June 1993, Page 19
This Month in History
The Assault on the USS Liberty Still Covered
Up After 26 Years
By James M. Ennes Jr.
Twenty-six years have passed since that clear day on June 8, 1967
when Israel attacked the USS Liberty with aircraft and torpedo
boats, killing 34 young men and wounding 171. The attack in international
waters followed over nine hours of close surveillance. Israeli pilots
circled the ship at low level 13 times on eight different occasions
before attacking. Radio operators in Spain, Lebanon, Germany and
aboard the ship itself all heard the pilots reporting to their headquarters
that this was an American ship. They attacked anyway. And when the
ship failed to sink, the Israeli government concocted an elaborate
story to cover the crime.
There is no question that this attack on a U.S. Navy ship was deliberate.
This was a coordinated effort involving air, sea, headquarters and
commando forces attacking over a long period. It was not the "few
rounds of misdirected fire" that Israel would have the world
believe. Worse, the Israeli excuse is a gross and detailed fabrication
that disagrees entirely with the eyewitness recollections of survivors.
Key American leaders call the attack deliberate. More important,
eyewitness participants from the Israeli side have told survivors
that they knew they were attacking an American ship.
Israeli Pilot Speaks Up
Fifteen years after the attack, an Israeli pilot approached Liberty
survivors and then held extensive interviews with former Congressman
Paul N. (Pete) McCloskey about his role. According to this senior
Israeli lead pilot, he recognized the Liberty as American
immediately, so informed his headquarters, and was told to ignore
the American flag and continue his attack. He refused to do so and
returned to base, where he was arrested.
Later, a dual-citizen Israeli major told survivors that he was
in an Israeli war room where he heard that pilot's radio report.
The attacking pilots and everyone in the Israeli war room knew that
they were attacking an American ship, the major said. He recanted
the statement only after he received threatening phone calls from
Israel.
The pilot's protests also were heard by radio monitors in the U.S.
Embassy in Lebanon. Then-U.S. Ambassador to Lebanon Dwight Porter
has confirmed this. Porter told his story to syndicated columnists
Rowland Evans and Robert Novak and offered to submit to further
questioning by authorities. Unfortunately, no one in the U.S. government
has any interest in hearing these first-person accounts of Israeli
treachery.
Key members of the Lyndon Johnson administration have long agreed
that this attack was no accident. Perhaps most outspoken is former
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Admiral Thomas Moorer. "I
can never accept the claim that this was a mistaken attack,"
he insists.
Former Secretary of State Dean Rusk is equally outspoken, calling
the attack deliberate in press and radio interviews. Similarly strong
language comes from top leaders of the Central Intelligence Agency,
National Security Agency (some of whose personnel were among the
victims), National Security Council, and from presidential advisers
such as Clark Clifford, Joseph Califano and Lucius Battle.
A top-secret analysis of Israel's excuse conducted by the Department
of State found Israel's story to be untrue. Yet Israel and its defenders
continue to stand by their claim that the attack was a "tragic
accident" in which Israel mistook the most modern electronic
surveillance vessel in the world for a rusted-out 40-year-old Egyptian
horse transport.
Despite the evidence, no U.S. administration has ever found the
courage to ever found the courage to defy the Israeli lobby by publicly
demanding a proper accounting from Israel.
How Does Congress React to These Complaints?
Most members of Congress respond to inquiries about the Liberty
with seemingly sympathetic promises to "investigate."
Weeks or months later they write again to report their "findings":
"The Navy investigated in 1967 and found no evidence that the
attack was deliberate," they say." Israel apologized,
calling the attack a tragic case of misidentification, and paid
damages for loss of life, injuries and property damage. The matter
is closed.
The fact is, however, that the Navy's "investigation"
examined only the quality of the crew's training, the adequacy of
communications and the performance of the crew under fire. The Navy
was forbidden to examine Israeli culpability and Navy investigators
refused to allow testimony showing that the attack was deliberate
or that Israel's excuse was untrue.
The Navy blocked all testimony about Israeli actions.
Instead of determining whether the attack was deliberate, the Navy
blocked all testimony about Israeli actions. No survivor was permitted
to describe the close in machine-gun fire that continued for 40
minutes after Israel claims all firing stopped. No survivor was
allowed to talk about the life rafts the Israeli torpedo men machine-gunned
in the water. No survivor was permitted to challenge defects and
fabrications in Israel's story. Even my eyewitness testimony as
officer-of-the deck was withheld from the official record. No evidence
of Israeli culpability was "found" because no such testimony
was allowed. To survivors, this was not an investigation. It was
a cover-up.
