THERE WILL BE NO OFFICIAL COMMEMORATION
Assault on the Liberty
She
was a beautiful ship.
June
8, 1967. Forty years ago, on this day that will live in infamy,
a lightly armed, clearly marked communications vessel sailing peacefully
in the eastern Mediterranean, was suddenly attacked without warning
by Israeli jets and torpedo boats, leaving 34 U.S. servicemen dead
and another 171 wounded and maimed for life. The ship was the USS
Liberty. Its mission was to monitor the fighting going on between
Israel and its Arab neighbors, which were then at war. Details of
this vicious, cold-blooded atrocity by America's favorite rogue state
are recounted by James Bamford in his no-holds-barred examination
of the National Security Agency, Body of Secrets. Below are
several excerpts from this devastating exposé.
Without warning the Israeli jets struck—swept-wing Dassault
Mirage IIICs. Lieutenant Painter observed that the aircraft had "absolutely
no markings," so that their identity was unclear. He then attempted
to contact the men manning the gun mounts, but it was too late. "I
was trying to contact these two kids," he recalled, "and
I saw them both; well, I didn't exactly see them as such. They were
blown apart, but I saw the whole area go up in smoke and scattered
metal. And, at about the same time, the aircraft strafed the bridge
area itself. The quartermaster, Petty Officer Third Class Pollard,
was standing right next to me, and he was hit."
With the sun at their backs in true attack mode, the Mirages raked
the ship from bow to stern with hot, armor-piercing lead. Back and
forth they came, cannons and machine guns blazing. A bomb exploded
near the whaleboat aft of the bridge, and those in the pilothouse
and the bridge were thrown from their feet."
In the communications spaces, radioman James Halman and Joseph Ward
had patched together enough equipment and broken antennas to get a
distress call off to the Sixth Fleet, despite intense jamming by the
Israelis. "Any station, this is Rockstar," Halman shouted,
using the Liberty's voice call sign. "We are under attack by
unidentified jet aircraft and require immediate assistance."
"Great, wonderful, she's burning, she's burning," said the
Israeli pilot.
After taking out the gun mounts, the Israeli fighter pilots turned
their attention to the antennas, to sever the Liberty's vocal cords
and deafen it so it could not call for help or pick up any more revealing
intercepts. "It was as though they knew their exact locations,"
said Senior Chief Stan White. Lieutenant Commander Dave Lewis, in
charge of the NSA operation on the ship, agreed . . . "It took
a lot of planning to get heat-seeking missiles aboard to take out
our entire communications in the first minute of the attack. If that
was a mistake, it was the best-planned mistake that has ever been
perpetrated in the history of mankind."
Then the planes attacked the bridge in order to blind her, killing
instantly the ship's executive officer. With the Liberty now deaf,
blind and silenced, unable to call for help and unable to move, the
Israeli pilots next proceeded to kill her. Designed to punch holes
in the toughest tanks, the Israeli shells tore through the Liberty's
steel plating like hot nails through butter, exploding into jagged
bits of shrapnel and butchering men deep in their living quarters.
"Menachem, is he screwing her?" [Israeli] headquarters asked
one of the pilots, excitedly.
As the Israelis contined their slaughter, neither they nor the Liberty
crew had any idea that witnesses were present hight above. Until now.
According to information, interviews and documents obtained for Body
of Secrets, for nearly thirty-five years NSA has hidden the fact that
one of its planes was overhead at the time of the incident, eavesdropping
on what was going on below. The intercepts from that plane, which
answer some of the key questions about the attack, are among NSA's
deepest secrets.
At 2:24, minutes after the air attack, horror once again washed over
the crew. Charles Rowley, the ship's photographer, was lying in the
ward room being treated for shrapnel wounds when armor-piercing bullets
began penetrating the bulkhead. Through the porthole he saw three
sixty-two-ton motor torpedo boats rapidly approaching in attack formation.
Closing
in at about forty knots, each of the French-built boats had a crew
of fifteen and were heavily armed with a 40mm cannon, four 20mm cannons
and two torpedoes. Like a firing squad, they lined up in a row and
pointed their guns and torpedo tubes at the Liberty's starboard hull.
