No, they might have been neutral but still had to be careful of stray German bombers.
That is very strange, because an ex Luftwaffe pilot in Germany in 1968 told me that he found Belfast Docks easily because the lights were on in Southern Ireland and
the outline of the border could be seen. I would rather believe a German bomber pilot
than the message you have posted. As a matter of interest my Dad was on guard on Belfast Docks when they were bombed by the Germans, and said the bombers came in from the direction of Southern Ireland. Where he was on guard there were big whisky vats that were peppered in shrapnel and the whisky poured into the dock.
What does 'lights over Ireland' mean?
Yes
In case the Japanese (or other enemies) decided to bomb or attack. It's hard to spot places at night, if all the lights are turned out.
The blackouts were a government mandate telling people to keep their curtains drawn and use the absolute minimum of lights at night. This reduced the visible 'targets' for invading German bombers.
No. Ireland was neutral during the second world war.
Car lights played a large part in the blackouts and air raids that took place along the US coast during World War II. Specifically, towns along the cost had to make sure that no light could be seen from the water. That way, if the Germans tried to bomb the coast, they'd have no idea where they were, or what target they might have hit.
No. Ireland was neutral during World War II.
No
Because the bombers had bombed their before and the London people did not invent blackouts then.
Ireland was part of the British Empire during World War I so was technically part of the war, though many people did not support it while others joined the British Army. Ireland was neutral during World War II.
In Ireland the Emergency was the name given to World War II. During that time Eamon De Valera was Taoiseach.
Practically all the cities in Germany, Great Britain, France and the other West European countries occupied by Germany.