Jim Duffy ✍ A core problem with neutrality in Ireland is that absolutely nobody agrees on what Irish neutrality means. It is a kind of "Whatever you're having yourself!" mish-mash.
Some people, including the president, thinks Irish neutrality is about pacifism - despite neutrality and pacifism being almost exact opposites, and almost all neutrals being armed neutrals willing to fight to defend their independence. The pacific neutrals freak out at the very thought that Ireland should have proper defence on the scale normal in neutrals, thinking it "militarism".
Then there are those who think neutrality means being neutral in all conflicts. That is closer to what the word means. However, funnily, those who insist on strict political neutrality on one conflict don't see the conflict with arguing for taking sides in other conflicts. We heard an example of it with Richard Boyd Barrett, who on RTÉ Radio almost had heart failure when told that it was hypocritical to demand political neutrality on Russia's war against Ukraine and then demand people championing the side of the Palestinians and were anti-Israel. You can no more be politically half-neutral than be half-pregnant. He argued that Israel committed war crimes. It did. So did Russia in Ukraine, which is why the ICC has an international arrest warrant for Putin over war crimes, crimes against humanity and possible genocide.
It appears this form of neutrality is simply about the left being able to pick and choose where to be neutral and where not to be. They endlessly sympathetic towards Russia - even though it has a far right government - as a hangover from its old Communist days. They hate America, not just under Trump but always. They hate Israel with a vengeance, and are unambiguously supportive of Palestine. That is the case no matter what either do.
Their concept of neutrality is a pick'n'mix - reflecting their own ideological agendas. Yet political neutrality in the strictest sense is supposed to mean you remain neutral on all issues no matter what actions are carried out by belligerents.
The state's definition of neutrality is not, and never has been, politically neutral. External Affairs minister Sean MacBride in 1949 made it unambiguously clear that Ireland was on the side of western democracies and hostile to the Soviet Union and Communist world.
In 1949 McBride addressed the Seanad on the Atlantic Pact, the treaty which founded NATO. He said that:
Throughout the Cold War, Ireland was closely aligned diplomatically with the US and the Western democracies in various ways. Taoiseach Sean Lemass in 1962 said:
Successive Taoisigh and Ministers for External/Foreign Affairs have said the same - that Ireland is unambiguously part of the west, supported the west, and entirely opposed to the Communist Bloc. It didn't just say it but implemented it - for example, during the Cuban Missile Crisis and US blockade on Cuba. Eastern Bloc planes tried to breach the blockade by flying contraband in. Given the length of the journey their planes had to land for refuelling at Shannon Airport. Lemass ordered the Gardaí to seize all contraband Eastern Bloc countries were smuggling to Cuba.
Ireland like rest of the west refused point blank to recognise the USSR's illegal seizure of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania, and maintained diplomatic relations with their governments-in-exile until the fall of communism.
So the idea sometimes stated that the Irish state was politically neutral is disproven by the evidence. It was unambiguously on the side of the west, and indeed would have joined NATO in 1949 if it wasn't for partition. It was never on the side of the communist bloc, or Russia post-communism.
The trouble with neutrality in Ireland is that different groups in Ireland interpret the term to mean different, often contradictory, things. Each talk with certainty about their meaning as 'the' meaning. Arguably the only technically correct one in Ireland is obviously the state's one, as it is the one Ireland Inc carries out. However even there things are not straight-forward. Ireland was officially neutral in World War II, yet was secretly aiding the Allies.
If one goes by the definition of neutrality in the Second Hague Convention Title V, Ireland arguably wasn't neutral at all, as it consistently broke the obligations of neutrality in Hague. It failed to treat all belligerents equally. It failed to keep any military from the belligerents that landed in the state out of the war, but enabled Allied belligerents to travel to Northern Ireland and rejoin the war (breaking Article 11). It negotiated a deal to allow British soldiers enter the state and travel to it to defend it against Nazi attack (breach of Articles 2 and 5). It knowingly did not ensure its actions and aid were applied "impartially applied by it to both belligerents." (Article 11).
Then again, every country broke Hague. It was so weak, countries intending to break it didn't opt to leave it but stayed in and broke it anyway. It was broken so consistently that Hague II Title V has long been effectively dead, and none of the five remaining neutrals in Europe (Ireland, Austria, Switzerland, Cyprus and Malta) would qualify as neutral under it.
Some people, including the president, thinks Irish neutrality is about pacifism - despite neutrality and pacifism being almost exact opposites, and almost all neutrals being armed neutrals willing to fight to defend their independence. The pacific neutrals freak out at the very thought that Ireland should have proper defence on the scale normal in neutrals, thinking it "militarism".
