news/2007/06/gns_ussliberty_070608
Cover-up theory alive at Liberty reunion
Posted : Friday Jun 8, 2007 7:52:58 EDT
McLEAN, Va. — Former crew members gathered near Washington to remember a controversial attack 40 years ago today when a U.S. spy ship was nearly sunk by an ally.
The Israeli naval and air bombardment of the USS Liberty on June 8, 1967, during Israel’s Six-Day War against three Arab nations left 34 Americans dead.
Israel has always insisted the attack was a case of mistaken identity, and 11 U.S. investigations over the years have reached the same conclusion.
Although Israel apologized and paid restitution to the families of service members killed and injured, some of the men on the ship that day have for decades been pushing the theory that the Israelis intended to murder every American onboard and that the Pentagon is covering up a war crime.
“They knew exactly who we were,” said Joel Lehman, 60, of Austin, Texas, who was a storekeeper for the Navy on the ship and wants a new investigation.
Researcher Michael Oren says the case is closed. He says no one has found evidence that the attack was anything other than an accident.
“I have never come across any evidence supporting it,” said Oren, a senior fellow at the Adelson Institute for Strategic Studies at the Shalem Center in Jerusalem. “Why would Israel ... attack a ship that belonged to its only ally?”
Several former Liberty crew members gathered Thursday at a hotel here to share stories and memories. Many believe the incident was not an accident, and they want a new inquiry into the incident.
According to a State Department summary, the Liberty had been sent to the area by the National Security Agency to find out whether Soviet personnel were operating with Egyptian forces. Messages sent to the Liberty instructing it to remain 100 miles offshore were never received.
The morning of the attack, several Israeli reconnaissance planes identified the ship as a friendly vessel in the war zone, 14 miles offshore. But later in the day, Israeli jets attacked, running six strafing runs.
Lehman and others contend Israel wanted to sink the Liberty because it hoped to blame the attack on Egypt and pull the U.S. into the war, or that it was worried the spy ship would find out about Israel’s plans to attack Syrian positions in the Golan Heights. Oren said both are false because Israel did not need U.S. help in the war and had already told the U.S. government of its plans to attack the Syrians.
A U.S. Navy Court of Inquiry completed 10 days after the attack concluded it was a case of mistaken identity. Ten subsequent inquiries by Congress, the CIA and the Pentagon found no evidence pointing to a deliberate attack.
Dale Larkins, 61, of Lexington, Neb., a seaman apprentice who had just gone below decks before the start of the attack, said Thursday that the atmosphere was “very relaxed” in the moments before the attack.
Larkins heard an explosion and the high-pitched sound of the ship’s chemical attack alarm. When he reported to one of the ship’s machine guns, he found three crewmates shot to pieces. Next came a torpedo hit, “and the ship surged in the water,” he said.
Glenn Oliphant, who lost his hearing in the attack, believes in a conspiracy. People who saw transcripts of communications between Israeli pilots and air traffic controllers say the Israelis knew the ship was American and ordered the attack, said Oliphant, secretary for the Liberty Veterans Association.
Oren said a series of mishaps caused the attack. The Israelis lost track of the ship during a shift change at combat headquarters. When Israeli troops on a beach of the Sinai Peninsula thought they were being shelled from the sea, Israel ordered its navy to attack.
Israeli jets were called in when the Navy could not get to the ship. When the pilots realized they were attacking a U.S. ship, they stopped, “but nobody told the [Israeli] navy,” Oren said. Israeli torpedo boats arrived on the scene and were fired at by the Liberty. The Israelis fired torpedoes. One struck the Liberty, killing several crew members. An Israeli officer saw the U.S. flag, called off the attack and offered to help.
Mitchell Bard, a historian with the American-Israeli Cooperative Enterprise, which promotes cooperation between the U.S. and Israel, maintains a Web site about the incident, which includes NSA transcripts of communications between Israeli pilots and their controllers, which illustrate the confusion.
“The cockpit tapes say [pilots] couldn’t see the [ship’s] flags. Then there was concern about its identity when they saw its hull number and the air traffic controllers in Tel Aviv became concerned that it was an American ship,” Bard said.
“As far I know, these are [the complete transcripts],” Bard said. “But this is something that a conspiracy theorist would say is missing.”
Oren agrees that a new inquiry should be held.
“I think that is probably not a bad idea,” he said.
Meanwhile, the NSA said this week that it will release all documents relating to the attack.
“We’re hoping those documents are what we’re looking for,” Oliphant said.
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