u/KindLiterature913

Who do people think were some of the best Operators (Operation Officers, O/Cs) of the four main Republican groups during the 69 to 1998 war?

I made one of these threads about a year ago about who people thought were some of the best ASUs (M60 gang, Dogs of D-COY, Ballymurphy Battalion, etc.), so I thought this might be a fun & interesting thread as well. The four groups being the INLA, Provies, Sticks & IPLO. They can be Brigade, Battalion or COY O/C's or just a normal Volunteer. Obviously, if their names aren't well known to the public, just use an alias. They don't have to be an official O/O for a Brigade or unit either, just as long as they had a pedigree of carrying out or planning operations. Of course, these being underground guerrilla armies, it's hard to know for sure what operations they were involved in, but some volunteers' time as a rural resistance fighter or urban guerrilla are pretty well documented. And the numbering doesn't mean anything it's just the way I put it.

  1. Would have to put Gerard Steenson in there as an INLA Belfast Brigade O/O (& de facto) O/C, he didn't carry out any operations as a IPLO Vol, what's called the IPLO/INLA feud was an internal feud between INLA GHQ & Army Council factions, with the Army Council faction volunteers all (or most) intending to join the IPLO after the feud & using the INLA name for legitimacy reasons. From 74 to 76, he was the most active Volunteer in the INLA during the feud with the Sticks, & instead of just targeting not well-known Vols as happens in a lot of feuds, he went after two of the Officials' biggest names, first wounding Sean Garland in Dublin & killing the OIRA's Belfast O/C, Billy McMillen. These actions won the INLA the feud, as the OIRA's objective was to wipe out the INLA as a military & political force, the INLA objectives were to survive and show they weren't to be messed with, and after Steenson carried out his attacks, the OIRA backed off & Steenson showed his potential for a leadership role by taking the initiative. He was arrested in 76 & when released in 1980, rejoined the INLA Belfast Brigade straight away and quickly became the Brigade's O/O as the State forces & Loyalists had killed a number of INLA operators in revenge for the Neave killing. But straight away, Steenson filled that void, going after mainly RUC & UDR members as well as their barracks, as soon as Ronnie Bunting died who acted as a link between the Army Council old guard & the Steenson faction, Steenson became the de facto Belfast commander, killing a UDR soldier & travelling to Armagh to plan the killing of a British soldier within two weeks of each other. Just five days later the INLA widened their targets to include Loyalists & Unionists politicians (after the Loyalist killings of Daly & Bunting), shooting and injuring a DUP member in Lurgan, also planned by Steenson was the deaths of Billy McCullough the UDA West Commander, and John McKeague the founder of the Red Hand Commando, the Ulser Unionist Party HQs were bombed, there was a sniper attack from a Markets unit on Paisley, Sammy Millar a member of the UDA's political wing the UDP was shot and injured & their was a failed attack on James Molyneaux. The years 1981 & 1982, when Steenson was de facto leader of the Belfast INLA are the only years the INLA matched the IRA for attacks carried out and 1982 being the only year they killed more RUC, UDR, Loyalists & British soldiers than the IRA in Ireland. After the top Belfast INLA operators were arrested the Supergrass period, the INLA Belfast never reached those heights again & it took a whole decade for the INLA to become somewhat as formidable as they had been in the early 80s.

2, From late 1992 to August 1994 Gino Gallagher, either the Belfast O/C or O/O or commander of a unit carried out a campaign against Loyalists, killing an Ulster Resistance member, 2 UFF, & 3 UVF members, as well as injuring 3 UDA members & one of the longest-serving UVF leaders, John Bunter Graham. The Belfast INLA in 1993 also carried out a campaign of attacks on British Army & RUC barracks and checkpoints, being involved in a gun battle with the RUC at Grosvenor Road barracks. Thanks to Gino's efforts he restored credibility back to the INLA

  1. Brendan Hughes would have to be in any list, starting as a Volunteer in D-COY in 1969, then becoming the commander of D-COY in the Lower Falls after his cousin Charlie Hughes was assassinated by the Sticks, in March 1971, when he took over D-COY, which was tiny compared the OIRA, with around a dozen to 15 Volunteers, by the same time next year they surpassed the Sticks with around 80 - 100 Vols & with the Ballymurphy COY was the most active in Belfast, as Hughes himself said, between 1970 to 1974 an average day would be robbing a bank, planting bombs in the city, putting out a float & having a several hour gun battle with the British Army. There's too many operations he was involved as O/C or adjutant, but some of them were, the Battle of the Lower Falls, The Battle at Lenadoon (probably the largest battle in Bellfast), the car bombings in Belfast to accompany the first PIRA car bombings in London mainly the Old Bailey (I believe it was six or eight), of course the PR disaster that was Bloody Friday, several ambushes & floats between March to September 1972 which saw the deaths of over 30 British soldiers, about another 10 UDR & RUC, & of course probably his greatest bit of military skill, planning & operating in the attacks on the Military Reaction Force, killing five British Army agents and putting an entire British Army undercover force out of operation.

