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Warrenpoint ambush

The Warrenpoint ambush,[5] also known as the Narrow Water ambush,[6] the Warrenpoint massacre[7] or the Narrow Water massacre,[8] was a guerrilla attack[9] by the Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA) on 27 August 1979. The IRA's South Armagh Brigade ambushed a British Army convoy with two large roadside bombs at Narrow Water Castle outside Warrenpoint, Northern Ireland. The first bomb was aimed at the convoy itself, and the second targeted the incoming reinforcements and the incident command point (ICP) set up to deal with the incident. IRA volunteers hidden in nearby woodland also allegedly fired on the troops, who returned fire. The castle is on the banks of the Newry River, which marks the border between Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland.

Warrenpoint ambush
Part of The Troubles/Operation Banner

A British Army lorry destroyed in the ambush. The hills of the Cooley Peninsula in County Louth can be seen in the background, behind Narrow Water Castle.
Date27 August 1979
Location54°06′42″N 06°16′45″W / 54.11167°N 6.27917°W / 54.11167; -6.27917Coordinates: 54°06′42″N 06°16′45″W / 54.11167°N 6.27917°W / 54.11167; -6.27917
Result

Provisional IRA victory

  • Deadliest attack on the British Army by the Provisional IRA[1]
Belligerents
 United Kingdom Provisional IRA
Commanders and leaders
Lt Col David Blair 
Maj. Peter Fursman 
Brendan Burns
Units involved
British Army South Armagh Brigade[2]
Strength
50 soldiers[citation needed] Unknown
Casualties and losses
18 killed
Over 20 wounded[3]
1 RAF Wessex helicopter damaged[4]
None
Civilian: 1 killed, 1 wounded by British Army gun fire
class=notpageimage|
Location within Northern Ireland

Eighteen British soldiers were killed and over twenty were seriously injured, making it the deadliest attack on the British Army during the Troubles.[3] An English civilian was also killed and an Irish civilian wounded, both by British soldiers firing across the border after the first blast. The attack happened on the same day that the IRA assassinated Lord Louis Mountbatten, a close relative of the British royal family.

Ambush

The ambush took place on the A2 road at Narrow Water Castle, just outside Warrenpoint, in the south of County Down in Northern Ireland. The road and castle are on the northern bank of the Newry River (also known as the Clanrye River), which marks the border between Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland. The Republic's side of the river, the Cooley Peninsula in County Louth, was an ideal spot from which to launch an ambush: it was thickly wooded, which gave cover to the ambushers, and the river border prevented British forces giving chase.[10]

First explosion

On the afternoon of 27 August, a British Army convoy of one Land Rover and two four-ton lorries—carrying soldiers of the 2nd Battalion, Parachute Regiment—was driving from Ballykinler Barracks to Newry.[11][12] The British Army were aware of the dangers of using the stretch of road along the Newry River and often declared it out of bounds. However, they would sometimes use it to avoid setting a pattern.[10] At 16:40, as the convoy was driving past Narrow Water Castle, an 800-pound (360 kg) fertiliser bomb, hidden among strawbales on a parked flatbed trailer, was detonated by remote control by IRA members watching from across the border in County Louth.[12] The explosion caught the last lorry in the convoy, hurling it on its side and instantly killing six paratroopers, whose bodies were scattered across the road.[13] There were only two survivors amongst the soldiers travelling in the lorry; they both received serious injuries. The lorry's driver, Anthony Wood (aged 19), was one of those killed. All that remained of Wood's body was his pelvis, welded to the seat by the fierce heat of the blast.[10]

According to the soldiers, immediately after the blast they were targeted by rifle fire from the woods on the Cooley Peninsula on the other side of the border,[14][15] and this view was supported by two part-time firefighters assisting the wounded, who were "sure they had been fired on from the Omeath side of the water".[16] Shortly afterwards, the two IRA members arrested by the Garda Síochána (the Republic of Ireland's police force) and suspected of being behind the ambush, were found to have traces of gunsmoke residue on their hands and on the motorbike they were riding.[17] The IRA's first statement on the incident, however, denied that any shots had been fired at the troops,[18] and according to Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC) researchers, the soldiers might have mistaken the sound of ammunition cooking off for enemy gunfire.[19] Nevertheless, at the official inquiry the soldiers declared on oath that they had been fired on.[20]

