A new
RTÉ documentary hears how a
1982 Downing Street conversation on
Margaret Thatcher's Irish ancestry led to her making a commitment "to do something on
Ireland".
The insight was made to a trusted colleague during a private dinner in Downing Street to celebrate the
British victory in the
Falklands War.
Thatcher: Ireland and the
Iron Lady tells the story of
Thatcher's relationship with Ireland. During her premiership, nowhere was Margaret Thatcher's influence on world affairs more complex, contentious and turbulent than on the island of Ireland. Thatcher's 12 years of dictating British policy produced a legacy of bitterness and entrenched division that continues to spark impassioned responses to this day.
The documentary examines her relationship with Taoisigh
Jack Lynch,
Charles Haughey and
Garret Fitzgerald and provides an insight behind the scenes to key events such as the
IRA hunger strikes and the signing of the
Anglo-Irish Agreement in
1985.
During the
1980s David Goodall was one of the most senior British diplomats involved in negotiating the Anglo-Irish Agreement in 1985. After the British victory in the
Falklands he spoke to the
British Prime Minister at a private dinner
.
In the documentary Sir David Goodall says: "I said in the course of this conversation:
Relations between
Ireland and Britain are complicated by the fact that so many of us are in this country are of
Irish descent, and although they don't like to say so, so many people on the island of Ireland are actually of
British descent."
"
Mrs. Thatcher listened to that and then she said: I am completely
English. So I said: Well, I'm not. I mean, one of my grandfathers was born in Ireland and there are hundreds of thousands of people in this country like me.
And she said: H'mm, now you mention it my great, great grandmother was O'
Sullivan, so perhaps I'm one
16th Irish"
"
At the end of this conversation she said reflectively: H'mm, if we get back again I think I'd like to do something about Ireland."
Thatcher: Ireland and the Iron Lady features interviews with former
Labour leader and Tánaiste
Dick Spring,
Michael Lillis, a senior
Government's negotiator during the Anglo-Irish Agreement and
Martin Mansergh, Charles Haughey's special advisor on
Northern Ireland.
It also includes contributions form many of Thatcher's former
British cabinet ministers and key advisers including
Charles Powell, her former
Private Secretary,
Douglas Hurd, former
British Foreign Secretary and her press officer and staunch ally,
Sir Bernard Ingham.
The documentary also reveals how, despite efforts to improve co-operation between the two governments, the British continued to spy on their Irish counterparts.
Michael Lillis was one of the government's senior negotiators during the talks that led to the
Anglo Irish Agreement. In the early stages of the Anglo-Irish discussions, he recalls his first encounters with his British equivalent.
In the documentary Michael Lillis says: "We were very conscious of the fact that they both were at the absolute heart of the whole British power system, including security and intelligence.
And one of them at one stage told us, that the communications codes that we had at that time were, I think the phrase that was used, easy to penetrate, in other words they were able to read our messages."
Ireland &
The Iron Lady also includes analysis of Thatcher's overall view of Ireland.
Charles Powell, her former Private Secretary says: "She saw the world in terms of conflict and this was a conflict more than a source of agreement. It was obviously conditioned her attitude to the IRA, but also to the
Irish government as well, who in a sense were perceived as the enemy."
Former Tánaiste Dick Spring says: "I mean, a woman who says there is no such thing as community or society, I think that's the antithesis of what politics is about in the
Republic of Ireland."
Thatcher: Ireland and The Iron Lady is directed by
Trevor Birney and produced by
Mary Curry. The documentary is
Below The
Radar TV production for
RTE. It is a co-production with
BBC Northern Ireland and is part financed by NI
Screen.
- published: 15 Jul 2013
- views: 35348