NP Rank:
Irish In Training For EU Battlegroups
The first group of Irish soldiers to participate in EU battlegroups are currently undergoing training for the new units.Chief of Staff Lt Gen Dermot Earley said the battlegroups will be ready to serve at short notice in both peacekeeping and disaster situations around the world.
Most of the 100 Irish soldiers assigned to an EU battlegroup were shaping up for their new role at Kilworth Camp in Co Cork this afternoon.
They will undergo further training in Sweden before the battlegroup officially goes on standby in January.
Ireland is providing a sophisticated bomb disposal and mine clearance unit to the Nordic Battlegroup, which will be composed of 2,000 troops - mostly from Sweden, Estonia, Norway and Finland.
The standby battlegroups are being set up so that Europe can respond to disasters or emergencies at five days notice to trouble spots around the world.
---oOo---
The Republic of Ireland's favourable geographical location, on the north-west border of the European Union, makes any external threat or future invasion unlikely. The state has a long-standing policy of non-belligerence in armed conflicts that included neutrality in World War II. For these reasons, the Republic's military capacity is relatively modest. However, the state has a long history of involvement in United Nations peace-keeping operations.
---oOo---
IRISH NEUTRALITY.
There is a story that when a downed airman was captured by an Irish policeman he escorted the airman across the border to Northern ireland. Later when asked to explain his actions bearing in mind that the Republic Of Ireland was neutral he explained "I thought that we were neutral in favour of Britain".
In February 2006, the Minister for Defence Willie O'Dea announced that the Irish government would open talks on joining the European Union battle groups. O'Dea said that joining the battlegroups would not affect Ireland's traditional policy of military neutrality, and that a UN mandate would be required for all battlegroup operations with Irish participation. Green Party foreign affairs spokesperson John Gormley condemned the decision, saying that the government was "discarding the remnants of Irish neutrality"
When the world descended into war in 1939 a few European countries remained neutral. Of those, none was more controversial than Ireland.
Winston Churchill, the British wartime Prime Minister, made an outspoken attack on the Irish Government and in particular Eamon de Valera in his radio broadcast on VE Day. Churchill maintained that the British government displayed restraint on the Irish state while the de Valera government were allowed to "frolic with the Germans". Churchill maintained that the British could have invaded the Irish state but displayed "considerable restraint" in not doing so.
De Valera replied to Churchill in a radio broadcast: "Mr. Churchill makes it clear that in certain circumstances he would have violated our neutrality and that he would justify his action by Britain’s necessity. It seems strange to me that Mr. Churchill does not see that this, if accepted, would mean that Britain’s necessity would become a moral code and that when this necessity became sufficiently great, other people’s rights were not to count….this same code is precisely why we have the disastrous succession of wars….shall it be world war?"
NowPublic on Facebook
Crowd Power
-
infomatique
Dublin, Ireland














Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (1)
at 09:37 on July 23rd, 2007
infomatique, I like this story and Great photos. Good stuff.