Do you want to go straight to a particular resource? Use the Jump Tool and follow 2 steps:
This can usually be found in the top hero section of overview, delegations visualize, session visualize, event visualize, commentary collection, commentary item, resource collection, and resource item pages.
Enter the shortcut code for the page that you wish to search for.
These documents were scanned, collated and catalogued by Ruth Murray, Annabel Harris, Isha Pareek, Eleanor Williams, Antoine Yenk, Harriet Carter, Oliver Nicholls, Kieran Wetherwick, and Cerys Griffiths.
Collection associations (2)
Already have an account? Login here
Don't have an account? Register here
Forgot your password? Click here to reset it
None
Copyright
None
Physical Copy Information
None
Digital Copy Information
None
NORTHERN IRELAND OFFICE WHITEHALL LONDON SW1A 2AZ
Roderic Lyne Esq CMG Private Secretary to the Prime Minister 10 Downing Street LONDON SW1A 2AA
22nd November 1993
Dear Roderic,
CONVERSATION WITH ARCHBISHOP EAMES: 20 NOVEMBER
I attach my Secretary of State's account of a telephone conversation he had with Archbishop Eames on Saturday 20 November. The Archbishops [sic] comments about Mr Molyneaux were confirmed in a subsequent conversation which my Secretary of State had with Mr Molyneaux which I am sending to you separately.
Copies of this letter go to John Sawers and Melanie Leach.
Yours ever
[Signature] for JONATHAN STEPHENS Private Secretary
CONVERSATION WITH ARCHBISHOP EAMES: 20 NOVEMBER 1993
I spoke to Dr Eames in the afternoon of Saturday 20 November.
The Archbishop had seen Jim Molyneaux the previous day. He had been very agitated; frightened, even. At Glengall Street he had been asked whether he was not being led by the nose, and was questioned on the lines of "What have you agreed to?". On Thursday 18 November his secretary had been questioned similarly by David Burnside at a party: had he "given the nod" to another document? (That is to say, an alternative to the one he was known to have turned down.)
In the light of the Irish Press leak, Molyneaux said he would be 'finished' if it were known he had been consulted on a further document, or that he had had a letter from the Taoiseach. The leak had jeopardised former positions, and he had to run for cover. He wanted "to ponder" replying to the letter.
Dr Eames emphasised that he had shown Molyneaux only the three paragraphs 9-12, so Molyneaux could truthfully say he had not seen the whole document. It was these paragraphs with which Molyneaux had taken serious issue. But he could not possibly provide an alternative text in present circumstances.
Dr Eames was very anxious that I should reassure Molyneaux:
(a) that he had intervened only by invitation;
(b) that when the two of them had conferred, Dr Eames had had no knowledge that the Irish had already prepared the leaked document – as to which he felt considerably let down; and
(c) that Molyneaux was central to the process and that Dr Eames was in no way a competitor.
I undertook to pass these messages on.
PM
22 November 1993
27 1988 - 2023
38 1993 - 1993
55 101 - 1991
64 1993 - 2020
26 1993 - 1993
57 1993 - 1993
59 1993 - 1993
51 1993 - 1993
18 1993 - 1993
24 1993 - 1994
41 1993 - 1994
32 1993 - 1994
72 101 - 1994
8 101 - 1990
76 101 - 1994
1 1994
60 101 - 1994
65 1993 - 2023
37 101 - 1993
54 101 - 1993
32 101 - 1993
77 1993 - 1993
58 101 - 2018
49 1993 - 1997
61 101 - 1992
38 101 - 1991
48 1992 - 1993
134 101 - ?-??
59 101 - 2023
84 101 - 1993
64 101 - 1991
44
11
31 1996 - 1996
61 1996 - 1996
49 1996 - 1996
20 1996 - 1997
32 1996 - 1996
48 1996 - 1996
74 1996 - None
4 1996 - 1996
33 1996 - 1996
30 1996 - 1996
7 1996 - 1996
24 1996 - 1996
9 1996 - 1996
59 1996 - 1996
60 1996 - 1996
14 1996 - 1997
41 1996 - 1996
45 1996 - 1996
67 1996 - 1996
16 1996 - 1996
87 1996 - None
23 1996 - 1996
79 1996 - None
22 1996 - 1996
1993-11-22
The Archbishop relays that Jim Molyneaux is anxious about his position following the press leak and he and his secretary have been harrassed about it. Following this conversation, the Secretary of State reassured Molyneaux that the Archbishop had intervened only by invitation, with no knowledge that the document would be leaked, and that he was not his competitor.
N/A
N/A
Unless otherwise specified, this material falls under Crown Copyright and contains public sector information licensed under the Open Government Licence v3.0.
The National Archives of the UK (TNA), digitzed by the Quill Project at https://quillproject.net/resource_collections/351/.