Ireland: The fight to end US military use of Shannon Airport

September 19, 2022
Issue 
Maragretta D'Arcy and Niall Farrell at Shannon Airport in October 2012.
Margaretta D鈥橝rcy and Niall Farrell protest at Shannon Airport in October 2012. Photo: Shannonwatch

鈥淭his is not a regular airport,鈥 Margaretta D鈥橝rcy told me as we heard a C-130T Hercules plane prepare to take off from Shannon Airport, in Ireland on September 11. The enormous United States Navy aircraft had flown from Sigonella, a US naval air station in Italy. A few minutes earlier, a US Navy C-40A left Shannon for a US military base in Stuttgart, Germany, after flying in from Naval Air Station Oceana in Virginia.

Shannon is not a regular airport, D鈥橝rcy said, because while it is merely a civilian airport, it allows US military planes to fly in and out of it, with Gate 42 of the airport functioning as its 鈥渇orward operating base鈥.

D鈥橝rcy, 88, who is a legendary Irish actress and documentary filmmaker, is a regular member of , comprising a group of activists who have 鈥 since 2008 鈥 held monthly vigils at a roundabout near the airport. Shannonwatch鈥檚 are to 鈥渆nd US military use of Shannon Airport, to stop rendition flights through the airport and to obtain accountability for both from the relevant Irish authorities and political leaders鈥.

Irish military veteran Edward Horgan, who has been on peacekeeping missions to Cyprus and Palestine, said the vigil is vital. 鈥淚t鈥檚 important that we come here every month,鈥 he said, 鈥渂ecause without this there is no visible opposition鈥 to the footprint of the US military in Ireland.

According to Shannonwatch鈥檚 report 鈥溾, the use of the airport as a US forward operating base began in 2002鈥03, and this transformation 鈥渨as, and still is, deeply offensive to the majority of Irish people鈥.

Article 29 of the of 1937 sets in place the framework for the country鈥檚 neutrality. Allowing a foreign military to use Irish soil violates Article 2 of the 1907 , to which Ireland is a signatory. Nonetheless, said John Lannon from Shannonwatch, the Irish government has allowed almost 3 million US troops to pass through Shannon Airport since 2002 and has even assigned a permanent staff officer to the airport. 鈥淚rish airspace and Shannon Airport became the virtual property of the US war machine,鈥 said Niall Farrell from the Galway Alliance Against War. 鈥淚rish neutrality was truly dead.鈥

鈥楶itstop of Death鈥

D鈥橝rcy鈥檚 eyes gleam as she recounts her time at the Greenham Common Women鈥檚 Peace Camp in Berkshire, England, involving activists from Wales, which was set up to prevent the storage and passage of US cruise missiles at the Greenham Common military base. The camp in 1981 and lasted until 2000.

D鈥橝rcy went to jail three times during this struggle 鈥 out of a total of at least 20 times she was in prison for her antiwar activism. 鈥淚t was good,鈥 she said, 鈥渂ecause we got rid of the weapons and the land was restored to the people. It took 19 years. Women consistently fought until we got what we wanted鈥.

When D鈥橝rcy was arrested, prison authorities strip-searched her. She refused to put her clothes back on and went on a hunger strike and naked protest. In doing so, she forced the prison authorities to stop the practice of performing strip searches. 鈥淚f you act with dignity, then you force them to treat you with dignity,鈥 she said.

Part of this act of dignity includes refusing to allow her country鈥檚 airport to be used as part of US wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. Since 2002, several brave people have entered the airport and attempted to deface US aircraft. On September 5, 2002, Eoin Dubsky 鈥溾 on a US warplane (for which he was fined); and on January 29, 2003, Mary Kelly took an axe onto the runway and a military plane, causing US$1.5 million in damage; she was also fined.

