The Troubles in the late 1970s and 1980s The Troubles were the conflict in
Northern Ireland that began in the late 1960s between the majority population of
unionists and the
republican minority. The unionists—also known as loyalists—wanted Northern Ireland to remain within the UK; Irish republicans wanted Northern Ireland to leave the UK and join a united Ireland. According to the political scientist Stephen Kelly, four events impacted the approach and policies towards Northern Ireland of
Margaret Thatcher, the
leader of the Opposition and then prime minister:
the assassination of
Airey Neave;
the assassination of
Lord Mountbatten and the
Warrenpoint ambush, which took place on the same day; and the
1981 Irish hunger strike. In March 1979 Neave, the
shadow secretary of state for Northern Ireland, was assassinated by the
Irish National Liberation Army in a
car bomb attack in the
Palace of Westminster. Neave was a friend and political mentor to Thatcher, who was described by her biographer
Jonathan Aitken as being "numb with shock" at the news of his death. On 27 August 1979—less than four months after Thatcher became prime minister—Mountbatten was killed by a bomb on his fishing boat, off the coast of
Mullaghmore, County Sligo, in the Irish Republic. The device had been planted by the
Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA). On the same day, the IRA also killed eighteen British soldiers near
Warrenpoint, with two bombs—the most deaths suffered in a single incident by the British Army during the Troubles. In March 1981
Bobby Sands, an IRA member who was imprisoned at the
Maze prison, Northern Ireland, went on hunger strike for the return of
Special Category Status (SCS) to prisoners. SCS involved treating those prisoners under different, more favourable, conditions with the status of political prisoners rather than as criminals. It included not having to wear prison uniform and being able to freely associate with other prisoners. While on hunger strike, Sands stood in the
Fermanagh and South Tyrone by-election and won. Thatcher remained unmoved on the point of allowing Special Category Status and said "There can be no question of political status for someone who is serving a sentence for crime. Crime is crime is crime: it is not political, it is crime, and there can be no question of granting political status". Ten men died of starvation before the strike came to an end. Sands was the first to die, which he did on 5 May 1981, after 66 days of starvation; his death led to rioting in republican areas of Northern Ireland. Because of the hunger strikes and the deaths of those involved, Thatcher was reviled by Irish republicans. According to the political scientist
Richard English, Thatcher was "a republican hate-figure of
Cromwellian proportions". English highlights as examples comments about Thatcher from the IRA member
Danny Morrison: "that
unctuous, self-righteous fucker" and "the biggest bastard we have ever known". Because of her staunch unionist position and because they considered her responsible for the deaths of the hunger strikers, the IRA leadership decided to try to assassinate her before the hunger strikes ended.
Thatcher's approach to Northern Ireland, 1979–1984 , with her husband
Denis (left), visiting Northern Ireland in 1982 Thatcher's outlook on Northern Ireland came from an inherently unionist position; she wanted a military victory over the IRA and "integration", that is, treating Northern Ireland like the rest of the UK, rather than having separate laws and political processes. Her support for integration, however, was abandoned after Neave's death and after she came to power. According to Eamonn Kennedy, the
Irish ambassador to the UK between 1978 and 1983, the murder of Neave and the deaths of British soldiers "left deep psychological scars" on her Irish outlook. Thatcher's unionist stance was intuitive; in her autobiography she wrote "My own instincts are profoundly Unionist. ... But, then, any Conservative should in his bones be a Unionist too. Our party has always, throughout its history, been committed to the defence of the Union." Kelly considers that "Thatcher's attitude to Northern Ireland was a powerful blend of reactionary policies and personal indifference." She admitted ignorance of the nuances of Northern Irish politics, and said in her memoirs "But what British politician will ever fully understand Northern Ireland?" According to Kelly, the focal point of Thatcher's hardline approach to Northern Ireland was security and the need to defeat paramilitary—specifically republican—violence. There was flexibility in her approach, however. During the hunger strikes, she personally gave the go-ahead for secret talks with the IRA to bring about a negotiated end to the strike. In 1980, despite saying publicly that the Irish Republic had no right to interfere with the UK's governing of Northern Ireland, she met
Charles Haughey, the (the Irish prime minister), to discuss the relationship.
Patrick Magee in 2014
Patrick Magee was born in Belfast in 1951 and moved to
Norwich, Norfolk, when he was two. In 1971 he returned to Belfast, and joined the IRA in 1972 after attending a —an illicit drinking den—in the Unity Flats area of
Belfast, raided by British soldiers. He was beaten and detained for thirty-six hours without charge; in 2001 he said the incident left him with "a sense of anger. Real anger. I felt I just couldn't walk away from this". He was soon assigned to be one of the IRA's "engineering officers", the organisation's term for a bomb maker. He was
interned (detained without trial) at
Long Kesh prison from June 1973 to November 1975. In the mid-1970s the IRA changed its structure from a
battalion to a
cell-based system. Each cell—also called an
active service unit (ASU)—normally comprised four
volunteers, of which only the leader was in contact with the level above. At this time Magee joined the England Department, the IRA's ASU that operated in England. He was periodically active there between 1978 and 1979, and in 1983. In 1983 Magee was part of the ASU that planned to bomb the Eagle and Child pub in
Lancashire, popular with soldiers as it was situated next to
Weeton Barracks. His IRA
handler in England was Raymond O'Connor, who rented a flat for Magee and a comrade, and drove the pair to the location to view the target. O'Connor had been arrested by Lancashire Special Branch the previous year and been identified as a member of the IRA; he had been recruited by police as an
informer and was passing details of Magee's mission to them. Magee and his comrade became suspicious of O'Connor and realised they were under surveillance; they returned to Dublin. When the pair told their IRA superiors that they had been followed, they were not believed. Magee later wrote that "There was a suspicion at home that we had panicked. No one could credit that we had narrowly escaped a trap. ... It appeared my operational days were over. I remember saying as much to a comrade, who agreed." ==Build-up==