The surviving paratroopers radioed for urgent assistance, and reinforcements were dispatched to the scene by road.[12] A rapid reaction unit was sent by Gazelle helicopter, consisting of Lieutenant-Colonel David Blair, commanding officer of the Queen's Own Highlanders, his signaller Lance Corporal Victor MacLeod, and army medics. Another helicopter, a Wessex, landed to pick up the wounded. Colonel Blair assumed command once at the site.[21]

Shooting of Hudson cousins

William Hudson, a 29-year-old from London, was killed by the British Army and his cousin Barry Hudson, a 25-year-old native of Dingle, was wounded when shots were fired across the Newry River into the Republic of Ireland about 3 km from the village of Omeath, County Louth.[15]

The pair were partners in 'Hudson Amusements' and had been operating their amusements in Omeath for the duration of the Omeath Gala. When the first explosion was heard across the Lough, the pair went down to the shore to see what was unfolding. The pair made their way to Narrow Water on the southern side of the border to get a better view of what was happening on the northern side. Barry Hudson was shot in the arm and as he fell to the ground he saw his cousin, who was the son of a coachman at Buckingham Palace, fall to the ground, shot in the head. He died almost immediately.[22]

Second explosion

The IRA had been studying how the British Army behaved after a bombing and correctly predicted that they would set up an incident command point (ICP) at the stone gateway on the other side of the road. At 17:12, thirty-two minutes after the first explosion, another 800-pound (360 kg) bomb hidden in milk pails exploded at the gateway, destroying it and hurling lumps of granite through the air. It detonated as the Wessex helicopter was taking off carrying wounded soldiers. The helicopter was damaged by the blast but did not crash.[11]

The second explosion killed twelve soldiers: ten from the Parachute Regiment and the two from the Queen's Own Highlanders.[23] Lt.Colonel Blair was the second Lt.Colonel to be killed in the Troubles up until then, following Lt.Colonel Corden-Lloyd of the 2nd Battalion Royal Green Jackets in 1978.[12] Only one of Colonel Blair's epaulettes remained to identify him as his body had been vaporised in the blast. The epaulette was taken from the scene by Brigadier David Thorne to a security briefing with prime minister Margaret Thatcher to "illustrate the human factor" of the attack.[24] Mike Jackson, then a major in the Parachute Regiment, was at the scene soon after the second explosion and later described seeing human remains scattered over the road, in the water and hanging from the trees. He was asked to identify the face of his friend, Major Peter Fursman, still recognisable after it had been ripped from his head by the explosion and recovered from the water by divers from the Royal Engineers.[10]

Press photographer Peter Molloy, who arrived at the scene after the first explosion, came close to being shot by an angry paratrooper who saw him taking photographs of the dead and dying instead of offering to help the wounded. The soldier was tackled by his comrades. Molloy said, "I was shouted at and called all sorts of things but I understood why. I had trespassed on the worst day of these fellas' lives and taken pictures of it."[25]

Aftermath

The Warrenpoint ambush was the deadliest attack on the British Army during the Troubles and the Parachute Regiment's biggest loss since World War II, with sixteen paratroopers killed.[11] General Sir James Glover, Commander of British forces in Northern Ireland, later said it was "arguably the most successful and certainly one of the best planned IRA attacks of the whole campaign".[11][26] The ambush happened on the same day that Lord Mountbatten, a prominent relative and close confidant of the British royal family, was killed by an IRA bomb aboard his boat at Mullaghmore, along with three others.

Republicans portrayed the attack as retaliation for Bloody Sunday in 1972 when the Parachute Regiment shot dead 13 unarmed civilians during a protest march in Derry. Graffiti appeared in republican areas declaring "13 gone and not forgotten, we got 18 and Mountbatten".[27] The day after the Mountbatten and Warrenpoint attacks, the Ulster Volunteer Force retaliated by shooting dead John Patrick Hardy (43), a Catholic civilian, at his home in Belfast's New Lodge estate. Hardy was allegedly targeted due to the mistaken belief that he was an IRA member.[28]

Very shortly after the ambush, IRA volunteers Brendan Burns and Joe Brennan were arrested by the Gardaí. They were stopped while riding a motorbike on a road opposite Narrow Water Castle. They were later released on bail due to lack of evidence.[29] Burns died in 1988 when a bomb he was handling exploded prematurely.[30] In 1998, former IRA member Eamon Collins claimed that Burns had been one of those who carried out the Warrenpoint ambush.[11] No one has ever been criminally charged.[31]

