The author begins with examining the roots and social beliefs around Irish Republicanism. M.L.R. Smith lays out that those roots come from a period of attempted underground rebellions, revolts, assassinations and bombings stemming from a disdain for British occupation of Ireland around the late 18th century to the early 20th century. Given how the British Government’s responses to many of these crises were to concede, M.L.R. Smith argues that the Irish Freedom Fighters were boldende to continue their campaign, seeing it as the only way to change British Rule over Ireland. This created a feeling that the Irish needed to abolish all influence of British control over the Emerald Isle to see true liberation. Of note however to the information presented above was the heavy bias that the author presents. It is evident within the first few pages that M.L.R. Smith is heavily biased in his interpretation of history, making many disparaging comments of Irish liberation from a colonial government that oppressed the people. Although the analysis of history seems to be well done, the interpretations from it are highly biased.
Having just finished this book, I find it to be highly biased, poorly written. After finishing this book, the only thing I can say I enjoyed was the topic itself. The military strategy was interesting, however, the way it was written was not, and trudging through the biased interpretations made me worry about how biased the information was.