| Eire
and "The Emergency"
By Mike Bennighof, Ph.D.
August 2006
What a race, what a tribe
of outcasts. They do not deserve to survive.
Rear Admiral Tufton
Beamish, RN,
MP, regarding Irish neutrality, 1939
On 2 September 1939, as one member of the
British Commonwealth after another joined
the mother country in declaring war on Nazi
Germany, Irish Prime Minister Eamon de Valera
stood before the Dail, or Parliament, and
declared that Eire (as the Irish Free State
had renamed itself the previous year) would
remain neutral in the new war.
The decision angered the new First Lord of
the Admiralty, Winston Churchill, who raged
that Ireland did not have the legal right
as a member of the Commonwealth to sit out
the war, and soon he was accusing the Irish
of allowing German submarines to shelter in
their waters. The three “treaty ports”
evacuated by the Royal Navy in 1938 (Lough
Swilly, Cobh and Berehaven) should be re-occupied
by force, Churchill asserted.
Saner minds prevailed, and Ireland’s
neutrality proved to be one friendly to the
Allied cause. The Irish, despite a deep desire
(at least among the Catholic population) to
unify the island under one state, depended
on imports for food and for coal. By the summer
of 1940 the Irish Army’s Chief of Staff,
Lt. Gen. Dan McKenna, was holding joint planning
conferences with British officers to prepare
for possible German landings in Ireland. Initial
resistance, the Irish insisted, would come
from exclusively their own Army. British forces
would be allowed to enter Irish territory
afterwards to help eject the invaders, but
they would not be welcome beforehand.
Ireland’s armed forces did not inspire
confidence. The Irish Defence Forces, or Na
Forsai Cosanta, mobilized in September 1939
but halted expansion at 19,000 men (peacetime
strength was about 6,000) because they lacked
weapons and other equipment. Two days before
Christmas, an Irish Republican Army cell managed
to steal over a million rounds of ammunition
and a number of submachine guns from the Army’s
chief depot at Magazine Fort near Dublin without
resistance. The police eventually recovered
almost all the missing items, but the incident
struck a severe blow to public confidence
in the Army.
| 
Irish steel. Eire’s ill-fated
medium tank.
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The five regular battalions were expanded
to form two infantry brigades, with the addition
of a new regular battalion and one of ex-IRA
volunteers. The Army’s four anti-aircraft
guns were concentrated in a single battery
at Dublin, while the 1st and 2nd Armoured
Squadrons (one serving with each brigade)
boasted a single Vickers C medium tank bought
in 1929, two Swedish Landsverk L60 light tanks,
and about a dozen each of Rolls-Royce and
Landsverk armored cars plus some locally-modified
Ford trucks mounting machine guns. Unfortunately,
during an anti-tank demonstration in early
1940 an Irish soldier mistakenly loaded an
anti-tank gun with a live round and damaged
the republic’s lone medium tank beyond
repair. Irish soldiers wore a German-pattern
helmet (though manufactured by Vickers in
the UK) and most infantrymen carried a .45-caliber
Thompson submachine gun.
Expansion continued through 1940 as Eire obtained
more weapons (mostly from Britain).
The two brigades became two divisions, one
stationed on the border with Northern Ireland
and one along the southern and eastern coasts.
Two independent brigades formed as well. In
the summer of 1942 both divisions exercised
together along the Blackwater with the maximum
strength the Irish Army would reach during
the war: 38,787. The German-style coalscuttle
helmet gave way to a British-model tin pot
starting in late 1940.
| 
Irish air power (one quarter of it all
in one photo).
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The Irish Army Air Corps had four Gloster
Gladiator fighters purchased in 1938. At least
two Hurricane fighters that crash-landed on
Irish soil were repaired and put to use, plus
several more purchased in 1943. Naval strength
consisted of two small fisheries protection
vessels and a single motor torpedo boat, augmented
by four more during the course of the war.
The exact number of Irish citizens who served
in the British armed forces is hard to determine;
Unionist politicians (those who wished to
keep Northern Ireland part of the United Kingdom)
were very sensitive to the distinct possibility
that neutral Eire had spilled more blood in
defense of freedom than had Northern Ireland
(where conscription was never enforced). At
least 32,000 men born in Eire served in the
British Army alone, and others in the Royal
Navy and Air Force. The number also does not
include Irish citizens resident in Britain
in 1939 who volunteered. Many civilians also
made the journey across the Irish Sea to work
in British factories during the war. Higher
wages played a part, with the Irish soldier
making less than half of what his British
counterpart earned after the Republic made
its deductions for haircuts and laundry. So
did a yearning for action, and the desire
of many Irishmen to fight the Nazis. By 1945
the Defense Forces listed over 5,000 men as
having deserted, and Army Intelligence admitted
that almost all of them were serving in the
British armed forces. “At least De Valera’s
kept us out of all this,” became the
common greeting between such Wild Geese.
| 
A Swedish-made Landsverk armored car
in Irish service.
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With half of Ireland’s grain supply
coming from Canada, the government encouraged
its citizens to plant potatoes. Wartime censorship,
in the hands of the Minister for Coordination
of Defensive Measures, Frank Aiken, extended
far beyond military information. Aiken used
his powers to enforce an extreme prudishness,
deleting any hints of sex from books, newspapers
and movies. Aiken also claimed that Eire’s
neutral status meant that the war could not
be portrayed in a moral context. Any mention
of the ongoing Holocaust in Central Europe
was kept from the Irish public — even
statements by American President Franklin
Roosevelt and British Foreign Secretary Anthony
Eden were edited to remove any reference to
the slaughter of Jews and others. Jewish refugees
were denied entry as “undesirable elements,”
though no repressive measures were undertaken
against Eire’s 4,000 Jewish citizens.
Not until 1995 would the Irish Prime Minister,
John Bruton, issue a velied apolopgy for having
“closed their doors and their ports.”
Irish soldiers killed in action overseas were
listed as having died in accidents in their
obituaries and any awards for courage under
fire deleted.
De Valera’s pursuit of neutrality
even included an expression of condolence
to the German legation on 30 April 1945 following
Adolf Hitler’s suicide, the circumstances
of which also remained hidden form the Irish
public. Less than two weeks later, Churchill’s
victory speech blasted De Valera: “Had
it not been for the loyalty and friendship
of Northern Ireland, we should have been forced
to come to close quarters with Mr. de Valera
or perish forever from the earth.”
| 
Eamon de Valera as Taoiseach (prime
minster).
|
Three days later, De Valera countered this invasion
threat by praising Churchill’s restraint.
“Mr. Churchill,” the Irish leader
said, “instead of adding another horrid
chapter to the already blood-stained record
of relations between England and this country,
has advanced the cause of international morality
an important step.”
In our Third
Reich game, Ireland begins the game
as a neutral state; it can only enter the
war if invaded. For all his anti-English rhetoric,
De Valera never brought the Irish state anywhere
close to the pro-Nazi position advocated by
some within the Irish Republican Army. But
Ireland has no armed forces in the game, and
though the Army of two divisions and two brigades
is a little weak to rate its own playing piece,
we’ll add a weak unit as a variant piece.
The 1-3 Irish INF is available only if Ireland
is attacked on or after the summer 1940 turn.
You
can download the new Irish piece here.
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here to order Third Reich now! |