Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, December 2003, pages
14-15
Special Report
Cristol Claim of 13 Investigations Into Israel’s Attack
on USS Liberty a Travesty
By Terence O’Keefe
When A. Jay Cristol’s The Liberty Incident was released a year
ago, it was uncritically hailed as the last word in the 36-year
controversy surrounding Israel’s 1967 attack on the USS Liberty
that took 34 American lives and wounded 172. The book was packed
with tedious minutiae arguing the case. Indeed, if its author is
to be believed, Liberty survivors have engaged in a 36-year
slander against the state of Israel—which was guilty, at worst,
of a grievous mistake in the heat of war.
“Thirteen investigations have all exonerated Israel,” is Cristol’s
mantra.
Like many others, I found the author’s case initially persuasive.
Here, after all, is a federal judge, a Navy captain, author, scholar,
former Navy lawyer and apparently a combat fighter pilot who claims
to have studied this matter for 15 years, with an open mind, and
who finally was forced to conclude that it was a tragic accident.
Those who say otherwise, I agreed, must be either mistaken or malicious.
But the survivors are persuasive, too—and Cristol dismisses their
eyewitness accounts out-of-hand. Eyewitnesses, he claims, are not
reliable, as they are too close to the event to be believed. Better
to rely upon dispassionate historians such as himself who examine
the evidence later, with a cooler and more objective vision.
It was with that view that I decided to examine both the Cristol
and the Liberty positions in an effort to find where the
truth lies. For more than a year I queried survivors and Mr. Cristol
himself, seeking facts, evidence and the truth.
To most questions, Cristol points to his account of 13 exonerating
investigations, so I focused closely on those. Here is the result:
Cristol’s 13 Investigations
1. The U.S. Navy Court of Inquiry: The senior legal adviser to
the Court of Inquiry reflected that, in his entire career, he has
never seen court of inquiry appointing letters with such limited
authority, or an investigation made in such haste. The court’s hearings
began before the Liberty even arrived in Malta, and the report
was completed just 10 days after the attack. The court commented
on this haste in the official record: “The Court of Inquiry experienced
no unusual difficulties incident to conducting the subject proceedings
except for the necessity of investigating such a major naval disaster
of international significance in an extremely abbreviated time frame.”
Due in part to the required haste and the limitations imposed
on the scope of the court’s inquiries (“It was not the responsibility
of the court to rule on the culpability of the attackers, and no
evidence was heard from the attacking nation”), the court concluded
that “available evidence combines to indicate...[that the attack
was] a case of mistaken identity.”
How, one might ask, could one inquire into all of the circumstances
without hearing from the attacking nation? In fact, the court did
neither. According to Captain Ward Boston, chief legal counsel to
the Court of Inquiry, the court found that the attack was deliberate,
but reported falsely that it was not because they were directed
by the president of the United States and the secretary of defense
to report falsely. So the findings are fraudulent. Yet these fraudulent
findings were the basis for several other reports that followed.
2. Israeli government investigations: The Ram Ron and Yerushalmi
reports of 1967 were not investigations. Both were elements of an
Israeli process to determine whether anyone in Israel should be
tried for a crime. That the attack itself was an accident was a
given. Both hearings officers determined that no one in Israel did
anything wrong, and that the USS Liberty was partly responsible,
for a number of contrived reasons, such as “failure to fly a flag”
and “trying to hide”—which the Navy Court of Inquiry found to be
untrue.
3. The Joint Chiefs of Staff Report of June 1967: This was an
inquiry into the mishandling of several messages intended for the
ship. It was not an investigation into the attack. It did not exonerate
Israel, because it did not in any way consider the question of culpability.
4. CIA report of June 13, 1967: This interim report, completed
five days after the attack, reported “our best judgment [is] that
the attack...was a mistake.” No investigation was conducted, and
no first-hand evidence was collected. Then-CIA Director Richard
Helms concluded and later reported in his autobiography that the
attack was planned and deliberate—a fact ignored by Mr. Cristol.