Seeing that the Israeli fighters had destroyed the American flag,
Commander McGonagle ordered the signalman to quickly hoist another—this
one the giant "holiday ensign," the largest on the ship.
USS
Liberty limps back to port following vicious sneak attack by America's
favorites: a "blessing" from Israel.
Almost immediately,
the boats opened up with a barrage of cannon fire. One armor-piercing
bullet slammed through the ship's chart house and into the pilothouse,
coming to rest finally in the neck of a young helmsman, killing him
instantly. Three other crewmen were slaughtered in this latest shower
of steel.
"Stand by for torpedo attack, starboard side," McGonagle
shouted frantically into the announcing system. The Israelis were
ready for the kill. At 2:37 p.m., the safety plug was pulled from
a 19-inch German-made torpedo on Motor Torpedo Boat 203. Seconds later
it sped from its launcher and took direct aim at the Liberty's NSA
spaces. Four other torpedoes—more than enough to sink the largest
aircraft carrier—were also launched. Had all or most of them
hit their mark, the Liberty's remaining life would have been measured
in minutes. Through a miracle, only one struck home. But that hit
was devastating.
To prevent anyone from escaping the badly wounded ship, the Israelies
even destroyed the few surviving life rafts that were put into the
water following the call to abandon ship.
"I watched with horror as the floating life rafts were riddled
with holes," said Lieutenant Lloyd painter, in charge of the
evacuation. "No survivors were planned for this day!"
Earlier that day, the Israelis had massacred civilians and prisoners
in the [northern Sinai] desert; now they were prepared to ensure that
no American survived the sinking of the Liberty. Another witness to
the lifeboat attacks was pipefitter Phillip F. Tourney. "As soon
as the lifeboats hit the water they were sunk. They would shoot at
us for target practice . . . They wanted to kill and maim and murder
anyone they could."
Black smoke was still escaping through the more than 800 holes in
the Liberty's hull, and the effort to hush up the incident had already
begun. Within hours of the attack, Israel asked President Johnson
to quietly bury the incident. "Embassy Tel Aviv," said a
highly
secret, very-limited-distribution message to the State Department,
"urged de-emphasis on publicity since proximity of vessel to
scene of conflict was fuel for Arab suspicions that U.S. was aiding
Israel." Shortly thereafter, a total news ban was ordered by
the Pentagon.
No one in the field was allowed to say anything about the attack.
All information was to come only from a few senior Washington offcials.
At 11:29 a.m. (5:29 p.m. Liberty), [President] Johnson took the unusual
step of ordering the JCS to recall the [American fighters being sent
to the aid of the stricken vessel] while the Liberty still lay smoldering,
sinking, fearful of another attack, without aid, and with its
decks covered with the dead, the dying and the wounded. Onboard the
flagship of the Sixth Fleet, Rear Admiral Lawrence R. Geis, who commanded
the carrier force in the Mediterranean, was angry and puzzled at the
recall and protested it to Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara.
Admiral Geis was shocked by what he heard next. According to information
obtained for Body of Secrets, "President Lyndon Johnson
came on with a comment that he didn't care if the ship sunk, he would
not embarrass his [Israeli] allies."

Gaping hole is seen in ship's hull at the waterline.
The hole in the
Liberty's twenty-three-year-old skin was nearly wide enough to drive
a bus through; the ship had a heavy list to starboard . . . thirty-two
of its crew were dead (two others would later die) and two-thirds
of the rest wounded; its executive officer was dead, and its commander
officer was badly hurt. Despite all this, the Liberty was heroically
brought back to life and slowly made her way toward safer waters.
Once the Liberty pulled into Malta on June 14, the effort to bury
the incident continued at full speed ahead. A total news blackout
was imposed. Crew members were threatened with courts-martial and
jail time if they ever breathed a word of the episode to anyone—including
family members and even fellow crew members. "If you ever repeat
this to anyone else ever again, you will be put in prison and forgotten
about," Larry Weaver said he was warned.
"Tob shebbe goyim harog." ("Kill
the best of the Gentiles.")
—THE TALMUD, Sanhedrin 59
REMEMBER THE LIBERTY !!!
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