments under Éamon de Valera.

Cruise O'Brien wrote that the then Secretary of the department, Joseph P. Walshe, might well have considered that Cruise O'Brien was "no fit person to be a member of Catholic Ireland's Department of External Affairs". Cruise O'Brien attributed his appointment "to a decision taken at a higher level. Under God, there was only one higher level. This consisted of Eamon de Valera, then Minister for External Affairs as well as Taoiseach." Cruise O'Brien speculated that de Valera's Catholicism may have been conditioned by his excommunication during the Civil War of 1922/3, that he may have felt that Walshe had been too close to the previous government, and that he may have been conscious of the nationalist credentials of the Sheehy family, notably Cruise O'Brien's great-uncle, Father Eugene Sheehy, who had been parish priest of Bruree during de Valera's formative years. De Valera later wrote of Father Sheehy, "Eisean a mhúin an tirgrá dhom" (It was he who taught me patriotism).[18]

Cruise O'Brien wrote of his entry into the public service: "The time when I joined the Department of Finance was the first time, since my First Communion, that I found myself in a working environment which was mainly – indeed almost entirely - Catholic".[19] As he admitted, his non-belief did not impede his career, which ended at ambassadorial level. He observed,

There was nothing unusual even then about not believing in Catholicism. What was unusual then was to acknowledge publicly that you did not believe in Catholicism … It is interesting that this did absolutely no harm to my public career around the mid-century – a time when the authority of a triumphant Catholic Church appeared to be overwhelmingly strong, in the media and in public life. But I think many educated people - including many in the public service - already resented that authority and, while being discreet about this themselves, had some respect for a person who publicly rejected it altogether.[20]

In the Department of External Affairs, during the 1948–51 inter-party government, he served under Seán MacBride, son of John MacBride and Maud Gonne, republican and former IRA Chief of Staff, who would become the 1974 Nobel Peace Laureate. Cruise O'Brien was particularly vocal in opposition to partition during the 1940s and 1950s, as part of his official duties.

Secondment in Congo

He came to prominence in 1961, after his secondment from Ireland's UN delegation as a special representative to Dag Hammarskjöld, Secretary General of the United Nations, in the Katanga region of the newly independent Congo (now the Democratic Republic of the Congo). Cruise O'Brien accused a combination of British, French and white Rhodesian elements of attempting to partition off Katanga as a pro-Western client state. He used military force to oppose a combination of western mercenaries and Katangan forces.

Cruise O'Brien arrived in Élisabethville (modern Lubumbashi) on 14 June 1961, making him the UN's point man for dealing with Moïse Tshombe, the leader of the self-proclaimed independent État du Katanga.[21] The Kasai Baluba people who formed the majority of the people in northern Katanga were solid supporters of a united Congo, and were the subjects of a ruthless campaign of repression waged by the white mercenaries hired by Tshombe, together with the Katangese gendarmerie. The UN refugee camps were soon overcrowded with thousands of Kasai Baluba people who fled into the refugee camps for their safety.[21] From the viewpoint of O'Brien and other UN personnel, the sooner the crisis was ended, the sooner the refugees could go home. On 28 August 1961, Operation Rumpunch was launched to remove the mercenaries from Katanga as the first step towards reintegrating Katanga into the Congo.[21] On 11 September, Mahmoud Khiary, the chief of the UN mission, gave O'Brien orders to arrest several leading figures within the Etat du Katanga.[21] On 13 September 1961, Operation Morthor was launched, which led Cruise O'Brien to assert prematurely at a press conference that the secession of Katanga was at an end.[21] Tshombe was ordered to be arrested, but he was able to escape via the British consul in Élisabethville to the British colony of Northern Rhodesia (modern Zambia) from whence he returned to Katanga.[21]

Siege of Jadotville

In September 1961, a company of 155 Irish UN troops ("A" Company, 35th Battalion, Irish Army), was surrounded by a force of heavily armed Gendarmerie and mercenaries outnumbering them 20-to-one in Jadotville. The Irish soldiers, many of them still in their teens, were lightly armed, short of ammunition and supplies, and unprepared for the situation. They had been sent to the newly independent Republic of Congo on what was supposed to be a peacekeeping mission but were ordered to the offensive by the UN's most senior diplomat on the ground, Cruise O'Brien acting on the instructions of the Secretary General, who wanted the Katanga problem solved before the upcoming United Nations General Assembly, as his career was on the line.

The Irish troops held out for six days before they ran out of bullets and drinking water. When water finally reached them, it came in old petrol cans that had not been cleaned, making it undrinkable. The troops inflicted heavy casualties on the enemy force but suffered no fatalities themselves. After their surrender, they spent just over one month in captivity unsure of their fate, and when they arrived back in Ireland, were dismayed and deeply hurt to learn that the UN and their own government were anxious to sweep the episode under the carpet to protect the reputation and to conceal the failures of the UN in preparing for combat and liberating Company A.

Cruise O'Brien wrote immediately about his experiences in The Observer of London and in The New York Times on 10 and 17 December 1961. Armed with the archive material, one expert concluded Hammarskjöld "knew in advance that the UN was about to take action in Katanga and he authorised that action".[22] This is contradicted in a 2022 book on the Congo crisis by historian Wilhelm Agrell.[23]

Dismissal

Faced with the failure of Operation Morthor, Hammarskjöld went to Élisabethville to meet Tshombe to discuss a ceasefire, but was killed when his airplane crashed during the journey. Cruise O'Brien wrote: "in Élisabethville I do not think there was anyone who believed that his death was an accident".[21]

A UN crisis ensued, and Cruise O'Brien was forced to step down simultaneously from his UN position and the Irish diplomatic service in late 1961. He went public immediately with his version of events, writing simultaneously in the Observer (London) and the New York Times that, "My resignation from the United Nations and from the Irish foreign service is a result of British government policy".[24] Michael Ignatieff asserted that Hammarskjöld, who was killed in Katanga in a suspicious plane crash prior to O'Brien's departure, had misjudged O'Brien's abilities as UN representative. He further observed that O'Brien's use of military force provided the Soviets and the US with ammunition in their campaign against the UN Secretary General and against UN actions in opposition to the interests of the big powers. That thesis was later shown to be inaccurate by the documentary CONGO 1961,[25] made for Irish television station TG4, which showed that Hammarskjöld himself had ordered the military actions and left Cruise O'Brien to take the blame when they failed.[22]

Documents on Irish Foreign Policy 1957-1961 (2018), included 1961 correspondence in which Frederick Boland, Ireland's ambassador to the UN, said that he had been told by Ralph Bunche, Under-Secretary-General of the United Nations for special political affairs, that Cruise O'Brien had been "given the green light" for the seizure of the Post Office and the Radio Station.[26]

Opposition to the Vietnam War

After Cruise O'Brien's recall from UN service and his resignation from the Irish civil service, he served as Vice-Chancellor of the University of Ghana. He resigned after he fell out with the Chancellor and President of Ghana, Kwame Nkrumah, in 1965. He was initially sympathetic towards Nkrumah, who won Ghana's independence from the British empire in 1957, but fell out with him due to his authoritarianism and his promotion of the ideology of 'Nkrumahism', in which all Ghanaians were expected to believe.[21] Cruise O'Brien sought to protect academic freedom against Nkrumahism, saying in a speech before the students of the University of Ghana that all intellectuals have a duty to promote the truth and that "These are not European values; these are universal values."[21]

He was then appointed Albert Schweitzer Professor of Humanities at New York University, a position he held until 1969. During the 1960s O'Brien was an active opponent of US involvement in Vietnam. He supported the right of the Vietnamese people to use violence against US armed forces. At a 1967 Vietnam War symposium O'Brien clashed with Hannah Arendt, who had remarked, "As to the Viet Cong terror, we cannot possibly agree with it". O'Brien responded, "I think there is a distinction between the use of terror by oppressed peoples against the oppressors and their servants, in comparison with the use of terror by their oppressors in the interests of further oppression. I think there is a qualitative distinction there which we have the right to make."

