
36 October-November 2025
and gossip from his associates. Indeed, he
also forbade alcohol consumption during
conferences with the British. Although he was
probably wrong to suggest the BIA was a mere
“front” for British intelligence, it was definitely
infiltrated by it.
One of the BIA’s organizers was Dame
Daphne Park. She had only recently retired
from MI6, where she served as Controller of its
Western Hemisphere Division. She used to
refer to FitzGerald as “Dear Garret.”
Park’s last MI6 post was as Controller of the
Western Hemisphere, where she oversaw
eorts to mislead the Americans into believing
the Provisional IRA was linked to the Soviet
Union and to tarnish Fianna Fáil’s reputation
among Irish-American politicians by
associating them with the IRA.
Park was a member of the Special Forces
Club, where she regularly mingled with ex-SOE,
SAS, and MI5/MI6 personnel.
Margaret Thatcher appointed her to the
Board of the BBC.
Park was a ruthless operator and deeply
involved in the machinations behind the
murder of Patrice Lumumba.
An unapologetic colonialist, she told the
Daily Telegraph in April 2003: “The government
is too worried about speaking out [against
Mugabe] because they think they will be
accused of being colonialist. Well, I don’t think
that’s such a terrible crime.”
FitzGerald befriended Christopher Ewart-
Biggs at the BIA shortly before the Englishman
was appointed ambassador to Ireland in 1976.
Ewart-Biggs had once acted as liaison between
MI6 and GCHQ — the latter still responsible for
tapping the phones of Irish citizens.
7. Bilderberg and The Kilowatt
Group
FitzGerald was also a member of the pro-NATO
Bilderberg Group. He first met Margaret
Thatcher at a Bilderberg conference. Thereafter,
he visited her and her political mentor, Airey
Neave MP, on several occasions at the House
of Commons while she was still leader of the
Opposition.
In 1976, during his tenure as Minister for
Foreign Aairs, Ireland joined the Kilowatt
Group, a network through which MI6, the CIA,
reported to London that FitzGerald “told us last
night that the Committee intends to question
all those involved in the arms trial and to
publish the proceedings in full. Evidence will
be taken from people in the North, whose
identities will, however, be protected. He said
that of the £100,000 or so expended, it
appeared that perhaps half had been spent on
genuine relief works.”
Peck added: “It looks increasingly as if the
proceedings of the committee could be a re-run
of the arms trial and be awkward for Messrs.
Haughey and [Neil] Blaney.”
4. FitzGerald’s Cover-Up of
MI6’s Role in the Arms Crisis
Patrick Crinnion of Garda Intelligence was
convicted of espionage-related crimes in
February 1973 alongside his MI6 handler John
Wyman.
On June 12, 1973, Crinnion wrote to Garret
FitzGerald and other ministers, asserting: “…I
recklessly crusaded against the IRA and
subversives without regard to the double-
edged political weapon the IRA is, and my
personal efforts resulted in a toll which
included precipitating the Fianna Fáil Arms
Crisis…” Crinnion precipitated the crisis by
delivering a note about the arms importation
attempt to Liam Cosgrave, Leader of the
Opposition.
FitzGerald chose to cover this up.
5. The Institute for the Study of
Conflict
Incredibly, FitzGerald helped an MI6 and IRD
propaganda campaign against Haughey (and
others) in the early 1970s.
The Institute for the Study of Conflict (ISC)
was set up by the CIA and managed in
cooperation with MI6. It was run by Brian
Crozier.
FitzGerald joined the ISC in the early 1970s.
One of his contributions was an essay for a
book called Ulster Debate. The foreword was
written by Brian Crozier. The book smeared
John Hume as a criminal.
While FitzGerald may initially have been
unaware of MI6’s hidden involvement, it
became public knowledge later. This explains
the unusual omission of any reference to the
ISC, Ulster Debate and Brian Crozier in
FitzGerald’s otherwise comprehensive
autobiographies.
6. The British-Irish Association
(BIA)
The BIA was founded in 1972 at the behest of
David Astor and others. Astor, then editor of
The Sunday Observer, was an MI6 asset.
In All In A Life, FitzGerald recounted how he
tried to attend as many BIA meetings as
possible, including the inaugural conference
at Magdalen College, Cambridge, in 1973.
In stark contrast, Haughey disliked traveling
to Britain so much that he deliberately chose
flight routes avoiding British airports.
In his memoirs, Austin Currie of the SDLP
(and later Fine Gael for which he was elected a
TD) recalls that in 1982: “In passing, I referred
to a forthcoming meeting of the British-Irish
Association in Oxford. It was held each year,
alternating between Oxford and Cambridge,
and was attended by politicians from Ireland
and Britain, academics, higher civil servants
and opinion-formers generally…The Taoiseach
responded strongly, saying no-one should
attend as the Association was ‘a front for MI5.’
I enquired if Brian [Lenihan] would be attending
and, having been assured he would not be, I
suggested that the Association be informed
since, in the program I had received, the
Minister for Foreign Aairs was hosting a
reception at the conference. Brian, rather
shamefacedly, said he would do so.”
Haughey was clearly afraid the British would
use the BIA to pick up unguarded conversations