Republican News · Thursday 7 February 2002

[An Phoblacht]

IRA bombs 10 Downing Street

BY ART Mac EOIN

In one of its most spectacular military operations ever, the IRA, in February 1991, bombed the British War Cabinet, which was meeting at the epicentre of British political power - Number 10 Downing Street.

Just after 10 am on Thursday, 7 February, as the most senior figures in the Tory War Cabinet discussed their strategy in the Gulf War, then raging, one of three IRA mortars, launched from a firing position on the corner of Horseguards Avenue and Whitehall, landed in the British Prime Minister's residence.

Blast windows and their frames protecting the cabinet room shattered as ministers dived for cover under tables. The IRA mortar heading straight for the cabinet room had hit a tree and exploded 15 yards short of its target. This, coupled with special defences in the cabinet room, ensured that injuries were restricted to two civil servants and two policemen attached to the Diplomatic Protection Squad. What was not lost on those inside Number 10 was that had the device not struck the tree it would have ploughed straight into the cabinet room, almost certainly killing the British Prime Minister and most senior members of the British government.

Two other mortars launched seconds later slightly overshot their target and crashed into Mountbatten Green, causing damage to numbers 11 and 12 Downing Street, the offices of the Treasury and Foreign Ministry.

The fact that the IRA, in the midst of one of the tightest security clampdowns in British history, had reached the centre of government in Britain and came within feet of wiping out its top tier, shocked the British establishment and dominated news headlines across the world.

The IRA, in a statement issued within hours of the attack, said: "Today an active service unit of the IRA successfully breached the greatly enhanced wartime security surrounding 10 Downing Street by launching a mortar attck in the heart of the British establishment.

"The operation had been planned over a number of months. Its inception pre-dates both John Major's coming to power and the beginning of British involvement in the Gulf War.

"Whether the Gulf War goes on for weeks or years, let the British government understand that, while nationalist people in the Six Counties are forced to live under British rule, the British cabinet will be forced to meet in bunkers.

"The British government has the solution to the conflict of which today's attack is a part. It should initiate the process which will lead to British withdrawal from our country and create the conditions for a true democracy throughout Ireland."

The IRA's most spectacular operation since the attack at the Conservative Party conference in Brighton in 1984, took place on 7 February 1991, 11 years ago this week.


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