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Writing Peace: The National Archives of the UK (TNA)

Record of Meeting between Peter Brooke, Charles Haughey and Gerry Collins Regarding Political Development on 31 January 1991

Monday, 04 February 1991

i24588

This document provides an account of a meeting between Peter Brooke, Charles Haughey and Gerry Collins that took place in Dublin on 31 January 1991. Topics of discussion included the political movement of PIRA/Sinn Féin, progress in the political development process, and the importance of the British and Irish Governments acting in concert with each other. The first page of the document contains a handwritten list of recipients. A slightly different version of the document exists elsewhere in the box.

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From: PS/Secretary of State
4 February 1991

cc PS/SofS (B&L) - B
PS/PUS (B&L) - B
PS/Sir K Bloomfield - B
Mr Pilling - B
Mr Ledlie - B
Mr Thomas - B
Mr Deverell - B
Mr Alston - B
Mr McNeill - B
Mr D Hill, CPL - B

NOTE FOR THE RECORD

SECRETARY OF STATE'S MEETING WITH THE TAOISEACH: 31 JANUARY 1991

The Secretary of State met with the Taoiseach in his new offices in Dublin on 31 January 1991. Mr Collins was also present. The meeting lasted some forty-five minutes and there was a cordial and co-operative spirit throughout.

2. The Taoiseach started by discussing the apparent debate within the Provisional movement, and particularly Sinn Fein, on a possible change in policy. Discussion of this topic took up the majority of the meeting. The Taoiseach thought that the current position taken by HMG and the Irish Government was sound and currently easy to maintain. However, if the Provisionals showed that they were serious about moving towards a change of strategy, the current stance would be difficult to sustain. Both the British and Irish Governments needed to act in concert, otherwise they would be payed off against each other and, since there were clearly risks involved, it would be wrong for only one side to take risks.

3. Responding, the Secretary of State said that the current situation within the Provisional movement had been building over the past two years. HMG's policies towards countering terrorism: a tight security policy, pressure on terrorists' finances, economic development, social policies, and - in the context of this meeting - the political development process, were having their effect, acting in concert. The situation had been reached where the political process should be put to the test; there was still life in it.

4. Mr Collins, who was perfectly affable but negative towards the political development process, questioned the attitudes and motives of some of the parties involved, notably the Unionists. The Taoiseach asked a number of questions about the latter.

5. The Taoiseach accepted that the political development process had put pressure on Sinn Fein. The Secretary of State said that the activities of journalists and other did not help what was inevitably a somewhat fragile potential policy change by the Provisionals. Events would take time to develop; it was important not to hurry unnecessarily. The Taoiseach neither accepted not contradicted this view, but he acknowledged that it would require a significant passage of time after a renounciation of violence for others to sit down at a table with Sinn Fein, and did not argue with the view that there would be many middle-class nationalists in the North who would take this view.

6. On channels of communication, the Taoiseach sought to test the nature of our sources of information.

7. Towards the end of the meeting with Taoiseach acknowledged that the two developments were not necessarily mutually exclusive, and that it would be worth continuing with the political development process, as it contributed to the rethink within the Provisional movement through the political pressure is exercised.

8. The Taoiseach also recognised that the Prime Minister was fully occupied at present (with the implication that the Taoiseach was not pressing to see him, and hence that immediate action was unlikely).

A J D PAWSON
Private Secretary