Editing Anti-Treaty Irish Republican Army

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{{Infobox guerilla organization|name=Anti-Treaty Irish Republican Army|split_to=[[Official Irish Republican Army]]<br>[[Provisional Irish Republican Army]]|split_from=[[Irish Republican Army (original)]]|dates=March 1922-December 1969|native_name=Óglaigh na hÉireann|allegiance=[[Irish Republic]]|ideology=[[Irish Republicanism]]<br>[[Abstentionism]]<br>'''Factions:'''<br>[[Catholic Nationalism]]<br>[[Socialism]]<br>[[Communism]]|position=Big tent|opponents=[[Irish Free State]]<br>[[Republic of Ireland]]<br>[[United Kingdom]]|war=[[Irish Civil War]]<br>[[S-Plan]]<br>[[Northern Campaign]]<br>[[Campaign of Resistance to British Occupation]]<br>[[The Troubles]]|leader1_title=Chief of Staff|leader2_title=Quartermaster General|image=Irish_flag.png.png|misc=|module=|organizations=[[Anti-Treaty Sinn Féin]] (political wing, sometimes)}}
{{Infobox guerilla organization|name=Anti-Treaty Irish Republican Army|split_to=[[Official Irish Republican Army]]<br>[[Provisional Irish Republican Army]]|split_from=[[Irish Republican Army (original)]]|dates=March 1922-December 1969|native_name=Óglaigh na hÉireann|allegiance=[[Irish Republic]]|ideology=[[Irish Republicanism]]<br>[[Abstentionism]]<br>'''Factions:'''<br>[[Catholic Nationalism]]<br>[[Socialism]]<br>[[Communism]]|position=Big tent|opponents=[[Irish Free State]]<br>[[Republic of Ireland]]<br>[[United Kingdom]]|war=[[Irish Civil War]]<br>[[S-Plan]]<br>[[Northern Campaign]]<br>[[Campaign of Resistance to British Occupation]]<br>[[The Troubles]]|leader1_title=Chief of Staff|leader2_title=Quartermaster General|image=Irish_flag.png.png|misc=|module=}}


The '''Anti-Treaty Irish Republican Army''' was an Irish Republican militant organization that existed from the split between the Pro-Treaty and Anti-Treaty IRA in 1922 to the split between the Provisional IRA and the Official IRA in 1969.<ref>{{Web citation|author=MÍCHEÁL MAC DONNCHA|newspaper=An Phoblacht|title=The IRA Convention of March 1922|date=2022-03-25|url=https://www.anphoblacht.com/contents/28296}}</ref>
The '''Anti-Treaty Irish Republican Army''' was an Irish Republican militant organization that existed from the split between the Pro-Treaty and Anti-Treaty IRA in 1922 to the split between the Provisional IRA and the Official IRA in 1969.<ref>{{Web citation|author=MÍCHEÁL MAC DONNCHA|newspaper=An Phoblacht|title=The IRA Convention of March 1922|date=2022-03-25|url=https://www.anphoblacht.com/contents/28296}}</ref>
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== Ideology ==
== Ideology ==
The Anti-Treaty IRA was a broad organization throughout its history, encompassing most Anti-Treaty and Abstentionist Republicans committed to the armed struggle. However, most radical left and otherwise progressive elements such as the fledgling [[Communist Party of Ireland]] within the broader Republican movement aligned with the Anti-Treaty forces rather than the Free State, which was supported by, among others, Fascists like [[Eoin O'Duffy]] and the most reactionary elements within the [[Catholic Church]] and the bourgeoise in general.<ref>{{Web citation|author=Patrick Long|newspaper=Dictionary of Irish Biography|title=O'Duffy, Eoin|url=https://www.dib.ie/biography/oduffy-eoin-a6728}}</ref>
The Anti-Treaty IRA was a broad organization throughout its history, encompassing most Anti-Treaty and Abstentionist Republicans committed to the armed struggle. However, most radical left and otherwise progressive elements such as the fledgling [[Communist Party of Ireland]] within the broader Republican movement aligned with the Anti-Treaty forces rather than the Free State, which was supported by, among others, Fascists like [[Eoin O'Duffy]] and the most reactionary elements within the [[Catholic Church]] and the bourgeoise in general.<ref>{{Web citation|author=Patrick Long|newspaper=Dictionary of Irish Biography|title=O'Duffy, Eoin|url=https://www.dib.ie/biography/oduffy-eoin-a6728}}</ref>
Despite this, for a time during the 1940s, as Britain was fighting against [[Nazi Germany]], some within the Irish Republican movement believed that the IRA should seek to collaborate with the Nazis against Britain. This mirrored IRA collaboration with the [[German Empire (1871–1918)|German Empire]] during the [[First World War]], and was not done out of ideological similarity or sympathy, but rather out of the old Republican idea that "England’s difficulty is Ireland’s opportunity".<ref name=":3">{{Web citation|newspaper=Socialist Republican Media|title=Reclaiming Volunteer Sean Russell|date=2019-08-14|url=https://socialistrepublicanmedia.home.blog/2019/08/14/reclaiming-volunteer-sean-russell/}}</ref> The Anti-Treaty IRA Chief of Staff who led many of these collaboration efforts, [[Seán Russell]], even said:<blockquote>"I am not a Nazi. I am not even pro-German. I am an Irishman fighting for the independence of Ireland. The British have been our enemies for hundreds of years. They are the enemy of Germany today. If it suits Germany to give us help to achieve independence, I am willing to accept it, but no more, and there must be no strings attached"<ref name=":3" /></blockquote>Despite this, today these ties are used by Anti-Republican and collaborationist figures to discredit the IRA as a form of [[Pinkwashing]].<ref>{{Web citation|newspaper=Broadsheet|title=Hands Off Seán|date=2020-06-11|url=https://www.broadsheet.ie/2020/06/11/hands-off-sean/}}</ref> In reality, those with actual Nazi sympathies included [[Éamon de Valera]], the Prime Minister of the collaborator regime ruling Ireland at the time, [[Douglas Hyde]], President of the same government, who both sent condolences to Nazi officials after [[Adolf Hitler|Adolf Hitler's]] death,<ref>{{Web citation|newspaper=Independent|title=condolences on Hitler's death|date=2005-12-30|url=https://www.independent.ie/irish-news/hyde-and-de-valera-offered-condolences-on-hitlers-death/25954338.html}}</ref> and [[Winston Churchill]], who expressed similar [[Antisemitism|Antisemitic]] beliefs to the Nazis and expressed admiration for their government.


== References ==
== References ==
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