Then there are those who think neutrality means being neutral in all conflicts. That is closer to what the word means. However, funnily, those who insist on strict political neutrality on one conflict don't see the conflict with arguing for taking sides in other conflicts. We heard an example of it with Richard Boyd Barrett, who on RTÉ Radio almost had heart failure when told that it was hypocritical to demand political neutrality on Russia's war against Ukraine and then demand people championing the side of the Palestinians and were anti-Israel. You can no more be politically half-neutral than be half-pregnant. He argued that Israel committed war crimes. It did. So did Russia in Ukraine, which is why the ICC has an international arrest warrant for Putin over war crimes, crimes against humanity and possible genocide.
It appears this form of neutrality is simply about the left being able to pick and choose where to be neutral and where not to be. They endlessly sympathetic towards Russia - even though it has a far right government - as a hangover from its old Communist days. They hate America, not just under Trump but always. They hate Israel with a vengeance, and are unambiguously supportive of Palestine. That is the case no matter what either do.
Their concept of neutrality is a pick'n'mix - reflecting their own ideological agendas. Yet political neutrality in the strictest sense is supposed to mean you remain neutral on all issues no matter what actions are carried out by belligerents.
The state's definition of neutrality is not, and never has been, politically neutral. External Affairs minister Sean MacBride in 1949 made it unambiguously clear that Ireland was on the side of western democracies and hostile to the Soviet Union and Communist world.
In 1949 McBride addressed the Seanad on the Atlantic Pact, the treaty which founded NATO. He said that:
based directly on the contents of the Atlantic Pact, based on military considerations, based on public policy, the Atlantic Pact is heralded as the new instrument of international co-operation in the North Atlantic. It was intended to preserve if you like, the democratic way of life among the nations of the North Atlantic.
With that, we are in complete agreement. We approve of the Atlantic Pact and I think that, if it were not for the fact that a portion of our country is wrongfully occupied by Britain, we would have been in the Atlantic Pact. Theoretically, its aims, its purpose are in accord with our own wishes and our own desire.
Throughout the Cold War, Ireland was closely aligned diplomatically with the US and the Western democracies in various ways. Taoiseach Sean Lemass in 1962 said:
NATO is necessary for the preservation of peace and the protection of the countries of western Europe, including this country. Although we are not members of NATO, we are fully in agreement with its aims.
Successive Taoisigh and Ministers for External/Foreign Affairs have said the same - that Ireland is unambiguously part of the west, supported the west, and entirely opposed to the Communist Bloc. It didn't just say it but implemented it - for example, during the Cuban Missile Crisis and US blockade on Cuba. Eastern Bloc planes tried to breach the blockade by flying contraband in. Given the length of the journey their planes had to land for refuelling at Shannon Airport. Lemass ordered the Gardaí to seize all contraband Eastern Bloc countries were smuggling to Cuba.
Ireland like rest of the west refused point blank to recognise the USSR's illegal seizure of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania, and maintained diplomatic relations with their governments-in-exile until the fall of communism.
So the idea sometimes stated that the Irish state was politically neutral is disproven by the evidence. It was unambiguously on the side of the west, and indeed would have joined NATO in 1949 if it wasn't for partition. It was never on the side of the communist bloc, or Russia post-communism.
The trouble with neutrality in Ireland is that different groups in Ireland interpret the term to mean different, often contradictory, things. Each talk with certainty about their meaning as 'the' meaning. Arguably the only technically correct one in Ireland is obviously the state's one, as it is the one Ireland Inc carries out. However even there things are not straight-forward. Ireland was officially neutral in World War II, yet was secretly aiding the Allies.
If one goes by the definition of neutrality in the Second Hague Convention Title V, Ireland arguably wasn't neutral at all, as it consistently broke the obligations of neutrality in Hague. It failed to treat all belligerents equally. It failed to keep any military from the belligerents that landed in the state out of the war, but enabled Allied belligerents to travel to Northern Ireland and rejoin the war (breaking Article 11). It negotiated a deal to allow British soldiers enter the state and travel to it to defend it against Nazi attack (breach of Articles 2 and 5). It knowingly did not ensure its actions and aid were applied "impartially applied by it to both belligerents." (Article 11).
Then again, every country broke Hague. It was so weak, countries intending to break it didn't opt to leave it but stayed in and broke it anyway. It was broken so consistently that Hague II Title V has long been effectively dead, and none of the five remaining neutrals in Europe (Ireland, Austria, Switzerland, Cyprus and Malta) would qualify as neutral under it.
⏩ Jim Duffy is a writer-historian.




