Besides the Vietnam War, Cruise O'Brien opposed what he saw as the overtly too passive opposition of the U.S. government to the white supremacist governments of Rhodesia and South Africa, charging that all the reaction the U.S. government ever made was to politely deplore the policies of the two governments.[21] In September 1967, he flew to the self-proclaimed Republic of Biafra to express his support for Ibo separatism.[21] In articles in The Observer and The New York Review of Books, he argued that there were important differences between the Republic of Biafra and the State of Katanga, and that there was no equivalence between the two breakaway states.[21] He argued that Biafra represented the sincere wish of the Ibo people to leave Nigeria, while Katanga was a sham.

In December 1967, Cruise O'Brien was front-page news in The Irish Times, which reported his arrest while demonstrating against the war in New York, and his being kicked by a policeman.[21] He joked about the policeman who assaulted him: "no prizes for guessing his ethnicity".[21] In 1968, he campaigned for Senator Eugene McCarthy who sought the Democratic nomination in the presidential election of that year on a platform of ending the Vietnam War.[21] In May of that year, Cruise O'Brien condemned police attacks on and harassment of the militant, armed, Black Panther Party.[27][28]

Between January and March 1969, he offered refuge at his home in Howth to German socialist student leader, and anti-Vietnam War activist, Rudi Dutschke and his wife Gretchen. In April the previous year Dutschke had been shot and badly injured by a right-wing assassin in West Berlin, but was subsequently denied visas by a number of European countries, including Britain. During their stay, the Dutschkes were visited by their lawyer Horst Mahler, who tried and failed to persuade them to support him underground in the group that was to become the Red Army Faction (the "Baader Meinhof Gang").[29]

Irish politics

Cruise O'Brien returned to Ireland and in the 1969 general election was elected to Dáil Éireann as a member of the opposition Labour Party in Dublin North-East,[30] taking the second of that constituency's four seats behind Fianna Fail Minister for Finance Charles Haughey, whose probity in financial matters he questioned.[31] He was appointed a member of the short-lived first delegation from the Oireachtas to the European Parliament. After the 1973 general election, Cruise O'Brien was appointed Minister for Posts and Telegraphs in the 1973–77 Labour-Fine Gael coalition under Taoiseach Liam Cosgrave.

After the outbreak of armed conflict in Northern Ireland in 1969, Cruise O'Brien developed a deep hostility to militant Irish republicanism and to Irish nationalists generally in Northern Ireland, which reversed the views that he articulated at the outset of the unrest.[32][33] He also reversed his opposition to broadcasting censorship imposed by the previous government, by extending and vigorously enforcing censorship of Raidió Teilifís Éireann (RTÉ) under Section 31 of the Broadcasting Act.[34] In 1976, he specifically banned spokespersons for Sinn Féin and the Provisional Irish Republican Army from RTÉ.[citation needed] At the same time, he unsuccessfully attempted to have Britain's BBC 1 broadcast on Ireland's proposed second television channel, instead of allowing RTÉ to run it.[35][36]

Two additional notable incidents affected Cruise O'Brien's career as minister, besides his support for broadcasting censorship.

In August 1976, Bernard Nossiter of The Washington Post interviewed him on the passage of an Emergency Powers Bill. During the course of the interview, Cruise O'Brien revealed an intention to extend censorship beyond broadcasting. He wished to "cleanse the culture" of republicanism and said that he would like the bill to be used against teachers who allegedly glorified Irish revolutionaries. He also wanted it used against newspaper editors who published pro-republican or anti-British readers' letters.[37] Cruise O'Brien mentioned The Irish Press as a newspaper against which he particularly hoped to use the legislation against and produced a file of Irish Press letters to the editor to which he took exception. Nossiter immediately informed The Irish Press editor Tim Pat Coogan of Cruise O'Brien's intentions. Coogan printed Nossiter's report (as did The Irish Times), republished the letters to which Cruise O'Brien objected and ran a number of strong editorials attacking Cruise O'Brien and the proposed legislation. The interview caused huge controversy and resulted in the modification of the measure appearing to target newspapers.[38]

Cruise O'Brien also supported Garda Síochána brutality from 1973 to 1977, but that was not revealed by Cruise O'Brien until 1998 in his Memoir.[39] In Memoir: My Life and Themes, Cruise O'Brien recalled a conversation with a detective who told him how the Gardaí had found out from a suspect the location of businessman Tiede Herrema, who had been kidnapped by group of maverick republicans in October 1975: "the escort started asking him questions and when at first he refused to answer, they beat the shit out of him. Then he told them where Herrema was"."/ Cruise O'Brien explained, "I refrained from telling this story to [ministerial colleagues] Garret [FitzGerald] or Justin [Keating], because I thought it would worry them. It didn't worry me".[40] Elements of the Garda that engaged in beating false confessions out of suspects quickly became known as the "Heavy Gang".[41][42]

Cruise O'Brien's Dublin North-East constituency was re-drawn and renamed as part of his Labour colleague James Tully's attempt as Minister for Local Government to design boundaries in the electoral interests of the coalition partners. The plan backfired. In the 1977 general election, he stood in Dublin Clontarf and was one of three ministers (the others being Justin Keating and Patrick Cooney) defeated in a rout of the outgoing administration.[43] He was, however, subsequently elected to Seanad Éireann in 1977 from the Dublin University constituency. He was dropped as Labour's Northern Ireland spokesperson. O'Brien resigned his seat in 1979 because of new commitments as editor-in-chief of The Observer newspaper in London.

Editor-in-Chief at The Observer

Between 1978 and 1981, Cruise O'Brien was editor-in-chief of The Observer newspaper in Britain. In 1979 he controversially refused to publish an Observer article by Mary Holland, the paper's Ireland correspondent. Holland, whose reporting won her a Journalist of the Year award, had been one of the first journalists to explain discrimination in Northern Ireland to a British audience. The article was a profile of Mary Nelis of Derry and dealt with her radicalisation as a result of the conflict. Cruise O'Brien objected and sent Holland a memo stating that the "killing strain" of Irish republicanism "has a very high propensity to run in families and the mother is most often the carrier".[13] The memo continued, "It is a very serious weakness of your coverage of Irish affairs that you are a very poor judge of Irish Catholics. That gifted and talkative community includes some of the most expert conmen and conwomen in the world and I believe you have been conned".[44][45] Holland was forced out of the newspaper by Cruise O'Brien.[46] She later joined The Irish Times as a columnist. She also rejoined The Observer after Cruise O'Brien's departure in 1981.[47]

Unionism

In 1985, Cruise O'Brien supported unionist objections to the inter-governmental Anglo-Irish Agreement. In 1996 he joined Robert McCartney's United Kingdom Unionist Party (UKUP) and was elected to the Northern Ireland Forum. In 1997, a successful libel action was brought against him by relatives of Bloody Sunday victims for alleging in a Sunday Independent article in 1997 that the marchers were "Sinn Féin activists operating for the IRA".[48] Cruise O'Brien opposed the 1998 Good Friday Agreement and opposed allowing Sinn Féin into government in Northern Ireland. He wrote that he was "glad to be an ally … in defence of the Union" with the Reverend Ian Paisley, leader of the Free Presbyterian Church and of the Democratic Unionist Party. In 1968 O'Brien had referred to Paisley as a "hate merchant". He also predicted, mistakenly, that Paisley would not enter a power-sharing government with Sinn Féin.[49] O'Brien later resigned from the UKUP after his book Memoir: My Life and Themes called on Unionists to consider the benefits of a united Ireland in order to thwart Sinn Féin.[50] In 2005 he rejoined the Irish Labour Party. Cruise O'Brien defended his harsh attitudes and actions towards Irish republicans, saying "We do right to condemn all violence but we have a special duty to condemn the violence which is committed in our name".[51]

Writings

Cruise O'Brien's many books include: States of Ireland (1972), where he first indicated his revised view of Irish nationalism, The Great Melody (1992), his 'thematic' biography of Edmund Burke, and his autobiography Memoir: My Life and Themes (1999). He also published a collection of essays, Passion and Cunning (1988), which includes a substantial piece on the literary work of William Butler Yeats and some challenging views on the subject of terrorism, and The Siege: The Saga of Israel and Zionism (1986), a history of Zionism and the State of Israel. His books, particularly those on Irish issues, tend to be personalised, for example States of Ireland, where he made the link between the political success of the republican Easter Rising and the consequent demise of his Home Rule family's position in society. His private papers have been deposited in the University College Dublin Archives.

