latenia wrote: » It was the correct decision. We just would have had Dublin and Cork razed to the ground by bombers .
bodice ripper wrote: » yes
Chuck Stone wrote: » We were neutral for the Allies.
latenia wrote: » It was the correct decision. We just would have had Dublin and Cork razed to the ground by bombers while cowering waiting for America to join in. Given that we were at war with Britain less than 20 years earlier and Irishmen were used disproportionately as cannon fodder against the same enemy on almost the same battlefields shortly before that I see no logical or moral reason for us to have sided with the allies. The Holocaust is often brought out as a stick to beat us with but that was never a causus belli at the time as the true horror only emerged afterwards.
sheesh wrote: » no
getzls wrote: » Surely this is a cowards excuse? Irelands shame.
Latchy wrote: » Either way , the Irish government and the Allies had a plan of action in place that should the republic ( or EIRE as it was referred to then by the British ) be invaded by the Nazis, the American and British forces would join up with the 500,000 strong Irish Army to try repel the invasion which probably would have involved fighting on several fronts .
Milk & Honey wrote: » The Irish Army was 43,000 strong in the war years. There were two plans drawn up. One was to repel a German invasion and the other was to repel a British invasion.
dttq wrote: » Had the Americans/ British thought for a moment that the Germans would invade Ireland to use as a launch pad for an easier invasion into England, and hence cut off the entire Western Front,
chughes wrote: » I'm not an apologist for DeValera but WW2 presented him with a huge dilemma. At the start of WW2 the Irish Free State was less than 20 years old and after taking so long to get Britain out of the the 26 counties part of the island of Ireland, he wasn't about to invite them back in again. It's easy at this remove to condemn the policy of neutrality but DeValera's supporters would have pilloried him if he had agreed to the ports being used. Churchill even offered the 6 counties for the use of the ports and it's highly likely that Churchill would have reneged on this as the Unionists would have revolted. I think DeVelera knew Churchill well enough not to trust him one inch. Many Irish people did join the British forces during WW2 so we did play some part in the war. My own father worked in the Clyde shipyards and in Harland & Wolfe repairing damages warships. The memorial gardens in Islandbridge are testament to the Irish people who fought and died in a number of conflicts including WW2. One thing I would condemn DeVelera for, however, is offering condolences to the German ambassador on the death of Hitler. At that stage the concentration camps would have been public knowledge so to offer condolences on behalf of the Irish people is unforgivable.
Colmustard wrote: » Yeah one was we surrender said in German, the other plan was we surrender said in English, they were good plans.
Wibbs wrote: » Actualy not quite. One Irish commander whose name escapes who had taken part in and beaten famous generals on all sides in war games before the war, had figured the Germans would try to move up the Nore valley(again IIRC) and accordingly had a load of artillery pieces pointed at the place(apparently after the war it turned out that would have been the german plan). Plus the Irish army would have a load of men with some practice at a moving guerrilla war with the largest empire the world has ever seen so wouldn't have been pushovers. The Germans would have been on the ground, with little in the way of tanks etc, with no air support beyond the odd Condor which no doubt the Brits would have been only to happy to shoot out of the sky. Their supply lines would be intermittent or non existent. It would have been a suicide invasion.
OurLadyofKnock wrote: » There is a lot to be said for how Ireland protected its citizens in the war.
Latchy wrote: » I think the plan I mentioned included co operation with the British for the German invasion scenario and yes , Dev had his son and a contingent of troops on the border to size up the situation but it doesn't take much brains to realize that the ''Brits invading the south to help repel the Germans '' scenario was the best option ...if only in the short term .