masti123 wrote: » The Continuity IRA exist and republican Sinn Féin. They've maintained the Republican tradition of rejecting the two partitionist states. Since 1923 there have been two splits with the IRA/Sinn Féin. The first being in 1969 when the Officials voted to accept Leinster House and Stormont at their Árd Fheis and Army Convention. The 'traditionalists' walked out and formed the Provisional IRA, stating that they remained loyal to the Irish Republic, and thus they were the true Republican Movement. And the other split in 1986 was essentially a repeat. The Provisionals voted to accept Leinster House. The 'traditionalists' walked out and from the Continuity IRA and Republican Sinn Féin, stating that they remained loyal to the Irish Republic, and thus they were the true Republican Movement.
Kermit.de.frog wrote: » How many IRA's are there? Real IRA Continuity IRA Old IRA The IRA I Can't Believe it's Not the IRA etc etc...
Rumpy Pumpy wrote: » Does the old IRA still exist?
whisky_galore wrote: » They're in the diesel laundering business now. ..
Rumpy Pumpy wrote: » Drinking in a pub on the periphery of Dublin CC, and a few auld lads came in selling a newspaper called The Starry Plough. Didn't buy a copy, but had a read of it while waiting for the barman to hurry up. Is there still a Republican tradition that rejects the idea of the 26 county 'statelet'? And advocates a 32 county socialist republic?
Raymond Shrilling Performance wrote: » All I'll say is you obviously have no idea what the Old IRA was if that's how you imagine them.
LordSutch wrote: » I think the old IRA disbanded in the 1950s. The Provisional IRA disbanded in the 90s.
Rumpy Pumpy wrote: » You probably fought alongside Collins in fairness. Famed for your sourness and pettiness.
FTA69 wrote: » What are you on about Sutch? There was no disbanding of any IRA in the 1950s. After the Civil War the IRA basically continued as a reasonably solid incarnation (bar a few people foraying into organisations such as Saor Uladh, Saor Éire and a few other schisms) until 1969 when the IRA split into the Provisionals (later to become the de facto Irish Republican Army) and the Officials (later to become the Workers Party and then a part of Labour.) The Provisionals went on ceasefire in 1994, later continued in 1996 and wound up generally around 2007. They still do exist however, but no longer on a military or operational footing.
Grayson wrote: » My Granddad did. He was in 1916, he was in intelligence with collins during the war of independence and was one of the first 21 officers in the freestate army. Apparently in the 60's and 70's he would say that the guys up north weren't the IRA. The IRA had been disbanded. Those guys were just "gurriers with guns".
masti123 wrote: » The Provisionals were the de facto Irish Republican Army after the 1969 for the fact that they were the only army to recognise the Irish Republic. You cannot claim to the the Army of the Irish Republic while not recognising that Republic. It stands to reason. The same logic would apply for the Continuity movement after the 1986 split.
FTA69 wrote: » Balls. The Continuity IRA were and are a joke with zero tradition of resistance in Ireland and even today are more akin to some sort of bizarre cult than anything else.