This book recounts in great detail the three bloody years which led up to the Downing Street declaration. It was a time of hope, punctuated by appalling acts of savagery by Republicans and Loyalists alike. The Frizzell’s bombing, the Greysteel massacre, the machine-gun attacks on several Catholic-frequented betting shops are but a few of the outrages carried out by bloodthirsty and undoubtedly evil paramilitaries. The author refuses to keep quiet as Sinn Fein and its apologists in the British Labour Party attempt to re-write the history of the troubles.
Ken Wharton Boeken
Deze Engelse schrijver, een voormalige Britse soldaat, beschrijft het gewelddadige religieuze en politieke conflict in Noord-Ierland, bekend als The Troubles, in een reeks non-fictieboeken. Zijn werk is een mondelinge geschiedenis, gebaseerd op firsthand verslagen van soldaten van alle rangen die dienden tijdens Operatie Banner, evenals zijn eigen ervaringen uit twee tours in Noord-Ierland. Door deze getuigenissen ontrafelt hij de complexiteit en de menselijke dimensie van een van de meest hardnekkige conflicten van de moderne geschiedenis. Zijn stijl is direct en onopgesmukt, waarbij de authenticiteit van het verhaal voorop staat.






A vital examination of Northern Ireland fifty years since the start of the Troubles, focusing on the events of 1969
Cut off from Earth for over a century, the people of Mandala have created a unique society and developed religious beliefs and cultural customs that are completely their own. Now, word has come that thousands of colonists are en route from Earth. Fearing a crippling shift in the planet's balance, the Prime Minister vows to do whatever it takes to keep them away.
Wasted Years Wasted Lives, Volume 1
- 430bladzijden
- 16 uur lezen
Continues: Sir, they're taking the kids indoors: the British Army in Northern Ireland, 1973-74. 2012.
'Sir, They'Re Taking the Kids Indoors'
- 362bladzijden
- 13 uur lezen
Continued by: Wasted years, wasted lives. 2013-2014.
The stories of the innocent; the survivors and those left behind, who paid the price of terrorism in Northern Ireland
Irish Republicanism, like its bloodthirsty Loyalist equivalent, bred and nurtured men of evil; psychopathic men and women who killed without compunction or thought; men and women who thought nothing of robbing innocents of their lives, uncaring of the devastation their actions would inflict on wives and children and parents alike. Yet at the same time, some complain about a 'shoot-to-kill' policy, ignoring civil rights and the so-called rule of law. These same concepts were conveniently overlooked by the terrorists of the IRA/INLA and the rest. One is constantly in conflict with the armchair IRA supporters of modern Irish Republicanism who talk of 'oppression' and 'the struggle for freedom.' But rest assured that while there is breath in this author's body, the battle to prevent Gerry Adams and the rest from re-writing history to suit their devious ends will never cease. This book picks up from where Volume 1 left off and describes and analyses the major incidents and stories from the Troubles between the years 1988 and 1990, as Operation Banner continued and Irish Republicanism and Northern Irish Loyalism continued to make the country into a bloody battlefield, where, quite literally, no-one was safe and where violence touched virtually every household in Ulster.