British military intelligence agents in Northern Ireland used fears
about demonic possessions, black masses and witchcraft as part of a
psychological war against emerging armed groups in the Troubles in the
1970s, a study says.
Prof Richard Jenkins, from Sheffield University, spoke to military
intelligence officers, including the head of the army’s “black
operations” in Northern Ireland, Captain Colin Wallace.
Wallace told Jenkins that they deliberately stoked up a satanic panic
from 1972 to 1974, even placing black candles and upside-down
crucifixes in derelict buildings in some of Belfast’s war zones.
Then, army press officers leaked stories to newspapers about black
masses and satanic rituals taking place from republican Ardoyne in north
Belfast to the loyalist-dominated east of the city.
In Jenkins’s book, Black Magic and Bogeymen, Wallace admitted that
the “psych-ops” branch of military intelligence exploited public fear of
satanism stoked by films such as The Exorcist and The Devil Rides Out.
Wallace told Jenkins that by whipping up devil-worshipping paranoia,
they created the idea that the emerging paramilitary movements and the
murder campaigns they were engaged in had unleashed evil forces across
Northern Irish society.
Wallace said his Information Policy group, based at military
headquarters in Thiepval barracks, Lisburn, hit upon the idea of
summoning the devil as a way to discredit paramilitary organisations.
“It was quite clear that the church, both the Roman Catholic church
and the Protestant church, even for the paramilitaries, held a fair
degree of influence,” Wallace said. “So we were looking for something
that would be regarded with abhorrence really by the two communities,
and at the same time would be something that paramilitaries couldn’t
justify, and also would be in many ways seen as a reason why some of the
outrages were taking place.
“That sort of degree of activity was lowering the value of human
life. And so eventually it came to the point where we looked at
witchcraft … Ireland was very superstitious and all we had to do was
bring it up to date.”
Wallace said the manufactured hysteria was also useful in keeping
younger children in at night and away from buildings that the military
and police might have used for undercover surveillance.
Jenkins, a professor of sociology, said Wallace’s own religious upbringing and cultural background were behind the ideas.
“I think that Wallace and the Information Policy unit had two main
objectives. First, it was to encourage a devout population to think that
the Troubles had opened a door to ‘dark forces’ and to have them blame
the paramilitaries by implication. The logic being: the ungodly
paramilitaries caused the violence, the violence has encouraged all
kinds of horrible things, ergo the devil, Satan and all that, although I
don’t think that was ever going to fly.
“Second, there was the bonus of keeping people, especially teenagers and kids, off the streets at night.”
The years 1972-74 were among the bloodiest of the Troubles and a
period when Northern Ireland teetered on the brink of civil war. It was
also the era when Ulster loyalist paramilitary groups started carrying
out ritualistic-style torture killings of Catholics and political
opponents.
One of the most notorious of these was the 1973 murder of nationalist politician Paddy Wilson and his friend Irene Andrews.
Jenkins writes that military intelligence sought to create a “subtle”
link in the public’s minds between these true-to-life horrors of the
Troubles and something more supernaturally evil as part of its
propaganda campaign.
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