Ireland’s pretence of neutrality plays right into the Kremlin’s hands. Last November, we saw vital communication cables in the Baltic Sea cut and Biden’s outgoing administration warned Moscow will likely continue targeting critical underwater infrastructure. As the European hub for most Tech Titans, the Republic of Ireland is especially vulnerable to such attacks.
The Kremlin would be much more reluctant to sabotage Google, Microsoft, PayPal, Apple and eBay and create mayhem on a grand scale if they were operating out of a NATO member state and not based on a small neutral island, wide open at the edge of the North Atlantic.
It is no secret that the Irish Naval Services has depleted resources with a meagre eight ships in total. Meanwhile, the Irish Air Corps “has no defence capability of any significance”, according to a report in 2020. Even more worryingly, Dublin relies on the RAF’s Typhoon jets to intercept threats in Irish airspace, which makes a mockery of the country’s neutrality.
The Russian navy can – and does – brazenly enter the Irish exclusive economic zone (EEZ). Could it have been a dummy run when one of their spy ships was escorted out of the Irish Sea on 15 November 2024? According to a report in the Guardian newspaper, “Its presence has raised fresh concerns about the security of the interconnector cables that run between Ireland and the UK carrying global internet traffic from huge datacentres operated by tech companies including Google and Microsoft, which have their EU headquarters sited in Ireland.”
To outsiders it must beggar belief that joining NATO is not even a topic on the political radar during these perilously dangerous times. The main political parties are afraid to broach the subject because there is strangely no appetite for it, with 61% of voters wanting to remain neutral, according to an Irish Times poll in 2023. The Irish, it seems, naively prefer to continue with their dangerous ostrich mentality, with only 20-something per cent in favour of NATO membership.
Ireland prides itself as being a supposedly neutral country because they believe it brings soft power. During the thorny Treaty of Nice negotiations, the EU was cajoled into officially recognising Ireland as a country with a “traditional policy of military neutrality”.
It begs the question: how does this chime with the fact that since the Gulf War in 1990, US military planes have been permitted to fly in and out of Shannon Airport, effectively using it as one of their central European hubs?
Successive Irish governments laughably claimed they only allowed the US military to refuel there on the condition that their planes carry no prisoners and cannot be armed with ammunition or explosives
It is naive to believe the US military obeys these rules because there has been no monitoring at the airport. It has even been proven that so-called “rendition flights” had flown into Shannon Airport.
So, how can a country claim to be neutral when [in the eyes of Moscow] it offers assistance to the American military and turns a blind eye to covet operations? No matter how you spin it, Ireland does have “blood on its hands”, as claimed by a former Irish MEP in 2020, by allowing warplanes in and out of its airspace.
During the European elections in the summer, the candidate Peter Casey, a successful businessman and TV star who came second in the last presidential election in Ireland, raised concerns that Shannon Airport could be a legitimate target if a wider war broke out with Russia. This – coupled with the Irish state’s alarming inability to guard its air and sea territories – should surely be good enough reasons to follow in Sweden and Finland’s footsteps and join NATO. Mr Casey’s comment should have made headline news, but there was barely a dicky bird about it. Again, this highlights their determination to remain with their heads buried in the sand while the hourglass ticks down to a harsher new reality.
There has always been an unwonted relationship with neutrality in Ireland. If I asked you to guess the nation where third-level students – including one of its future PM – “celebrated” VE Day by burning British and American flags, you’d unlikely guess the culprit was the Republic of Ireland [then called the Irish Free State].
As an Irish person, you can only be deeply ashamed of those past actions. But it all needs to be viewed in a historical context. Irish wounds were still raw from the oppressive and bloody occupation it suffered under the British regime until it gained independence in 1922. Besides, the Irish public didn’t know what was going on because the government refused to acknowledge there was a world war, officially calling it ‘The Emergency’. Even the Irish media had been censored from fully reporting on WWII.
Ireland has supposedly been neutral in international relations since the 1930s. But that didn’t prevent the then-Irish Taoiseach [PM] Éamon de Valera from making an official visit to the German ambassador to “express his condolences” on the death of Adolf Hitler, which was correctly described at the time by one irate American letter writer as showing “allegiance to a devil”. It was also shameful how, according to a Reuter report, “the Éireann Minister in Lisbon today hoisted the German swastika at half mast over the legation as a sign of mourning for Hitler.”
It’s now time to drop the charade of this neutrality nonsense and for Ireland to join NATO because the country won’t be able to hide behind that excuse if the entire European Union – God forbid – was ever dragged into an international conflict.
One NATO source told me, “Ireland would be good for NATO, especially relating to naval assets.” Ireland may be a small country with a small army, but it can still make a valuable contribution. The Irish army has a strong reputation for its peacemaker role in the UN. While the Irish Army Rangers Wing - as a legacy of their hardcore training during the ‘Troubles’ in Northern Ireland - are amongst the best sharpshooters in the world and can boast of being the only non-Americans to ever win the US Army International Sniper Competition in 2018.
Even though the Republic hasn’t been in any combative conflict since its civil war of 1922-23, Irish soldiers did fight and die in WWII – despite the threat of being ostracized back home for fighting with the British army.
Sadly, VE Day comes and goes for the most part in Dublin without any substantive celebration, which ignores all those who sacrificed their lives. I am not suggesting that we Irish all start wearing the Poppy every November, but those Irish soldiers should be honoured on every VE day anniversary in May.
It was a very touching scene when these Irish soldiers – an estimated 130,000 – who went off to join “foreign” armies [American, Australian, British and Canadian] were honoured a few years back with a special tribute by Europe to mark VE Day’s 75th anniversary.
The British author L.P. Hartley once mused in his novel The Go-Between, “The past is a foreign country; they do things differently there.” His statement certainly rings true for Ireland during WWII – and I’d hate to see history repeat itself. Ireland should never again be found sitting on the fence…