According to Toby Harnden, the attack "drove a wedge" between the British Army and the RUC. Lieutenant-General Sir Timothy Creasey, General Officer Commanding Northern Ireland, suggested to Margaret Thatcher that internment should be brought back and that liaison with the Gardaí should be left in the hands of the military.[32] Sir Kenneth Newman, the RUC Chief Constable, claimed instead that the British Army practice, since 1975, of supplying their garrisons in South County Armagh by helicopter gave too much freedom of movement to the IRA.[33] One result was the appointment of Sir Maurice Oldfield to a new position of Co-ordinator of Security Intelligence in Northern Ireland. His role was to co-ordinate intelligence between the military, MI5 and the RUC. Another was the expansion of the RUC by 1,000 members.[34] Tim Pat Coogan asserts that the deaths of the 18 soldiers hastened the move towards Ulsterisation.[35]

Lieutenant-Colonel Blair is remembered on a memorial at Radley College, Oxfordshire.[36]

References

  • Harnden, Toby (1999). Bandit Country. Hodder & Stoughton. ISBN 0-340-71736-X.
  • Taylor, Peter (1997). Behind The Mask: The IRA & Sinn Fein. Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 1-57500-061-X.

Footnotes

  1. ^
    • Barzilay, David. British Army in Ulster. Century Books, 1981. Vol. 4. p. 94. ISBN 0-903152-16-9
    • Wood, Ian. Scotland and Ulster. Mercat Press, 1994. p. 170. ISBN 1-873644-19-1
    • Geddes, John. Highway to Hell: An Ex-SAS Soldier's Account of the Extraordinary Private Army Hired to Fight in Iraq. Century, 2006. p. 20. ISBN 1-84605-062-6
    • Forest, James J. F. (2006). Homeland Security: Critical infrastructure. Greenwood Publishing Group, 93. ISBN 0-275-98768-X
    • Kennedy-Pipe, Caroline (1997). The origins of the present troubles in Northern Ireland. Longman, p. 84. ISBN 0-582-10073-9
  2. ^ English, Richard. Armed Struggle: The History of the IRA. Pan Macmillan, 2008. p.221
  3. ^ a b Moloney, Ed (2007). A Secret History of the IRA (2nd ed.). Penguin Books. p. 176. ISBN 978-0141028767.
  4. ^ Taylor, Steven (30 June 2018). Air War Northern Ireland: Britain's Air Arms and the 'Bandit Country' of South Armagh, Operation Banner 1969–2007. Pen and Sword. ISBN 978-1-5267-2155-6.
  5. ^
  6. ^
  7. ^
    • "1979: Soldiers die in Warrenpoint massacre". BBC News "On This Day"
    • "Police net closes in on Omagh murder gang". Irish Independent, 5 January 1999.
  8. ^
    • O'Brien, Brendan. The Long War: The IRA and Sinn Féin. Syracuse University Press, 1993. p. 205
    • "Narrow Water para returns after 30 years". Belfast Newsletter, 24 August 2009.
    • "Top diplomat thought Hume wanted return of internment". Belfast Telegraph, 30 December 2009.
  9. ^
    • Carr, Matthew (2007). The infernal machine: a history of terrorism. New Press, p. 173. ISBN 1-59558-179-0. "...the assassination of Lord Mountbatten at his holiday home at southern Ireland on 27 March 1979, the same day that another IRA unit ambushed and blew up eighteen British soldiers at Warrenpoint in a more conventional guerrilla operation."
    • Geraghty, Tony (1998). The Irish War: The Hidden Conflict Between the IRA and British Intelligence. JHU Press. pp. 212. ISBN 0801864569.
  10. ^ a b c d Jackson, General Sir Mike (5 September 2007). "Gen Sir Mike Jackson relives IRA Paras bombs". The Daily Telegraph.
  11. ^ a b c d e McKittrick, David. Lost Lives: The stories of the men, women, and children who died as a result of the Northern Ireland Troubles. Mainstream, 1999. pp. 796–797
  12. ^ a b c d Sanders, Andrew. Times of Troubles: Britain's War in Northern Ireland. Edinburgh University Press, 2012. pp.139–140
  13. ^ Harnden p. 198
  14. ^ Taylor, Peter (1997). Behind the mask:The IRA and Sinn Féin. TV books. p. 266. ISBN 1-57500-061-X.
