Bertie Ahern rejected a suggested visit from the British Navy's vessel the Ark Royal into Dublin Port in 2003 when he was taoiseach, according to State papers.
As RTÉ News reports, National Archive documents record that the then British ambassador to Ireland Stuart Eldon had "requested permission" for the visit of the ship on "an informal basis" in early June 2003.
A report by Taoiseach’s secretary Michael Collins dated May 19th of that year said that the Anglo Irish Division of the Department of Foreign Affairs believed that "we should decline this request".
Mr Collins recorded that a visit by the British Navy flagship would "undoubtedly" be seen by many as "untimely, not to say insensitive” and it would be hard "to construe" a visit by the Ark Royal at that time as "anything other than propaganda and triumphalism".
A Department of Foreign Affairs briefing note from May 2003 outlining concerns over a proposed visit by the Royal Navy’s HMS Ark Royal to Dublin, bearing the handwritten Taoiseach’s comment: “my view is no”.
Mr Collins advised that "we should not allow" the matter to become "one of public controversy or difficulty" between the two governments.
The British Embassy in Dublin should "be advised" that such a sensitive matter should be "subject of informal consultation" first, he said.
The cover page of a three-page report includes a handwritten note saying: "Michael, please see Taoiseach’s comment on page 3."
One handwritten line on page 3 from the Taoiseach says that "my view is no".
Read the RTÉ News report here

















































