
Note
Letters -- even if sent via e-mail -- should include name and
address for verification
Keep them short -- short letters have a better chance of
being published and a better chance of being read.
Kitson overlooked
A Chairde,
I'm very disappointed in one major respect with An
Phoblacht, 30 January. Nowhere in the eight page Bloody
Sunday pullout nor in any of the other pages, does the name
of the most guilty British soldier appear. Other names
mentioned, such as Ford, MacLellan and Wilford are certainly
war criminals, but the one who planned and initiated the
deliberate slaughter on that day was Kitson, at that time
the British army's guru on `counter-revolutionary' warfare.
He had just completed his book `Low Intensity Operations'
and had been sent by the British government to the Six
Counties to put his plans into effect to terrorise the
civilian population into submission.
On the day, others directed the murder operations, but it
had been planned and initiated by Kitson.
His plan, of course, despite the savagery imposed on Derry,
did not succeed in terrorising the nationalist people -
indeed they responded in the opposite vein, they stood up
and have remained standing up ever since.
Now that more evidence shows clearly the guilt of those
British forces in Derry on the day, never must the main
guilt of Kitson be overlooked.
`Observer',
Bristol.
Mayhew's aggressive language
A Chairde,
Sir Patrick Mayhew's use of aggressive language in attacking
the IRA was being read as a further sign that the security
situation in the North may be about to deteriorate further.
Or was it Sir Patrick's intention to provoke a further
deterioration in the situation? Instead of making
provocative and inflammatory speeches Sir Patrick Mayhew
would better employ what little time he has left as Northern
Ireland Secretary in urging the Unionists to accept the
recommendation of an Independent Commission, instead of the
RUC, to adjudicate on contentious marches.
Joe Murphy,
Birmingham.