>From MCELROY@zodiac.rutgers.edu Sun May  2 19:48:06 1993

Re-posted from Reg.Ireland 
It concerns a campaign pledge made by Pres. Clinton that he would
appoint a special peace envoy for Northern Ireland. 
 
Topic 337 Des Wilson on Peace Envoy 
tlane     reg.ireland     8:53 pm  Apr 15, 1993 
 
BELFAST PERSPECTIVE 
 
 
End To Arrogance? 
 
By:  Fr. Des Wilson 
 
     One of the most interesting aspects of the discussion 
     about sending a "peace envoy" or a "fact-finder" to 
     Ireland is that the United States government no longer 
     accepts the version of Ireland given by British 
Information Services.  If it did, why send a fact-finder? 
 
APPALLING ARROGANCE 
 
 
     One of the most atrocious lies of British Information 
     Services is that Irish Catholics and Protestants cannot 
     live together in peace.  To accuse any people of this is 
     appalling arrogance!  It is accusing a people of lacking 
     one of the most elementary of human abilities--that of 
being able to live side-by-side with other human beings. 
 
HAWKED 
 
 
     This lie has been hawked around the world by British 
     Intelligence Services (or British Information Services, 
     which is the same thing) and reinforced, unfortunately, by 
     church officials who have told the same lie.  In the north 
     of Ireland, where between 20% and 30% of Catholics marry 
     Protestants and others, the lie seems impossible to 
     believe.   The United States government believed it for 
     decades, however, in spite of all evidence to the 
     contrary. 
 
     We have said it before, but it is worth saying again 
     because this time, in the new climate of opinion in the 
     United States, it may be listened to by those in 
     government who so far have supported the British 
     government at all costs. 
 
 
PUBLIC MISTRUST 
 
 
     The first step towards defeating a tyranny is to know the 
     truth about it.  So, if the American government now 
     publicly signals its mistrust of British Information 
     Services, then we are on our way.  If the government in 
     Dublin would follow suit, we Irish democrats would be in a 
strong position indeed. 
 
DUBLIN 
 
     There are rumors in Ireland that the Dublin government is 
     pulling back from its opposition to Irish democrats at 
     home or abroad.  That remains to be seen.  The embassy and 
     consulates will have to prove their goodwill before it 
     would be safe to believe any such rumor.  There is as yet 
     not the slightest scintilla of evidence to show that the 
     Irish embassies or consulates abroad are anything but 
     firmly opposed to those who in their quest for a modern 
     democracy in Ireland have dared to oppose British 
     government policy in Ireland.  These embassies have 
     facilitated a prolonged and sustained anti-Catholic 
     persecution there.  As far as the anti-Catholic 
     persecution is concerned--a persecution sustained by the 
     profoundly sectarian British government--John Major 
     recently showed his contempt for all Catholics once 
again. 
 
HUMAN RIGHTS 

     He said that the only human rights abuses in the north of 
     Ireland are those committed by paramilitaries.  The 
     constant pogroms against Catholics are not abuses of human 
     rights, because Catholics do not count any more than Jews 
     did under the Nazis.  The constant denial of the right to 
     live in certain areas--Catholics are driven out of them by 
     pogroms once every 12 years--does not count any more than 
     it counted under the Nazis.  The constant denial of 
     employment and promotion to Catholics does not count.  It 
     exists, as even Major would have to concede, but it does 
     not count. 
 
     The deeply and irretrievably sectarian and anti-democratic 
     government led by Major now makes clear the basic 
     difficulty of creating a modern democracy in Ireland under 
     British rule.  You might as well have asked for democracy 
     under Hitler or Stalin--because in the eyes of all of 
     them, some citizens simply do not count. 
 
     Why should the American people support or even countenance 
     such a tyranny? 
 
 
Conf?  
 
 
Topic 338 Des Wilson on Peace Envoy #2 
tlane     reg.ireland     8:55 pm  Apr 15, 1993 
 
BELFAST PERSPECTIVE: OPPOSING THE ENVOY 
 
 
By:  Father Des Wilson 
 
     British opposition to President Clinton's sending of a 
     peace envoy to Ireland has shown itself in a number of 
     ways.  The British press poured out venom against the 
     Americans, telling them to "keep their fingers out of 
     other people's affairs." 
 
     Irish democrats reminded their friends abroad that you can 
     do as much as you will for the British regime--even 
     winning two world wars for them--but you will get no 
     thanks for it.  Conservative backbenchers added their fury 
     to the shouts in the market place.  How dare the Americans 
     interfere? 
 
RELIGION 
 
 
     Church leaders reflected the government's fear of any 
     spotlight being turned on the British regime by democrats 
     from America or elsewhere.  When it was suggested that Mr. 
     Foley be appointed, not as peace envoy, but as fact-finder 
     for the President, British Unionists were enraged.  Mr. 
     Foley is friendly to the British government, and yet the 
     British Unionists were furious over his possible 
     appointment.  Why? 
 
     Because he is a Catholic. 
 
 
ANTI-CATHOLIC 
 
     Individuals in the United States find it difficult to 
     understand how racist and deeply anti-Catholic the British 
     regime is.  You can be as loyal to the regime as you wish; 
     you can serve it, help it buy property in other people's 
     countries, facilitate it in every way--but at the end of 
     the day, if you are a Catholic, you are out. 
 
     Very few Catholics want to be married in the Chapel in 
     Westminster--but they cannot, whether they want it or not, 
     no matter how loyal they are.  And if a member of the 
     British ruling family], the Windsors, marries a Catholic, 
     he or she is at once barred from ever becoming monarch, no 
     matter how near he or she may be in line for the throne. 
     Or how far--a recently barred member of the family was 
     16th in line. 
 
     So, Mr. Foley is unacceptable to the British Unionists 
     because he is a Catholic and the regime has pursued a 
     relentless anti-Catholic persecution for more than 70 
     years. 
 
 
CONVERT 
 
 
     Even if Mr. Foley went so far as to give up being a 
     Catholic and joined, say, the Church of England or the 
     Church of Ireland, he would still be unacceptable because 
     he had been a Catholic.  A cabinet minister in the 
     Stormont regime was politically destroyed when:  1) he 
     offended Presbyterian churchmen, and 2) he was found to 
have had a Catholic grandmother. 
 
RESENTMENT 
 
 
     The British government itself, although it must adopt a 
     suitably humble attitude before the US government, resents 
     even a fact-finding emissary coming from the United 
     States.  After all, the regime spends millions of dollars 
     each year on its British Information Services, giving its 
     version of what is happening in Ireland.  Is this not 
     enough?  Is the President saying that the British 
     Information Services are untruthful?  Or unreliable? 
     Irish democrats hope so, because the Services are 
     unreliable and untruthful.  Or is he4 saying that it is 
     not enough to read back numbers of British Information 
     Services brochures to find out what is happening in 
     Ireland?  For the first time, the BIS version of Ireland 
is being publicly questioned at a high level. 
 
UNTRUSTWORTHY 
 
 
     BIS pamphlets and handouts--technically well produced but 
     intellectually inept--go regularly to universities, 
     libraries, embassies, consulates, church establishments, 
     media, etc.  They give an account of Irish affairs which 
     is inaccurate and cynical.  By even suggesting that an 
     emissary be sent to Ireland on a fact-finding mission, one 
     is saying clearly that this elaborate British network of 
     propaganda is not to be trusted any longer by the White 
House. 
 
BREAKTHROUGH 
 
 
     Perhaps this signals a significant breakthrough towards 
     the truth and towards a new United States policy of 
     helping Irish and British democrats to dismantle the last 
     undemocratic, anti-Catholic, aristocratic regime in the 
European Community. 
 
 
