| Intelligencer Hain Comments
Spark Row
The recent U.S. visit by new Northern Secretary Peter Hain did not pass
of without incident. Hain held many meetings with leading Irish American
and political figures when he was here, including Secretary of State Condoleezza
Rice.
The Sunday Telegraph in London disclosed that Hain had been unstinting
in his complimentary comments about Sinn Fein leaders Gerry Adams and Martin
McGuinness in many of those meetings. This caused upset among the ranks
of Unionists of course, with Peter Robinson, deputy leader of Ian Paisley’s
DUP, castigating the new Northern secretary and saying the comments showed
his pro-Nationalist bias.

The Telegraph also quoted from this newspaper’s interview with Hain to
make its point. In the interview Hain stated that Adams had shown “a lot
of political guts” in calling for the IRA to step aside, and he called the
Adams statement a “very important, momentous statement” that showed “vision
and determination.”
Hain also said he believed that the Adams statement was “a line in the
sand” and that Adams and McGuinness were “on an historic mission to take
the Republican movement towards exclusively democratic means.”
It is hard to see why anyone should argue with the above comments, stating
the obvious as they do. However, there is little question that right now,
with talk of the IRA statement of intent to disband in the air, Unionists
are particularly nervous about what deal has been worked out to bring that
to fruition.
‘Stupid’ Hain, Says Adams
It was unfortunate timing for both men, but just at the time that Hain
was singing the praises of Gerry Adams in the U.S., the Sinn Fein leader
was castigating him back home in Belfast.
Adams was rightly upset that Hain had rearrested Sean Kelly, the former
Republican prisoner who carried out the Shankill Road bombings and who had
been free under the terms of the Good Friday Agreement.
Adams was also angry that Hain had agreed with the Unionists that a period
of time would have to elapse after an IRA statement before they would enter
negotiations with them.
Adams called Hain’s decision on Kelly “one of the stupidest decisions
that has been taken in a long time here,” and accused Hain of “caving in”
to the Unionists on many other issues.
Just to put matters right for Hain, he was also blasted on the other
side by Ian Paisley, who warned him that “no doctored statement” by the
IRA would do.
Maybe Hain feels he must be doing something right if both sides are blasting
him.
Old Enemies At Consul Home
Speaking of Hain, how times have changed. He spoke at a reception in
the Manhattan residence of the British Consul on Tuesday night before a
list of invited Irish American leaders.

Among them was Larry Downes, head of Friends of Sinn Fein in the U.S.
It surely is a new era when Sinn Fein are among the invited guests at such
an event in the home of the old enemy.
Also present was Pat Doherty, who works for the New York City comptroller’s
office. Doherty can take much of the credit for the MacBride Principles,
the set of fair hiring guidelines that then New York City Comptroller Harrison
Goldin injected into the Northern Ireland political discourse. The principles
were a mighty thorn in the side of successive British governments.
Goldin has long since moved on, but Doherty has become an ever present
in the office of the New York City comptroller and still carries out the
task of Irish liaison with the current incumbent, William Thompson.
It really is a sign of changed times when men like Downes and Doherty
are among the invited guests at the British consul’s residence. Love them
or hate them, the British are certainly good at inclusion when they want
to be.
At the event Doherty certainly had an interesting insight into Hain.
He remembered attending a “Time to Go” event in the 1980s in London which
Hain also attended.
It is obviously a role the Northern secretary would like to put behind
him at this point.
O’Connor’s Irish Roots
Though she was often referred to as an Irish American, Sandra Day O’Connor
was at pains to explain that her roots were actually Scottish and that her
husband supplied the Irish heritage.

O’Connor explained in a letter to our sister publication Irish America
magazine a few years ago that while she was a frequent visitor to Ireland
and was proud of her husband’s roots, her own were definitely Scottish as
she has extensively researched them.
O’Connor was born in El Paso on the Texas Mexican border and was most
likely descended from the same Scotch Irish stock who defended the Alamo
a few generations earlier.
Certainly, given the scramble on to replace her and the sharply rising
tensions, we may witness another type of Alamo in the Senate before the
next nominee is secure.
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