During a time of high tension, terror and fear, the Irish Defence Forces
faced the very real threat of the Irish State being plunged into a
savagely sectarian civil war. The southern state faced a breakdown of
law and order, severely challenged by manhunts, prison breaks,
shoot-outs, kidnappings, bank robberies, subversive training camps,
bomb-making factories, illegal weapons shipments, and border operations.
Soldiering Against Subversion is the dramatic and previously untold
story of the Irish Defence Forces' critical role in defending the
southern state against paramilitary forces during the worse years of the
modern Troubles. Retired Lieutenant Colonel, Dan Harvey, describes the
major operations via in-depth interviews with Irish Defence veterans,
revealing how these brave men and women protected the state on home
soil.
From the kidnapping of Shergar and Quinsworth CEO Don Tidey, the manhunt
and capture of INLA leader Dessie 'the Border Fox' O'Hare, the
pandemonium as the Irish army quells a violet prison riot in Mountjoy in
1972, to the Irish navy's efforts to thwart gun-running off the coast of
Kerry, these first-hand accounts reveal the true story of the fight for
the nation's democracy.