  2. Rook O'Prey for the IPLO's Belfast Brigade, the protégé of Gerard Steenson when Rook was a Volunteer in the INLA in the early 1980s. He took out four Loyalists, two of them well known, & Georg Seawright was especially known. He also, in one of the IPLO's first attacks in late 86, took out a RUC Officer & the same month carried out a successful grenade & gun attack on Queen Street RUC barracks, injuring seven RUC, something the INLA had failed to do in the last 2 & a half years and wouldn't do again for over a decade. He also allegedly led the attack on the Orange Cross Cub with a UZI smg killing a long-time RHC member who just got out. On 11 August 88 he planned two attacks on British Army patrols the first on the Grosvenor Road and the other at Divis Flats, resulting in a gun battle with the British with the IPLO unit armed with a UZI & a Sanna SMG. I noticed the INLA & IPLO would always try to mount attacks between 9 to 11 August each year, I'm guessing to commemorate internment. I believe the Provos did as well, looking at a timeline of their attacks, one of their biggest operations in the 1980s was the bombing & destruction of the RUC Birches barracks on 11 August 1985. In June 1991, a hit team he led seriously injured Shankill Butcher Eddie McIlwaine, the month later he was involved in the killing of a Royal Navy member, and in August 1991 he was shot dead by the UVF which spelt the downfall of the IPLO, his comrades went on a wildcat attack spree, shooting up a number of Loyalist clubs & pubs killing 3 civilians & a UDA member in the notorious Diamond Jubilee Bar where C-Company members regularly drank & occasionally planned attacks.

  3. Seamus McElwaine, one of the first attacks he carried out was a sniper attack on a patrol near Rosslea, killing an RUC officer when he was only 17/8. As far as I know, he became the youngest O/C of the 5 main Brigade areas (SouthArmagh/Down, Belfast, Derry, East Tyrone & S Fermanagh). One of his first operations as Brigade OC was an ambush in Lisnaskea on the British 14 Intelligence COY unit, in which two 14 Int COY agents were killed, and none of McElwaine's unit received any hits in exchange; it was probably the most impressive operation carried out against the unit also known as the DET. In February 1980, his unit killed 2 RUC officers & injured a British soldier in a landmine attack on the Rosslea road. In Newtownbutler the same year 2 UDR & a RUC officer were killed in gun attacks, as well as killing off-duty RUC & UDR members at Drumacabranagher & Rosslea. After his escape from the Maze, he returned to A/S, and quickly became one of the most (if not the most) wanted men in the North, for 2 and half years he slept rough around in barns & outhouses around the Monaghan/Fermanagh border. Between late 1983 to his death he was involved in in the deaths of 5 RUC officers & UDR member, as well as an attack at Enniskillen when a booby-trap bomb attached to a car killed 3 British soldiers. He also carried out three bomb attacks on RUC barracks. I can certainly see why Jim Lynagh & Padraig McKearney were keen to carry out operations with them.

  4. Francis Hughes - Very Similar style to McElWaine, was O/C of the South Derry Brigade or Battalion when he was only about 17. Like Seamus, he was a full-time guerrilla, sleeping in barns, ditches, & outhouses. One of he first operations he was involved was the 1972 Dungiven landmine & gun attack in which three British soldiers were killed & 3 injured in the blast with another four injured in the sniping shots after, the year after in 1973 there was the killing of a British soldier in a land mine attack at Ballyronan, his unit killed a British soldier in a sniper attack & UDR member in car bomb attack a few months later, they also carried dozens of bomb & RPG attacks on RUC/British Army barracks & checkpoints around this period. In 1977, he was involved in the improvised Moneymore ambush, which killed 2 RUC officers, injured 2 others & made him, Dom McGlinchey & Ian Milne the most wanted men in Ireland. In 1978 near Lisnamuck Francis & another Volunteer got into a gun battle with the SAS, Hughes killed one SAS soldier & injured another before being badly injured himself & captured the next day, he was the second PIRA Volunteer to die on the 1981 Hunger Strike, he would have killed or had a part in killing at 20 British soldiers & 10 RUC/UDR as well a numerous bomb attacks on barracks & checkpoints.

  5. Jim Lynagh - Famous for the large scale attacks he carried out, he always wanted a large ASU of 8 - 12 armed Vounteers with him so they would have to fight the Brits to escape. He was responsible for the deaths of a at least a dozen Brits, UDR & RUC, the Dublin SCC tried to charge for the killing of a UDR member, after he was released in 1979 & rejoined the East Tyrone Brigade it's likely he would have been involved in the land mine attack that year that killed four British soldiers, two years later in 1981, after a number of Loyalist attacks on Nationalist civilians & political figures Lynagh, with 12 other armed Volunteers burned down Tynan Abbey to the ground, killing former Stormont speaker Norman Stronge & his son who was an UUP MP, and then his small army blasted their way past the RUC corden sent to stop them. He was likely involved in the Balleygawley land mine attack in 1983 which killed four UDR members, and was the main strategist in the destruction of the Balleygawley RUC barracks in which two RUC were shot dead & three other injured, and also the attack on the Birches barracks on the 11 August 1986, the 15th anniversary of internment, of course he was killed at Loughgall in May 1987, in between the Ballygawley & Loughgall barracks attacks his unit was involved in eight other RUC barracks attacks including a car bomb attack on Coalisland barracks & five mortar attacks in East Tyrone & two in northwest Armagh in his units area.

