Tony Geraghty
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Tony Geraghty is a British-Irish writer and journalist. He served in the Parachute Regiment, and was awarded the Joint Service Commendation Medal for his work as a military liaison officer with U.S. forces during the Gulf War. He has been a journalist for The Boston Globe and was the Sunday Times Defence Correspondent in the 1970s.[1]
Geraghty was born in Liverpool, England to an Irish Catholic family. He was educated at the London Oratory.[2]
During the Falls Curfew in July 1970, Geraghty was arrested at gunpoint by a British soldier and charged with impeding the army by being on the street against a military order, which carried an automatic prison sentence on conviction. In September 1970 a magistrate ruled he had no case to answer, and acquitted him.[3]
His 1998 book The Irish War: The Hidden Conflict Between the IRA and British Intelligence was written following research which included interviews with members of British Intelligence, the security forces, and the Provisional Irish Republican Army. It describes the various tactics, both military and political, used by the protagonists in the Troubles in Northern Ireland.[4]
Publisher's Weekly called the book "highly opinionated" but praised "its attention to detail and its direct, potent writing." Library Journal said "[t]he role of British Intelligence in Ulster has never been so deeply explored".[5]
On 3 December 1998 Geraghty's house was searched and he was interviewed by the Ministry of Defence police and in May 1999, he was charged with breaching the Official Secrets Act on the basis that he quoted from classified army documents in the book. The army was concerned that in mentioning their Caister/Crucible computer intelligence databases for tracking the population of Northern Ireland, and the Vengeful-Glutton number plate recognition and vehicle tracking system, he might have been in possession of copies of the documents.[6]
The case was dropped in November 2000.[7][8][9] [10]
He has written several books on the Special Air Service. The Bullet Catchers is a history of close protection bodyguards.
[edit] Books
- Who Dares Wins: The Story of the Special Air Service, 1950-1980, 1980, (ISBN 085368457X)
- March or Die: A New History of the French Foreign Legion, 1987, (ISBN 0816017948)
- The Bullet Catchers, 1989, (ISBN 0586206221)
- Brixmis: The Untold Exploits of Britain's Most Daring Cold War Spy Mission, 1997, (ISBN 0006386733)
- The Irish War: The Hidden Conflict Between the IRA and British Intelligence, 1998, (ISBN 0801864569)
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ Who Dares Wins - Little, Brown Book Group
- ^ Geraghty, Tony (2000). The Irish War: The Hidden Conflict Between the IRA and British Intelligence. Harper Collins, pp. xx-xxi. ISBN 978-0006386742.
- ^ The Irish War: The Hidden Conflict Between the IRA and British Intelligence, pp. 33-39
- ^ Google Books
- ^ Tony Geraghty
- ^ Duncan Campbell, The Guardian, November 2, 2000
- ^ New Statesman - Writers: guilty until found innocent
- ^ The Queen v. Wylde: The camera in the grocery shop
- ^ British Journalism Review Vol. 10, No. 2, 1999 - The sub-secret underworld of the D-Notice business
- ^ Secrets breach denied | Politics | The Guardian