Aaron Edwards is a Senior Lecturer in Defence and International Affairs at the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst and an Honorary Research Fellow in the Department of Politics and International Relations at the University of Leicester. He is the author of several books, including Mad Mitch’s Tribal Law: Aden and the End of Empire (2014) and UVF: Behind the Mask (2017). His work has featured in The Irish Times, Belfast Telegraph, Belfast NewsLetter and The Irish News.
Mainstream republicans and some academics have disputed what impact
agents and informers actually had on the IRA’s capacity to carry on
its campaign. Edwards’s valuable research does reveal important
intelligence failures, and the turf wars between Special Branch,
the army and MI5… Edwards’s thesis is not that the IRA was
infiltrated and betrayed into defeat; its campaign could have
continued with diminishing effects for some years. Rather it is
that the intelligence war played a decisive role in strengthening
those in the IRA leadership who wanted a ceasefire.
*The Sunday Times*
Edwards sheds some new light on the activities of 'agents of
influence' – individuals described by MI5 as 'unsung heroes …
subject to control and direction'. He describes in some detail
activities and claims of prominent IRA individuals, including
members of the IRA’s internal security unit, its 'nutting squad',
and the relationship between Willie Carlin, MI5’s spy within Sinn
Féin, and Martin McGuinness as the former IRA commander made his
journey to his election as Northern Ireland’s deputy first
minister. The author rightly points to the destructive rivalry
between the different intelligence-gathering agencies of the
British security state — the RUC’s special branch, the army’s Force
Research Unit (FRU) and MI5.
*Declassified*
Agents of Influence is a forensically detailed account of
Britain’s intelligence operation in Northern Ireland, from 1979
when prime minister Margaret Thatcher made it a top priority. to
1997 when the fighting effectively stopped. Edwards, a Belfast-born
historian, has made excellent use of recently declassified British
government files on the subject. Most impressively, he has also got
personal testimony from three MI5 moles… Agents of
Influence skilfully untangles the complex web of spooks who
flitted between British security, the Northern Ireland Office, the
army and the RUC … One of Edwards’s most striking discoveries is
that on at least two occasions, Special Branch actually saved Gerry
Adams from being assassinated by loyalist gunmen. The British were
apparently afraid that Adams would be replaced by someone more
extreme and less receptive to a democratic solution … Until
recently, it was possible to buy a T-shirt from Sinn Féin’s online
shop with the slogan 'IRA – Undefeated Army'. This coolly factual
and important piece of research suggests that the truth is much
more complex.
*Sunday Business Post*
Edwards, in this seminal work, has done much to shine a light into
this clandestine and often unsavoury world of conflicted
loyalties...Edwards is also careful to guide the reader through the
often-convoluted evolution and development of the British
Intelligence effort and highlights how one of the biggest
impediments in this “War in the Shadows” was interservice rivalry
that took years de-conflict and hone into an integrated and
coordinated system that critically was key to the containment of
PIRA.
*An Cosantóir*
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