List of IRAs
The
IRA (
Irish Republican Army) is a name used to describe several paramilitary movements in
Ireland in the
20th and
21st centuries, though the first known use of the term occurred in the
Fenian raids on Canada in the 1860s.
All claim descent from the original
Irish Republican Army, which was formed from the
Irish Volunteers. It was the army of the
Irish Republic, declared by
Dáil Éireann in 1919. Most Irish people dispute the claims of more recently created organizations that insist that they are the only legitimate descendants of the original IRA, often referred to as the "Old IRA".
The playwright and former IRA member
Brendan Behan once said that the first issue on any IRA agenda was "the split". For the IRA, that has constantly been the case. The first split came after the signature of the
Anglo-Irish Treaty in 1921, with supporters of the Treaty forming the nucleus of the
National Army while the anti-treaty forces continued to use the name
Irish Republican Army. After the end of the
Irish Civil War, the IRA was around in one form or another for forty years, when it split into the Official IRA and the Provisional IRA in 1969. The latter then had its own breakaways, namely the Real IRA and the Continuity IRA, each claiming to be the true successor of the Army of the
Irish Republic.
* The
original IRA (in later years, known as the "Old" IRA), recognised by the
First Dáil as the legitimate army of the Irish Republic in April 1921. Split into pro-Treaty forces (the National Army, also known as the
Government forces or the
regulars) and anti-Treaty forces (the
Republicans,
irregulars or
Executive forces) after the Treaty.
*The
Irish Republican Army (1922-1969) - the anti-treaty IRA which fought and lost the civil war and which thereafter refused to recognise either the
Irish Free State or
Northern Ireland, deeming them both to be creations of British imperialism.
* The
Official IRA, the remainder of the IRA after the 1969 split with the Provisionals, now inactive in the military sense.
* The
Provisional IRA (PIRA), which broke from the OIRA in 1969 over the latter's failing to protect
nationalist communities in
Northern Ireland, has a left-wing orientation and increasing political activity; the term 'IRA' is almost always now used to denote this particular group.
* The
Continuity IRA, broke from the PIRA in 1986 because the latter ended its policy on
abstentionism (thus recognising the authority of the
Republic of Ireland).
* The
'Real' IRA, a 1997 breakaway from the PIRA consisting of members opposed to the
peace process.
Here in more detail is a representation of a genealogical tree of Irish nationalist movements derived from the original IRA:
*
Original IRA (the "old" IRA) - fought in the War of Independence
1919-
1921** That part of the
Old IRA that accepted the compromise of the 1921 treaty which established the
Irish Free State and that became the initial Free State government. Its supporters became the modern-day
Fine Gael Party, currently the second-largest party in Ireland. With additional recruits, it became the
National Army, later known as the
Irish Defence Forces** That part of the
original IRA organized within
Northern Ireland not included within the Free State (see below).
** That part of the
IRA, organized within the twenty six counties that became the Free State, which rejected the compromise of the 1921 treaty with Britain and under
Liam Lynch fought the
Irish Civil War against the Free State 'National Army' (led by
Michael Collins), with the support of the anti-treaty faction of
Sinn Féin, led by
Éamon de Valera.
***
Fianna Fáil - some years after losing the Civil War a faction led by de Valera resigned from Sinn Féin and established the
Fianna Fáil party, which is currently the largest party in Ireland.
*** The remainder of the IRA, including that part of the
Old IRA organised within
Northern Ireland, carried on low level sporadic paramilitary activity in Northern Ireland as well as some activities in the Free State (later the
Republic of Ireland). After a period of poor relations, the symbiotic relationship between Sinn Féin and the IRA was re-established in the late 1930s.
**** By the 1960s, after the IRA waged a disastrous
border campaign,
Sinn Féin moved towards a
Marxist class struggle outlook. With the outbreak of
the Troubles Sinn Féin, or as it came to be called after the formation of the Provisional IRA and Provisional Sinn Féin,
Official IRA /
Official Sinn Féin found itself sidelined because of its decision not to defend
Catholic areas of Belfast from
sectarian attacks. Over time the Official IRA faded away, while Official Sinn Féin moved to a purely Marxist position, renaming itself first
Sinn Féin the Workers Party, and then in
1982 the
The Workers Party.
*****After the Official IRA's 1972 ceasefire it and Official Sinn Féin suffered a split in 1974 leading to the formation of the extreme left wing
Irish National Liberation Army and the
Irish Republican Socialist Party, led by
Seamus Costello (later assassinated by the Official IRA during a bloody feud). The INLA was known for a series of internal feuds and some of the more sectarian killings from the nationalist side.
***** In
1992 the Workers' Party suffered a split when a majority faction failed to secure changes. They left and formed the
Democratic Left the most leftist of the parties in the Republic with seats in the
Dáil Éireann (though also operating in
Northern Ireland). Ultimately the Democratic Left merged into the
Labour Party.
**** In
1969, the more traditionalist republican members split off into the
Provisional IRA and
Provisional Sinn Féin. The Provisional IRA operated mostly in Northern Ireland, using violence against the
Royal Ulster Constabulary and the
British army, and British institutions and economic targets. They also killed members of the Irish army and the
Garda SÃochána (the Irish police force), which was against one of their
standing orders. A further split occurred in
1986, when the southern leadership of Provisional Sinn Féin under
Ruairà Ã" Brádaigh was deposed and replaced by a new northern leadership under
Gerry Adams.
***** The deposed elements, who adhere to
republican legitimatism, opposing Provisional Sinn Féin's decision to abandon
abstentionism and enter
Dáil Éireann, set up a rival party and military wing, called
Republican Sinn Féin and the
Continuity IRA.
***** Members of the Provisional IRA who did not accept the peace process split off to form the
Real IRA. Its political wing is the
32 County Sovereignty Movement.
For a diagramatic version of this, see
Genealogy of the IRA.