Flag of the People's Republic of China (PRC) |
The following is a short article I wrote a couple of years ago after a research trip to the Chinese Foreign Ministry Archives in Beijing. It is based on original research. For those who may be interested I can provide the original source document archive references. Attribution requested.
UPDATE: On The Cedar Lounge Revolution Blog Brian Hanley has pointed out that the "Moscow was Rome to them" was one of his and Scott Millar's interviewees talking about Irish communists rather than the IRA. In my defence, however, I did email Brian Hanley while writing the original article for clarification on a number of points, however I never received a reply.
The Starry Plough |
On
16th September 1964 a lone figure knocked at the door of the embassy of
the People’s Republic of China in Paris. The embassy had only
opened earlier that year following President de Gaulle’s decision
to break diplomatic relations with Chiang Kai-shek’s Nationalist
government and establish them with the Communist government in
Beijing. The man at the door handed over a letter of introduction to
the junior embassy staffer who had answered his knock. The letter
was from the Chief of Staff of the Irish Republican Army, Cathal
Goulding, and requested on his behalf that the letter’s deliverer
be received by Ambassador Huang Zhen.
Huang Zhen |
This
unexpected call from an Irishman would prove to be the first of three
such visits by Seamus Costello over the next five months, as part of
the IRA’s attempts to procure arms from Mao’s China. The letter
requested Chinese assistance in the “Irish struggle against British
imperialist rule and to establish a democratic people’s republic”
and hoped “China would support [the IRA] in the same way it
supported the struggles of Asia and Africa.” Costello claimed to
have been sent to establish contact with the Chinese government on
behalf of the IRA and to have talks with them on the provision of
assistance. Costello’s Chinese interlocutor made no response to
his request, but accepted the letter (for which he would later be
reprimanded and told that under no circumstances in the future should
he accept such a communication). Costello returned to London the next
day, and the Chinese embassy cabled Beijing to request that it inform
the Chinese Chargé d’Affaires Office
in London (Beijing and London had diplomatic relations, but would not
exchange ambassadors until 1972) of what had transpired that day in Paris.
If
the bona fides
of the man from Bray who had turned up unannounced in Paris in early
autumn were doubted by the Chinese, when he turned up unannounced at
the Chargé d’Affaires'
office in London a little over a month later, at least the London
staff knew something of whom they were dealing with. However, when
Seamus Costello came knocking on their door on 26th October, this time he was not alone, and was accompanied by none other than Cathal Goulding himself. The two men had come to inquire about whether the Chinese government had a response to the request contained in their letter and had hoped, presumably, to carry out talks as had been indicated during the visit in Paris. They had flown over from Ireland specially, they said, and hoped to meet with the Chargé.
Specifically they requested that China provide military assistance
to help their anti-British guerrilla war, and hoped that they might
be able to send men to Beijing to undergo military training. The
low-level diplomat who received them (falsely) denied any knowledge
of the letter that had been delivered in Paris, and was noncommittal
in his response. Unsurprisingly, the two men were not received by
the Chargé and were subsequently sent on their way.
Apparently
uncowed by Chinese stonewalling, Costello approached the Chargé’s
Office yet again in February 1965, this time calling himself the
Adjutant General of the Irish Republican Army. He admitted, however,
that because the IRA was an ‘underground’ organization, he used
the cover of a car salesman. The Irish people “opposed British
control” he told his Chinese contact, and because “China
supported the liberation struggles of the world’s peoples, he
sincerely hoped to receive Chinese support”, and this time put
forward three very specific requests:
Seamus Costello: looking for a Chinese takeaway. |
1)
Chinese help in training for guerrilla warfare
2)
Chinese military aid
3)
Chinese help in training IRA members in the use of printing presses
for the distribution of propaganda materials.
He
also requested to see the military attaché, but was told that the
Office did not have one. The Chinese did not respond to any of his
requests, at which point Costello “expressed his disappointment and
left.”
These
incidents shed light on the intersection of two very disparate
revolutionary movements who professed allegiance to the same ideals,
but who found themselves in the mid-1960s moving in opposite
directions. As Brian Hanley and Scott Miller have demonstrated in
The Lost Revolution,
from around 1963 onwards the IRA leadership had begun redefining
the movement in the direction of communism. “Moscow was Rome to
them”, as Hanley and Millar quote one of their interviewees. Given
the antagonistic state of Sino-Soviet relations in 1965 however, marked by polemical allegations by the Chinese of Soviet 'revisionism' and by the Soviets of Chinese 'dogmatism', in
this light the approach to China is all the more surprising. It must
be concluded on this basis therefore that the approach to China was
not out of any sense of ideological solidarity with China's
anti-Moscow stance, but on the rather more opportunistic grounds of
'my enemy's enemy is my friend'. This also then prompts the bigger
question of why Mao's China, which would within 18 months be the
self-proclaimed capital of the world revolution, shunned participants
in what Cathal Goulding and Seamus Costello clearly believed to be
part of that same said anti-imperialist global revolution.
The
timing of Seamus Costello’s approach to the Chinese embassy was,
from the IRA's perspective, unfortunate. Since 1963 there had been a
clear leftward shift in China's foreign policy, exemplified by a
reversal of China's previously cautious stance towards the burgeoning
guerrilla campaign (largely modelled on Mao's doctrine of 'People's War') of the National Front for the Liberation of South Vietnam
against the American-supported Ngo Dinh Diem government in Saigon. Although the IRA leadership would
clearly have been unaware of Mao's decision in the summer of 1962 to
supply the Vietnamese with some 90,000 rifles free-of-charge, they
were clearly sufficiently inspired by China's rhetoric to believe that some military support
might be forthcoming. What they could not have known,
however, was of a fundamental shift in China's perspective on the global
revolution that had begun to take place at some point around the
second half of 1964.