  6. Kevin McKenna, the longest PIRA CoS, really put the East Tyrone Brigade on the map; when Brendan Hughes (not Darky a different Hughes) left what was then a battalion-sized unit in early 1972, he also carried out attacks around the mid-Tyrone area. Before mid-72, the West Tyrone Brigade & especially the battalion around the Strabane-Clady area, carried out far more operations. One of the first attacks McKenna was believed to be involved in was an ambush on a joint RUC/Brit patrol near Coalisland, in which a RUC officer was killed & several others injured; just 2 Vols attacked the patrol with SMGs. He likely played a part in the September 1972 land mine attack on a British Mobile Patrol which killed 3 British soldiers at Dungannon. In March 1973 he was involved in two separate landmine attacks, one killed a British soldier on St Patricks day, near Dungannon the other killed another British soldier about 2 miles away in Ballymacilroy, around the same period he killed another British soldier in land mine attack near Clogher. It's possible he was involved in the Knock-na-Moe landmine attack which killed four British soldiers near Omagh. The most famous attack he was involved in this period was the 1974 attack on Clogher UDR Barracks which badlly damaged the barracks & killed a the first female UDR member while injuring several others as the barracks was attacked with mortars, assault rifles & RPGs. His time in charge as Brigade O/C he was responsible for at least another dozen deaths of British soldiers & RUC.

  7. Joe O'Connell was by far the most successful IRA commander of an IRA ASU in England, especially in London, and he was involved in nearly all the attacks himself. He was responsible for planning 41 operations, the Guildford & Woolwich pub bombs, & the Kensington booby-trap bomb killed six British soldiers, he bombed large shops like Harrods & Selfridges, three restaurants Walton's, Scotts Oyster Bar & an Italian restaurant as well as shootig up Scotts two weeks after bombing it, and planting a large 25lb bomb in Locketts restaurant which was defused but was a popular place for MPs & members of the London bomb squad, he bombed Hiltons, & Portmans hotels and also shot up the Churchill, Carlton Tower & the Portman (again) hotels. He was also responsible for a number of attacks on Conservative & Upper Class "Gentlemen's clubs" including the Victory Services Club, Brook's Club, Army & Navy Club, Naval & Military Club, and the London Cavalry Club. He also bombed Ted Heath's flat. Ted Heath was the British PM at the time of the Falls Curfew, Internment & Bloody Sunday. His unit also shot dead the Guinness Book of Records founder, who put a £50,000 bounty on the unit's head. A number of operation his unit bombed several places in the one day, which included the London Pillar box bombs in Caledonian Road, Victoria Street, & Piccadilly Circus which in 20 people were injured, two days later 3 bombs were planted at King's Cross & Tite Street Chelsea, two of the bombs were decoys for a hidden bomb on Tite Street which timed to take out the police & bomb squad responding to the first call. He carried out 3 bomb attacks on Telephone Exchanges all the West End, which killed one person & injured four others, and the first operation in 1975 his unit planted time bombs in seven West End shops, which injured six people. To show just what a great commander he was, the unit sent to replace him carried out just eight operations between January & March 1976, with two of the Volunteers badly injuring themselves. The next prolonged England campaign didn't start until 1981, with the unit carrying out five attacks before being caught. Also, during the Balcombe Street campaign, another English unit was set up in the north, carrying out two shootings of police in Liverpool & Manchester before being caught in the summer of 1975 during a siege. https://www.liverpoolcitypolice.co.uk/memories/hope-street-seige-1975/

  8. Slab Murphy - Deserves to be on any list for the operations he planned in 1979 alone. In March a UDR soldier was killed in a land mine attack at Newtownhamilton, a month later in April four RUC officers were killed by a hidden bomb set off by remote, in June two RUC officers were killed in a land mine attack near Cullaville, in July an RUC officer was killed in another remote control bomb attack, this time near Crossmaglen, of course 18 British soldiers were killed & 25 injured at Warrenpoint, in November a British soldier was killed by a booby-trap attached to a pole in Crossmaglen, & in December another British soldier was killed in a booby-trap bombing in a derelict house in Forkhill. That's 29 British forces killed in just nine months by one brigade. And the next big attack was a land mine attack at Altnaveigh in May 1981, which killed five British soldiers, that's 34 in two years. He was also the planner for the successful Derryard PVC attack in 1989, which destroyed the checkpoint & killed two British soldiers.

  9. Michael Caraher - I'd have him in their for the west South Armagh sniper team he commanded, and was part of what was called "The Cullyhana Gun Club" who ambushed an undercover British force trying to kill an IRA unit, the unit was involved in multiple gun battles (including Newry Road) & attacks on RUC & Brit barracks as well as a Lynx that was knocked out of the sky by a MK15, they also used horizontal mortars which killed 2 RUC & a British soldier between 1992 to the 94 ceasefire. As well as killing seven members of the British forces (or was it eight?) with the Barrett Sniper rifle, he also injured another two, shooting the helmet off one and leaving a scar on his head, but also blowing an RUC officer's leg off in an attack at Forkhill the month after they killed a British soldier in February 1997.

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u/KindLiterature913 — 3 days ago

Friction Burns Recordings & Suck Discs Hard House labels Tribute Mix (1998 to 2000)

Hi, I uploaded a Nukleuz Classics mix about a month ago or two ago, it was mostly Nukleuz records from 96 to 2002 (my fav period of Hard House) & people seemed to like it. Friction Burns & Suck Discs (sister label) are two of my favourite UK Hard House record labels from late 90s early 00s Hard House so I wanted to do a mix of this.