  15. ^ a b McKittrick, David. Lost Lives: The stories of the men, women, and children who died as a result of the Northern Ireland Troubles. Mainstream, 1999. p. 799
  16. ^ "From the Archives: August 29th, 1979". The Irish Times. Retrieved 12 July 2020.
  17. ^ Harnden, p. 204
  18. ^ "At Least 18 British Soldiers Slain In an Attack by I.R.A. in Ulster". The New York Times. 28 August 1979. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 12 July 2020.
  19. ^ Harnden, p. 200
  20. ^ Reynolds, David (1998). Paras: An Illustrated History of Britain's Airborne Forces. Sutton. p. 257. ISBN 0750917237.
  21. ^ J. Bowyer Bell (1997). The secret army: the IRA. Transaction Publishers, p. 454. ISBN 0-8156-0597-8
  22. ^
    • "Saw his cousin shot on the day of the Narrow Water bomb". The Argus. Dundalk. 2 September 2009. Retrieved 27 August 2016.
    • "Inquest is told fatal shot fired from across border". The Argus. Dundalk. 28 October 2009. p. 56.
  23. ^
  24. ^ Ezard, John (25 April 2000). "David Thorne: The general who served in Northern Ireland and the Falklands, and defended the regimental structure of the British army". Obituaries. The Guardian.
  25. ^ "These are the last pictures I ever took... I went home & threw out my camera; I was so sickened. Warrenpoint Massacre: 25 Years On We Revisit Horror of IRA Bombings". The Mirror (London, England). Jilly Beattie. 17 June 2004
  26. ^ "Shoot to Kill" – Transcript. BBC. Retrieved 20 May 2015.
  27. ^ Somerville, Ian and Purcell, Andrew (2011). "A history of Republican public relations in Northern Ireland from 'Bloody Sunday' to the Good Friday Agreement". Journal of Communication Management – Special Edition on PR History,Volume 15, Issue 3.
  28. ^ Taylor, Peter (1999). Loyalists. London: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc. pp. 163–164
  29. ^ Harnden, p. 205
  30. ^
    • "IRA's top fugitive killed in bomb blast". UPI. 2 March 1988. Retrieved 31 January 2019.
    • Malcolm Sutton's Index of Deaths from the Conflict in Ireland: 1988. Conflict Archive on the Internet (CAIN)
  31. ^ Black, Rebecca (25 August 2019). "Narrow Water survivor 'at peace' 40 years after atrocity which killed 18 soldiers". Yahoo! News. Press Association. Retrieved 19 January 2020.
  32. ^ Harnden, p. 212
  33. ^
    • "But Sir Kenneth Newman, the RUC Chief Constable was adamant that the policy of 'police primacy', introduced by Merlyn Rees, should be remain in all areas, including South Armagh. The Army's decision not to travel by road in South Armagh was wrong, he argued, because it gave the IRA too much freedom". Harnden, p. 213
    • "Since the mid-1970s virtually all military movement has been by helicopter to avoid casualties from landmines planted under the roads; even the rubbish from the security forces bases is taken away by air." Harnden, p. 19
  34. ^ Arthur, Paul (2000). Special Relationships: Britain, Ireland and the Northern Ireland problem. Blackstaff Press, Chapter 8. ISBN 0-85640-688-0
  35. ^ Coogan, Tim Pat (1995). The Troubles: Ireland's Ordeal, 1966–1995, and the Search for Peace. Hutchinson. p. 245. ISBN 0-09-179146-4. From the time of the Ulsterisation, normalisation and criminalisation policy formulations in the mid-seventies it had become obvious that, if the conflict was to be Vietnamised and the natives were to do the fighting, then the much-talked-about 'primacy of the police' would have to become a reality. The policy was officially instituted in 1976. But if one had to point to a watershed date as a result of which the police actually wrested real power from the army I would select 27 August 1979.
  36. ^ (PDF). Lusimus. No. 16. Radley College. January 2008. p. 1. Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 July 2011.

