Below is an interview your Watchman did on the USS Libery that is pictured above. I should have known a McCain would be involved in the cover up!
Posted By Jeffrey
St. Clair On June 8, 2018 @ 1:56 am on CounterPunch
In
early June of 1967, at the onset of the Six Day War, the Pentagon sent the USS
Liberty from Spain into international waters off the coast of Gaza to monitor
the progress of Israel’s attack on the Arab states. The Liberty was a lightly
armed surveillance ship.
Only
hours after the Liberty arrived it was spotted by the Israeli military. The IDF
sent out reconnaissance planes to identify the ship. They made eight trips over
a period of three hours. The Liberty was flying a large US flag and was easily
recognizable as an American vessel.
Soon
more planes came. These were Israeli Mirage III fighters, armed with rockets
and machine guns. As off-duty officers sunbathed on the deck, the fighters
opened fire on the defenseless ship with rockets and machine guns.
A
few minutes later a second wave of planes streaked overhead, French-built
Mystere jets, which not only pelted the ship with gunfire but also with napalm
bomblets, coating the deck with the flaming jelly. By now, the Liberty was on
fire and dozens were wounded and killed, excluding several of the ship’s top
officers.
The
Liberty’s radio team tried to issue a distress call, but discovered the
frequencies had been jammed by the Israeli planes with what one communications
specialist called “a buzzsaw sound.” Finally, an open channel was found and the
Liberty got out a message it was under attack to the USS America, the Sixth
Fleet’s large aircraft carrier.
Two
F-4s left the carrier to come to the Liberty’s aid. Apparently, the jets were
armed only with nuclear weapons. [The F-4s were certainly not
armed with nuclear weapons, much less only nuclear weapons. This was
the excuse used to justify Washington calling back the US Navy jets sent by the
fleet commander to the USS Liberty’s rescue. The claim is an obvious lie for
two reasons. One is that no fleet commander is going to send aircraft that are
not armed to engage other aircraft to protect a ship under attack. The other is
that arming aircraft with nuclear weapons is a very controlled event. It is not
something that a fleet commander is permitted to do on his own.]
When
word reached the Pentagon [that jets had been sent to the Liberty’s defense],
Defense Secretary Robert McNamara became irate and ordered the jets to return.
“Tell the Sixth Fleet to get those aircraft back immediately,” he barked.
McNamara’s injunction was reiterated in saltier terms by Admiral David L.
McDonald, the chief of Naval Operations: “You get those fucking airplanes back
on deck, and you get them back down.” The planes turned around. And the attack
on the Liberty continued.
After
the Israeli fighter jets had emptied their arsenal of rockets, three Israeli
attack boats approached the Liberty. Two torpedoes were launched at the
crippled ship, one tore a 40-foot wide hole in the hull, flooding the lower
compartments, and killing more than a dozen American sailors.
As
the Liberty listed in the choppy seas, its deck aflame, crew members dropped
life rafts into the water and prepared to scuttle the ship. Given the number of
wounded, this was going to be a dangerous operation. But it soon proved
impossible, as the Israeli attack boats strafed the rafts with machine gun
fire. No body was going to get out alive that way.
After
more than two hours of unremitting assault, the Israelis finally halted their
attack. One of the torpedo boats approached the Liberty. An officer asked in
English over a bullhorn: “Do you need any help?”
The
wounded commander of the Liberty, Lt. William McGonagle, instructed the
quartermaster to respond emphatically: “Fuck you.”
The
Israeli boat turned and left.
A
Soviet destroyer responded before the US Navy, even though a US submarine, on a
covert mission, was apparently in the area and had monitored the attack. The
Soviet ship reached the Liberty six hours before the USS Davis. The captain of
the Soviet ship offered his aid, but the Liberty’s conning officer refused.
Finally,
16 hours after the attack two US destroyers reached the Liberty. By that time,
34 US sailors were dead and 174 injured, many seriously. As the wounded were
being evacuated, an officer with the Office of Naval Intelligence instructed
the men not to talk about their ordeal with the press.
The
following morning Israel launched a surprise invasion of Syria, breaching the
new cease-fire agreement and seizing control of the Golan Heights.
Within
three weeks, the Navy put out a 700-page report, exonerating the Israelis,
claiming the attack had been accidental and that the Israelis had pulled back
as soon as they realized their mistake. Defense Secretary Robert McNamara
suggested the whole affair should be forgotten. “These errors do occur,”
McNamara concluded.