In 1963, Cruise O'Brien's script for a Telefís Éireann programme on Charles Stewart Parnell won him a Jacob's Award.[52]

He was a longtime columnist for the Irish Independent. His articles were distinguished by hostility to the Northern Ireland peace process, regular predictions of civil war involving the Republic of Ireland, and a pro-Unionist stance.[citation needed]

Cruise O'Brien held visiting professorships and lectureships throughout the world, particularly in the United States, and controversially in apartheid South Africa, openly breaking the academic boycott. A persistent critic of Charles Haughey, Cruise O'Brien coined the acronym GUBU (Grotesque, Unbelievable, Bizarre and Unprecedented), based on a statement by Charles Haughey, who was then Taoiseach, commenting on the discovery of a murder suspect, Malcolm MacArthur, in the apartment of the Fianna Fáil Attorney General Patrick Connolly.[53] Until 1994, Cruise O'Brien was a Pro-Chancellor of the University of Dublin.

According to Roy Foster, Colm Tóibín wrote that Seamus Heaney "was so popular that he could even survive being endorsed by Conor Cruise O’Brien, which normally meant 'the kiss of death' in Ireland. The legendary The New Yorker fact-checking desk, unable to let a single statement go uncorroborated, found out Cruise O'Brien's Dublin phone number, and called it to inquire if his approval meant the kiss of death in his native country: they then telephoned an astonished Tóibín and reproachfully told him: 'Mr O'Brien said: "No, it didn't".'"[54]

Bibliography

  • Maria Cross: Imaginative Patterns in a Group of Modern Catholic Writers (as Donat O'Donnell) (London: Chatto & Windus, 1952) OCLC 7884093
  • Parnell and His Party 1880–90 (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1957) ISBN 978-0-19-821237-9 (1968 edition)
  • The Shaping of Modern Ireland (London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1960)
  • To Katanga and Back: A UN Case History (London: Hutchinson, 1962) OCLC 460615937
  • Writers and Politics: Essays & Criticism (London: Chatto & Windus, 1965) ISBN 978-0-14-002733-4 (1976 Penguin edition)
  • Introduction and notes to Edmund Burke's Reflections on the Revolution in France (London: Penguin Books, 1968, 2004) ISBN 978-0-140-43204-6
  • Murderous Angels: A Political Tragedy and Comedy in Black and White (play) (Boston: Little, Brown, 1968) OCLC 449739
  • The United Nations: Sacred Drama with illustrations by Feliks Topolski (London: Hutchinson, 1968) ISBN 978-0-09-085790-6
  • Camus (Fontana Modern Masters, 1970) ISBN 978-0-00-211147-8 – released in US as Albert Camus of Europe and Africa (New York: Viking, 1970) ISBN 978-0-670-01902-1
  • (with Máire O'Brien) A Concise History of Ireland (London: Thames & Hudson, 1972); retitled The Story of Ireland (New York: Viking, 1972)
  • States of Ireland (London: Hutchinson, 1972) ISBN 978-0-09-113100-5
  • The Suspecting Glance (London: Faber, 1972) ISBN 978-0-571-09543-8
  • Herod: Reflections on Political Violence (London: Hutchinson, 1978) ISBN 978-0-09-133190-0
  • The Siege: The Saga of Israel and Zionism (1986) ISBN 978-0-671-63310-3
  • God Land: Reflections on Religion and Nationalism (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1988) ISBN 978-0-674-35510-1
  • Passion and Cunning and Other Essays (London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1988) ISBN 978-0-297-79325-0
  • The Great Melody: A Thematic Biography of Edmund Burke (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1992) ISBN 978-0-226-61651-3
  • On the Eve of the Millennium (Toronto: House of Anansi Press, 1994). ISBN 978-0-88784-559-8
  • The Long Affair: Thomas Jefferson and the French Revolution, 1785–1800 (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1996) ISBN 978-0-226-61656-8
  • Ancestral Voices: Religion and Nationalism in Ireland (Dublin: Poolbeg Press, 1994) ISBN 978-1-85371-429-0
  • Memoir: My Life and Themes (Dublin: Poolbeg Press, 1999) ISBN 978-1-85371-947-9

References

  • Akenson, Donald H. (1994). Conor: A Biography of Conor Cruise O'Brien. Cornell University Press. ISBN 0-8014-3086-0.
  • Coogan, Tim Pat (2008). A Memoir. Weidenfeld & Nicolson. ISBN 978-0-297-85110-3.
  • Jordan, Anthony J. (1994). To Laugh or to Weep, A Biography of Conor Cruise O'Brien. Blackwater Press. ISBN 0861214439.
  • Cruise O'Brien, Conor (1999). Memoir: My Life and Themes. Dublin: Poolbeg. ISBN 978-1-85371-947-9.
  • Meehan, Niall (2009). "Arrested Development: Conor Cruise O'Brien 1917–2008". History Ireland (March–April).
  • Meehan Niall (2017). The Embers of Revisionism, Critiquing Creationist Irish History, AHS, 2017.
  • Callanan, Frank; Meehan, Niall; O'Connor, Philip (2019). "The Polariser". Dublin Review of Books.

