Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, March 2004, page
10
Special Report
Declaration of Ward Boston, Jr., Captain, JAGC, USN (Ret.)
I, Ward Boston, Jr. do declare that the following statement is
true and complete:
- For more than 30 years, I have remained silent on the topic
of USS Liberty. I am a military man and when orders come
in from the Secretary of Defense and President of the United States,
I follow them.
- However, recent attempts to rewrite history compel me to share
the truth.
- In June of 1967, while serving as a Captain in the Judge Advocate
General Corps, Department of the Navy, I was assigned as senior
legal counsel for the Navy’s Court of Inquiry into the brutal
attack on USS Liberty, which had occurred on June 8th.
- The late Admiral Isaac C. Kidd, president of the Court, and
I were given only one week to gather evidence for the Navy’s official
investigation into the attack, despite the fact that we both had
estimated that a proper Court of Inquiry into an attack of this
magnitude would take at least six months to conduct.
- Admiral John S. McCain, Jr., then Commander-in-chief, Naval
Forces Europe (CINCUSNAVEUR), at his headquarters in London, had
charged Admiral Kidd (in a letter dated June 10, 1967) to “inquire
into all the pertinent facts and circumstances leading to and
connected with the armed attack; damage resulting therefrom; and
deaths of and injuries to Naval personnel.”
- Despite the short amount of time we were given, we gathered
a vast amount of evidence, including hours of heartbreaking testimony
from the young survivors.
- The evidence was clear. Both Admiral Kidd and I believed with
certainty that this attack, which killed 34 American sailors and
injured 172 others, was a deliberate effort to sink an American
ship and murder its entire crew. Each evening, after hearing testimony
all day, we often spoke our private thoughts concerning what we
had seen and heard. I recall Admiral Kidd repeatedly referring
to the Israeli forces responsible for the attack as “murderous
bastards.” It was our shared belief, based on the documentary
evidence and testimony we received first hand, that the Israeli
attack was planned and deliberate, and could not possibly have
been an accident.
- I am certain that the Israeli pilots that undertook the attack,
as well as their superiors, who had ordered the attack, were well
aware that the ship was American.
- I saw the flag, which had visibly identified the ship as American,
riddled with bullet holes, and heard testimony that made it clear
that the Israelis intended there be no survivors.
- Not only did the Israelis attack the ship with napalm, gunfire,
and missiles, Israeli torpedo boats machine-gunned three lifeboats
that had been launched in an attempt by the crew to save the most
seriously wounded—a war crime.
- Admiral Kidd and I both felt it necessary to travel to Israel
to interview the Israelis who took part in the attack. Admiral
Kidd telephoned Admiral McCain to discuss making arrangements.
Admiral Kidd later told me that Admiral McCain was adamant that
we were not to travel to Israel or contact the Israelis concerning
this matter.
- Regrettably, we did not receive into evidence and the Court
did not consider any of the more than sixty witness declarations
from men who had been hospitalized and were unable to testify
in person.
- I am outraged at the efforts of the apologists for Israel in
this country to claim that this attack was a case of “mistaken
identity.”
- In particular, the recent publication of Jay Cristol’s book,
The Liberty Incident, twists the facts and misrepresents
the views of those of us who investigated the attack.
- It is Cristol’s insidious attempt to whitewash the facts that
has pushed me to speak out.
- I know from personal conversations I had with Admiral Kidd
that President Lyndon Johnson and Secretary of Defense Robert
McNamara ordered him to conclude that the attack was a case of
“mistaken identity” despite overwhelming evidence to the contrary.
- Admiral Kidd told me, after returning from Washington, D.C.
that he had been ordered to sit down with two civilians from either
the White House or the Defense Department, and rewrite portions
of the court’s findings.
- Admiral Kidd also told me that he had been ordered to “put
the lid” on everything having to do with the attack on USS Liberty.
We were never to speak of it and we were to caution everyone else
involved that they could never speak of it again.
- I have no reason to doubt the accuracy of that statement as
I know that the Court of Inquiry transcript that has been released
to the public is not the same one that I certified and sent off
to Washington.
- I know this because it was necessary, due to the exigencies
of time, to hand correct and initial a substantial number of pages.
I have examined the released version of the transcript and I did
not see any pages that bore my hand corrections and initials.
Also, the original did not have any deliberately blank pages,
as the released version does. Finally, the testimony of Lt. Painter
concerning the deliberate machine gunning of the life rafts by
the Israeli torpedo boat crews, which I distinctly recall being
given at the Court of Inquiry and included in the original transcript,
is now missing and has been excised.
- Following the conclusion of the Court of Inquiry, Admiral Kidd
and I remained in contact. Though we never spoke of the attack
in public, we did discuss it between ourselves, on occasion. Every
time we discussed the attack, Admiral Kidd was adamant that it
was a deliberate, planned attack on an American ship.
- In 1990, I received a telephone call from Jay Cristol, who
wanted to interview me concerning the functioning of the Court
of Inquiry. I told him that I would not speak to him on that subject
and prepared to hang up the telephone. Cristol then began asking
me about my personal background and other, non-Court of Inquiry
related matters. I endeavored to answer these questions and politely
extricate myself from the conversation. Cristol continued to return
to the subject of the Court of Inquiry, which I refused to discuss
with him. Finally, I suggested that he contact Admiral Kidd and
ask him about the Court of Inquiry.
- Shortly after my conversation with Cristol, I received a telephone
call from Admiral Kidd, inquiring about Cristol and what he was
up to. The Admiral spoke of Cristol in disparaging terms and even
opined that “Cristol must be an Israeli agent.” I don’t know if
he meant that literally or it was his way of expressing his disgust
for Cristol’s highly partisan, pro-Israeli approach to questions
involving USS Liberty.
- At no time did I ever hear Admiral Kidd speak of Cristol other
than in highly disparaging terms. I find Cristol’s claims of a
“close friendship” with Admiral Kidd to be utterly incredible.
I also find it impossible to believe the statements he attributes
to Admiral Kidd, concerning the attack on USS Liberty.
- Several years later, I received a letter from Cristol that
contained what he purported to be his notes of our prior conversation.
These “notes” were grossly incorrect and bore no resemblance in
reality to that discussion. I find it hard to believe that these
“notes” were the product of a mistake, rather than an attempt
to deceive. I informed Cristol that I disagreed with his recollection
of our conversation and that he was wrong. Cristol made several
attempts to arrange for the two of us to meet in person and talk
but I always found ways to avoid doing this. I did not wish to
meet with Cristol as we had nothing in common and I did not trust
him.
- Contrary to the misinformation presented by Cristol and others,
it is important for the American people to know that it is clear
that Israel is responsible for deliberately attacking an American
ship and murdering American sailors, whose bereaved shipmates
have lived with this egregious conclusion for many years.
Dated: Jan. 9, 2004 at Coronado, California. |