External links

  • Blair, Alexandra (28 August 2004). "The day my dad was killed by the Provos". Features. Irish Independent.
  • Warrenpoint falls silent as soldiers’ families recall IRA massacre
  • Warrenpoint ambush remembered

warrenpoint, ambush, also, known, narrow, water, ambush, warrenpoint, massacre, narrow, water, massacre, guerrilla, attack, provisional, irish, republican, army, august, 1979, south, armagh, brigade, ambushed, british, army, convoy, with, large, roadside, bomb. The Warrenpoint ambush 5 also known as the Narrow Water ambush 6 the Warrenpoint massacre 7 or the Narrow Water massacre 8 was a guerrilla attack 9 by the Provisional Irish Republican Army IRA on 27 August 1979 The IRA s South Armagh Brigade ambushed a British Army convoy with two large roadside bombs at Narrow Water Castle outside Warrenpoint Northern Ireland The first bomb was aimed at the convoy itself and the second targeted the incoming reinforcements and the incident command point ICP set up to deal with the incident IRA volunteers hidden in nearby woodland also allegedly fired on the troops who returned fire The castle is on the banks of the Newry River which marks the border between Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland Warrenpoint ambushPart of The Troubles Operation BannerA British Army lorry destroyed in the ambush The hills of the Cooley Peninsula in County Louth can be seen in the background behind Narrow Water Castle Date27 August 1979LocationNarrow Water Castle near Warrenpoint County Down Northern Ireland54 06 42 N 06 16 45 W 54 11167 N 6 27917 W 54 11167 6 27917 Coordinates 54 06 42 N 06 16 45 W 54 11167 N 6 27917 W 54 11167 6 27917ResultProvisional IRA victory Deadliest attack on the British Army by the Provisional IRA 1 Belligerents United KingdomProvisional IRACommanders and leadersLt Col David Blair Maj Peter Fursman Brendan BurnsUnits involvedBritish ArmySouth Armagh Brigade 2 Strength50 soldiers citation needed UnknownCasualties and losses18 killedOver 20 wounded 3 1 RAF Wessex helicopter damaged 4 NoneCivilian 1 killed 1 wounded by British Army gun fireclass notpageimage Location within Northern Ireland Eighteen British soldiers were killed and over twenty were seriously injured making it the deadliest attack on the British Army during the Troubles 3 An English civilian was also killed and an Irish civilian wounded both by British soldiers firing across the border after the first blast The attack happened on the same day that the IRA assassinated Lord Louis Mountbatten a close relative of the British royal family Contents 1 Ambush 1 1 First explosion 1 2 Shooting of Hudson cousins 1 3 Second explosion 2 Aftermath 3 References 4 Footnotes 5 External linksAmbush EditThe ambush took place on the A2 road at Narrow Water Castle just outside Warrenpoint in the south of County Down in Northern Ireland The road and castle are on the northern bank of the Newry River also known as the Clanrye River which marks the border between Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland The Republic s side of the river the Cooley Peninsula in County Louth was an ideal spot from which to launch an ambush it was thickly wooded which gave cover to the ambushers and the river border prevented British forces giving chase 10 First explosion Edit On the afternoon of 27 August a British Army convoy of one Land Rover and two four ton lorries carrying soldiers of the 2nd Battalion Parachute Regiment was driving from Ballykinler Barracks to Newry 11 12 The British Army were aware of the dangers of using the stretch of road along the Newry River and often declared it out of bounds However they would sometimes use it to avoid setting a pattern 10 At 16 40 as the convoy was driving past Narrow Water Castle an 800 pound 360 kg fertiliser bomb hidden among strawbales on a parked flatbed trailer was detonated by remote control by IRA members watching from across the border in County Louth 12 The explosion caught the last lorry in the convoy hurling it on its side and instantly killing six paratroopers whose bodies were scattered across the road 13 There were only two survivors amongst the soldiers travelling in the lorry they both received serious injuries The lorry s driver Anthony Wood aged 19 was one of those killed All that remained of Wood s body was his pelvis welded to the seat by the fierce heat of the blast 10 According to the soldiers immediately after the blast they were targeted by rifle fire from the woods on the Cooley Peninsula on the other side