The article doesn't say anything like anything mkg claims either.
Brexiteers don't do reading or honesty.
Uh, yeah it kind of does......
In any case, the NI/Ireland border is a 100% logically-intractable situation, if one wants the twin goals of a) the UK leaving the EU and b) the Good Friday (and subsequent) Agreement being honoured. Because:
1) Leaving the EU necessarily entails leaving the single market and customs union (otherwise it's very highly arguable that this doesn't constitute Brexit);
2) The GFA requires there to be no hard border between NI and Ireland, effectively in perpetuity;
3) There would therefore need to be, effectively in perpetuity, a
de facto single market and customs union between NI and Ireland;
4) Therefore, at the very least, the NI part of the UK would effectively need to "half" remain in the EU in perpetuity;
5) Even if it were only NI which remained part of the single market and customs union, and the remainder of the UK were to do a "full" Brexit, this would necessarily entail a hard border between NI and the remainder of the UK, with customs checks and passport controls etc;
6) The only alternative to (5) would be for the whole of the UK to remain part of the single market and customs union, but this defeats (1); and
7) Both (5) and (4) above are in practice unworkable in any case.
So as far as I see it, the talks between the UK Govt and the EU can be as friendly and constructive as they like - and it can be any politician of any hue representing the UK Govt position: the NI/Ireland border situation cannot, and will not, ever be resolved within a Brexit scenario.
What I suggest this means in practice is that in effect
the UK can now never leave the EU, so long as either a) the GFA stipulations remain in place, or b) Ireland remains within the EU.
So everyone, IMO, might just as well give up even trying now to make Brexit work. Of course the problem is that a largely-ignorant electorate was given this decision to make, and even a well-informed parliament might never have seen the giant bear trap that the NI/Ire border issue was going to create.
One enormous problem, indeed. And perhaps one that only ever has the chance of being solved (well, the least troublesome way of being solved, at least....) by means of a second referendum in which everyone had better pray the result turns out differently.........