Citations

  1. ^ "Former minister and journalist Conor Cruise O'Brien dies", The Irish Times, 18 December 2008
  2. ^ "Conor Cruise O'Brien: farewell to Ireland's restless conscience". The Telegraph. 20 December 2008. from the original on 27 February 2009. Retrieved 8 July 2009.
  3. ^ Akenson 1994, p. 364.
  4. ^ Akenson 1994, pp. 472–81.
  5. ^ "Conor Cruise O'Brien". Oireachtas Members Database. from the original on 21 August 2019. Retrieved 9 November 2012.
  6. ^ "General Registrar's Office" (PDF). IrishGenealogy.ie. Retrieved 20 September 2019.
  7. ^ William Lecky, Clerical Influences: An essay on Irish sectarianism and English Government, edited with an introduction by W.E.G. Lloyd and F. Cruise O'Brien, Maunsel and Company, Dublin, 1911 (originally published as a chapter in The Leaders of Public Opinion in Ireland (1861))
  8. ^ "Twentieth-Century Witness: Ireland's Fissures, and My Family's, Conor Cruise O'Brien, Atlantic Monthly, Vol.273, No.1, pp. 49-72, January 1994". The Atlantic. from the original on 26 November 2016. Retrieved 6 March 2017.
  9. ^ Cruise O'Brien 1999, pp. 15–16.
  10. ^ "Personal File Two Deaths in Rathmines, Conor Cruise O'Brien, Atlantic Monthly, Vol. 83, No.6, pp. 44–49, June 1999". The Atlantic. June 1999. from the original on 14 October 2013. Retrieved 6 March 2017.
  11. ^ Conor Cruise O'Brien – Obituary by Brian Fallon 7 January 2017 at the Wayback Machine, The Guardian, London, 19 December 2008
  12. ^ "Cruise O'Brien, Conor, "Two Deaths in Rathmines", The Atlantic, June 1999". The Atlantic. June 1999. from the original on 14 May 2008. Retrieved 6 March 2017.
  13. ^ a b Meehan 2009.
  14. ^ Cruise O'Brien 1999, p. 83.
  15. ^ ""Remembering Mr Gageby", The Irish Times, 21 July 2004". The Irish Times. from the original on 22 September 2021. Retrieved 27 January 2021.
  16. ^ "Breandán Mac Suibhne, The Lion and the Haunted House, Dublin Review of Books". from the original on 22 August 2013. Retrieved 8 September 2013.
  17. ^ Cruise O'Brien 1999, p. 267.
  18. ^ Cruise O'Brien 1999, pp. 100, 106.
  19. ^ Cruise O'Brien 1999, p. 95.
  20. ^ "O'Brien, Conor Cruise, 'The Roots of My Preoccupations', Atlantic Monthly, July 1994, Vol. 274, No. 1; pp 73–81". The Atlantic. from the original on 26 November 2016. Retrieved 6 March 2017.
  21. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Callanan, Frank. "O'Brien, Conor Cruise". Directory of Irish Biography. Retrieved 25 April 2022.
  22. ^ a b CONGO 1961, akajava films, broadcast on TG4, September 2012
  23. ^ Wilhelm Agrell, Kongokrisen, Historiska Media, 2022, ISBN 9789177897194
  24. ^ The Embers of Revisionism, Niall Meehan, AHS, 2017, p3, at, https://www.academia.edu/34075119/ 5 September 2021 at the Wayback Machine.
  25. ^ CONGO 1961, Akajava Films, broadcast on TG4, September 2012
  26. ^ "Letters show O'Brien had UN authority for actions in Katanga". The Irish Times. 13 November 2018. from the original on 7 February 2021. Retrieved 28 January 2021.
  27. ^ The Embers of Revisionism, Critiquing Creationist Irish History, by Niall Meehan, AHS, 2017, p.3, at, https://www.academia.edu/34075119/ 5 September 2021 at the Wayback Machine
  28. ^ See also "The Polariser", Niall meehan, Frank Callinan, Phillip O'Connor, Dublin Review of Books, July 2019, at, https://www.drb.ie/essays/the-polariser 31 October 2020 at the Wayback Machine.
  29. ^ Scally, Derek (26 May 2018). "Hiding in Howth: When the 1968 revolution came to Ireland". The Irish Times. from the original on 9 November 2020. Retrieved 11 December 2021.
  30. ^ "Conor Cruise O'Brien". ElectionsIreland.org. from the original on 1 October 2012. Retrieved 9 November 2012.
  31. ^ Jordan 1994, p. 98.
  32. ^ The Embers of Revisionism, Critiquing Creationist Irish History, by Niall Meehan, AHS, 2017, at, https://www.academia.edu/34075119/ 5 September 2021 at the Wayback Machine
  33. ^ See also, 'The Polariser', Niall Meehan, Frank Callinan, Phillip O'Connor, Dublin Review of Books, July 2019, at https://www.drb.ie/essays/the-polariser 31 October 2020 at the Wayback Machine.
  34. ^ "Does Government Trust Broadcasters? 1973". www.rte.ie. from the original on 1 March 2020. Retrieved 1 March 2020.
  35. ^ See "Ceisteanna—Questions. Oral Answers. - Rebroadcasting of BBC 1. – Dáil Éireann (20th Dáil) – Thursday, 10 July 1975". Houses of the Oireachtas. from the original on 5 May 2021. Retrieved 5 May 2021. for more information on Cruise O'Brien's BBC 1 campaign.
  36. ^ Conor Cruise O'Brien – Obituary 7 January 2017 at the Wayback Machine by Brian Fallon, guardian.co.uk, Friday 19 December 2008
  37. ^ Coogan, Tim Pat, The I.R.A., pp. 421–422.
  38. ^ Coogan 2008, pp. 208–210.
  39. ^ Gene Kerrigan and Pat Brennan (1999). This Great Little Nation. Gill & Macmillan, pp. 235–237. ISBN 0-7171-2937-3.
  40. ^ Cruise O'Brien 1999, p. 355.
  41. ^ Joe Joyce, Peter Murtagh, Blind Justice, Dublin: Poolbeg, 1984.
  42. ^ Derek Dunne, Gene Kerrigan, "Round Up the Usual Suspects – Nicky Kelly & The Cosgrave Coalition", Magill, Dublin, 1984.
  43. ^ "Dublin Clontarf 1977 result". from the original on 9 September 2007. Retrieved 19 December 2008.
  44. ^ Coogan 2008, p. 211.
  45. ^ See 'Conor Cruise O'Brien and Mary Holland contract termination Observer (London) 1979', https://www.academia.edu/35030894/ 22 September 2021 at the Wayback Machine
  46. ^ Browne, Vincent (30 January 1980). "Is the Cruiser Springing a Leak?". Magill. from the original on 8 August 2020. Retrieved 9 September 2020.
  47. ^ Cruise O'Brien 1999, p. 373.
  48. ^ "Bloody Sunday marchers libelled". from the original on 13 October 2013. Retrieved 18 September 2013.
  49. ^ The Embers of revisionism, By Niall Meehan, AHS, 2017, p.5.
  50. ^ Difficulty for UKUP leader forces O'Brien resignation, Irish Times, October 28, 1998
  51. ^ Jordan 1994, p. 189.
  52. ^ "Presentation of television awards and citations". The Irish Times. 4 December 1963.
  53. ^ Cruise O'Brien, Conor (24 August 1982). "Unsafe at Any Speed". The Irish Times.
  54. ^ Foster, R.F. (February 2009). "The Cruiser". Standpoint. from the original on 23 November 2019. Retrieved 22 November 2019.

External links

  • Obituary, The New York Times, 19 December 2008
  • "Arrested development: Conor Cruise O’Brien, 1917–2008", Niall Meehan, History Ireland, Vol 17, No. 2, March-April 2009
  • "Conor Cruise O'Brien, the irascible angel", Neal Ascherson, Open Democracy, December 2008
  • Works by or about Conor Cruise O'Brien in libraries (WorldCat catalog)
  • Cruise O'Brien article archive and author page from The New York Review of Books
  • Appearances on C-SPAN
  • "Conor Cruise O'Brien: A Centennial Appraisal", lecture by Frank Callanan, November 2017
  • "The Polariser", debating Conor Cruise O'Brien, Frank Callinan, Niall Meehan, Phillip O'Connor
Political offices
Preceded by Minister for Posts and Telegraphs
1973–1977
Succeeded by
Northern Ireland Forum
New forum Regional Member
1996–1998
Forum dissolved