of the border 14 15 and this view was supported by two part time firefighters assisting the wounded who were sure they had been fired on from the Omeath side of the water 16 Shortly afterwards the two IRA members arrested by the Garda Siochana the Republic of Ireland s police force and suspected of being behind the ambush were found to have traces of gunsmoke residue on their hands and on the motorbike they were riding 17 The IRA s first statement on the incident however denied that any shots had been fired at the troops 18 and according to Royal Ulster Constabulary RUC researchers the soldiers might have mistaken the sound of ammunition cooking off for enemy gunfire 19 Nevertheless at the official inquiry the soldiers declared on oath that they had been fired on 20 The surviving paratroopers radioed for urgent assistance and reinforcements were dispatched to the scene by road 12 A rapid reaction unit was sent by Gazelle helicopter consisting of Lieutenant Colonel David Blair commanding officer of the Queen s Own Highlanders his signaller Lance Corporal Victor MacLeod and army medics Another helicopter a Wessex landed to pick up the wounded Colonel Blair assumed command once at the site 21 Shooting of Hudson cousins Edit William Hudson a 29 year old from London was killed by the British Army and his cousin Barry Hudson a 25 year old native of Dingle was wounded when shots were fired across the Newry River into the Republic of Ireland about 3 km from the village of Omeath County Louth 15 The pair were partners in Hudson Amusements and had been operating their amusements in Omeath for the duration of the Omeath Gala When the first explosion was heard across the Lough the pair went down to the shore to see what was unfolding The pair made their way to Narrow Water on the southern side of the border to get a better view of what was happening on the northern side Barry Hudson was shot in the arm and as he fell to the ground he saw his cousin who was the son of a coachman at Buckingham Palace fall to the ground shot in the head He died almost immediately 22 Second explosion Edit The IRA had been studying how the British Army behaved after a bombing and correctly predicted that they would set up an incident command point ICP at the stone gateway on the other side of the road At 17 12 thirty two minutes after the first explosion another 800 pound 360 kg bomb hidden in milk pails exploded at the gateway destroying it and hurling lumps of granite through the air It detonated as the Wessex helicopter was taking off carrying wounded soldiers The helicopter was damaged by the blast but did not crash 11 Narrow Water Castle c 2007 The second explosion killed twelve soldiers ten from the Parachute Regiment and the two from the Queen s Own Highlanders 23 Lt Colonel Blair was the second Lt Colonel to be killed in the Troubles up until then following Lt Colonel Corden Lloyd of the 2nd Battalion Royal Green Jackets in 1978 12 Only one of Colonel Blair s epaulettes remained to identify him as his body had been vaporised in the blast The epaulette was taken from the scene by Brigadier David Thorne to a security briefing with prime minister Margaret Thatcher to illustrate the human factor of the attack 24 Mike Jackson then a major in the Parachute Regiment was at the scene soon after the second explosion and later described seeing human remains scattered over the road in the water and hanging from the trees He was asked to identify the face of his friend Major Peter Fursman still recognisable after it had been ripped from his head by the explosion and recovered from the water by divers from the Royal Engineers 10 Press photographer Peter Molloy who arrived at the scene after the first explosion came close to being shot by an angry paratrooper who saw him taking photographs of the dead and dying instead of offering to help the wounded The soldier was tackled by his comrades Molloy said I was shouted at and called all sorts of things but I understood why I had trespassed on the worst day of these fellas lives and taken pictures of it 25 Aftermath EditThe Warrenpoint ambush was the deadliest attack on the British Army during the Troubles and the Parachute Regiment s biggest loss since World War II with sixteen paratroopers killed 11 General Sir James Glover Commander of British forces in Northern Ireland later said it was arguably the most successful and certainly one of the best planned IRA attacks of the whole campaign 11 26 The ambush happened on the same day that Lord Mountbatten