  1. Madam Friction & DJ Elvira - Chopper

  2. Cadenza - Trading Faces (Razor Babes Mix)

  3. Blow Brothers - House (Sister Suck Mix)

  4. Razor Babes - The World Is Listening

  5. Champions Burn - Bat train

  6. Razor Babes - Oh My God (Friction Burns Mix)

  7. Sister Suck - clone Ranger (Friction Burns Mix)

  8. Cadenza - Trading Faces (Triptic Mix)

  9. Bob Burns Jnr vs BK - I Feel Like Dancin

  10. Madam Friction - Sex Maniac

  11. Bob Burns Jnr vs DJ Elvira - Weak Arse Dance Music

  12. Sister Suck - Jump Up Crew

  13. Friction Burns - Pull Down (Friction Burns Mix)

  14. DJ Elvira vs Madam Friction - Grip It Good (Champions Burn Mix)

Friction Burns Recordings Tribubte mix

https://soundcloud.com/shane-gallagher-58635494

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u/KindLiterature913 — 5 days ago

PIRA Balcombe St Four London ASU bomb a Mayfair Restaurant in London's West End, 18 November 1975

This was the last bombing of Phase 2 (August 75 - December 75) by the London unit. Two people were killed in the attack & 23 were injured. Phase 2 of the campaign was a lot more indiscriminate, with very few warnings, but it did have a specific target: the British Upper Class/Establishment, and this was the third bomb attack on a West End restaurant in three weeks. Phase 1 of the campaign (October 74 to February 75) was generally targeted at military & economic targets.

The bombings carried out by the unit between October 1974 to December 1975 include

  1. Guildford Pub bombings (1st & 2nd bomb) 5 Oct 74

  2. Bombing of the Victory Services Club & Army & Navy Club ( 3rd & 4th bombs) 11 Oct 74.

  3. Brook Club bombing (5th bomb, 3 injured) 22 Oct 74

  4. Harrow School Cadet building (6th bomb) 24 Oct 74

  5. Woolwich Pub bomb (7th bomb, 2 killed 35 injured) 7 Nov 74

  6. London Pillar box bombs 1 (8th, 9th & 10th bombs, 20 injured) 25 Nov 74

  7. London Pillar box bombs 2 (11th & 12th bombs, 20 injured) 27 Nov 74

  8. Talbot Arms bomb (13th & 14th bombs, 8 injured) 30 Nov 74

  9. Naval & Military Club bomb (15th bomb, 2 injured) 11 Ded 74

  10. West End Telephone Exchange bombs (16th, 17th & 18th bombs, 1 killed, 4 injured) 17 Dec 74

  11. Oxford Street Car bomb (19th bomb, 9 injured) 19 Dec 74

  12. Harrods bombing (20th bomb, 1 injured) 21 Dec 74

  13. ex-PM Edward Heaths flat (21st bomb) 22 Dec 74

  14. North London Waterworks (22nd bomb, 3 injured) 23 Jan 75

  15. 7 times detonated in West End (23rd, 24th, 25th, 26th, 27th, 28th & 29th bombs, 4 injured) 27 Jan 75 - End of Phase One

  16. Catherham Arms bomb (30th bomb, 33 injured) 27 August 75

  17. Oxford Street bomb (31st bomb, 7 injured) 28 August 75

  18. Kensington bomb (32nd bomb, 1 killed) 29 August 75

  19. High Holborn bomb (33rd bomb) 30 August 75

  20. Hilton Hotel bomb (34th bomb, 2 killed 63 injured) 5 Sep 75

  21. Portman Hotel bomb (35th bomb, 3 injured) 22 Sep 75

  22. Kent pub bombing (36th bomb, 2 injured) 25 Sep 75

  23. High Holborn Bank bomb (37th bomb) 26 Sep 75

  24. Green Park Station, Piccadilly (38th bomb, 1 killed 20 injured) 9 Oct75

  25. Kensington bomb (39th bomb, 1 killed) 23 Oct 75

  26. Trattoria Fiore restaurant bombing (40th bomb, 17 injured) 29 Oct 75

  27. Connaught Square bomb (41st bomb, 3 injured) 3 Nov 75

  28. Scott's Oyster Bar bombing (42nd bomb, 1 killed, 15 injured) 12 Nov 75

  29. Waltons Restaurant bombing (43rd bomb, 2 killed, 23 injured) 18 Nov 75

In between those five bombs planted were defused, making it 48 planted & 43 detonated, they also carried out 7 gun attacks.

11th Dec 74 shots fired at London Cavalry Club, 0 injured.

14th Dec 74 shots fired at Churchill Hotel, 3 injured.

19th Jan 75 shots fired at Portman Hotel, 5 injured, roughly at the same time, shots fired at Carlton Hotel 8 injured.

26th Feb 75 IRA Volunteer shot dead a police constable in Kensington.

27th Nov 75 IRA unit shot dead the Guinness Book of Records founder after he placed a £50,000 bounty on their heads.

6th Dec 75 shots were fired at Scotts Oyster Bar.

