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The Next One Is for You

A True Story of Guns, Country, and the IRA's Secret American Army

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

From New York Times reporter and Pulitzer finalist Ali Watkins, the long-buried story of how a group of Philadelphia gunrunners armed the IRA at the height of the Troubles—a true-crime saga that illuminates Irish America’s central role in the conflict and its legacy.

Northern Ireland, 1975. Violence has erupted on the streets of Belfast. After years as a sleepy, guerilla army, the IRA is clashing with Loyalist gangs and heavily armed British soldiers. But the Troubles have spilled beyond the small island: An ocean away, in the heart of Philadelphia’s Irish enclave, a teenage girl finds a letter in her mailbox. Inside is a bullet, and the message is clear: The next one is for you or your family.
As celebrated New York Times reporter Ali Watkins reveals in this exquisitely reported nonfiction thriller, the conflict in Northern Ireland might have gone very differently had it not been for a small, ragtag band of carpenters, family men, and fugitives in the United States. The Philadelphia Five, as they came to be known, supplied the Irish Republican Army at its moment of greatest need, bolstering the fight for a united Ireland but fueling the Troubles at an untold cost. This small group of Irish nationalists smuggled hundreds of rifles, rocket launchers, explosives, and armor-piercing bullets across the Atlantic Ocean and into Northern Ireland. Whether they were skimming money from innocuous-seeming charities, coolly slipping weapons into hidden compartments of vans and houses, or scouring local graveyards for the names of dead Irishmen to use on federal firearm forms, the gunrunners approached their mission—to unite Ireland under one flag, by any means necessary—with ruthless poise, even as European and American investigators closed in, members of their own movement began to turn on them, and bodies stacked up on all sides.
A gripping tale of crime, rebellion, and the hazy line between them, The Next One Is for You is the definitive account of America’s hand in the Troubles—a conflict whose resonance is still felt today, in the United States and Ireland alike.

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    • Booklist

      February 1, 2025
      The violence of the Troubles in Ireland is still within living memory, with political ramifications that still echo today. While much historical attention has focused on how the Troubles serve as a lodestone of modern Irish life, less attention has been paid to the Irish diaspora and the support it offered to nationalist efforts. New York Times journalist Watkins reveals the understudied role of Philadelphia's Irish immigrants during the conflict. By smuggling weapons into Ireland and developing a militant sense of identity, they created crucial leverage for the nationalists back home. Watkins' formidable skills as a crime journalist are on full display. This sweeping history accounts for a 30-year period on both sides of the Atlantic, but it's foregrounded by the lives of a handful of characters. Watkins illuminates how these people negotiated the relationship between violence and politics and the ways in which they struggled to reach a sovereign future--let alone envision a peaceful one. Through their stories, Watkins shows how a revolutionary period is experienced by the individuals at its forefront.

      COPYRIGHT(2025) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Kirkus

      Starred review from April 1, 2025
      Robust, ominous epic of blue-collar Americans running guns to the Irish Republican Army.New York Times journalist Watkins writes with exactitude and compassion, digging deeply in archives to capture a high-stakes tale that played out internationally during the early 1970s, when the Northern Irish sectarian war against British domination (the Troubles) was at its brutal extreme. While the Provisional IRA received a new generation of recruits due to outrage following Unionist excesses like the "Bloody Sunday" massacre, weapons were in short supply. With a sprawling cast, Watkins focuses on the "Philadelphia Five," a group of ordinary-seeming blue-collar Irish Americans with covert ties to the Republican cause, eventually "charged with trafficking hundreds of rifles to the IRA." But for years, their complicated multistate network maintained "plausible deniability" via involvement with NORAID, a charity outwardly devoted to aiding beleaguered Catholic communities: "It was a fragile arrangement, having a public-facing organization as the front for a decidedly illegal transcontinental gun-smuggling operation." Watkins ably captures the quirky personalities and gritty working-class backdrop of the American side, but she alternates it with the chilling narrative of how one smuggled rifle armed a young woman in Belfast in 1973, on an IRA mission ending with her own shooting and imprisonment. As Watkins notes, while the Troubles would endure for another 25 years, the brazen actions of the Philadelphia Five predictably provoked an unwelcome diplomatic firestorm: "Officials in Belfast and London had been making the case, nearly since the Troubles had started, that the majority of the IRA's arsenal came from American hands." And despite their cocky Irish patriotism, "As the boys in Belfast were fighting the British Army, the boys in NORAID were barreling toward their own confrontation, with the US Department of Justice." Engrossing, original fusion of true crime and geopolitics.

      COPYRIGHT(2025) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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