NEW WORK: ‘Fall Grün’ (2023-)

 


At the beginning of WW2, Germany were drawing up plans for the possible invasion of Ireland. Crucial to this were a number of spying missions, feasibility studies for attack, as well as the building of alliances and networks of contacts within the restructured but dissident Irish Republican movement. Sensing an opportunity to claim or reclaim Northern Ireland, an IRA cohort led by Sean Russell, had already drawn up invasion plans of their own and delivered it personally to the Abwer in Berlin – namely ‘Plan Kathleen’. The IRA were attempting to court German Intelligence, instigate and orchestrate a German attack on Ulster. A number of Nazi Spies entered Ireland by air and by sea for general intelligence gathering. Many German spies were apprehended and interned, but many were active through the early years of the war. Some main players participated in sending and receiving coded transmissions to Berlin throughout the war - many of which Irish State Intelligence managed to decode and decipher from its headquarters in Dublin.

 


Fall Grün - ‘Case Green’ or “Operation Green” - is an ongoing project about espionage, subterfuge, intelligence & counter-intelligence activities in early 20th Century Ireland. Specifically, this work relates to clandestine IRA & German collusion and possible plans to invade Ireland and Northern Ireland during the early stages of World War Two. The restructuring of the IRA post-1930s, the adaptation of State Intelligence (G2) to new forms of threat, as well as the State’s close relationship with British Intelligence bodies made Ireland a microcosm of the major players in the Second War. Nazi Germany had many tentacles permeating in the various layers of Irish Society, and the German Legation became the epicentre of activities and direct link with the Nazi High Command. In the context of Irish neutrality, these realities led to the Irish state finding itself in a compromising position – caught between the real threat of both British and German Invasion.

Over the last few months, I have drawn up lists of German landing sites, safe-houses, artefacts & compiled archive images, intelligence documents courtesy of the British National Archives in Kew, Irish Military Archives and private archives to build a narrative of WW2 espionage in the context of a neutral Ireland.