‘I was in the Army over thirty years and Derry was the most
resentful place I ever served, even the dogs hated us.’
When civil rights protests in the 1960s gave way to armed struggle,
the Provisional IRA in Derry – both city and county – led the
fight against the British security forces. In the city Martin
McGuinness – a young butcher’s assistant from the Bogside –
quickly rose through the ranks, launching a bombing campaign that
reduced the city centre to rubble. In tandem, the IRA’s active
service units fought the British Army in the streets and alleys of the
Bogside, Creggan, Shantallow and the Waterside. Out in the townlands,
a new generation from the county’s traditional republican families
waged an equally ruthless war against their neighbours in the RUC and
UDR. The Derry Brigade’s success would help propel McGuinness to the
very top of the IRA’s Army Council.
By the early 1980s the Derry Brigade appeared untouchable. However, in
reality, Special Branch and British Intelligence had infiltrated it
from top to bottom and almost destroyed the brigade. By the mid-1990s
its war was all but over, its ranks decimated by death and
incarceration. This is the story of that war told by those from all
sides who survived it.
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Martin McGuinness and the Derry IRA’s War Against the British
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781785375521
Publisert
2025
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Irish Academy Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter