dhermann1
I'll Lock Up
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The "Irish situation" only proves the old maxim that there is nothing more dangerous than a weak neighbor.
dhermann1 said:The "Irish situation" only proves the old maxim that there is nothing more dangerous than a weak neighbor.
It is a long-standing myth that the Black and Tans were the scourings of British Gaols - they were not. As Mikepara points out, they were most ex army/navy or police. Many were frustrated ex-soliders, Tommies who had faced unemployment and indifference on the part of the public when they returned from the Western Front. Service in Ireland offered them decent pay - 10 shillings a day - plus food in board. They also had the unofficial assurance that they were there to make Ireland a hell for rebels. While some behaved decently, many did not. Most had no ties to Ireland, no stake in her future, and became frustrated with fighting a guerilla war.Britain didn't recruit any criminal scum into the RIC Police Auxiliary [Black and Tans] They did recruit policemen and demobbed Army / Navy officers.
While intimidation was no doubt a factor in the problems faced by the ordinary RIC, another was that many of the Irish Catholics had sympathies with the nationalist cause, and did not wish to be involved in action against their fellow countrymen. There is a famous case where a group of RIC men resigned after recieving orders from their new British commander, Divisional Police Commissioner for Munster, Colonel Smythe, to cause as much destruction as they could, and shoot to kill. After he told them that the more they did this the better he would like them, and that there would be no official punishment if they did kill, a spokesmen for the RIC group, Constable Jeremiah Mee, addressed him, stating: 'By your accent I take it you are an Englishman. You forget you are addressing Irishmen.' He placed his cap, belt and bayonet on a table in front of the Colonel and continued: 'These too are English. Take them as a present from me, and to hell with you, you murderer.' He was supported in this action by both Protestant and Catholic RIC men.They where not a Regiment but Police and they where there on the direct wish of the Chief Constable, because the IRA where hindering recruitment by killing or intimidating the majority Catholic peelers. Remember the Protestants only had ascendency in the North and that included the police.
I think that there is evidence of quite widespread destruction caused by the Black and Tans and Auxies. The reprisals on the part of the Tans, when they took place, were often at the expense of civilians. 1920 - the Year of Terror as it still remembered in Ireland - saw the sacking and burning of small towns like Trim, Balbriggan, Thurles and Templemore. In reprisal for the killing of three RIC men in Tralee, they besieged the town - businesses were closed, no food allowed in for a week, and three local men were shot. The burning of Cork, one of the outrages of the war, crowned their efforts. Chief Secretary for Ireland, Sir Hamar Greenwood, put up a disgraceful performance in Westminster when he claimed no responsibility on the part of the Black and Tans and Auxiliaries for the burning, and even claimed that they were responsible for saving the city from complete destruction! (It was no wonder that "telling a Hamar" became slang for lying in Ireland). The events in Cork, however, helped change public opinion in Britain on the course of action the British Government was pursuing, and helped lay the path for the Treaty negotiations.Yes the Auxies where hated, yes in some cases they beat and killed people who could have been arrested. The fast majority did a good martial policing job and did arrest and decently treat many more IRA members and sympathizers out of the 1000's of incidents in the 'tan wars' there where a handful of tit for tat atrocities.
Yes, Michael Collins did a remarkable job of attacking the British intelligence network. He was quite surgical about it, too - he despised waste, and so tried to identify and remove individuals so as to achieve maximum effect with minimum carnage. Absolutely ruthless, though, once someone was identified as a threat. Once the order was given, it had to be carried out. A most remarkable man, who once told Cathal Brugha "You'll get none of my men for that" when the latter had proposed a policy of assassination of British Cabinet Ministers and random terror attacks in British theatres. The Croke Park episode, mentioned above, is illustrative of both his methods and of the brutal and indiscrimate reprisals that led to the Black and Tans and Auxiliaries being so despised.Michael Collins made quite a name for himself by killing informers and peelers. Cookie is wrong to suggest, by implication that it is only a crime to kill someone in pre 1922 British ruled Ireland if that person wasn't a member of the Crown Forces.
It is an important and overlooked point that more men were killed during the Irish Civil War that followed the War of Independence than were killed during it. Indeed, it can be argued that the Irish War of Independence had many of the elements of a civil war, as it often pitched Irishman against Irishman rather than against the British. In saying that, I don't exonerate the British Government from its role in setting up the situation that led to the Civil War. The Civil War, a terrible and embittering time, is one of the greatest of tragedies in the long history of the Irish troubles. Increasing desperation lead to some ghastly atrocities on both sides, and the killing only ground to a halt following a brutal policy of the execution of Republican prisinors (notably the introduction of this policy happened after the death of Michael Collins in 1922 - we'll never know, but I doubt whether he would ever have put someone like Erskine Childers before a firing squad). Prolonged struggle had led to brutalisation, and Ireland emerged exhausted and with a bitterness that would endure for several generations.You just have to see what the new Irish Free State did to the anti treaty IRA rebels. They shot and hung and massacred many more IRA men than Britain did and the Treaty war was much worse casualty wize than the war for independance.