By Anne Cadwallader Reuters - 1 hour 46 minutes ago
BELFAST (Reuters) - Brian Keenan, a former leader in the IRA who fought to end British rule in Northern Ireland, has died, his close ally Sinn Fein President Gerry Adams said on Wednesday.
Born in 1942, Keenan still believed close to his death that the IRA could have won its fight for a united Ireland had it continued attacks on the British mainland and focused on business targets as in the 1996 London bombing of Canary Wharf.
"Those IRA Volunteers who took the fight to Britain were particularly brave and had special qualities," Keenan told the republican Sinn Fein party's weekly newspaper An Phoblacht earlier this year.
"That is the only way to fight a war. There cannot be self-doubt, half-measures or holding back," Keenan said in the interview.
Adams said Keenan nevertheless accepted Sinn Fein's political participation in the Northern Ireland peace process and used his clout to move the IRA to support a 1998 peace deal that largely ended three decades of violence.
http://uk.news.yahoo.com/rtrs/20080521/tpl-uk-irish-keenan-81f3b62.html