Following the agreement to handover the Treaty Ports to the Irish Free State,
Winston Churchill was one of only a few MPs who were critical of the decision. In 1938 he addressed the UK's
House of Commons calling it a "folly": Churchill also remarked that the concessions under the Agreements of 1938 were "astonishing triumphs" for Irish leader Éamon de Valera. Churchill also asked would it not be "far better to give up the £10,000,000 [a one-off Irish payment under the Agreement], and acquire the legal right, be it only on a lease granted by treaty, to use these harbours when necessary?" Mr Churchill also made a remark concerning the name by which the Irish state would henceforth be described in the UK (Eire) – "I have not been able to form a clear opinion on the exact juridical position of the Government of that portion of Ireland called Southern Ireland, which is now called Eire. That is a word which really has no application at the present time, and I must say, even from the point of view of the ordinary uses of English, that it is not customary to quote a term in a foreign language, a capital town, a geographical place, when there exists a perfectly well-known English equivalent [Ireland]. It is usual to say
Paris not
Paree." With the outbreak of the
Second World War in September 1939, Churchill's concerns proved justified. The
escort groups' refuelling facilities at Berehaven and Queenstown were further west than the nearest ones in Northern Ireland and
Great Britain. To compensate for the distance, allied convoys from North America had to be routed via
Iceland to the ports in Northern Ireland in the early months of the
Battle of the Atlantic. However, this decision arguably proved more practical because the shorter sea lanes around Ireland's southern coast soon became vulnerable to German anti-shipping air attacks following the
Fall of France in June 1940. The Iceland route also provided adequate air cover and escort refuelling for allied convoys. Nevertheless, many in the Royal Navy felt resentment towards the handover of the Irish Treaty Ports because they would have provided cover to convoys heading south to
Gibraltar and
North Africa. The Admiralty later estimated that ceding the ports led directly to the loss of 368 Allied ships and 5,070 lives during the war (Churchill was ridiculed for considering that de Valera might declare Ireland neutral). Formerly, when the country was part of the
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, the Royal Navy had designated its
Ireland Station as a long-standing separate command. ==See also==