In
Assault on the Liberty, a harrowing first-hand account by James Ennes Jr.,
McNamara’s version of events is proven to be as big a sham as his concurrent
lies about Vietnam. Ennes’s book created a media storm when it was first published
by Random House in 1980, including (predictably) charges that Ennes was a liar
and an anti-Semite. Still, the book sold more than 40,000 copies, but was
eventually allowed to go out of print. Now Ennes has published an updated
version, which incorporates much new evidence that the Israeli attack was
deliberate and that the US government went to extraordinary lengths to disguise
the truth.
It’s
a story of Israel aggression, Pentagon incompetence, official lies, and a
cover-up that persists to this day. The book gains much of its power from the
immediacy of Ennes’s first-hand account of the attack and the lies that
followed.
Now,
decades later, Ennes warns that the bloodbath on board the Liberty and its
aftermath should serve as a tragic cautionary tale about the continuing ties
between the US government and the government of Israel.
The
Attack on the Liberty is the kind of book that makes your blood seethe. Ennes
skillfully documents the life of the average sailor on one of the more peculiar
vessels in the US Navy, with an attention for detail that reminds one of Dana
or O’Brien. After all, the year was 1967 and most of the men on the Liberty
were certainly glad to be on a non-combat ship in the middle of the
Mediterranean, rather than in the Gulf of Tonkin or Mekong Delta.
But
this isn’t Two Years Before the Mast. In fact, Ennes’s tour on the Liberty last
only a few short weeks. He had scarcely settled into a routine before his new
ship was shattered before his eyes.
Ennes
joined the Liberty in May of 1967, as an Electronics Material Officer. Serving
on a “spook ship”, as the Liberty was known to Navy wives, was supposed to be a
sure path to career enhancement. The Liberty’s normal routine was to ply the
African coast, tuning in its eavesdropping equipment on the electronic traffic
in the region.
The
Liberty had barely reached Africa when it received a flash message from the
Joint Chiefs of Staff to sail from the Ivory Coast to the Mediterranean, where
it was to re-deploy off the coast of the Sinai to monitor the Israeli attack on
Egypt and the allied Arab nations.
As
the war intensified, the Liberty sent a request to the fleet headquarters
requesting an escort. It was denied by Admiral William Martin. The Liberty
moved alone to a position in international waters about 13 miles from the shore
at El Arish, then under furious siege by the IDF.
On
June 6, the Joint Chiefs sent Admiral McCain, father of the senator from
Arizona, an urgent message instructing him to move the Liberty out of the war
zone to a position at least 100 miles off the Gaza Coast. McCain never
forwarded the message to the ship.
A
little after seven in the morning on June 8, Ennes entered the bridge of the
Liberty to take the morning watch. Ennes was told that an hour earlier a
“flying boxcar” (later identified as a twin-engine Nord 2501 Noratlas) had
flown over the ship at a low level.
Ennes
says he noticed that the ship’s American flag had become stained with soot and
ordered a new flag run up the mast. The morning was clear and calm, with a
light breeze.
At
9 am, Ennes spotted another reconnaissance plane, which circled the Liberty. An
hour later two Israeli fighter jets buzzed the ship. Over the next four hours,
Israeli planes flew over the Liberty five more times.
When
the first fighter jet struck, a little before two in the afternoon, Ennes was
scanning the skies from the starboard side of the bridge, binoculars in his
hands. A rocket hit the ship just below where Ennes was standing, the fragments
shredded the men closest to him.
After
the explosion, Ennes noticed that he was the only man left standing. But he
also had been hit by more than 20 shards of shrapnel and the force of the blast
had shattered his left leg. As he crawled into the pilothouse, a second fighter
jet streaked above them and unleashed its payload on the hobbled Liberty.
At
that point, Ennes says the crew of the Liberty had no idea who was attacking
them or why. For a few moments, they suspected it might be the Soviets, after
an officer mistakenly identified the fighters as MIG-15s. They knew that the
Egyptian air force already had been decimated by the Israelis. The idea that
the Israelis might be attacking them didn’t occur to them until one of the crew
spotted a Star of David on the wing of one of the French-built Mystere jets.
Ennes
was finally taken below deck to a makeshift dressing station, with other
wounded men. It was hardly a safe harbor. As Ennes worried that his fractured
leg might slice through his femoral artery leaving him to bleed to death, the
Liberty was pummeled by rockets, machine-gun fire and an Italian-made torpedo
packed with 1,000-pounds of explosive.