conor, cruise, brien, other, people, with, same, name, conor, brien, donal, conor, david, dermot, donat, cruise, brien, november, 1917, december, 2008, often, nicknamed, cruiser, irish, diplomat, politician, writer, historian, academic, served, minister, posts. For other people with the same name see Conor O Brien Donal Conor David Dermot Donat Cruise O Brien 3 November 1917 18 December 2008 1 often nicknamed The Cruiser 2 was an Irish diplomat politician writer historian and academic who served as Minister for Posts and Telegraphs from 1973 to 1977 a Senator for Dublin University from 1977 to 1979 a Teachta Dala TD for the Dublin North East constituency from 1969 to 1977 and a Member of the European Parliament MEP from January 1973 to March 1973 Conor Cruise O BrienMinister for Posts and TelegraphsIn office 14 March 1973 5 July 1977TaoiseachLiam CosgravePreceded byGerry CollinsSucceeded byPadraig FaulknerSenatorIn office 27 October 1977 13 June 1979ConstituencyDublin UniversityTeachta DalaIn office June 1969 June 1977ConstituencyDublin North EastMember of the European ParliamentIn office 1 January 1973 23 March 1973ConstituencyOireachtasVice Chancellor of the University of GhanaIn office 1962 1965Preceded byRaymond Henry StoughtonSucceeded byAlexander KwapongPersonal detailsBornDonal Conor David Dermot Donat Cruise O Brien 1917 11 03 3 November 1917Rathmines Dublin IrelandDied18 December 2008 2008 12 18 aged 91 Howth Dublin IrelandPolitical partyLabour PartyOther politicalaffiliationsUK Unionist Party 1996 1998 Spouse s Christine Foster m 1939 div 1959 wbr Maire Mhac an tSaoi m 1962 wbr Children5 including KateAlma materTrinity College DublinHis opinion of Britain s role in Ireland subsequent to the partition of the island and the independence of the Free State in 1921 changed during the 1970s in response to the outbreak of The Troubles He now saw opposing nationalist and unionist traditions as irreconcilable and switched from a nationalist to a unionist view of Irish politics and history and from opposition to support for partition Cruise O Brien s outlook was radical and seldom orthodox He summarised his position as intending to administer an electric shock to the Irish psyche 3 Internationally though a long standing member of the Irish Anti Apartheid Movement he opposed in person the African National Congress s academic boycott of the apartheid regime in South Africa 4 Views that he espoused during and after the 1970s contrasted with those he articulated during the 1950s and 1960s During his 1945 61 career as a civil servant Cruise O Brien promoted the government s anti partition campaign In the 1960s he was associated with the New Left and opposition to US military involvement in Viet Nam At the 1969 general election he was elected to Dail Eireann as a Labour Party TD for Dublin North East He served as Minister for Posts and Telegraphs with responsibility for broadcasting between 1973 and 1977 in a coalition government 5 During those years he was also the Labour Party s Northern Ireland spokesman Cruise O Brien was later known primarily as an author and as an Irish Independent and Sunday Independent columnist Contents 1 Early life 2 Department of External Affairs 3 Secondment in Congo 3 1 Siege of Jadotville 3 2 Dismissal 4 Opposition to the Vietnam War 5 Irish politics 6 Editor in Chief at The Observer 7 Unionism 8 Writings 9 Bibliography 10 References 10 1 Citations 11 External linksEarly life EditConor Cruise O Brien was born at 44 Leinster Road Rathmines Dublin to Francis Frank Cruise O Brien and the former Kathleen Sheehy 6 Frank was a journalist with the Freeman s Journal and Irish Independent newspapers and had edited an essay written 50 years earlier by William Lecky concerning the influence of the clergy on Irish politics 7 Kathleen was a teacher of the Irish language She was the daughter of David Sheehy a member of the Irish Parliamentary Party and organiser of the Irish National Land League She had three sisters Hanna Margaret and Mary Hanna s husband the well known pacifist and supporter of women s suffrage Francis Sheehy Skeffington was executed by firing squad on the orders of Captain J C Bowen Colthurst during the 1916 Easter Rising 8 9 Soon afterwards Mary s husband Thomas Kettle an officer of the Royal Dublin Fusiliers in the First World War was killed during the Battle of the Somme These women Hanna and Kathleen in particular were a major influence on Cruise O Brien s upbringing alongside Hanna s son Owen Sheehy Skeffington 10 Cruise O Brien s father died in 1927 He wanted Conor educated like Conor s cousin Owen in Sandford Park School that had a predominantly Protestant ethos a wish Kathleen honoured 11 despite objections from Catholic clergy 12 Cruise O Brien subsequently attended Trinity College Dublin which played the British national anthem until 1939 While others stood he and Sheehy Skeffington sat in protest on such occasions 13 Cruise O Brien was elected a scholar in Modern Languages at Trinity in 1937 and was editor of Trinity s weekly TCD A College Miscellany His first wife Christine Foster from a Belfast Presbyterian family was like her father a member of the Gaelic League Her parents Alexander Alec Roulston Foster and Anne Annie Lynd were in Cruise O Brien s description Home Rulers a very advanced position for any Protestants in the period 14 Alec Foster was at the time headmaster of Belfast Royal Academy he was later a founding member of the Wolfe Tone Society 15 and was a strong supporter of the Irish Anti Apartheid movement 16 He was a former Ulster Ireland and British amp Irish Lions rugby player having captained Ireland three times between 1912 and 1914 Cruise O Brien and Christine Foster were married in a registry office in 1939 The couple had three children Donal Fedelma and Kathleen Kate who died in 1998 The marriage ended in divorce after 20 years In 1962 Cruise O Brien married the Irish language writer and poet Maire Mhac an tSaoi in a Roman Catholic church Cruise O Brien s divorce though contrary to Roman Catholic teaching was not an issue because that church did not recognise the validity of his 1939 civil wedding He referred to this action which in effect formally de recognised the legitimacy of his former wife and their children as hypocritical and otherwise distasteful but I took it as preferable to the alternatives 17 Mac an tSaoi was five years his junior and the daughter of Sean MacEntee who was Tanaiste deputy prime minister at the time The couple subsequently adopted two children of Irish African parentage a son Patrick and a daughter Margaret Department of External Affairs EditCruise O Brien s university education led to a career in the public service most notably in the Department of External Affairs He achieved distinction as managing director of the state run Irish News Agency and later as part of the fledgling Irish delegation to the United Nations He later claimed he was something of an anomalous iconoclast in post 1922 Irish politics particularly in the context of Fianna Fail governments under Eamon de Valera Cruise O Brien wrote that the then Secretary of the department Joseph P Walshe might well have considered that Cruise O Brien was no fit person to be a member of Catholic Ireland s Department of External Affairs Cruise O Brien attributed his appointment to a decision taken at a higher level Under God there was only one higher level This consisted of Eamon de Valera then Minister for External Affairs as well as Taoiseach Cruise O Brien speculated that de Valera s Catholicism may have been conditioned by his excommunication during the Civil War of 1922 3 that he may have felt that Walshe had been too close to the previous government and that he may have been conscious of the nationalist credentials of the Sheehy family notably Cruise O Brien s great uncle Father Eugene Sheehy who had been parish priest of Bruree during de Valera s formative years De Valera later wrote of Father Sheehy Eisean a mhuin an tirgra dhom It was he who taught me patriotism 18 Cruise O Brien wrote of his entry into the public service The time when I joined the Department of Finance was the first time since my First Communion that I found myself in a working environment which was mainly indeed almost entirely Catholic 19 As he admitted his non belief did not impede his career which ended at ambassadorial level He observed There was nothing unusual even then about not believing in Catholicism What was unusual then was to acknowledge publicly that you did not believe in Catholicism It is interesting that this did absolutely no harm to my public career around the mid century a time when the authority of a triumphant Catholic Church appeared to be overwhelmingly strong in the media and in public life But I think many educated people including many in the public service already resented that authority and while being discreet about this themselves had some respect for a person who publicly rejected it altogether 20 In the Department of External Affairs during the 1948 51 inter party government he served under Sean MacBride son of John MacBride and Maud Gonne republican and former IRA Chief of Staff who would become the 1974 Nobel Peace Laureate