The Irish Civil War: Law, Execution and Atrocity

Page 11

Chapter 2

A State in Chaos ‘We have no army, we have only an armed mob,’ said Michael Collins, speaking just after the siege of the Four Courts.1 Dozens of republican prisoners captured at the Four Courts had been allowed to escape from Portobello barracks by National Army men assigned to guard them. The doors of the holding area were left open and prisoners just swarmed over the barracks’ walls and disappeared into the night. Lack of discipline in the National Army had become a major issue; desertion and drunkenness were rife.2 Some units were well run, but in many battalions officers went drinking with their men, making control of troops all but impossible. In Limerick there were reports of sentries falling drunk at their posts, and in Clonmel soldiers potted birds with handguns and leered intimidatingly at passers-by on street corners. In the months that followed, National Army soldiers would commit an astonishing number of criminal offences unrelated to the war.3 The cause of it all was that the National Army had been created in a tearing hurry. In the spring, the Irish Republican Army had parted company with the provisional government over the Treaty and this brought with it the first hint of civil war. To guard against this threat, the provisional government had created the National Army and many less than savoury men were recruited in the rush. ‘We have put guns in the hands of criminals,’ admitted Collins. Many other recruits had come from the British Army which was downsizing. Soldiers, demobbed in England, were brought over


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