No. 164 UCDA P150/2716
Holy See, July 1946
A President of the State was elected directly by the people in 1938. In effect, through the Constitution of 1937, we have become a Republic (as Mr. de Valera has repeatedly stated) which uses an external Monarch as a device and symbol of our cooperation with a certain group of states. No shadow of diplomatic unity with Great Britain or the Commonwealth, in any sense, remains.
There is, at the very least, a case for reconsidering the whole position with regard to the reply. The reply, if sent in its present form,1 might well be one of several factors tending to bring about a demand from the Irish people to break this final, tenuous link, so that the reality of our relations with Britain might become clear beyond possibility of doubt to the one Institution in the world to which it is most essential that they should be clear. Some day the link will doubtless disappear. At present it is a certain help towards the restitution of the occupied area of the six counties.
The Royal Irish Academy's Documents on Irish Foreign Policy series has published an eBook of confidential correspondence on the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty negotiations.
The international network of Editors of Diplomatic Documents was founded in 1988. Delegations from different parts of the world met for the first time in London in 1989.
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