Cruise O Brien was particularly vocal in opposition to partition during the 1940s and 1950s as part of his official duties Secondment in Congo EditHe came to prominence in 1961 after his secondment from Ireland s UN delegation as a special representative to Dag Hammarskjold Secretary General of the United Nations in the Katanga region of the newly independent Congo now the Democratic Republic of the Congo Cruise O Brien accused a combination of British French and white Rhodesian elements of attempting to partition off Katanga as a pro Western client state He used military force to oppose a combination of western mercenaries and Katangan forces Cruise O Brien arrived in Elisabethville modern Lubumbashi on 14 June 1961 making him the UN s point man for dealing with Moise Tshombe the leader of the self proclaimed independent Etat du Katanga 21 The Kasai Baluba people who formed the majority of the people in northern Katanga were solid supporters of a united Congo and were the subjects of a ruthless campaign of repression waged by the white mercenaries hired by Tshombe together with the Katangese gendarmerie The UN refugee camps were soon overcrowded with thousands of Kasai Baluba people who fled into the refugee camps for their safety 21 From the viewpoint of O Brien and other UN personnel the sooner the crisis was ended the sooner the refugees could go home On 28 August 1961 Operation Rumpunch was launched to remove the mercenaries from Katanga as the first step towards reintegrating Katanga into the Congo 21 On 11 September Mahmoud Khiary the chief of the UN mission gave O Brien orders to arrest several leading figures within the Etat du Katanga 21 On 13 September 1961 Operation Morthor was launched which led Cruise O Brien to assert prematurely at a press conference that the secession of Katanga was at an end 21 Tshombe was ordered to be arrested but he was able to escape via the British consul in Elisabethville to the British colony of Northern Rhodesia modern Zambia from whence he returned to Katanga 21 Siege of Jadotville Edit Main article Siege of Jadotville In September 1961 a company of 155 Irish UN troops A Company 35th Battalion Irish Army was surrounded by a force of heavily armed Gendarmerie and mercenaries outnumbering them 20 to one in Jadotville The Irish soldiers many of them still in their teens were lightly armed short of ammunition and supplies and unprepared for the situation They had been sent to the newly independent Republic of Congo on what was supposed to be a peacekeeping mission but were ordered to the offensive by the UN s most senior diplomat on the ground Cruise O Brien acting on the instructions of the Secretary General who wanted the Katanga problem solved before the upcoming United Nations General Assembly as his career was on the line The Irish troops held out for six days before they ran out of bullets and drinking water When water finally reached them it came in old petrol cans that had not been cleaned making it undrinkable The troops inflicted heavy casualties on the enemy force but suffered no fatalities themselves After their surrender they spent just over one month in captivity unsure of their fate and when they arrived back in Ireland were dismayed and deeply hurt to learn that the UN and their own government were anxious to sweep the episode under the carpet to protect the reputation and to conceal the failures of the UN in preparing for combat and liberating Company A Cruise O Brien wrote immediately about his experiences in The Observer of London and in The New York Times on 10 and 17 December 1961 Armed with the archive material one expert concluded Hammarskjold knew in advance that the UN was about to take action in Katanga and he authorised that action 22 This is contradicted in a 2022 book on the Congo crisis by historian Wilhelm Agrell 23 Dismissal Edit Faced with the failure of Operation Morthor Hammarskjold went to Elisabethville to meet Tshombe to discuss a ceasefire but was killed when his airplane crashed during the journey Cruise O Brien wrote in Elisabethville I do not think there was anyone who believed that his death was an accident 21 A UN crisis ensued and Cruise O Brien was forced to step down simultaneously from his UN position and the Irish diplomatic service in late 1961 He went public immediately with his version of events writing simultaneously in the Observer London and the New York Times that My resignation from the United Nations and from the Irish foreign service is a result of British government policy 24 Michael Ignatieff asserted that Hammarskjold who was killed in Katanga in a suspicious plane crash prior to O Brien s departure had misjudged O Brien s abilities as UN representative He further observed that O Brien s use of military force provided the Soviets and the US with ammunition in their campaign against the UN Secretary General and against UN actions in opposition to the interests of the big powers That thesis was later shown to be inaccurate by the documentary CONGO 1961 25 made for Irish television station TG4 which showed that Hammarskjold himself had ordered the military actions and left Cruise O Brien to take the blame when they failed 22 Documents on Irish Foreign Policy 1957 1961 2018 included 1961 correspondence in which Frederick Boland Ireland s ambassador to the UN said that he had been told by Ralph Bunche Under Secretary General of the United Nations for special political affairs that Cruise O Brien had been given the green light for the seizure of the Post Office and the Radio Station 26 Opposition to the Vietnam War EditAfter Cruise O Brien s recall from UN service and his resignation from the Irish civil service he served as Vice Chancellor of the University of Ghana He resigned after he fell out with the Chancellor and President of Ghana Kwame Nkrumah in 1965 He was initially sympathetic towards Nkrumah who won Ghana s independence from the British empire in 1957 but fell out with him due to his authoritarianism and his promotion of the ideology of Nkrumahism in which all Ghanaians were expected to believe 21 Cruise O Brien sought to protect academic freedom against Nkrumahism saying in a speech before the students of the University of Ghana that all intellectuals have a duty to promote the truth and that These are not European values these are universal values 21 He was then appointed Albert Schweitzer Professor of Humanities at New York University a position he held until 1969 During the 1960s O Brien was an active opponent of US involvement in Vietnam He supported the right of the Vietnamese people to use violence against US armed forces At a 1967 Vietnam War symposium O Brien clashed with Hannah Arendt who had remarked As to the Viet Cong terror we cannot possibly agree with it O Brien responded I think there is a distinction between the use of terror by oppressed peoples against the oppressors and their servants in comparison with the use of terror by their oppressors in the interests of further oppression I think there is a qualitative distinction there which we have the right to make Besides the Vietnam War Cruise O Brien opposed what he saw as the overtly too passive opposition of the U S government to the white supremacist governments of Rhodesia and South Africa charging that all the reaction the U S government ever made was to politely deplore the policies of the two governments 21 In September 1967 he flew to the self proclaimed Republic of Biafra to express his support for Ibo separatism 21 In articles in The Observer and The New York Review of Books he argued that there were important differences between the Republic of Biafra and the State of Katanga and that there was no equivalence between the two breakaway states 21 He argued that Biafra represented the sincere wish of the Ibo people to leave Nigeria while Katanga was a sham In December 1967 Cruise O Brien was front page news in The Irish Times which reported his arrest while demonstrating against the war in New York and his being kicked by a policeman 21 He joked about the policeman who assaulted him no prizes for guessing his ethnicity 21 In 1968 he campaigned for Senator Eugene McCarthy who sought the Democratic nomination in the presidential election of that year on a platform of ending the Vietnam War 21 In May of that year Cruise O Brien condemned police attacks on and harassment of the militant armed Black Panther Party 27 28 Between January and March 1969 he offered refuge at his home in Howth to German socialist student leader and anti Vietnam War activist Rudi Dutschke and his wife Gretchen In April the previous year Dutschke had been shot and badly injured by a right wing assassin in West Berlin but was subsequently denied visas by a number of European countries including Britain During their stay the Dutschkes were visited by their lawyer Horst Mahler who tried and failed to persuade them to support him underground in the group that was to become the Red Army Faction the Baader Meinhof Gang 29 Irish politics EditCruise O Brien returned to Ireland and in the 1969 general election was elected to Dail Eireann as a member of the opposition Labour Party in Dublin North East 30 taking the second of that