"And then the Irishman said..." Ho Chi Minh and Mao Zedong, April 1965. |
For
the earlier part of the 1960s, Mao Zedong's ideological outlook,
based on his own brand of dialectical materialism, had declared that
there were four basic 'contradictions' in the world: between the
socialist and imperialist camps; between the proletariat and the
bourgeoisie in capitalist countries; between the oppressed nations
and imperialism; and among the capitalist countries themselves.
Clearly at least two of these contradictions could be seen as having
relevance to the IRA, under the growing influence of socialist
thought, and their struggle against 'British imperialism' in Northern
Ireland. By early 1965, however, that outlook had changed. China
had now begun to see “imperialism headed by the United States” as
the principal contradiction in the world and the one, therefore,
against which required the greatest struggle.
In 1950 Taoiseach Éamon de Valera and his Fianna Fáil government had been considered 'fascist' by the new communist government in Beijing because of Ireland's neutrality in WW2. |
Thus, assistance to
anti-imperialist struggles that would result in the establishment of
a revolutionary anti-American national polity were given rhetorical
prominence. Given what the Chinese knew about Ireland's generally
pro-American and deeply Catholic stance in global affairs, even were
the IRA to bring about a successful reunification of Ireland, it was
probably considered unlikely that they would be successful in
overthrowing the capitalist class that ruled Ireland. As a result a
united Ireland would certainly not have fitted what China considered to be a
revolutionary state. What might have emerged in Ireland would not
have been a truly 'national democratic' revolution, designed to purge
the country of both foreign imperialism and domestic oppression of
the proletariat and peasantry.
While
in the late 1960s and early 1970s Peking
Review
would announce to the world Beijing's support for the civil rights
movements in both the United States and Northern Ireland, and hold
them up as evidence of a rising tide of domestic anti-imperialism
within the 'imperialist camp', China in 1964/5 also had very good,
and less lofty, reasons for not wishing to involve itself in the
problems of Northern Ireland. For historical reasons, as well as the
continued British possession of Hong Kong and its role in essentially
anti-PRC groupings such as the Southeast Asia Treaty Organisation
(SEATO) and activities such as the establishment of Malaysia in 1963
(contrary to the demands of Indonesia's anti-imperialist President
Sokarno) Britain was recognised by China as the second-most prominent
imperialist power in the world, after the United States.
Chiang Kai-shek (l) and Mao Zedong |
(Chiang Kai-shek’s Kuomintang (Nationalist) government had been defeated by Mao Zedong’s Chinese Communist Party in the Chinese Civil War of 1946-1950 and had fled to the island of Taiwan off the southeast coast of mainland China where it continued (and continues today) as the ‘Republic of China’. Some Western nations such as Sweden and Britain immediately switched diplomatic representation to Mao’s Communist government in Beijing, while others continued to recognise Chiang’s KMT in Taipei as the legitimate government of China. Neither Beijing nor Taipei would permit recognition of both.)
Nonetheless,
Britain, unlike many other Western nations (most notably the United
States, but also including Ireland) did have diplomatic relations
with the People's Republic of China. General de Gaulle's break withTaiwan in 1964 had also been a major coup for Mao, the fruits of
which might be imperilled by overt Chinese support for the IRA: if
the IRA, then why not the Corsicans, Basques, Bretons or any other
stateless ethnic or linguistic minority in western Europe? At a time
when isolating the United States from its western allies had become
the main focal point of Chinese attention, driving America's European
'allies' with whom its relations had become increasingly strained
over the course of the 1960s back into Washington's arms was not part
of Mao's plan. Thus, while the Simba rebels in the Republic of the
Congo could expect material and military support from Beijing,
revolutionaries who sought the dismemberment of an important western
European nation could not.
So
while the IRA was moving in a leftward direction in the early to
mid-1960s, taking it toward the ground that Beijing had occupied,
Mao's China was simultaneously moving yet further leftward in matters
of ideology, with the result that anti-Americanism became the
benchmark of a true revolutionary struggle. Isolating the United
States internationally trumped any temptation that might have existed
to strike a blow against Britain, China's oldest and most prominent
imperialist aggressor. Unfortunately for Seamus Costello, Cathal
Goulding and the IRA, this meant they wouldn't even get the loan of
an oul' printing press.
Chris A. Connolly
The IRA's Chinese Takeaway by Chris A. Connolly is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.
Based on a work at http://ayellowguard.blogspot.com/2013/10/the-iras-chinese-takeaway.html.
The IRA's Chinese Takeaway by Chris A. Connolly is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.
Based on a work at http://ayellowguard.blogspot.com/2013/10/the-iras-chinese-takeaway.html.
Further
Reading (if you're interested):
Chen
Jian, Mao's
China and the Cold War
(Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press, 2001)
Brian
Hanley & Scott Millar, The
Lost Revolution: The Story of the Official IRA and the Workers'
Party,
(Dublin: Penguin Ireland, 2009)
Peter
Van Ness, Revolution
and Chinese Foreign Policy,
(Berkeley, University of California Press, 1970)
1 comment:
They were at the wrong Embassy- it's the Japanese that like Ra men.
Post a Comment