image This is a remarkable editorial from Thursday’s Irish Times. It’s a newspaper which has long had a reputation as the most pro-unionist of the Dublin press and yet now chooses to express a widespread sense of humiliation with reference to a failed national liberation struggle.

If anyone was ever stupid enough to believe Peter Brooke’s weird claim that Britain has “no selfish strategic interest” in Ireland the events of the last couple of days should be definitive proof that it was a lie.

IT MAY seem strange to some that The Irish Times would ask whether this is what the men of 1916 died for: a bailout from the German chancellor with a few shillings of sympathy from the British chancellor on the side. There is the shame of it all. Having obtained our political independence from Britain to be the masters of our own affairs, we have now surrendered our sovereignty to the European Commission, the European Central Bank, and the International Monetary Fund. Their representatives ride into Merrion Street today.

Fianna Fáil has sometimes served Ireland very well, sometimes very badly. Even in its worst times, however, it retained some respect for its underlying commitment that the Irish should control their own destinies. It lists among its primary aims the commitment “to maintain the status of Ireland as a sovereign State”. Its founder, Eamon de Valera, in his inaugural address to his new party in 1926, spoke of “the inalienability of national sovereignty” as being fundamental to its beliefs. The Republican Party’s ideals are in tatters now.

The Irish people do not need to be told that, especially for small nations, there is no such thing as absolute sovereignty. We know very well that we have made our independence more meaningful by sharing it with our European neighbours. We are not naive enough to think that this State ever can, or ever could, take large decisions in isolation from the rest of the world. What we do expect, however, is that those decisions will still be our own. A nation’s independence is defined by the choices it can make for itself.

Irish history makes the loss of that sense of choice all the more shameful. The desire to be a sovereign people runs like a seam through all the struggles of the last 200 years. “Self-determination” is a phrase that echoes from the United Irishmen to the Belfast Agreement. It continues to have a genuine resonance for most Irish people today.

The true ignominy of our current situation is not that our sovereignty has been taken away from us, it is that we ourselves have squandered it. Let us not seek to assuage our sense of shame in the comforting illusion that powerful nations in Europe are conspiring to become our masters. We are, after all, no great prize for any would-be overlord now. No rational European would willingly take on the task of cleaning up the mess we have made. It is the incompetence of the governments we ourselves elected that has so deeply compromised our capacity to make our own decisions.

They did so, let us recall, from a period when Irish sovereignty had never been stronger. Our national debt was negligible. The mass emigration that had mocked our claims to be a people in control of our own destiny was reversed. A genuine act of national self-determination had occurred in 1998 when both parts of the island voted to accept the Belfast Agreement. The sense of failure and inferiority had been banished, we thought, for good.

To drag this State down from those heights and make it again subject to the decisions of others is an achievement that will not soon be forgiven. It must mark, surely, the ignominious end of a failed administration

5 responses to “Imperialism not all good says Irish Times”

  1. But surely this is an argument about the limitation of national liberation as a vehicle of emancipation under capitalism rather then an argument suggesting that this has happened because Ireland is an oppressed nation.

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  2. Joe Higgins (Socialist Party MEP for Dublin) argued today on the RTE Radio 1 Pat Kenny programme that the IMF assault on the Irish State results from Angela Merkel’s surrender to the speculators. The German Chancellor first said the bond-holders would have to pay something to solve the financial crisis, but then backtracked saying this should only apply from 2013. The big international creditors then decided to pick on a weak link in the EU Zone, and the leaders of the formally independent Irish State are meekly lying down, aided and abetted by the big EU powers. The link is here, about an hour and 15 minutes after the start of the 2 hour programme :

    http://www.rte.ie/radio1/player_av.html?0%2Cnull%2C200,http://dynamic.rte.ie/quickaxs/209-r1-todaywithpatkenny.smil

    Confidence in the main bourgeois parties, Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael, seems to have spectacularly collapsed. Watch out for the result of next Thursday’s Donegal South-West by-election, the result comes in on Friday. Predictions are that Sinn Féin will win the contest, that the Labour Party will increase its vote, and that a left-wing independent Thomas Pringle will also do well. Pringle is a Donegal local councillor who resigned from SF in 2007 because he opposed the party’s willingness to enter a coalition government with the right (Gerry Adams’s party stated it was “ready for government”).

    More than ever, we need a united left with backbone.

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  3. UNITE Calls for immediate resignation of failed political establishment

    Statement by Jimmy Kelly, UNITE (Ireland) Regional Secretary :

    *Go in a week and let the people decide who will negotiate
    *People urged to join national protest on November 27th

    A leading trade union figure has called on the people of Ireland to make their views known clearly to those who are presently deciding the economic landscape likely to frame the next decade.

    “Our government has finally surrendered control after two years of what can only be described as incompetence and lies,” said UNITE Regional Secretary, Jimmy Kelly. “Yet still they go to cut ribbons and profess anger at being questioned on whether they are ashamed of their performance. They have treated the Irish people like fools and must step down immediately.”

    “We have heard that it is the markets fault, that the banks lied to them and that it was somehow our fault for questioning them and undermining confidence.”

    “This is the sham politics to which we have descended and the country deserves better.”

    “The IMF is now running the rule over figures which the Department of Finance have had from the banks and elsewhere for two years. They will evaluate and plot a course of action that has nothing to do with the future of our country and is only concerned with financial equations.”

    “Our politicians could have steered towards a path of growth but they chose instead to bow down before their beloved markets. They were the fool in the room and now families that are struggling to survive will be burdened with debt and a generation lost to emigration.”

    “There is no place left at the table for disgraced politicians that have only thought of themselves. They should be forced to step down immediately, relinquishing their fancy cars and crazy expenses and allow the people to decide who it is to negotiate our way out of the mess they have created.”

    “If they are not gone within a week then the people of Ireland who are staging a national demonstration on Saturday 27th at the GPO in Dublin, a symbol of what we fought for and have now put at fatal risk, must make them do so.”

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  4. I note that Gavin Esler prefaced a discussion of this story on Newsnight last night by quoting James Connolly.

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  5. Ireland is being sold into slavery. The EU, IMF, British bail out is entirely motivated by self-interest and there is absolutely nothing at all in it for Ireland except economic ruin. The bailout is designed to prop up the value of the billions in `assets’ that the banks and governments of Germany, France, America, Britain (£50 billion alone)and others have on deposit in Irish Banks in the form of worthless bonds issued by a private banks but based on toxic, completely unrealisable loans. The money will be used to honour these bonds whilst the Irish economy is eviscerated simply to pay the interest on these new debts. The bail out is about spending a little now in the hope of getting a lot back later. There is nothing in it for Ireland except the most short-term survival giving the asset strippers time to pack up and leave with what ever of value they can lay their hands on.

    Instead of accepting this bail out, the Irish government should have sold the toxic debts of its banks on the open market at their true value, about 1c in the Euro, and whilst guaranteeing a certain amount of personal savings, told the private bond holders of the EU, Britain and America to get stuffed. All that money was borrowed to buy British, French and German crap in the first place or to provide American corporations with a cheap base in Europe. The bail out money will be finding its way back into the treasuries of its oh so generous providers ultimately accompanied by a huge premium taken out of the hide of the Irish working class and literally Ireland will have no prospect of recovery and no future as a viable nation. Stop this bail out now.

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