constituency s four seats behind Fianna Fail Minister for Finance Charles Haughey whose probity in financial matters he questioned 31 He was appointed a member of the short lived first delegation from the Oireachtas to the European Parliament After the 1973 general election Cruise O Brien was appointed Minister for Posts and Telegraphs in the 1973 77 Labour Fine Gael coalition under Taoiseach Liam Cosgrave After the outbreak of armed conflict in Northern Ireland in 1969 Cruise O Brien developed a deep hostility to militant Irish republicanism and to Irish nationalists generally in Northern Ireland which reversed the views that he articulated at the outset of the unrest 32 33 He also reversed his opposition to broadcasting censorship imposed by the previous government by extending and vigorously enforcing censorship of Raidio Teilifis Eireann RTE under Section 31 of the Broadcasting Act 34 In 1976 he specifically banned spokespersons for Sinn Fein and the Provisional Irish Republican Army from RTE citation needed At the same time he unsuccessfully attempted to have Britain s BBC 1 broadcast on Ireland s proposed second television channel instead of allowing RTE to run it 35 36 Two additional notable incidents affected Cruise O Brien s career as minister besides his support for broadcasting censorship In August 1976 Bernard Nossiter of The Washington Post interviewed him on the passage of an Emergency Powers Bill During the course of the interview Cruise O Brien revealed an intention to extend censorship beyond broadcasting He wished to cleanse the culture of republicanism and said that he would like the bill to be used against teachers who allegedly glorified Irish revolutionaries He also wanted it used against newspaper editors who published pro republican or anti British readers letters 37 Cruise O Brien mentioned The Irish Press as a newspaper against which he particularly hoped to use the legislation against and produced a file of Irish Press letters to the editor to which he took exception Nossiter immediately informed The Irish Press editor Tim Pat Coogan of Cruise O Brien s intentions Coogan printed Nossiter s report as did The Irish Times republished the letters to which Cruise O Brien objected and ran a number of strong editorials attacking Cruise O Brien and the proposed legislation The interview caused huge controversy and resulted in the modification of the measure appearing to target newspapers 38 Cruise O Brien also supported Garda Siochana brutality from 1973 to 1977 but that was not revealed by Cruise O Brien until 1998 in his Memoir 39 In Memoir My Life and Themes Cruise O Brien recalled a conversation with a detective who told him how the Gardai had found out from a suspect the location of businessman Tiede Herrema who had been kidnapped by group of maverick republicans in October 1975 the escort started asking him questions and when at first he refused to answer they beat the shit out of him Then he told them where Herrema was Cruise O Brien explained I refrained from telling this story to ministerial colleagues Garret FitzGerald or Justin Keating because I thought it would worry them It didn t worry me 40 Elements of the Garda that engaged in beating false confessions out of suspects quickly became known as the Heavy Gang 41 42 Cruise O Brien s Dublin North East constituency was re drawn and renamed as part of his Labour colleague James Tully s attempt as Minister for Local Government to design boundaries in the electoral interests of the coalition partners The plan backfired In the 1977 general election he stood in Dublin Clontarf and was one of three ministers the others being Justin Keating and Patrick Cooney defeated in a rout of the outgoing administration 43 He was however subsequently elected to Seanad Eireann in 1977 from the Dublin University constituency He was dropped as Labour s Northern Ireland spokesperson O Brien resigned his seat in 1979 because of new commitments as editor in chief of The Observer newspaper in London Editor in Chief at The Observer EditBetween 1978 and 1981 Cruise O Brien was editor in chief of The Observer newspaper in Britain In 1979 he controversially refused to publish an Observer article by Mary Holland the paper s Ireland correspondent Holland whose reporting won her a Journalist of the Year award had been one of the first journalists to explain discrimination in Northern Ireland to a British audience The article was a profile of Mary Nelis of Derry and dealt with her radicalisation as a result of the conflict Cruise O Brien objected and sent Holland a memo stating that the killing strain of Irish republicanism has a very high propensity to run in families and the mother is most often the carrier 13 The memo continued It is a very serious weakness of your coverage of Irish affairs that you are a very poor judge of Irish Catholics That gifted and talkative community includes some of the most expert conmen and conwomen in the world and I believe you have been conned 44 45 Holland was forced out of the newspaper by Cruise O Brien 46 She later joined The Irish Times as a columnist She also rejoined The Observer after Cruise O Brien s departure in 1981 47 Unionism EditIn 1985 Cruise O Brien supported unionist objections to the inter governmental Anglo Irish Agreement In 1996 he joined Robert McCartney s United Kingdom Unionist Party UKUP and was elected to the Northern Ireland Forum In 1997 a successful libel action was brought against him by relatives of Bloody Sunday victims for alleging in a Sunday Independent article in 1997 that the marchers were Sinn Fein activists operating for the IRA 48 Cruise O Brien opposed the 1998 Good Friday Agreement and opposed allowing Sinn Fein into government in Northern Ireland He wrote that he was glad to be an ally in defence of the Union with the Reverend Ian Paisley leader of the Free Presbyterian Church and of the Democratic Unionist Party In 1968 O Brien had referred to Paisley as a hate merchant He also predicted mistakenly that Paisley would not enter a power sharing government with Sinn Fein 49 O Brien later resigned from the UKUP after his book Memoir My Life and Themes called on Unionists to consider the benefits of a united Ireland in order to thwart Sinn Fein 50 In 2005 he rejoined the Irish Labour Party Cruise O Brien defended his harsh attitudes and actions towards Irish republicans saying We do right to condemn all violence but we have a special duty to condemn the violence which is committed in our name 51 Writings EditCruise O Brien s many books include States of Ireland 1972 where he first indicated his revised view of Irish nationalism The Great Melody 1992 his thematic biography of Edmund Burke and his autobiography Memoir My Life and Themes 1999 He also published a collection of essays Passion and Cunning 1988 which includes a substantial piece on the literary work of William Butler Yeats and some challenging views on the subject of terrorism and The Siege The Saga of Israel and Zionism 1986 a history of Zionism and the State of Israel His books particularly those on Irish issues tend to be personalised for example States of Ireland where he made the link between the political success of the republican Easter Rising and the consequent demise of his Home Rule family s position in society His private papers have been deposited in the University College Dublin Archives In 1963 Cruise O Brien s script for a Telefis Eireann programme on Charles Stewart Parnell won him a Jacob s Award 52 He was a longtime columnist for the Irish Independent His articles were distinguished by hostility to the Northern Ireland peace process regular predictions of civil war involving the Republic of Ireland and a pro Unionist stance citation needed Cruise O Brien held visiting professorships and lectureships throughout the world particularly in the United States and controversially in apartheid South Africa openly breaking the academic boycott A persistent critic of Charles Haughey Cruise O Brien coined the acronym GUBU Grotesque Unbelievable Bizarre and Unprecedented based on a statement by Charles Haughey who was then Taoiseach commenting on the discovery of a murder suspect Malcolm MacArthur in the apartment of the Fianna Fail Attorney General Patrick Connolly 53 Until 1994 Cruise O Brien was a Pro Chancellor of the University of Dublin According to Roy Foster Colm Toibin wrote that Seamus Heaney was so popular that he could even survive being endorsed by Conor Cruise O Brien which normally meant the kiss of death in Ireland The legendary The New Yorker fact checking desk unable to let a single statement go uncorroborated found out Cruise O Brien s Dublin phone number and called it to inquire if his approval meant the kiss of death in his native country they then telephoned an astonished Toibin and reproachfully told him Mr O Brien said No it didn t 54 Bibliography EditThis list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items September 2016 Maria Cross Imaginative Patterns in a Group of Modern Catholic Writers as Donat O Donnell London Chatto amp Windus 1952 OCLC 7884093 Parnell and His Party 1880 90 Oxford Clarendon Press 1957 ISBN 978 0 19 821237 9 1968 edition The Shaping of