After
the attack ended, Ennes was approached by his friend Pat O’Malley, a junior
officer, who had just sent a list of killed and wounded to the Bureau of Naval
Personnel. He got an immediate message back. “They said, ‘Wounded in what
action? Killed in what action?’,” O’Malley told Ennes. “They said it wasn’t an
‘action,’ it was an accident. I’d like for them to come out here and see the
difference between an action and an accident. Stupid bastards.”
The
cover-up had begun.
The
Pentagon lied to the public about the attack on the Liberty from the very
beginning. In a decision personally approved by the loathsome McNamara, the
Pentagon denied to the press that the Liberty was an intelligence ship,
referring to it instead as a Technical Research ship, as if it were little more
than a military version of Jacques Cousteau’s Calypso.
The
military press corps on the USS America, where most of the wounded sailors had
been taken, were placed under extreme restrictions. All of the stories filed
from the carrier were first routed through the Pentagon for security clearance,
objectionable material was removed with barely a bleat of protest from the
reporters or their publications.
Predictably,
Israel’s first response was to blame the victim, a tactic that has served them
so well in the Palestinian situation. First, the IDF alleged that it had asked
the State Department and the Pentagon to identify any US ships in the area and
was told that there were none. Then the Israeli government charged that the
Liberty failed to fly its flag and didn’t respond to calls for it to identify
itself. The Israelis contended that they assumed the Liberty was an Egyptian
supply ship called El Quseir, which, even though it was a rusting transport
ship then docked in Alexandria, the IDF said it suspected of shelling Israeli
troops from the sea. Under these circumstances, the Israeli’s said they were
justified in opening fire on the Liberty. The Israelis said that they halted
the attack almost immediately, when they realized their mistake.
“The
Liberty contributed decisively toward its identification as an enemy ship,” the
IDF report concluded. This was a blatant falsehood, since the Israelis had
identified the Liberty at least six hours prior to the attack on the ship.
Even
though the Pentagon knew better, it gave credence to the Israeli account by
saying that perhaps the Liberty’s flag had lain limp on the flagpole in a
windless sea. The Pentagon also suggested that the attack might have lasted
less than 20 minutes.
After
the initial battery of misinformation, the Pentagon imposed a news blackout on
the Liberty disaster until after the completion of a Court of Inquiry
investigation.
The
inquiry was headed by Rear Admiral Isaac C. Kidd. Kidd didn’t have a free hand.
He’d been instructed by Vice-Admiral McCain to limit the damage to the Pentagon
and to protect the reputation of Israel.
The
Kidd interviewed the crew on June 14 and 15. The questioning was extremely
circumscribed. According to Ennes, the investigators “asked nothing that might
be embarrassing to Israeland testimony that tended to embarrass Israel was
covered with a ‘Top Secret’ label, if it was accepted at all.”
Ennes
notes that even testimony by the Liberty’s communications officers about the
jamming of the ship’s radios was classified as “Top Secret.” The reason? It
proved that Israel knew it was attacking an American ship. “Here was strong
evidence that the attack was planned in advance and that our ship’s identity
was known to the attackers (for it its practically impossible to jam the radio
of a stranger), but this information was hushed up and no conclusions were
drawn from it,” Ennes writes.
Similarly,
the Court of Inquiry deep-sixed testimony and affidavits regarding the
flag-Ennes had ordered a crisp new one deployed early on the morning of the
attack. The investigators buried intercepts of conversations between IDF pilots
identifying the ship as flying an American flag.
It
also refused to accept evidence about the IDF’s use of napalm during the
attacks and choose not to hear testimony regarding the duration of the attacks
and the fact that the US Navy failed to send planes to defend the ship.
“No
one came to help us,” said Dr. Richard F. Kiepfer, the Liberty’s physician. “We
were promised help, but no help came. The Russians arrived before our own ships
did. We asked for an escort before we ever came to the war zone and we were
turned down.”
None
of this made its way into the 700-page Court of Inquiry report, which was
completed within a couple of weeks and sent to Admiral McCain in London for
review.
McCain
approved the report over the objections of Captain Merlin Staring, the Navy
legal officer assigned to the inquiry, who found the report to be flawed,
incomplete and contrary to the evidence.
