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Clinton told to to avoid public handshake with Gerry Adams, records show | World News


White House officials wanted Bill Clinton to avoid shaking Sinn Fein leader Gerry Adams’ hand in front of cameras during his historic visit to Ireland in 1995, newly released records show.

Mr Clinton visited Northern Ireland in November 1995, becoming the first serving US president to make the trip.

Mr Adams was president of Sinn Fein, regarded as the political wing of the IRA paramilitary group, between 1983 and 2018, but has always denied being a member of the IRA.

Mr Clinton and Gerry Adams famously shook hands on the Falls Road in Belfast on the morning of 30 November, but official documents which have been declassified show that the White House had wanted to avoid a handshake being seen by the public.

A letter written by the Irish government official David Donoghue ahead of the presidential visit detailed how “the Americans would prefer to avoid a handshake photograph between the president and Adams”.

Mr Clinton would later say the handshake was a “big deal” and that it felt at the time as though “the pavement was about to crack open”.

Image:
Adams and Clinton greet each other in 2023 at Queen’s University Belfast. Pic: PA

The pair had met for the first time in the White House earlier that year, but only shook hands after photographers left the room.

Mr Clinton was reportedly put under pressure at the time from then British prime minister John Major not to give Mr Adams a warm reception, according to the New York Times.

Clinton’s ancestral links to Co Fermanagh ‘largely fantasy’

The documents from the National Archives of Ireland also included the findings of a genealogy expert researching Mr Clinton’s ancestry, as there had long been claims that he had Cassidy ancestors on his mother’s side who were from Co Fermanagh.

Genealogist Sean Murphy wanted to trace the president’s ancestry after “media dissemination of claims concerning the president’s Irish ancestry which proved to be baseless, yet were left un-contradicted by any authoritative source”.

Clinton meeting locals in Enniskillen in Co Fermanagh during a 2001 visit. File pic: PA
Image:
Clinton meeting locals in Enniskillen in Co Fermanagh during a 2001 visit. File pic: PA

He told the Taoiseach’s office that his links to Co Fermanagh in northern Ireland were “based largely on fantasy”.

He said the earliest trace of the president’s maternal ancestors of his mother’s line was “probably” Zachariah Cassidy, born in about 1750-60 in South Carolina, and his son Levi.

“The Cassidy ‘clan’ claim that the earliest ancestor was a Luke or Lucas Cassidy of Roslea, Co Fermanagh, appears to be based largely on fantasy,” he wrote.

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However, he said it was “reasonable to speculate” that his family had at one time emigrated to America from an Ulster county.

The National Archives of Ireland releases batches of declassified government files annually, with information typically relating to events 30 years before.

Last year, it was revealed former US attorney general Janet Reno had strongly advised Mr Clinton not to give Mr Adams a temporary visa in 1995, as there was no evidence that suggested “progress has been made towards the disarmament and demobilisation of the IRA”. The visa included permission for fundraising in the US.



This story originally appeared on Skynews

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