I thought adding in the timeline of events above would interest people.

u/KindLiterature913 — 7 days ago

PIRA Belfast Brigade kill British soldier in ambush attack in the New Lodge, 3 August 1992,

Two PIRA Volunteers opened up with assault rifles on British Army Land Rovers killing one British Soldier.

As far as I can tell the British didn't actually enter the New Lodge, they were on Duncairn Avenue when the Volunteers, who had a great vantage point from one of the high-rise flats in the New Lodge, opened fire as the British mobile patrol passed by the New Lodge on Duncairn Avenue but didn't actually enter it.

u/KindLiterature913 — 7 days ago

PIRA East Tyrone Brigade carried out a land mine attack on a British Army APC, killing 3 soldiers, Sanaghanroe, near Dungannon, 10 September 1972

Around the Dungannon/Ballygawley area, these types of mine & culvert attacks would plague the British Army for most of the war, and certain roads became "no-go" roads for the British to travel on. In March 1973, two British soldiers were killed in separate land mine attacks near here, one at Parkanaur & the other at Ballymacilroy. In December 1979, four months after Narrow Water, four British soldiers were killed in a land mine attack on the outskirts of Dungannon. In July 1983 four UDR members were killed in a land mine attack, of course the Ballygawley RUC Barracks was destroyed in an IRA bomb & gun attack in December 1985 in which two RUC officers were shot, and of course, in August 1988 there was the Ballygawley bus bombing, which killed 8 British soldiers & almost 30 others. This happened on one the "no-go" roads.

Along with the mine & culvert attacks, there were also plenty of British soldiers, UDR & RUC killed in ambush & sniper attacks around the area as well.

What a big bloody crater that blast left behind btw.

u/KindLiterature913 — 9 days ago

Incredibly inaccurate "news" (propaganda) report on the Guildford Four & the Horse & Groom pub bomb, 22 October 1975

The way this is presented its as if all four had taken part in the one bombing. When in reality the four-person ASU bombed two each, with Dowd & a female only entering the Horse & Groom, O'Connell and another female Vol entering the Seven Stars pub about 100 meters away.

What type of urban guerrilla would carry out a bombing & mistake a small duffel bag with 5lbs of explosives in it for two shoe boxes with 8lbs of explosives in it? You could fit 50lbs of explosives into the size of that box shown in the report and just blow the whole street away.

When the Balcombe Four were caught, police experts at their trial believed the unit had been having SAS-style training, & were clearly "the most violent, ruthless and highly-trained unit ever sent to Britain by the Provisional IRA". That clearly wasn't the Guildford who broke under torture & psychological manipulation.

u/KindLiterature913 — 10 days ago

PIRA Belfast Brigade killed two British Army Disposal Officers with a booby-trapped bomb hidden in back of car, 15 March 1972

As far as I can make it, the BDOs found & defused a decoy bomb but another bomb was hidden under the back seat of the car, and was either detonated a booby-trap when the BDOs moved the back seat, or the BDOs believed there was only one bomb in the car, falsely believing that had plenty of time to slowly take a look at the car, but the hidden bomb was time-bomb.

From what I can tell, between 1971 to 1981, 11 Bomb Disposal Officers were killed similarly.

Three of them were killed in England. One of them was killed in Birmingham in September 1973, who was the first person killed by the PIRA in England. A second officer was called Roger Goad, who was killed by the Balcombe Street Gang, by a bomb Joe O'Connell built. Two days previously O'Connell built a bomb desginded to kill a disposal officer from the Bomb Squad (the Bomb Squad had been after the Balcombe unit at least since the November 1974 Woolwich pub bombing so the IRA unit started targeting the Bomb Squad back), but the device was defused, so O'Connell built was described as "one of the most sophisticated booby-trap bombs the IRA had built" with the bomb containing two hoax compartments, with the bomb being packed around booster tubes. The last was killed outside a Wendy's restaurant on Oxford Street, London.

The third killing was during the short 1981 IRA campaign when they also bombed the Woolwich Barracks, Chelsea Barracks & bombed the home of Judge Harver, who was the Judge that handed down the prison sentences to the Maguire Family & the Guildford 4, who made a closing statement about how he would have hanged the four if the death penalty was on the books.

u/KindLiterature913 — 11 days ago

PIRA South Armagh Brigade Volunteers captured & detained a minibus of five prison officers and a RUC detective at Killeen checkpoint, 15 September 1990

At the time, the IRA had no policy of targeting Prison Officers as a group, unlike the British Army, Navy & RAF, RUC, UDR, as well as Loyalist paramilitaries and people contracted to build & re-build British military infrastructure. The only time POs were targeted as a matter of official IRA (as well as INLA) policy was the period of the H-Block protests around 1977 to 1982, any PO killed before or after that period was killed for a specific reason, like brutality towards POWs.

The IRA ASU let the three most junior POs go, interrogated the other two, and killed the RUC man. When they were satisfied with the information they got from the POs they released them. The RUC man was found near Cullaville two days later.

