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The fire after the explosion in Derry on Saturday 19 January 2019 PSNI

Opinion The Derry car bomb is part of a dissident republican resurgence over the last decade

The suspension of the Northern Ireland Assembly coupled with the rhetoric around a ‘hard border’ has given oxygen to groups like the New IRA, writes Tom Clonan.

SATURDAY’S CAR BOMB attack on Bishop Street in the heart of Derry’s city centre is a very sinister development.  It is not the first time that Derry’s courthouse has been targeted in this way. 

In March 2011, a similar vehicle-borne improvised explosive device (IED) was positioned in front of the same building. 

The IED contained 50kg of home-made explosives and on examination by British Army bomb disposal experts, the device was found to be unstable, but viable.

Despite the Good Friday Agreement and the ceasefires entered into by both Republican and Loyalist paramilitaries, there has been a gradual resurgence in dissident Republican violence over the last 10 years. 

There has also been a rise in Loyalist violence during the same period, involving punishment shootings and killings. But dissident republicans have evolved more sophisticated terrorist operations including targeted assassinations and car bombs and they are understood to be developing expertise in mortar attacks.

In relation to Saturday’s car bomb – which was successfully detonated – the PSNI have stated that their ‘primary line of enquiry is that the New IRA was responsible’. 

They also stated that the ‘crude and unstable’ device was capable of creating a mass casualty incident. 

The New IRA? 

In the wake of the Belfast Agreement, a small but highly skilled cohort of former members of the Provisional IRA went on to form splinter groups of dissident republicans including groups such as the Real IRA and the Continuity IRA. 

In April of 1998, the Real IRA attempted to drive a massive car bomb on board a car ferry in Dublin. However, the car bomb was intercepted by gardaí in Dun Laoghaire. 

A forensic examination of the vehicle carried out by Irish Defence Forces Ordnance Officers found that the device was viable but highly unstable and unpredictable. If they had managed to get on board the ferry – even though the target was in the UK – the bulk charge could easily have prematurely detonated in the Irish Sea, with almost unimaginable consequences.

Unfortunately, the unimaginable did happen in August 1998 when the Real IRA drove a similar car bomb into the centre of Omagh.  The massive 140kg bulk charge, placed in a Vauxhall Cavalier detonated – it killed 29 people and injured more than 200. 

The Real IRA disbanded in the aftermath.  Their counterparts in the Continuity IRA were heavily infiltrated by MI5 and PSNI informants during this period and were hampered in their ability to carry out any major terrorist operations. 

In 2007, due to the peace dividend associated with the Good Friday Agreement and the improving security situation, the British Army formally ended Operation Banner and significantly reduced the numbers of troops deployed to Northern Ireland.

In the background, however, a hardcore of disaffected dissident republicans – retaining the ideological commitment and military and engineering skill sets obtained during the Troubles – continued to organise, recruit and train for terror attacks against a range of targets within Northern Ireland. 

In 2008, dissident republicans carried out three separate assassination attempts on PSNI officers in Dungannon, Castlederg and Dungannon. In two gun attacks and one car bomb operation, three police officers were seriously injured.

In 2009, dissident republicans carried out a gun attack on Massereene Barracks in which they killed two British soldiers, Sappers Mark Quinsey and Patrick Azimkar. The weapons used were high-velocity AKM Kalashnikov assault rifles of a type believed to have been ‘de-commissioned’ by the Provisional IRA during the peace process.

In January 2010, PSNI recruit Peadar Heffron seriously injured in a car bomb attack outside his home in Randalstown, Co Antrim. In April of 2010, dissident republicans hijacked a Skoda taxi and placed a 100kg explosive device inside it – detonating outside MI5’s Headquarters in Northern Ireland, at Palace Barracks in Hollywood, Co Down. 

In 2011, PSNI Constable Ronan Kerr was killed by a similar car bomb device.   

This hardcore of dissident republicans, whilst enhancing their operational capabilities and honing their bomb-making and targeted killing skill-sets, came together in early 2012 to form the so-called New IRA. 

Since 2012, the New IRA has consolidated somewhat and has continued to carry out targeted killings and bomb attacks. In November 2012, the New IRA murdered prison officer David Black, in Co Armagh, in a shooting incident. 