Staring
sent a letter to the Judge Advocate General of the Navy disavowing himself from
the report. The JAG seemed to take Staring’s objections to heart. It prepared a
summary for the Chief of Naval Operations that almost completely ignored the
Kidd/McCain report. Instead, it concluded:
that
the Liberty was easily recognizable as an American naval vessel; that it’s flag
was fully deployed and flying in a moderate breeze; that Israeli planes made at
least eight reconnaissance flights at close range; the ship came under a
prolonged attack from Israeli fighter jets and torpedo boats.
This
succinct and largely accurate report was stamped Top Secret by Navy brass and
stayed locked up for many years. But it was seen by many in the Pentagon and
some in the Oval Office. But here was enough grumbling about the way the
Liberty incident had been handled that LBJ summoned that old Washington fixer
Clark Clifford to do damage control. It didn’t take Clifford long to come up
with the official line: the Israelis simply had made a tragic mistake.
It
turns out that the Admiral Kidd and Captain Ward Boston, the two investigating
officers who prepared the original report for Admiral McCain, both believed
that the Israeli attack was intentional and sustained. In other words, the IDF
knew that they were striking an American spy ship and they wanted to sink it
and kill as many sailors as possible. Why then did the Navy investigators
produce a sham report that concluded it was an accident?
Twenty-five
years later we finally found out. In June of 2002, Captain Boston
told the Navy Times: “Officers follow orders.”
It
gets worse. There’s plenty of evidence that US intelligence agencies learned on
June 7 that Israel intended to attack the Liberty on the following day and that
the strike had been personally ordered by Moshe Dayan.
As
the attacks were going on, conversations between Israeli pilots were overheard
by US Air Force officers in an EC121 surveillance plane overhead. The spy plane
was spotted by Israeli jets, which were given orders to shoot it down. The
American plane narrowly avoided the IDF missiles.
Initial
reports on the incident prepared by the CIA, Office of Naval Intelligence and
the National Security Agency all reached similar conclusions.
A
particularly damning report compiled by a CIA informant suggests that Israeli
Defense minister Moshe Dayan personally ordered the attack and wanted it to
proceed until the Liberty was sunk and all on board killed. A heavily redacted
version of the report was released in 1977. It reads in part:
“[The
source] said that Dayan personally ordered the attack on the ship and that one
of his generals adamantly opposed the action and said, ‘This is pure murder.’
One of the admirals who was present also disapproved of the action, and it was
he who ordered it stopped and not Dayan.”
This
amazing document generated little attention from the press and Dayan was never
publicly questioned about his role in the attack.
The
analyses by the intelligence agencies are collected in a 1967 investigation by
the Defense Subcommittee on Appropriations. Two and half decades later that
report remains classified. Why? A former committee staffer said: “So as not to
embarrass Israel.”
More
proof came to light from the Israeli side. A few years after Attack on the
Liberty was originally published, Ennes got a call from Evan Toni, an Israeli
pilot. Toni told Ennes that he had just read his book and wanted to tell him
his story. Toni said that he was the pilot in the first Israeli Mirage fighter
to reach the Liberty. He immediately recognized the ship to be a US Navy
vessel. He radioed Israeli air command with this information and asked for
instructions. Toni said he was ordered to “attack.” He refused and flew back to
the air base at Ashdod. When he arrived he was summarily arrested for
disobeying orders.
How
tightly does the Israeli lobby control the Hill? For the first time in history,
an attack on an America ship was not subjected to a public investigation by
Congress. In 1980, Adlai Stevenson and Barry Goldwater planned to open a senate
hearing into the Liberty affair. Then Jimmy Carter intervened by brokering a
deal with Menachem Begin, where Israel agreed to pony up $6 million to pay for
damages to the ship. A State Department press release announced the payment
said, “The book is now closed on the USS Liberty.”
It
certainly was the last chapter for Adlai Stevenson. He ran for governor of
Illinois the following year, where his less than perfect record on Israel, and
his unsettling questions about the Liberty affair, became an issue in the
campaign. Big money flowed into the coffers of his Republican opponent, Big Jim
Thompson, and Stevenson went down to a narrow defeat.
But
the book wasn’t closed for the sailors either, of course. After a Newsweek
story exposed the gist of what really happened on that day in the Mediterranean,
an enraged Admiral McCain placed all the sailors under a gag order. When one
sailor told an officer that he was having problems living with the cover-up, he
was told: “Forget about it, that’s an order.”
The
Navy went to bizarre lengths to keep the crew of the Liberty from telling what
they knew. When gag orders didn’t work, they threatened sanctions. Ennes tells
of the confinement and interrogation of two Liberty sailors that sounds like
something right out of the CIA’s MK-Ultra program.