5. Clark Clifford report of July 18, 1967: Clark Clifford was
directed by Lyndon Johnson to review the Court of Inquiry report
and the interim CIA report and “not to make an independent inquiry.”
His was merely a summary of other fallacious reports, not an “investigation”
as alleged by Mr. Cristol. The report reached no conclusions and
did not exonerate Israel, as Mr. Cristol also claimed. On the contrary,
Clifford wrote later that he regarded the attack as deliberate—a
fact ignored by Mr. Cristol.
6. and 7. Two Senate Investigations: The Committee on Foreign
Relations meeting of 1967 and Senate Armed Services Committee meeting
of 1968 were hearings on unrelated matters which clearly skeptical
members used to castigate representatives of the administration
under oath before them. Typical questions were, “Why can’t we get
the truth about this?” They were not “investigations” at all, but
budget hearings, and reported no conclusions concerning the attack.
They did not exonerate Israel, as claimed by Mr. Cristol.
8. House Appropriations Committee meeting of April and May 1968:
This was a budget committee meeting which explored the issue of
lost messages intended for the ship. It was not an investigation
and reported no conclusions concerning the attack, as alleged by
Mr. Cristol.
9. House Armed Services Committee Review of Communications, May
1971: Liberty communications were discussed along with other
communications failures. The committee reported no conclusions concerning
the attack, as alleged by Mr. Cristol.
10. Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, 1979/1981: Mr. Cristol
claims that the committee investigated the attack and exonerated
Israel, yet he has been unable to provide minutes, a report or other
evidence of such an investigation. Rules of the select committee
require that any committee investigation be followed by a report.
There is no report of such an investigation; ergo, there was no
such investigation.
11. National Security Agency Report, 1981: Upon the publication
in 1980 of Assault on the Liberty by James Ennes, the National
Security Agency completed a detailed account of the attack. The
report drew no conclusions, although its authors did note that the
deputy director dismissed the Israeli excuse (the Yerushalmi report)
as “a nice whitewash.” The report did not exonerate Israel, as claimed
by Mr. Cristol.
12. State of Israel–Israel Defense Force History Department report
of June 1982: This Israeli government report was a reaction to a
published report by Sen. Adlai Stevenson III that he believed the
attack to be deliberate and hoped to provide a forum for survivors
to tell their story. It was primarily a summary of the Ram Ron and
Yerushalmi reports. The Stevenson forum, which was the impetus for
the report, was never held. The report supports the official Israeli
position that the attack was a tragic accident.
13. House Armed Services Committee investigation of 1991/1992:
Though cited by Mr. Cristol as an investigation which exonerates
Israel, the U.S. government reports no record of such an investigation.
Cristol claims that the investigation resulted from a letter to
Rep. Nicholas Mavroules from Joe Meadors, then-president of the
USS Liberty Veterans Association, seeking Mavroules’ support.
Instead of responding to Liberty veterans, however, Congressman
Mavroules referred the matter to Mr. Cristol for advice. Survivors
heard nothing further. Meadors’ letter was never answered. The U.S.
government reports that there has been no such investigation.
Time for a Real Investigation
Liberty survivors have said for 36 years that theirs is
the only major maritime incident not investigated by Congress. Apologist
Cristol’s response is to claim that no investigation is needed because
the attack has been investigated repeatedly, and that each such
investigation has exonerated Israel. That claim is pure fantasy.
A recent request to the Congressional Research Service for evidence
of any congressional inquiry into the attack on the USS Liberty
brought a report that Congress has never investigated the attack.
Israeli culpability for the attack on the USS Liberty has
never been investigated by any agency of the United States government.
It should be.
Terence O’Keefe is a CPA working on a master’s degree in strategic
intelligence at the American Military University. He plans to write
his thesis on the Liberty attack. |