They are active in the Republic also and some of their members are believed to have been involved in a bomb that gardaí discovered in 2014, in the Finnstown House hotel in Lucan, west Dublin. 

In 2016, they murdered prison officer prison officer Adrian Ismay in Belfast – by placing a bomb under his car.

By 2017, the PSNI had identified the New IRA as the primary threat to the security of the state in Northern Ireland. During 2017, the PSNI believe that the New IRA were responsible for placing 29 separate explosive devices and carrying out dozens of punishment shootings. 

In 2018, the New IRA is believed to have placed 17 explosive devices and 24 punishment shootings throughout Northern Ireland. 

Currently, it is estimated that the New IRA generates around 50 million pounds sterling per annum through organised crime including fuel smuggling and trade in illegal cigarettes. 

Political upheaval

The suspension of the Northern Ireland Assembly at Stormont, coupled with the unfortunate rhetoric around a ‘hard border’ associated with the current Brexit crisis have given oxygen to groups such as the New IRA. 

With strongholds in Derry, Belfast and in the border Counties of Tyrone, Fermanagh and Armagh the New IRA will continue to frustrate and target the normalisation of policing in these sensitive interface areas. 

Brexit provides groups such as the New IRA with a perfect storm in which the national discourse has returned to a peculiarly toxic narrative around identity and borders on this island – narratives which had become largely irrelevant as a consequence of our membership of the European Union. 

The New IRA will continue to mobilise republican rhetoric to justify car bombings and shootings such as that carried out on Saturday.  Those operations will also benefit organised crime by diverting invaluable resources to counter-terrorism and preventing the normalisation of policing – throughout the entire island of Ireland.

Military response

In its new military operation on this island, the British Army has deployed increasing numbers of specialist troops to support ‘Operation Helvetic’ throughout Northern Ireland. 

These include highly trained explosive ordnance disposal officers and the Special Reconnaissance Squadron of the SAS acting in support of MI5 and the PSNI in countering the threat posed by dissident republicans.

The cost of the peace-time security operations in Northern Ireland is already phenomenally high. According to a 2016 report published by the Ulster University Economic Policy Centre for the Department of Finance in Northern Ireland, the annual cost of policing is in excess of £1 billion pounds per annum. 

The cost to the British Exchequer of Operation Helvetic is similar. 

The threat to the security of the state – both in Northern Ireland and in the Republic – posed by dissident republicans has increased significantly as a consequence of the Brexit crisis. 

It has superseded the threat posed by Islamist extremists and represents a clear and present danger to the peace process on this island. 

In my view, any return to a border – of whatever type, hard or otherwise – on this island will cost us dearly, in financial terms and in human terms.

Groups such as the New IRA – along with their business partners in organised crime – have shown themselves to be ready, willing and more than able to constitute an existential threat to the fragile peace in Ireland.      

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    Mute Trevor Hayden
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    Jan 22nd 2019, 7:16 AM

    Why have no Orange/UVF/UDA suspicions been mentioned?
    I’m no fan of SF or their IRA background but for a supposed “security expert” would you not have to look at both sides of the coin to see wether other organisations were involved?

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    Mute Clifford Brennan
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    Jan 22nd 2019, 7:23 AM

    @Trevor Hayden: Probably because the article is about a dissident republican resurgence.

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    Mute Trevor Hayden
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    Jan 22nd 2019, 7:30 AM

    @Clifford Brennan: That does not mean these bombs were carried out by dissident republicans.

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    Mute Clifford Brennan
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    Jan 22nd 2019, 7:39 AM
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    Mute Trevor Hayden
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    Jan 22nd 2019, 7:46 AM

    @Clifford Brennan: I have read it, but the article above seems to be centred around the IRA and these bombings without any reference to the unionist terrorist groups who during the troubles were just as violent.

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    Mute Nick Caffrey
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    Jan 22nd 2019, 9:29 AM

    @Trevor Hayden: Because. That. Is. Not. What. The. Article. Is. ABOUT.
    What’s so hard to understand?

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    Mute Trevor Hayden
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    Jan 22nd 2019, 9:32 AM

    @Nick Caffrey: Stock photo. Republican violence. Linking them together.
    Understood.

