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       USS Liberty Attack:   
	American Servicemen Expendable, Just Don't 
	Embarrass Israel  
	By Tammy Obeidallah 
	Al-Jazeerah: CCUN, May 31, 2010 
	  
	 Within the United States, there has been a growing awareness of 
	Palestinian suffering. This has been manifested in the many demonstrations 
	held during Israel’s assault on Gaza from December 2008-January 2009. The 
	boycott of Israeli goods is gaining speed, as well as the campaign to 
	recognize the Israeli government’s treatment of Palestinians as apartheid.
	 
	Yet there is one tragic and shameful event in particular which serves to 
	discourage Palestinian rights activists. If so-called “patriotic” Americans 
	viciously suppress the concerns of veterans and their families by covering 
	up the murder of their own sailors, what hope is there to recognize the 
	voices of oft-maligned Arabs half a world away? June 8 will mark the 43rd 
	anniversary of the heaviest attack on an American ship that inflicted the 
	highest number of casualties since World War II. The USS Liberty was an 
	intelligence vessel, patrolling international waters in the Eastern 
	Mediterranean Sea. 
  The day was clear and sunny; the ship flying the 
	American flag, as was standard. Suddenly and simultaneously, out of that 
	clear azure sky and sea came a two-pronged attack by Israeli air and naval 
	forces. Napalm, gunfire and missiles rained hell on Liberty’s crew for two 
	hours while Israeli torpedo boats closed in. 
  In that two hours, 34 
	American sailors died. Another 172 were injured 
  The Liberty crew 
	managed to send an SOS, heard by nearby U.S. Sixth Fleet aircraft carriers. 
	Fighter planes launched immediately, however turned back on orders from 
	President Johnson. Naval personnel listening to radio relays heard Johnson 
	say “I don’t care if the ship sinks, I’m not going to embarrass an ally.”
	
  Israel claimed it was a case of “mistaken identity,” in other words, 
	“friendly fire.” Israel’s ludicrous explanation was that pilots thought the 
	USS Liberty was El Quseir, an Egyptian vessel having 1/4 of Liberty’s 
	displacement and half the beam. El Quseir was 180 feet shorter and very 
	differently configured. The Liberty had her name clearly written in English, 
	while the Egyptian ship would have displayed Arabic script. 
  There 
	are several motives for Israel’s deliberate attack: to prevent the USS 
	Liberty from transmitting intelligence pertaining to massacres by Israeli 
	troops which were taking place in the Golan Heights and that the 1967 War 
	did indeed result from a pre-emptive strike by Israel. The attack could have 
	been used to draw the U.S. into the 1967 War as well. Most of the Liberty’s 
	survivors believe that Israel’s goal was to sink the ship and kill everyone 
	aboard. Had there been no survivors, the attack could have been pinned on an 
	Arab country. 
  Ward Boston, Jr., himself a U.S. Navy veteran, was the 
	chief legal counsel to the Navy Court of Inquiry investigating the USS 
	Liberty attack. In an editorial published by The San Diego Union Tribune, 
	Boston stated then President Johnson and Secretary of Defense McNamara 
	ordered the Navy Court of Inquiry to conclude the attack was accidental. 
	Furthermore, the late Admiral Isaac C. Kidd, the Court of Inquiry’s 
	president, was given only one week to gather evidence for the investigation, 
	although a proper inquiry would have taken six months. 
  “We boarded 
	the crippled ship at sea and interviewed survivors. The evidence was clear. 
	We both believed with certainty that this attack was a deliberate effort to 
	sink an American ship and murder its entire crew,” Boston wrote. “I saw the 
	bullet-riddled American flag that had been raised by the crew after their 
	first flag had been shot down completely.” 
  For the official record, 
	Admiral Kidd was ordered to rewrite part of the Court’s findings, including 
	striking Lt. Lloyd Painter’s testimony in which he stated three life rafts 
	filled with seriously wounded sailors were gunned down at close range by 
	Israeli torpedo boats.  
	Survivors of the USS Liberty attack, their families and the families of 
	those killed have demanded a fair congressional inquiry, to no avail. To 
	this day, survivors have never been allowed to testify publicly. Nor have 
	intelligence officers who received real-time Hebrew translations of Israeli 
	commanders ordering pilots to sink “the American ship.” 
  The cover-up 
	did not stop at the official report:  it extended to commemorations 
	honoring USS Liberty survivors and crew members’ memorials alike. The USS 
	Liberty’s Commander, William L. McGonagle was awarded the Medal of Honor in 
	a quiet ceremony at the Washington Navy Yard, not in the customary White 
	House setting.  
	In 1987, the town of Grafton, Wisconsin proposed naming a new $1 million 
	library–to be built with private donations and an $83,000 federal 
	contribution– The USS Liberty Memorial Library. Days later, Jewish community 
	leaders decried the proposal as “anti-Semitic.” An angry letter from a local 
	rabbi, Gideon Goldenholz, stated the name was “insulting to Jews.” Not 
	surprisingly, the $83,000 federal money was put on hold. Even the priest at 
	Grafton’s Catholic Church came out in opposition to the name, stating “The 
	USS Liberty has become a symbol of hate.”  The Milwaukee Jewish Council 
	attempted to block the name and there were several picketers at the 
	groundbreaking ceremony. The USS Liberty Memorial Library was finally 
	dedicated in 1989 after two years of battling well-organized opposition. 
	Shortly after the library’s completion, Congressman Andy Jacobs (D-IN) 
	inserted an essay entitled “The USS Liberty, 1967-89,” written by former 
	Congressman Pete McCloskey (R-CA) into the Congressional Record. McCloskey 
	pointed out that the dedication of the memorial with the names of the 34 
	dead was the first public recognition of their service in the 22 years since 
	the attack. 
	The greatest sacrilege, however, is that these 34 crew members’ 
	tombstones are engraved “...died in the Eastern Mediterranean,” rather than 
	“killed in action.”  
	There is little hope of real policy change in a country where citizens 
	would denigrate their own veterans, both living and dead, in order to 
	protect a state where perpetrating war crimes is commonplace.
 
  
	  
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