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Decommissioning and paramilitary strategy in Northern Ireland: A problem compared
Authors:Kirsten E. Schulze  M. L. R. Smith
Affiliation:1. Lecturer in the Department of International History, London School of Economics and Political Science , University of London;2. Lecturer in the Department of War Studies, King's College , University of London;3. Principal Consultant to the Institute of Defence and Strategic Studies , Nanyang Technological University , Singapore
Abstract:This study examines the problems of paramilitary decommissioning in Northern Ireland. It analyses why decommissioning has become so contentious in the Northern Ireland peace process. Decommissioning, though, is not a unique or intrinsically insurmountable problem. This is demonstrated by highlighting the issue in international context. Three examples of decommissioning in conflict resolution processes are assessed: the Lebanon, El Salvador and Mozambique. These varied examples do supply some limited lessons for Northern Ireland. This study argues that the explanation for the intractability of decommissioning in Northern Ireland resides, to a greater extent, in the tactical and strategic reasoning of the main paramilitary groupings in Northern Ireland. The factors that condition their thinking, however, can be found in the nature of the peace process itself which provides the paramilitiaries with every incentive to retain possession of their weapons.
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