“In
an incredible abuse of authority, military officers held two young Liberty
sailors against their will in a locked and heavily guarded psychiatric ward of
the base hospital,” Ennes writes. “For days these men were drugged and
questioned about their recollections of the attack by a ‘therapist’ who
admitted to being untrained in either psychiatry or psychology. At one point,
they avoided electroshock only by bolting from the room and demanding to see
the commanding officer.”
Since
coming home, the veterans who have tried to tell of their ordeal have been
harassed relentlessly. They’ve been branded as drunks, bigots, liars and
frauds. Often, it turns out, these slurs have been leaked by the Pentagon. And,
oh yeah, they’ve also been painted as anti-Semites.
In
a recent column, Charley Reese describes just how mean-spirited and petty this
campaign became. “When a small town in Wisconsin decided to name its library in
honor of the USS Liberty crewmen, a campaign claiming it was anti-Semitic was
launched,” writes Reese. “And when the town went ahead, the U.S. government
ordered no Navy personnel to attend, and sent no messages. This little library
was the first, and at the time the only, memorial to the men who died on the
Liberty.”
So
why then did the Israelis attack the Liberty?
A
few days before the Six Days War, Israel’s Foreign Minister Abba Eban visited
Washington to inform LBJ about the forthcoming invasion. Johnson cautioned Eban
that the US could not support such an attack.
It’s
possible, then, that the IDF assumed that the Liberty was spying on the Israeli
war plans. Possible, but not likely. Despite the official denials, as Andrew
and Leslie Cockburn demonstrate in Dangerous Liaison, at the time of the Six
Days War the US and Israel had developed a warm covert relationship. So closely
were the two sides working that US intelligence aid certainly helped secure
Israel’s devastating and swift victory. In fact, it’s possible that the Liberty
had been sent to the region to spy for the IDF.
A
somewhat more likely scenario holds that Moshe Dayan wanted to keep the lid on
Israel’s plan to breach the new cease-fire and invade into Syria to seize the
Golan.
It
has also been suggested that Dayan ordered the attack on the Liberty with the
intent of pinning the blame on the Egyptians and thus swinging public and
political opinion in the United States solidly behind the Israelis. Of course,
for this plan to work, the Liberty had to be destroyed and its crew killed.
There’s
another factor. The Liberty was positioned just off the coast from the town of
El Arish. In fact, Ennes and others had used town’s mosque tower to fix the
location of the ship along the otherwise featureless desert shoreline. The IDF
had seized El Arish and had used the airport there as a prisoner of war camp.
On the very day the Liberty was attacked, the IDF was in the process of
executing as many as 1,000 Palestinian and Egyptian POWs, a war crime that they
surely wanted to conceal from prying eyes. According to Gabriel Bron, now an
Israeli reporter, who witnessed part of the massacre as a soldier: “The
Egyptian prisoners of war were ordered to dig pits and then army police shot
them to death.”
The
bigger question is why the US government would participate so enthusiastically
in the cover-up of a war crime against its own sailors. Well, the Pentagon has
never been slow to hide its own incompetence. And there’s plenty of that in the
Liberty affair: bungled communications, refusal to provide an escort, situating
the defenseless Liberty too close to a raging battle, the inability to
intervene in the attack and the inexcusably long time it took to reach the
battered ship and its wounded.
That’s
but par for the course. But something else was going on that would only come to
light later. Through most of the 1960s, the US congress had imposed a ban on
the sale of arms to both Israel and Jordan. But at the time of the Liberty
attack, the Pentagon (and its allies in the White House and on the Hill) was
seeking to have this proscription overturned. The top brass certainly knew that
any evidence of a deliberate attack on a US Navy ship by the IDF would scuttle
their plans. So they hushed it up.
In
January 1968, the arms embargo on Israel was lifted and the sale of American
weapons began to flow. By 1971, Israel was buying $600 million of American-made
weapons a year. Two years later the purchases topped $3 billion. Almost
overnight, Israel had become the largest buyer of US-made arms and aircraft.
Perversely,
then, the IDF’s strike on the Liberty served to weld the US and Israel
together, in a kind of political and military embrace. Now, every time the IDF
attacks defenseless villages in Gaza and the West Bank with F-16s and Apache
helicopters, the Palestinians quite rightly see the bloody assaults as a joint
operation, with the Pentagon as a hidden partner.
Thus,
does the legacy of Liberty live on, one raid after another.
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