A few weeks later, on February 3, the Pitstop Ploughshares,a group of five activists belonging to the Catholic Worker Movement,聽attacked a US Navy C-40 aircraft 鈥 the same one that Kelly had previously damaged 鈥 with hammers and a pickaxe. This is a story vividly聽by Harry Browne in Hammered by the Irish. They also spray-painted 鈥溾 on a hangar.

D鈥橝rcy and Farrell marched the runway in 2012 to protest the airport being used by US planes. Arrested and convicted, they nonetheless to the runway the next year in orange jumpsuits.

During the court proceedings in June 2014, D鈥橝rcy grilled the airport authorities about why they had not arrested the pilot of an armed US Hercules plane that arrived at Shannon Airport four days after their arrest on the runway. 鈥淎re there two sets of rules 鈥 one for people like us trying to stop the bombing and one for the bombers?鈥 she . Shannon Airport鈥檚 inspector Pat O鈥橬eill replied, 鈥淚 don鈥檛 understand the question鈥.

鈥淭his is a civilian airport,鈥 D鈥橝rcy said as she gestured toward the runway. 鈥淗ow does a government allow the military to use a civilian airport?鈥

Extraordinary renditions

The US government began illegally transporting prisoners from Afghanistan and other places to its prison in the Guant谩namo Bay detention camp and other 鈥溾 in Europe, North Africa and West Asia. The act of transporting the prisoners came to be known as 鈥渆xtraordinary rendition鈥.

When Ireland鈥檚 foreign affairs minister Dermot Ahern was asked about the 鈥渆xtraordinary rendition鈥 flights into Shannon Airport in 2005, he : 鈥淚f anyone has any evidence of any of these flights, please give me a call and I will have it immediately investigated.鈥 Amnesty International replied that it had direct evidence that up to six CIA chartered planes had used Shannon Airport about 50 times. Amnesty International produced a thorough four years later that showed that their earlier number was deflated and that likely hundreds of such US military flights had flown in and out of the airport.

While the Irish government over the years has said that it this practice, the Irish police 鈥 the Garda S铆och谩na 鈥 have not boarded these flights to inspect them. As a signatory of the (signed in 1953) and the (adopted in 1984 and ratified in 1987), Ireland is duty-bound to prevent collaboration with 鈥渆xtraordinary rendition鈥 鈥 a position taken by the .

Irish MPs Mick Wallace and Clare Daly were at Shannon Airport in 2014 for trying to search two US aircraft that they believed were carrying 鈥渢roops and armaments鈥. They were frustrated by the Irish government鈥檚 false assurances. 鈥淗ow do they know? Did they search the planes? Of course not,鈥 Wallace and Daly said.

Meanwhile, according to the Shannonwatch :聽鈥淩ather than take measures to identify past involvement in rendition or to prevent further complicity, successive Irish [g]overnments have simply denied any possibility that Irish airports or airspace were used by US rendition planes.鈥

Conor Cregan rode his bicycle near Shannon Airport in 2006. Airport police inspector Lillian O鈥橲hea 鈥 who recognised him from protests 鈥 confronted him, but Cregan rode off. He was eventually arrested. At Cregan鈥檚 trial, O鈥橲hea that police had been told to stop and harass the activists at the airport. Zoe Lawlor of Shannonwatch said that 鈥渉arassment such as this reinforces the importance of our protest鈥.

Sinn F茅in 鈥 the largest opposition party in the Northern Ireland Assembly 鈥 put forward a in 2003 and 2015 to enshrine the concept of neutrality into the Irish Constitution. Sinn F茅in MP Se谩n Crowe the government has 鈥渟old Irish neutrality piece by piece against the wishes of the people鈥.

If the idea of neutrality is adopted by the Irish people, it will be because of the sacrifices of people such as D鈥橝rcy, Farrell, and Kelly.

[This article was produced by . Vijay Prashad is an Indian historian, editor and journalist. He is a writing fellow and chief correspondent at Globetrotter. He is an editor of and the director of .]

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