Congress Goes Through the Motions
Occasionally a member of Congress will seem to probe a bit deeper,
as Ted Kennedy once did. In response to requests, Kennedy asked
Liberty survivors and others for input,which his staff then
"studied" for more than a year.
Kennedy asked no questions, conducted no interviews, and showed
no curiosity about the many discrepancies in Israel's story. Then
Kennedy reported his "findings" in a letter to survivors.
Carefully avoiding the circumstances of the attack, Kennedy's letter
deplored the "tragic circumstances and loss of life" and
declared that the facts about the Liberty must be uncovered
"to the maximum extent humanly possible."
That letter, however, represented Kennedy's maximum effort. Appeals
to Kennedy for some real help go unanswered.
The Quest Goes On
The best forum in the '90s for this story and related stories of
the Middle East may well be electronic mail, the complex of computer
and electronic mail systems that now span the globe.
For instance, the USS Liberty and theMiddle East are hot topics
in the "Prodigy interactive computer service" run by Sears
and IBM. With over 2 million members, Prodigy's "Israel"
forums guarantee some lively and often bitter debates.
Unfortunately, the playing field often seems uneven. The cover-up
side heavily outnumbers its critics, and is allowed tactics rarely
tolerated from others. Criticism of Israeli policies is seen as
"attacks on the Jewish homeland." Pro-Israel debaters
charge that Israel's critics are "disciples of hate,"
and "pathological haters of Israel and all things Jewish."
The language gets worse. Prodigy allows Israel's critics to be
called "sodomists," and "derriere bussing anti-Semites."
The Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, which prints
an update on progress toward a congressional investigation every
year on the June anniversary of the tragedy, comes in for special
vitriol. The magazine is described almost daily as I a hate rag."
Yet Prodigy's censors often reject even mild and factual rebuttals
of such charges as "insulting."
Despite a near media blackout, and such invective directed at publications
that defy it, Americans, do continue to support the USS Liberty
and its survivors' association. Late last year the Veterans
of Foreign Wars Post 560 in Zimmerman, Minnesota, raised over $12,000
to create a rest stop and picnic area on donated land near a major
highway as a memorial to the men who died on the Liberty.
This makes the 29th public memorial to the USS Liberty.
The memorial area and an inscribed granite stone were appropriately
dedicated in a ceremony attended by survivors, VFW members, Mayor
Randy Hanson, and Liberty's heroic Congressional Medal of
Honor-winning skipper, Captain William McGonagle, among others.
Inspired by community support, members of Post 560 are now telling
the USS Liberty story to every VFW post in Minnesota. Member
Stan Wuolle tells us that after they cover all of Minnesota, they
will start on Wisconsin and the Dakotas.
In New York, meanwhile, Korean War veteran John Everts learned
about the attack just last year and was similarly moved. Everts
inspired two Korean vets groups in which he is active, "The
Chosin Few" and "The Korean War Veterans" Kivlehan
Chapter, to write more than 100 letters to Congress seeking the
investigation that survivors mill are denied.
To date, no member of Congress has risked re-election chances by
agreeing publicly to Evert's request. No one really expected that
to happen. But efforts like these help members of Congress and the
American public remember that Israel attacked the USS Liberty,
deliberately and then lied about it. Sooner or later, Americans
will insist that their government and their representatives in Congress
find out why.
James Ennes retired from the Navy in 1978 as a lieutenant commander
after 27 years of enlisted and commissioned service. He was a lieutenant
on the bridge of the USS Liberty on the day of the attack.
His book on the subject, Assault on the Liberty (Random
House, 1980), is a "Notable Naval Book" selection of the
U. S. Naval Institute and was "editors' choice" when reviewed
in The Washington Post. Copies of the book are available
from the American
Educational Trust, publisher of this magazine, at $25.00
each.
SIDEBAR
About James Ennes Assault on the Liberty
"I've never read a more graphic depiction of war and its effects
at sea ... an insider's book by an honest participant."
Author Seymour Hersh
"If this book received more attention, U.S. policies in the
Middle East might be better balanced and more successful."
Former U.S. Senator Adlai E. Stevenson, Jr.
"Searing heat and terrible noise came suddenly from everywhere.
Heat came first, and it was heat—not cannon fire—that
Caused me to turn away. An explosion tossed our gunners high in
the air-spinning, broken, like rag dolls. We were being pounded
by a deadly barrage of aircraft cannon and rocket fire.
"A solid blanket of force threw me against A railing. My arm
held me up while the attacker passed overhead, followed by a loud
swoosh, then silence. I seemed to be the only one left standing
as the jet disappeared astern of us. Around me, scattered about
carelessly, men squirmed helplessly, like wounded animals-wide-eyed,
terrified, not understanding what had happened."
From Assault on the Liberty |