On August 27, 1979, Lord Louis Mountbatten is killed
when Irish Republican Army (IRA) terrorists detonate a 50-pound bomb
hidden on his fishing vessel
Shadow V. Mountbatten, a war hero,
elder statesman, and second cousin of Queen Elizabeth II, was spending
the day with his family in Donegal Bay off Ireland's northwest coast
when the bomb exploded. Three others were killed in the attack,
including Mountbatten's 14-year-old grandson, Nicholas. Later that day,
an IRA bombing attack on land killed 18 British paratroopers in County
Down, Northern Ireland.
The assassination of Mountbatten was the
first blow struck against the British royal family by the IRA during
its long terrorist campaign to drive the British out of Northern Ireland
and unite it with the Republic of Ireland to the south. The attack
hardened the hearts of many Brits against the IRA and convinced Margaret
Thatcher's government to take a hard-line stance against the terrorist
organization.
Louis Mountbatten, the son of Prince Louis of Battenberg and a great-grandson of
Queen Victoria I, entered the Royal Navy in 1913, when he was in his early teens. He saw service during
World War I and at the outbreak of
World War II was commander of the 5th destroyer flotilla. His destroyer, the HMS
Kelly,
was sunk off Crete early in the war. In 1941, he commanded an aircraft
carrier, and in 1942 he was named chief of combined operations. From
this position, he was appointed supreme Allied commander for Southeast
Asia in 1943 and successfully conducted the campaign against Japan that
led to the recapture of Burma.
In 1947, he was appointed the
last viceroy of India, and he conducted the negotiations that led to
independence for India and Pakistan later that year. He held various
high naval posts in the
1950s
and served as chief of the United Kingdom Defense Staff and chairman of
the Chiefs of Staff Committee. Meanwhile, he was made Viscount
Mountbatten of Burma and a first earl. He was the uncle of Philip
Mountbatten and introduced Philip to the future Queen Elizabeth. He
later encouraged the marriage of the two distant cousins and became
godfather and mentor to their first born, Charles, Prince of Wales.



Made
governor and then lord lieutenant of the Isle of Wight in his
retirement, Lord Mountbatten was a respected and beloved member of the
royal family. His assassination on August 27, 1979, was perhaps the most
shocking of all horrors inflicted by the IRA against the United
Kingdom. In addition to his grandson Nicholas, 15-year-old boat hand
Paul Maxwell was killed in the attack; the Dowager Lady Brabourne,
Nicholas' grandmother, was also fatally injured. Mountbatten's grandson
Timothy--Nicholas' twin--was injured; as was his daughter, Lady
Brabourne; and the twins' father, Lord Brabourne. Lord Mountbatten was
79.
The IRA immediately claimed responsibility for the attack,
saying it detonated the bomb by remote control from the coast. It also
took responsibility for the same-day bombing attack against British
troops in County Down, which claimed 18 lives.
IRA member Thomas
McMahon was later arrested and convicted of preparing and planting the
bomb that destroyed Mountbatten's boat. A near-legend in the IRA, he was
a leader of the IRA's notorious South Armagh Brigade, which killed more
than 100 British soldiers. He was one of the first IRA members to be
sent to Libya to train with detonators and timing devices and was an
expert in explosives.
Authorities believe the Mountbatten assassination
was the work of many people, but McMahon was the only individual
convicted. Sentenced to life in prison, he was released in 1998 along
with other IRA and Unionist terrorists under a controversial provision
of the Good Friday Agreement, Northern Ireland's peace deal. McMahon
claimed he had turned his back on the IRA and was becoming a carpenter.
Taken from:
http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/mountbatten-killed-by-ira [27.08.2013]