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    Mute Dan Jacobson
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    Jan 22nd 2019, 10:57 AM

    @Trevor Hayden: It’s the broken sectarian mindset rooted in experience of childhood bullying/abuse and the consequent symptomatic justifying of hateful vengeful bigotry that sustains the division of our island. You can break the cycle.

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    Mute Trevor Hayden
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    Jan 22nd 2019, 11:06 AM

    @Dan Jacobson: True Dan, but I believe it’s sloppy journalism to automatically bring republican violence of the past into the fore as soon as something like this arises.
    During the 70s and 80s both republican and unionists were involved in the very same thing.
    To automatically jump on one of the sides without proof is reckless.
    Peace is what both sides need without provocating journalism.
    Either side could be to blame for this for their own means with the brexit referendum or it could simply be a drugs or personal vendetta.
    But journalists should not stoke the flames and let the police do their job.

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    Mute Cormac Ó Braonáin
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    Jan 22nd 2019, 1:28 PM

    @Clifford Brennan: not only have you spectacularly missed his point. But you willfully missed it…twice. Bag of hammers stuff, Clifford.

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    Mute Dan
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    Jan 22nd 2019, 7:32 AM

    Don’t give them the satisfaction of being labeled as anything other than common criminals.

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    Mute reabhloid
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    Jan 22nd 2019, 11:45 AM

    @Dan: that would make the British army common criminals too , or any army that exloses bombs for that matter

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    Mute Quentin Moriarty
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    Jan 22nd 2019, 7:20 AM

    Paul Quinn 2007
    No justice for his family to date .

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    Mute GrumpyAulFella
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    Jan 22nd 2019, 9:08 AM

    £1bn security bill. You could build a wing of a children’s hospital with that.

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    Mute Jane Alford
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    Jan 22nd 2019, 8:39 AM

    If these thugs/criminals think their actions will encourage Ireland to be united, they are deluded. Why on earth would the south ever want to have to deal with these prats?

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    Mute GrumpyAulFella
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    Jan 22nd 2019, 8:58 AM

    Don’t sully the term Republican by labelling them that. Call them what they are, terrorists.

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    Mute Nick Caffrey
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    Jan 22nd 2019, 9:30 AM

    @GrumpyAulFella: No. Criminals is what they are.

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    Mute Ivor O'Sullivan
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    Jan 22nd 2019, 7:21 AM

    I thought the dinosaurs were extinct !!Prehistoric animals should stay just that.

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    Mute Angela McCarthy
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    Jan 22nd 2019, 3:16 PM

    Yes Gus, but dont forgot that Collins and the 1921-2 crop were also called toe-rags and worse. What I find very intriguing about this later Derry bombing is that no-one has claimed responsibility for it. Do people not find that odd – from a group we are told wants to make a big splash entrance onto the big stage?

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    Mute John Mulligan
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    Jan 22nd 2019, 11:41 AM

    ‘Skilled’? ‘Military’?
    Why use terms like this to describe people whose only ‘skill’ is to break and tear down?
    Any fool could wreak mayhem and destruction, and frequently does.
    These people share one thing in common, apart from a hatred of anyone who duffers from them in race or religion. They believe that you can persuade people of your point of view by killing them, their families or random strangers.

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    Mute John Mulligan
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    Jan 22nd 2019, 11:41 AM

    @John Mulligan: *differs*

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    Mute reabhloid
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    Jan 22nd 2019, 11:48 AM

    @John Mulligan: worked for Michael Collins

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    Mute Gus Sheridan
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    Jan 22nd 2019, 12:33 PM

    @reabhloid: different world now but for some it’s still 1922. The current crop of toe rags only represent themselves.

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    Mute Kev Barnes
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    Jan 22nd 2019, 7:12 AM

    REALLY???

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    Mute Tom Padraig
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    Jan 22nd 2019, 8:01 PM

    its concerning, Derry seems so much closer to Dublin than it use to. i feel fear around this incident,

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    Mute Marie Broomfield
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    Jan 22nd 2019, 2:17 PM

    Some.people.just waiting for any excuse to start! Political my back side! Cause me granny! Criminals plain and simple. Dirty usless peolle with nothing better to do than cause havoc. Lets hope our Derry neighbours nip this in the bud. Sent them young fellas off to see the world and expand their tiny perspectives

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