Earlier in the year, during the British Army's Operation Conservation, an undercover planned ambush to destroy an IRA SA unit near Cullyhanna was thwarted by the IRA in a counter-ambush. At this stage, the British Army gave up more ground to the IRA, as demonstrated by the IRA using checkpoints to seal off Meigh in 1992 & Cullaville in 1993 for several hours, carrying AR-15s, M60s, FN MAGs, RPGs, H&Ks & a Barrett sniping rifle. This happened extremely close to a British Army watchtower, yet no British patrol was sent to challenge the IRA. 1990 was also the same year the IRA sniper teams became operational, and a soldier had his helmet blown off his head from the kinetic energy of the Barrett rifle.

u/KindLiterature913 — 12 days ago

PIRA Belfast Brigade 1,200 lb van bomb detonated in Glengall St, damaging several major buildings, 4 December 1991

This was one of the largest bombs detonated in Belfast City at the time. The Opera House was the closest to the bomb & took most of the force from the blast, collapsing the front of the building. The Europa hotel was also badly damaged (again), and for the third time in three different decades, the Ulster Unionist Party headquarters was badly damaged by a bomb, after the IRA bombed it in the 70s & the INLA in the 1980s. 16 people were injured in the bombing, none had life-threatening injuries. A 1993 truck bombing, almost on the same spot cost over £5 million in damages, so I'm guessing this would have cost roughly the same in damages

u/KindLiterature913 — 13 days ago

The PIRA Belfast Brigade bombed the Ulster Unionist Party HQ on Glengall Street, 2 September 1971

September 1971 is really when the IRA's all-out offensive campaign began. I know people point to Bloody Sunday as the start, but Bloody Sunday just intensified the campaign.

This was the IRA's second attempt in two weeks to bomb the UUP HQ, as two weeks earlier, the British defused a bomb just inside the HQ's doorway. This one was planted just outside the doorway and wrecked a good deal of the building. This bombing, along with a bombing at Clarendon House on Franklin Street, injured a total of 42 people from both bombings.

The UUP HQ was bombed several more times; an INLA bombing during a general election in 1982 caused significant damage. In December 1991, a massive 1,200 lb van bomb parked outside the Opera House (on Glengall Street) caused huge damage to both the UUP HQ & the Europa Hotel. And in March 1993, a 1,000 lb truck bomb parked outside the UUP HQ detonated, causing around £5 million worth of damage to the building and also badly damaged the Opera House again.

I don't recall the DUP HQ or any other Loyalist party HQ's being targeted, not that I can recall anyway. I know one or two shooting incidents happened outside the PUP HQ, like the INLA shooting of 3 UVF men standing outside it in June 1994, but that's about it. Does anyone recall any other Loyalist party HQs being bombed?

u/KindLiterature913 — 14 days ago

UVF Belfast Brigade bombing of the Rose & Crown Bar, Lower Ormeau, 2 May 1974

Six Catholic Civilians were killed in this bomb attack, and another 18 were horribly wounded.

At the time of the bombing, this was considered the bloodiest attack carried out by Loyalists, as the 1971 McGurk's bombing was still blamed on the IRA until 1977; it was also the worst attack in Belfast in two years, as the reporter points out.

May 1974 was the bloodiest month for Loyalist attacks, killing 52 people, spurred on by the rhetoric of the UWC, most of them were killed by the UVF. Just five days later, Gertrude & James Devlin were shot dead by the Glenanne Gang in their Donaghmore home, Tyrone, and in Newtownabbey, two Catholic workers on a building site, one 55, the other just 19 years old, were both shot dead by the UVF. Of course, around 40% of those deaths are from the Dublin & Monaghan bombings on the 17 May 74, with another 300 injured, another Glenanne Gang operation, on the 24 May two brothers were shot dead by the UVF in a pub near Ballymena, along with multiple or double killings there was several singular ones, like the day before the Dublin bombs, a UVF sniper shot dead a 21 year-old Catholic women in the New Lodge area of Belfast, and on the 25 May a 52 year-old Catholic man was found beaten to death in a house that wasn't fully built yet in Glencairn, Belfast.

For context, 62 people were killed in total during May 74, with 6 killed by the PIRA, 2 PIRA Volunteers killed by their own bomb, and two killed by British soldiers. The bloodiest month of the entire war was July 1972, when 97 people were killed, with the PIRA carrying out 41 killings & 5 killed by the OIRA or non-Specific Republican group, with the British Army, RUC, & Loyalists responsible for the other 51.

u/KindLiterature913 — 14 days ago

PIRA Belfast Brigade ASU assassinated the assistant governor at Long Kesh, 6 March 1984, Hawthornden Drive, Belmont

According to Darky Hughes, during the time of the Long Kesh fire & joint riot in Crumlin in 1974, McConnell was one of the most brutal POs he encountered.

Quote: from Ed Moloney's "Voices From The Grave" pg 185 - 186.

"They gassed us and sent the riot squad in. There were hundreds of screws with batons. They savagely beat every fucking body they could find. .......................

They lined us up against the wall, and there was this one screw there called McConnell, and he was in total hysterics, and he was running about with a gun in his hand. He had a weapon in his hand, and he was, he was crazed, totally crazed. Bill McConnell, Assistant Governor. He was shot dead by the IRA in 1984."

