Should the Irish be Trusting the Brits?

a. mr, a. they, agreed ireland, alasdair mc, alliance party, american, american revolution, andrew d. sens, andrew pike, anne porter, arms decommissioning commission, bob linnon, brit, brit embassy, british, british embassy, british establishment, british imperialists, british war criminals, brits, bruce morrison, c.  on nov, cheney gang, counties, daily ireland, david beresford, diplock court, dominic martin, downing st, edmund e. lynch, extradition treaty, father mc, father sean mc, father timothy s. healy, foreign relations, forum, georgetown u., georgetown u. back, gfa, good friday agreement, ian paisley, in july, iraqi war, ireland, irish, irish american unity conference, irish embassy, irish national caucus, irish nationalism, irish peace process, irish people, irish republicans, john michael, lady camilla, law school, margaret thatcher, mark m. boatner, media, michael, michael gallagher, middle east, new ireland, new york city, north, northern ireland, occupied six counties, pat finucane center, patton report, peace, perfidious albion, prime minister, prime minister tony blair, prince charles, process, robert livingstone, s. j., s. president, senate, six, six counties, six county, state department, stephen farry, ten men dead, ulster unionist party, us state department, war, war party, when mr, william hughes, winston churchill