- Thirty-five years after Israeli air and naval forces
attacked a lightly armed U.S. Navy spy ship during the Arab-Israeli Six-Day
War, the CIA director at the time and the legal counsel to the Navy's court
of inquiry say the attack was deliberate.
-
- "It was no accident," former CIA director Richard
Helms said May 29, bucking that agency's June 13, 1967, report that indicated
the incident could have been a mistake.
-
- Retired Navy legal counsel Capt. Ward Boston says he
and the court's president, the late Rear Adm. Isaac "Ike" Kidd,
always believed Israeli forces knowingly attacked the Liberty.
-
- "I feel the Israelis knew what they were doing.
They knew they were shooting at a U.S. Navy ship," said Boston, who
lives in Coronado, Calif. "That's the bottom line. I don't care how
they tried to get out of it."
-
- The attack killed 34 men and wounded 172 others, and
sparked a long-running controversy: Did Israel knowingly try to sink the
American ship or did it believe the ship was an Egyptian vessel?
-
- Officially, the Navy exonerated Israel on June 18, 1967
- 10 days after the attack - when the Navy court of inquiry found that
available evidence indicated the attack was a case of mistaken identity.
-
- THE COURT OF INQUIRY
-
- Boston said Kidd told him he believed the attack was
deliberate and that the Israelis knew the ship was American.
-
- That flies in the face of the findings of Kidd's court,
and also what the author of a new book on the Liberty says Kidd told him
in interviews in the early 1990s.
-
- A. Jay Cristol, a federal judge in Florida and retired
Navy aviator who also served in the service's Judge Advocate General's
Corps, is the author of the upcoming "The Liberty Incident."
-
- "Kidd told me an entirely different story,"
said Cristol, whose new book is dedicated to Kidd, who died in 1999.
-
- Cristol said that during one interview with Kidd in December
1990, Kidd related that when he brought the court's report to then-Chief
of Naval Operations Adm. David Lamar McDonald, the CNO asked him, "Ike,
was it intentional?"
-
- "Ike said, 'No, Admiral,'" Cristol recalled.
-
- But Boston remembers that when Kidd returned from Washington,
he said officials were not interested in hearing the truth.
-
- "In military life, you accept the fact that if you're
told to shut up, you shut up. We did what we were told," Boston said.
-
- He explained that he is willing to talk now because "everyone
else is shooting their mouth off."
-
- Boston said he does not know whether his beliefs were
shared by the other members of the court, Capts. Bert M. Atkinson Jr. and
Bernard J. Lauff.
-
- Lauff could not be located for comment. Atkinson died
in 1999.
-
- But Boston's statements do put him now in the camp of
retired Adm. Merlin Staring, who as a captain and staff legal officer in
London was initially told to review the court's report.
-
- Staring said June 3 that the report was taken from him
before he finished his review, but based on what he had seen, the evidence
did not support the contention that the attack was an accident.
-
- Staring concedes he still has not read the entire report.
-
- Staring, who went on to become the Navy's top JAG officer,
is now part of a newly formed Liberty Alliance, which includes former CNO
and Joint Chiefs of Staff chairman Thomas Moorer and two Marine Medal of
Honor recipients, Gen. Ray Davis and Col. Mitchell Paige.
-
- The group wants a full congressional investigation into
the attack and is lobbying military organizations, including the Veterans
of Foreign Wars and the American Legion, hoping to garner support among
their members, said Tito Howard, the group's executive director.
-
- SURVIVORS ALLEGE CONSPIRACY
-
- Many Liberty survivors and their supporters long have
maintained that the attack was deliberate and that the Kidd report excluded
testimony from crew members that would have shown that.
-
- Boston recalled that testimony was taken from crew members
who said the Israelis fired on life rafts when they were put into the water.
-
- The court's report includes testimony indicating the
shooting of the life rafts was incidental, occurring when the ship was
strafed by Israeli jets.
-
- Some allege Israel wanted the spy ship sunk to ensure
it did not pick up communications showing Israel was planning to seize
the Golan Heights from Syria. Others say it was to prevent Liberty from
intercepting communications dealing with an alleged Israeli massacre of
Egyptian POWs in the Sinai.
-
- Some Liberty survivors and supporters claim the U.S.
government covered up the incident to avoid a conflict with Israel that
could have cost the Johnson administration support among Jewish voters
and supporters. Subsequent administrations and Congresses have avoided
a thorough airing of the incident for the same reasons, they say.
-
- But Cristol says there have been 10 U.S. investigations,
ranging from the court of inquiry and the CIA's report to several conducted
by House and Senate committees.
-
- Five drew no conclusions regarding Israel, according
to a list compiled by Cristol, while others accepted that it was an accident.
-
- The most recent official look at the incident was in
1991, when the House Armed Services subcommittee on investigations found
no evidence to support the Liberty survivors' claim that Israel attacked
the ship deliberately.
-
- REPORTS AND RECOLLECTIONS
-
- The CIA's report, the earliest of those assembled, held
open the possibility that the attack was a case of mistaken identity -
the finding that the Kidd court went on to make five days later - though
it did not present that as a conclusion.
-
- In the June 13, 1967, report, the CIA stated that "an
overzealous pilot" could have mistaken the Liberty for an Egyptian
ship, the El Quesir. Helms, the former CIA director, declined to discuss
the incident at length.
-
- "I've done all I can. I don't want to spend the
rest of my life in court" testifying about the incident, he said.
-
- Mike Weeks, a naval aviation writer and amateur historian
who studied the official Navy communications that occurred during and after
the attack and believes it was an accident, said there is more information
on the Liberty still classified and believes the government should release
all of it.
-
- "Just put it out there and see how it flows,"
he said. "The bottom line, all this stuff ought to be let loose, for
heaven's sake." ___
-
- Bryant Jordan is a staff writer for Marine Corps Times.
-
- Should Congress reopen the investigation into the 1967
Israeli attack on the USS Liberty? The Israelis claim the attack was a
mistake; some veterans contend it was deliberate.
-
- As of 8:40 PDT Sunday, 67% say YES.
-
- Go to: www.navytimes.com and scroll to the bottom right
side of the page to register your vote.
|