Modern Ireland London Routledge amp Kegan Paul 1960 To Katanga and Back A UN Case History London Hutchinson 1962 OCLC 460615937 Writers and Politics Essays amp Criticism London Chatto amp Windus 1965 ISBN 978 0 14 002733 4 1976 Penguin edition Introduction and notes to Edmund Burke s Reflections on the Revolution in France London Penguin Books 1968 2004 ISBN 978 0 140 43204 6 Murderous Angels A Political Tragedy and Comedy in Black and White play Boston Little Brown 1968 OCLC 449739 The United Nations Sacred Drama with illustrations by Feliks Topolski London Hutchinson 1968 ISBN 978 0 09 085790 6 Camus Fontana Modern Masters 1970 ISBN 978 0 00 211147 8 released in US as Albert Camus of Europe and Africa New York Viking 1970 ISBN 978 0 670 01902 1 with Maire O Brien A Concise History of Ireland London Thames amp Hudson 1972 retitled The Story of Ireland New York Viking 1972 States of Ireland London Hutchinson 1972 ISBN 978 0 09 113100 5 The Suspecting Glance London Faber 1972 ISBN 978 0 571 09543 8 Herod Reflections on Political Violence London Hutchinson 1978 ISBN 978 0 09 133190 0 The Siege The Saga of Israel and Zionism 1986 ISBN 978 0 671 63310 3 God Land Reflections on Religion and Nationalism Cambridge MA Harvard University Press 1988 ISBN 978 0 674 35510 1 Passion and Cunning and Other Essays London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson 1988 ISBN 978 0 297 79325 0 The Great Melody A Thematic Biography of Edmund Burke Chicago University of Chicago Press 1992 ISBN 978 0 226 61651 3 On the Eve of the Millennium Toronto House of Anansi Press 1994 ISBN 978 0 88784 559 8 The Long Affair Thomas Jefferson and the French Revolution 1785 1800 Chicago University of Chicago Press 1996 ISBN 978 0 226 61656 8 Ancestral Voices Religion and Nationalism in Ireland Dublin Poolbeg Press 1994 ISBN 978 1 85371 429 0 Memoir My Life and Themes Dublin Poolbeg Press 1999 ISBN 978 1 85371 947 9References EditAkenson Donald H 1994 Conor A Biography of Conor Cruise O Brien Cornell University Press ISBN 0 8014 3086 0 Coogan Tim Pat 2008 A Memoir Weidenfeld amp Nicolson ISBN 978 0 297 85110 3 Jordan Anthony J 1994 To Laugh or to Weep A Biography of Conor Cruise O Brien Blackwater Press ISBN 0861214439 Cruise O Brien Conor 1999 Memoir My Life and Themes Dublin Poolbeg ISBN 978 1 85371 947 9 Meehan Niall 2009 Arrested Development Conor Cruise O Brien 1917 2008 History Ireland March April Meehan Niall 2017 The Embers of Revisionism Critiquing Creationist Irish History AHS 2017 Callanan Frank Meehan Niall O Connor Philip 2019 The Polariser Dublin Review of Books Citations Edit Former minister and journalist Conor Cruise O Brien dies The Irish Times 18 December 2008 Conor Cruise O Brien farewell to Ireland s restless conscience The Telegraph 20 December 2008 Archived from the original on 27 February 2009 Retrieved 8 July 2009 Akenson 1994 p 364 Akenson 1994 pp 472 81 Conor Cruise O Brien Oireachtas Members Database Archived from the original on 21 August 2019 Retrieved 9 November 2012 General Registrar s Office PDF IrishGenealogy ie Retrieved 20 September 2019 William Lecky Clerical Influences An essay on Irish sectarianism and English Government edited with an introduction by W E G Lloyd and F Cruise O Brien Maunsel and Company Dublin 1911 originally published as a chapter in The Leaders of Public Opinion in Ireland 1861 Twentieth Century Witness Ireland s Fissures and My Family s Conor Cruise O Brien Atlantic Monthly Vol 273 No 1 pp 49 72 January 1994 The Atlantic Archived from the original on 26 November 2016 Retrieved 6 March 2017 Cruise O Brien 1999 pp 15 16 Personal File Two Deaths in Rathmines Conor Cruise O Brien Atlantic Monthly Vol 83 No 6 pp 44 49 June 1999 The Atlantic June 1999 Archived from the original on 14 October 2013 Retrieved 6 March 2017 Conor Cruise O Brien Obituary by Brian Fallon Archived 7 January 2017 at the Wayback Machine The Guardian London 19 December 2008 Cruise O Brien Conor Two Deaths in Rathmines The Atlantic June 1999 The Atlantic June 1999 Archived from the original on 14 May 2008 Retrieved 6 March 2017 a b Meehan 2009 Cruise O Brien 1999 p 83 Remembering Mr Gageby The Irish Times 21 July 2004 The Irish Times Archived from the original on 22 September 2021 Retrieved 27 January 2021 Breandan Mac Suibhne The Lion and the Haunted House Dublin Review of Books Archived from the original on 22 August 2013 Retrieved 8 September 2013 Cruise O Brien 1999 p 267 Cruise O Brien 1999 pp 100 106 Cruise O Brien 1999 p 95 O Brien Conor Cruise The Roots of My Preoccupations Atlantic Monthly July 1994 Vol 274 No 1 pp 73 81 The Atlantic Archived from the original on 26 November 2016 Retrieved 6 March 2017 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Callanan Frank O Brien Conor Cruise Directory of Irish Biography Retrieved 25 April 2022 a b CONGO 1961 akajava films broadcast on TG4 September 2012 Wilhelm Agrell Kongokrisen Historiska Media 2022 ISBN 9789177897194 The Embers of Revisionism Niall Meehan AHS 2017 p3 at https www academia edu 34075119 Archived 5 September 2021 at the Wayback Machine CONGO 1961 Akajava Films broadcast on TG4 September 2012 Letters show O Brien had UN authority for actions in Katanga The Irish Times 13 November 2018 Archived from the original on 7 February 2021 Retrieved 28 January 2021 The Embers of Revisionism Critiquing Creationist Irish History by Niall Meehan AHS 2017 p 3 at https www academia edu 34075119 Archived 5 September 2021 at the Wayback Machine See also The Polariser Niall meehan Frank Callinan Phillip O Connor Dublin Review of Books July 2019 at https www drb ie essays the polariser Archived 31 October 2020 at the Wayback Machine Scally Derek 26 May 2018 Hiding in Howth When the 1968 revolution came to Ireland The Irish Times Archived from the original on 9 November 2020 Retrieved 11 December 2021 Conor Cruise O Brien ElectionsIreland org Archived from the original on 1 October 2012 Retrieved 9 November 2012 Jordan 1994 p 98 The Embers of Revisionism Critiquing Creationist Irish History by Niall Meehan AHS 2017 at https www academia edu 34075119 Archived 5 September 2021 at the Wayback Machine See also The Polariser Niall Meehan Frank Callinan Phillip O Connor Dublin Review of Books July 2019 at https www drb ie essays the polariser Archived 31 October 2020 at the Wayback Machine Does Government Trust Broadcasters 1973 www rte ie Archived from the original on 1 March 2020 Retrieved 1 March 2020 See Ceisteanna Questions Oral Answers Rebroadcasting of BBC 1 Dail Eireann 20th Dail Thursday 10 July 1975 Houses of the Oireachtas Archived from the original on 5 May 2021 Retrieved 5 May 2021 for more information on Cruise O Brien s BBC 1 campaign Conor Cruise O Brien Obituary Archived 7 January 2017 at the Wayback Machine by Brian Fallon guardian co uk Friday 19 December 2008 Coogan Tim Pat The I R A pp 421 422 Coogan 2008 pp 208 210 Gene Kerrigan and Pat Brennan 1999 This Great Little Nation Gill amp Macmillan pp 235 237 ISBN 0 7171 2937 3 Cruise O Brien 1999 p 355 Joe Joyce Peter Murtagh Blind Justice Dublin Poolbeg 1984 Derek Dunne Gene Kerrigan Round Up the Usual Suspects Nicky Kelly amp The Cosgrave Coalition Magill Dublin 1984 Dublin Clontarf 1977 result Archived from the original on 9 September 2007 Retrieved 19 December 2008 Coogan 2008 p 211 See Conor Cruise O Brien and Mary Holland contract termination Observer London 1979 https www academia edu 35030894 Archived 22 September 2021 at the Wayback Machine Browne Vincent 30 January 1980 Is the Cruiser Springing a Leak Magill Archived from the original on 8 August 2020 Retrieved 9 September 2020 Cruise O Brien 1999 p 373 Bloody Sunday marchers libelled Archived from the original on 13 October 2013 Retrieved 18 September 2013 The Embers of revisionism By Niall Meehan AHS 2017 p 5 Difficulty for UKUP leader forces O Brien resignation Irish Times October 28 1998 Jordan 1994 p 189 Presentation of television awards and citations The Irish Times 4 December 1963 Cruise O Brien Conor 24 August 1982 Unsafe at Any Speed The Irish Times Foster R F February 2009 The Cruiser Standpoint Archived from the original on 23 November 2019 Retrieved 22 November 2019 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Conor Cruise O Brien Obituary The New York Times 19 December 2008 Arrested development Conor Cruise O Brien 1917 2008 Niall Meehan History Ireland Vol 17 No 2 March April 2009 Conor Cruise O Brien the irascible angel Neal Ascherson Open Democracy December 2008 Works by or about Conor Cruise O Brien in libraries WorldCat catalog Cruise O Brien article archive and author page from The New York Review of Books Appearances on C SPAN Conor Cruise O Brien A Centennial Appraisal lecture by Frank Callanan November 2017 The Polariser debating Conor Cruise O Brien Frank Callinan Niall Meehan Phillip O ConnorPolitical officesPreceded byGerry Collins Minister for Posts and Telegraphs1973 1977 Succeeded byPadraig FaulknerNorthern Ireland ForumNew forum Regional Member1996 1998 Forum dissolved Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Conor Cruise O 27Brien amp oldid 1144126605, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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