a prominent relative and close confidant of the British royal family was killed by an IRA bomb aboard his boat at Mullaghmore along with three others Republicans portrayed the attack as retaliation for Bloody Sunday in 1972 when the Parachute Regiment shot dead 13 unarmed civilians during a protest march in Derry Graffiti appeared in republican areas declaring 13 gone and not forgotten we got 18 and Mountbatten 27 The day after the Mountbatten and Warrenpoint attacks the Ulster Volunteer Force retaliated by shooting dead John Patrick Hardy 43 a Catholic civilian at his home in Belfast s New Lodge estate Hardy was allegedly targeted due to the mistaken belief that he was an IRA member 28 Very shortly after the ambush IRA volunteers Brendan Burns and Joe Brennan were arrested by the Gardai They were stopped while riding a motorbike on a road opposite Narrow Water Castle They were later released on bail due to lack of evidence 29 Burns died in 1988 when a bomb he was handling exploded prematurely 30 In 1998 former IRA member Eamon Collins claimed that Burns had been one of those who carried out the Warrenpoint ambush 11 No one has ever been criminally charged 31 According to Toby Harnden the attack drove a wedge between the British Army and the RUC Lieutenant General Sir Timothy Creasey General Officer Commanding Northern Ireland suggested to Margaret Thatcher that internment should be brought back and that liaison with the Gardai should be left in the hands of the military 32 Sir Kenneth Newman the RUC Chief Constable claimed instead that the British Army practice since 1975 of supplying their garrisons in South County Armagh by helicopter gave too much freedom of movement to the IRA 33 One result was the appointment of Sir Maurice Oldfield to a new position of Co ordinator of Security Intelligence in Northern Ireland His role was to co ordinate intelligence between the military MI5 and the RUC Another was the expansion of the RUC by 1 000 members 34 Tim Pat Coogan asserts that the deaths of the 18 soldiers hastened the move towards Ulsterisation 35 Lieutenant Colonel Blair is remembered on a memorial at Radley College Oxfordshire 36 References EditHarnden Toby 1999 Bandit Country Hodder amp Stoughton ISBN 0 340 71736 X Taylor Peter 1997 Behind The Mask The IRA amp Sinn Fein Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 1 57500 061 X Footnotes Edit Barzilay David British Army in Ulster Century Books 1981 Vol 4 p 94 ISBN 0 903152 16 9 Wood Ian Scotland and Ulster Mercat Press 1994 p 170 ISBN 1 873644 19 1 Geddes John Highway to Hell An Ex SAS Soldier s Account of the Extraordinary Private Army Hired to Fight in Iraq Century 2006 p 20 ISBN 1 84605 062 6 Forest James J F 2006 Homeland Security Critical infrastructure Greenwood Publishing Group 93 ISBN 0 275 98768 X Kennedy Pipe Caroline 1997 The origins of the present troubles in Northern Ireland Longman p 84 ISBN 0 582 10073 9 English Richard Armed Struggle The History of the IRA Pan Macmillan 2008 p 221 a b Moloney Ed 2007 A Secret History of the IRA 2nd ed Penguin Books p 176 ISBN 978 0141028767 Taylor Steven 30 June 2018 Air War Northern Ireland Britain s Air Arms and the Bandit Country of South Armagh Operation Banner 1969 2007 Pen and Sword ISBN 978 1 5267 2155 6 Bowyer Bell John The IRA 1968 2000 Analysis of a Secret Army Taylor amp Francis 2000 p 305 ISBN 0 7146 8119 9 Faligot Roger Britain s Military Strategy in Ireland The Kitson Experiment Zed Press 1983 p 142 ISBN 0 86232 047 X Ellison Graham and Smyth Jim The Crowned Harp Policing Northern Ireland Pluto Press 2000 p 145 ISBN 0 7453 1393 0 Smithwick Tribunal to examine bomb attack that killed 18 soldiers Belfast Telegraph 5 December 2011 Garda told not to aid ambush probe Irish Examiner 13 March 2012 Moloney Ed 2007 A Secret History of the IRA 2nd ed Penguin Books p 735 ISBN 978 0141028767 1979 Soldiers die in Warrenpoint massacre BBC News On This Day Police net closes in on Omagh murder gang Irish Independent 5 January 1999 O Brien Brendan The Long War The IRA and Sinn Fein Syracuse University Press 1993 p 205 Narrow Water para returns after 30 years Belfast Newsletter 24 August 2009 Top diplomat thought Hume wanted return of internment Belfast Telegraph 30 December 2009 Carr Matthew 2007 The infernal machine a history of terrorism New Press p 173 ISBN 1 59558 179 0 the assassination of Lord Mountbatten at his holiday home at southern Ireland on 27 March 1979 the same day that another IRA unit ambushed and blew up eighteen British soldiers