I mean, no matter what the Brits or RUC did, there were always people making excuses for them. In 1987 the RUC officer who went into a restaurant and started firing his revolver until he was tackled to the ground by customers & passers by, that was in Castlewellan, "he was under too much stress", same with the RUC officer who walked into (or just outside of) the SF office on the Falls Rd in 1992 and killed 3 people "too much stress" and you get the same exuses over & over. John Wier, Harris Boyle, Robert McConnell etc & about 30 of their mates who killed around 125 people in Mid-Ulster, in the mid-70s, "they just reached their breaking point".

u/KindLiterature913 — 18 days ago

IPLO Belfast Brigade shoot up UVF-RHC Drinking the "Orange Cross", Shankill RD, 18 February 1989

The attack was led by Martin "Rook" O'Prey, hoping to kill a UVF or RHC loyalist, they found Steven McCrea, a Red Hand Command member, McCrea only just got released from the Maze for the killing of a Catholic in 1972. Rook was armed, I believe, with either a UZI or a Sanna 77 SMG, and two Vols with the Czech VZOR (CZ 75) pistols, they didn't draw the weapons out straigh away, they scanned the den for a Loyalist and shot McCrea. As they were leaving they fired a volley from the pistols & the SMG, hitting four people at the bar, 2 women & 2 men (one who I remeber reading was an ex-UVF member as well as ex-UDR member).

The attack was in revenge for the killing of 5 civilians (4 Catholics & 1 Protestant they assumed was Catholic) in the last 3 weeks by both the UVF & UFF, including two men killed in Smithfield during work, . Hugh Smyth doesn't mention anything about those 5, or the 13 Catholic (11) & Protestant (2) civilians killed the year before by Loyalists or the 11 civilians 8 Catholics & 3 Protestants killed during John Binghams sectarian rampage between December 1984 & September 1986 until his death.

Also, CAIN claims just 12 civilians were killed by the RHC, on the wiki UVF & RHC timeline https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_Ulster_Volunteer_Force_actions I counted they had killed 15 just between 1972 & 76 alone, including the Stand Bar bombing & the Dundalk & Silverbridge which is 11 alone, in total I counted 32, and there's reliable sources that killed at least 3 dozen people in 1972 alone, with the total death toll being as high 100, as there is still around 250 Loyalist killings no group claimed responsible for. The UVF never would have claimed McGurks until they got caught years later, or for the Dublin & Monaghan bombings except for a documentary bruised their ego & admitted to it 20 years later, that's nearly 50 civilans alone (15 from McGurks & 34 from the attacks in the south = 49)

A disgusting blog also prayed tribute to sectarian RHC member killed in the attack. https://extramuralactivity.com/2019/01/24/a-true-soldier-of-ulster/

"Stevie, even as a young man was a willing and active volunteer for the RHC, which culminated with him being arrested in October 1972 and being sentenced to life imprisonment early in 1973. Stevie served 16 years as a political prisoner in Long Kesh. He thoughtlessly gave up his life for others. A true soldier of Ulster. Forever remembered by friends and comrades. Lamh dearg abu.” It forgets to say what he was arrested for, it was likely the shooting dead of Catholic civilian (James Kerr, aged 17) at his garage workplace on Lisburn Road in October 1972 or for killing a Catholic civilian, Bernard Rice (aged 49), in a drive-by shooting on the Crum Rd. A true soldier of Ulster indeed.

u/KindLiterature913 — 25 days ago

IRA South Armagh Brigade ambush British patrol from armoured plated van, Crossmaglen, 21 December 1978

Three British soldiers were killed in this often overlooked ambush, the leader of the patrol survived, and said the van looked like the type of shape of a Britsih rail delivery van, the back was covered in armoured platting with slits in parts for Vols to point their weapons out, according to the report four Volunteers were in the van two standing & two lying along the vans floor, three AR-15s & one AK47 was used, the attack lasted less than 5 minutes, the soldier who wasn't hit returned fire but claimed no hits as the bullets just hit off the armoured plate. Here's the soldiers account of the ambush.

"On 21 December, Sergeant Rick Garmory was leading his brick in staggered formation past St Patrick's Church in Crossmaglen; Guardsman Graham Duggan, behind him, was carrying a Light Machine Gun, while Guardsmen Kevin Johnson and Glen Ling were across the road. Although it was market day, Garmory noted that the road was almost deserted. He said later in an interview with Colonel Oliver Lindsay for a history of the Grenadier Guards: On coming round the bend near the Rio Bar, I saw 40 yards away what looked like a British Rail parcel delivery van parked partly on the pavement on the left facing away from us. It had an 18-inch tailboard with a roll shutter that could be pulled down. The van immediately struck me as highly suspicious because I saw what looked like cardboard boxes piled to the top in the back, all flush with the tailboard so they would fall out if the van moved off fast. I instantaneously put my magnifying sight to my eye and saw four firing slits, two above the other two, among the boxes. I immediately opened fire. Garmory said he knew by experience that he was under heavy fire from three Armalites and an AK-47. Two IRA men were probably firing standing with two lying down. He continued: Bullets passed through the sleeves of my smock. I could see them hitting the pavement in front of me and also the wall just to my left. Having fired off a whole magazine I whipped back behind a wall, gave a quick contact report and saw my three Grenadiers had been hit. I ran back to Duggan who was still conscious although an Armalite round had pene¬ trated his liver. I told him to hang on. 1 was still under fire ... I fired off Duggan's LMG magazine from the hip in one quick burst which quietened them down a bit. I could see the van's rear must have armoured plating behind the boxes because every third of my rounds was tracer and I could see them ricochetting upwards off the plating. When the magazine was empty I ran across the road to Johnson, moved his body off his rifle and fired more shots at the van as it careered off, partly hitting a telegraph pole just in front of it. Staff from the nearby health centre tended to the three guardsmen but it was too late. 'Looking back on it, as Lve done so often since, the IRA were highly professional, said Garmory. 'Their supporters' signalling presumably indicated to them that our armoured car [which had been accom¬ panying foot patrols earlier that day] was being refuelled . . . "

u/KindLiterature913 — 25 days ago

IRA European ASU bomb Glamorgan British Army Barracks in, Duisburg, West Germany, 13 July 1988

