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Could the murder of Lord Mountbatten been prevented?


BRITISH diplomats believed the bomb attack which killed Lord Mountbatten 30 years ago could have been prevented, it emerged today.

Lord Mountbatten, who lived at Broadlands in Romsey, was killed on August 27, 1979 when the IRA detonated a bomb on his boat at his Irish holiday home in Mullaghmore, County Sligo.

Three other people died in the explosion. Later the same day 18 British soldiers - including 16 members of the Parachute Regiment - were killed in an IRA ambush at Warrenpoint in Northern Ireland, marking one of the darkest days of the Troubles.

In a telegram to Foreign Secretary Lord Carrington - released by the National Archives at Kew today under the 30-year rule - the British ambassador in Dublin, Robin Haydon, said there was a widespread belief the attack on Lord Mountbatten could have been stopped.

He said that the concerns about the level of security provided by the Irish security forces were shared by local people who had "greatly liked and respected" the peer, a distinguished Second World War military leader and an uncle of the Duke of Edinburgh.

"For those men and women the horror of what happened was and still is very real and their shame is genuine. The more so because they must share the doubts which we in this embassy have that, had the Garda Siochana been more vigilant and conscientious, the murders might not have happened," he added.

Mr Haydon said he had been told by Lord Mountbatten's daughter, Lady Pamela Hicks, that it was the first year when the boat did not have a police guard on it during the day.

"In the absence of an official report, it would be unwise to go into detail, but I must say I find it extraordinary that the boat was apparently not searched by the Garda before it sailed," he said.

"It is even more extraordinary that, to my knowledge, no questions have been asked by the Irish media about the level and adequacy of Garda security for the Mountbatten family."

Mr Haydon also strongly criticised the "apathetic reaction" of Irish prime minister Jack Lynch, who refused to break off his holiday to Portugal to deal with the crisis.

"The Taoiseach's explanation, that he kept in close touch with the situation and issued instructions from Portugal about what was to be done, did not carry conviction and showed remarkable insensitivity to the need for a political leader in a crisis not only to take action but to be seen to be taking it," he said.

Mr Haydon added that the embassy had received many letters of sympathy and condolence from ordinary members of the Irish public, some written in "a highly emotional vein".

"There has not been one letter that in any way seeks to justify the crimes or to mitigate their horror," he noted.

"In any other country, that last sentence would probably be unnecessary: here, it has to be said because the Irish have a remarkable capacity for blaming others, especially the British, for their own failings and inadequacies."

Comments(9)

Ken Hutchinson says...
12:22pm Wed 30 Dec 09

Obviously the Taoiseach did not share Mr Haydons' view that what happened on that day constituted a "crisis".

Condor Man says...
12:48pm Wed 30 Dec 09

Ken Hutchinson wrote:
Obviously the Taoiseach did not share Mr Haydons' view that what happened on that day constituted a "crisis".
no, I expect they weren't. Then again, history will not view them favourably

damien thorn says...
12:59pm Wed 30 Dec 09

not quite the nice old gent as portrayed,lots of skeletons in his cupboard.

southy says...
1:10pm Wed 30 Dec 09

history not being to kind to mountbatten, information is now being starting to be release, on what the man was really like. and the total c@ckups he made in india. and it took another person to make the best of the total mess he made. he was more interested in his, how can you say, the bit on the side.
still a nice enough person to chat to about fishing.

Ken Hutchinson says...
1:19pm Wed 30 Dec 09

"still a nice enough person to chat to about fishing.".......Or birds?
This bunch have either been riding each other or somebody else that they shouldn't be for centuries....

hulla baloo says...
1:36pm Wed 30 Dec 09

From what I understand, his naval career was not that good, losing a few ships due to bad leadership.
But as another poster says, good for chats about fishing.

southy says...
2:16pm Wed 30 Dec 09

dulce et decorum est pro patria mori
churchill made big big errors while he was first sea lord, that bad he got removed from the post the only person to be demoted from that post.
one good thing hulla baloo mountbatten was not involed at the sea battle of ceylon.

Condor Man says...
4:22pm Wed 30 Dec 09

I'm sure Mountbatten was as awful as the rest of them but he and those kids didn't deserve to die as they did. Interesting to read today that Maggie tore into the Yanks afterwards, blasting them for letting too much money get to the IRA. It was only after 9/11 that they stopped the flow of cash to terrorist groups.

southy says...
4:54pm Wed 30 Dec 09

Condor Man wrote:
I'm sure Mountbatten was as awful as the rest of them but he and those kids didn't deserve to die as they did. Interesting to read today that Maggie tore into the Yanks afterwards, blasting them for letting too much money get to the IRA. It was only after 9/11 that they stopped the flow of cash to terrorist groups.
they was also getting funds coming out of england also. at the same time it was known that there was money collection here in the south for the ira. condor
i take it your reading the papers that got release to day, i like what lawson said about her, he called her a dictator and put her on the same level has franco


LordLouis Mountbatten Lord Louis Mountbatten

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