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  1. From 1971 to 1972, the IRA took to the offensive and conducted a relatively high-intensity campaign against the British and Northern Ireland security forces and the infrastructure of the state. The British Army characterised this period as the "insurgency phase" of the IRA's campaign.

    • 1969-1997
    • Military stalemate [1] [2]Ceasefire
  2. 15 de may. de 2019 · Established in 1919 to halt British rule in Northern Ireland using armed forces, the Irish Republican Army, or IRA, fought for independence and a reunified republic—often in tandem with, but...

  3. In January 1971, the IRA and British Army held secret talks aimed at stopping persistent rioting in Ballymurphy. [412] [413] It was agreed that the IRA would be responsible for policing there, but the agreement was short-lived. [412] [413] During the 1975 ceasefire incident centres were set up across Northern Ireland, staffed by Sinn ...

  4. En los años 1971-94, los Provos montaron una ofensiva armada contra tropas, policías y paramilitares opuestos a ellos con el objetivo de unificar la isla. Otra de sus tácticas consistió en una guerra económica contra el comercio en el norte de Irlanda. En la primera mitad de los años 70 la campaña fue más sangrienta.

  5. In December 1971, the Official IRA killed Ulster Unionist Party (UUP) Senator John Barnhill at his home in Strabane. [27] This was the first murder of a politician in Northern Ireland or the Republic of Ireland since the assassination of Free State Minister for Justice Kevin O'Higgins in 1927.

  6. 13 August 2019. By Julian O'Neill,BBC News NI Home Affairs Correspondent. How 1969 sparked the Provisional IRA's deadly campaign. Fifty years ago, the sparks of sectarian conflict in Northern...

  7. As the Provisionals stepped up their violent campaign to reunify Ireland, the army responded by retaliating against Catholic communities. In 1970, the army began large scale cordon and search operations in Catholic neighborhoods. By 1971, the army was placing Catholic men by the hundreds in indefinite detention without charging them with any crime.