Along with a new offensive in the north & bombing England again, the IRA also embarked on a European campaign against British targets in mainland Europe. The 3 countries they attacked with British military installations were Belgium, Holland & West Germany.

This bombing was the first attack carried out in Germany. There were 2 active service units operating one in west & north west W.Germany, and another along the Belgian/Dutch border, allegedly Dessie Grew was the commander for the whole European operation.

u/KindLiterature913 — 26 days ago

Provisional IRA Belfast Brigade, first major bombing in Belfast city centre, 16 July 1970

The bombing of the Northern Bank of on High Street, injured 30+ people, the most civilians injured by an IRA bomb at that stage.

This was less than two weeks after the Falls Curfew & Massacre. If you recall during the Curfew, two hardline unionist government ministers toured the area in an armoured vehicle in an army mobile patrol as if they were Caesar celebrating his victory over Gaul. This enraged nationalists, who rightly saw the gesture as a symbol of unionist triumphalism over an area subdued by British military force & violence, with so much innocent blood spilled, 4 killed (a 5th died later) and 60 injured. Belfast was never the same after that, there had been a serious riot in April and about 30 civilians were injured but nothing like this. So this was seen as a revenge attack by Billy McKee who was mainly in control of the bombing campaign, and saw the unionist regime as the main enemy at that time, as they controlled the RUC & the Army as the Tories had just won the general election in June and they let the Unionists give the orders. It was also one of, if not the first of the IRA's economic targets.

This was really the beginning of the strategy of putting bombs in the city centre so the British would have to go protect unionist shops & business premises from bombs, which in turn helped take the heat off the Nationalist ghetto areas like the Falls, Ballymurphy, Ardoyne etc. The bomb weighed between 5 to 7 lbs of gelignite, which is around the size of the bombs used in the Guildford & Caterham pub bombings, 33 were injured in the Caterham bombing so pretty much the same amount injured here in Belfast, the reason the Horse & Groom pub had double the injuries & 5 deaths (4 soldiers, 1 civilian) was the size of the pub, and the amount in it, around 75 people inside a pub that was supposed to hold 55 to 60, it doesn't take rocket science to figure out why there was more carnage there.

But the whole summer saw what the Provisionals were capable of and there were no more "I RAN AWAY" slogans on walls, their bombing targets before this were mainly symbolic, but after this bomb, they meant business, a month later, in August, they killed the first two RUC of their campaign with a booby-trapped bomb in Crossmaglen, and then for the next six months they were planning for defence & retaliation strategy against the British Army which began in February 71 which was basically an eye for an eye, and then after internment they went on the offensive about 2 weeks later in late August 71.

u/KindLiterature913 — 26 days ago

Official IRA South Down Battalion shoots dead an RUC officer along Camlough - Bessbrook Rd, near Newry, 29 February 1972

The RUC officer was killed when the OIRA rang about a hoax robbery occuring at the factory, when the RUC patrol car pulled up outside the gate a 3 or 4 man unit opened up with Thompons killing one & injuring another officer. This was just the second time the OIRA killed a member of the state forces around the Newry area, although the PIRA had killed none at this stage, and the OIRA would eventually build a modest force in Newry from 72 to 77, carrying out over 30 attacks in & around Newry.

Just four days earlier, that horrible sectarian cretin, UUP Home Affairs Minister John Taylor was left like a sieve in a very similar style attack, with 2 or 3 OIRA Volunteers opening up on Taylor while he sat stationary in his car, Joe McCann was alleged to have carried out the attack, it might be possible he was behind this one as well. It wasn't uncommon for O/Cs or O/Os to carry out & lead attacks in other brigade areas that had not been very active to give them a boost.

u/KindLiterature913 — 26 days ago

Official IRA South Down Battalion ambush a Royal Marine APC & Land Rover in Newry, injuring 2 soldiers & 4 civilians, 9 December 1971

One soldier was seriously injured & 4 civilians & another soldier had slight injuries, after the OIRA SDB opened up with M1 Carbine rifles & Thompon smgs at a British Army mobile patrol.

This was the OIRA's 3rd operation in Newry, and second time they either killed or injured British soldiers.

u/KindLiterature913 — 26 days ago

IRA Belfast Brigade, 3rd Battalion, ASU, patrol Ardoyne 1988 (I think), vols with FN MAGs, AK47s, & H&K G3s as well as a cute pistol.

I've seen this video on here before as well, I wasn't going to post it, but on here it's split into 2 parts, so you have to go back out of the page to watch the 2nd part, so I thought it would be handy to the post this for people who wanted to watch in full. I didn't add the music, but you can still hear the Vols speaking.

u/KindLiterature913 — 26 days ago