University of Portland Pilot Scholars History Undergraduate Publications and History Presentations 12-2017 British Collusion in the Irish War on Terror: Analyzing the Legal and Ethical Implications of Deploying Collusion Tactics to Defeat Terrorism Gabriel Haughey Follow this and additional works at: https://pilotscholars.up.edu/hst_studpubs Part of the History Commons Citation: Pilot Scholars Version (Modified MLA Style) Haughey, Gabriel, "British Collusion in the Irish War on Terror: Analyzing the Legal and Ethical Implications of Deploying Collusion Tactics to Defeat Terrorism" (2017). History Undergraduate Publications and Presentations. 13. https://pilotscholars.up.edu/hst_studpubs/13 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the History at Pilot Scholars. It has been accepted for inclusion in History Undergraduate Publications and Presentations by an authorized administrator of Pilot Scholars. For more information, please contact
[email protected]. British Collusion in the Irish War on Terror: Analyzing the Legal and Ethical Implications of Deploying Collusion Tactics to Defeat Terrorism By Gabriel Haughey Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Arts in History University of Portland December 2017 Between the mid-1960s and 1998, the Provisional Irish Republican Army (PIRA), a radical paramilitary group not affiliated with the government of the Republic of Ireland, sought to liberate Northern Ireland from British rule through force of arms and unify all of Ireland under one independent Irish nation. In response to the PIRA’s campaign of violence, British military intelligence adopted counter terrorism measures, which included the recruitment and handling of PIRA informants (collusion) in order to infiltrate the paramilitary group’s command network.