Treaty Ports (Ireland)
After the
Irish Free State was granted independence in
1922, three deep water
Treaty Ports, at
Berehaven, Queenstown (renamed
Cobh) and
Lough Swilly, were retained by the
United Kingdom as
sovereign bases. This was a condition of the
Anglo-Irish Treaty of
December 6 1921, which ended the
Irish War of Independence.
The existence of the ports was one of the causes of the
Irish Civil War, where those who regarded the Treaty as a betrayal of
Irish Republicanism fought against the forces of the nascent Free State.
The ports remained under the control of the UK until
Anglo-Irish Free Trade Agreement in
1938, when they were returned to
Ireland. From an Irish point of view, the handover of the ports in the leadup to
World War II was felt to be vital to consolidate Ireland's
neutrality during "
The Emergency".
Some in Britain, including
Winston Churchill, considered the handover a short-sighted decision, since at the start of the
Battle of the Atlantic in
1939, the convoy escort refuelling facilities which Berehaven and Queenstown would have provided were 370 kilometres (200 miles) further out into the Atlantic than those which were available in
Northern Ireland and
Britain. However,
British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain was reluctant to antagonise Ireland while facing a greater enemy in
Nazi Germany. The bases became less important after the
Allies established bases in
Iceland following the British occupation in
1940. Moreover, the ports had been neglected by the
British Admiralty and would not have been ready for war.