at Warrenpoint in a more conventional guerrilla operation Geraghty Tony 1998 The Irish War The Hidden Conflict Between the IRA and British Intelligence JHU Press pp 212 ISBN 0801864569 a b c d Jackson General Sir Mike 5 September 2007 Gen Sir Mike Jackson relives IRA Paras bombs The Daily Telegraph a b c d e McKittrick David Lost Lives The stories of the men women and children who died as a result of the Northern Ireland Troubles Mainstream 1999 pp 796 797 a b c d Sanders Andrew Times of Troubles Britain s War in Northern Ireland Edinburgh University Press 2012 pp 139 140 Harnden p 198 Taylor Peter 1997 Behind the mask The IRA and Sinn Fein TV books p 266 ISBN 1 57500 061 X a b McKittrick David Lost Lives The stories of the men women and children who died as a result of the Northern Ireland Troubles Mainstream 1999 p 799 From the Archives August 29th 1979 The Irish Times Retrieved 12 July 2020 Harnden p 204 At Least 18 British Soldiers Slain In an Attack by I R A in Ulster The New York Times 28 August 1979 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 12 July 2020 Harnden p 200 Reynolds David 1998 Paras An Illustrated History of Britain s Airborne Forces Sutton p 257 ISBN 0750917237 J Bowyer Bell 1997 The secret army the IRA Transaction Publishers p 454 ISBN 0 8156 0597 8 Saw his cousin shot on the day of the Narrow Water bomb The Argus Dundalk 2 September 2009 Retrieved 27 August 2016 Inquest is told fatal shot fired from across border The Argus Dundalk 28 October 2009 p 56 Malcolm Sutton s Index of Deaths from the Conflict in Ireland 1979 Conflict Archive on the Internet CAIN Harnden p 199 Ezard John 25 April 2000 David Thorne The general who served in Northern Ireland and the Falklands and defended the regimental structure of the British army Obituaries The Guardian These are the last pictures I ever took I went home amp threw out my camera I was so sickened Warrenpoint Massacre 25 Years On We Revisit Horror of IRA Bombings The Mirror London England Jilly Beattie 17 June 2004 Shoot to Kill Transcript BBC Retrieved 20 May 2015 Somerville Ian and Purcell Andrew 2011 A history of Republican public relations in Northern Ireland from Bloody Sunday to the Good Friday Agreement Journal of Communication Management Special Edition on PR History Volume 15 Issue 3 Taylor Peter 1999 Loyalists London Bloomsbury Publishing Plc pp 163 164 Harnden p 205 IRA s top fugitive killed in bomb blast UPI 2 March 1988 Retrieved 31 January 2019 Malcolm Sutton s Index of Deaths from the Conflict in Ireland 1988 Conflict Archive on the Internet CAIN Black Rebecca 25 August 2019 Narrow Water survivor at peace 40 years after atrocity which killed 18 soldiers Yahoo News Press Association Retrieved 19 January 2020 Harnden p 212 But Sir Kenneth Newman the RUC Chief Constable was adamant that the policy of police primacy introduced by Merlyn Rees should be remain in all areas including South Armagh The Army s decision not to travel by road in South Armagh was wrong he argued because it gave the IRA too much freedom Harnden p 213 Since the mid 1970s virtually all military movement has been by helicopter to avoid casualties from landmines planted under the roads even the rubbish from the security forces bases is taken away by air Harnden p 19 Arthur Paul 2000 Special Relationships Britain Ireland and the Northern Ireland problem Blackstaff Press Chapter 8 ISBN 0 85640 688 0 Coogan Tim Pat 1995 The Troubles Ireland s Ordeal 1966 1995 and the Search for Peace Hutchinson p 245 ISBN 0 09 179146 4 From the time of the Ulsterisation normalisation and criminalisation policy formulations in the mid seventies it had become obvious that if the conflict was to be Vietnamised and the natives were to do the fighting then the much talked about primacy of the police would have to become a reality The policy was officially instituted in 1976 But if one had to point to a watershed date as a result of which the police actually wrested real power from the army I would select 27 August 1979 A New Memorial PDF Lusimus No 16 Radley College January 2008 p 1 Archived from the original PDF on 22 July 2011 External links EditBlair Alexandra 28 August 2004 The day my dad was killed by the Provos Features Irish Independent Warrenpoint falls silent as soldiers families recall IRA massacre Warrenpoint ambush remembered Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Warrenpoint ambush amp oldid 1130418768, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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