|
As we are sure you are well aware, the U.S.Navy technical
research ship USS LIBERTY (AGTR-5) was on 8 June 1967 attacked
by Israeli air and naval forces in the Eastern Mediterranean
Sea. Thirty-four Americans assigned to the vessel -- 33 U.S.
Navy personnel and one civilian U.S. Government employee -- were
killed in the attack; 172 Navy personnel were wounded; and the
ship was damaged beyond any further use and was accordingly
scrapped. On 10 June 1967 Admiral John S. McCain, Jr., USN,
Commander in Chief, United States Naval Forces, Europe
(CINCUSNAVEUR), headquartered in London, England, appointed a
formal Court of Inquiry "to inquire into all the pertinent facts
and circumstances leading to and connected with [that] armed
attack; damage resulting therefrom; and deaths of and injuries
to naval personnel."
We address you now in this matter, Mr. Secretary, for two
important reasons, both springing from an official letter that
your Department recently addressed to an inquiring Member of
Congress under date of 16 March 2005. We attach at TAB A, for
your ready reference, a letter of that date which the Office of
the Judge Advocate General sent to Congressman Rob Simmons of
Connecticut.[CLICK HERE to read Tab A.]
Our first reason for addressing you with respect to that letter
is in the nature of a fervent thank you. In the Department's
letter to the Congressman is the statement, for the record, that
"[the] Court of Inquiry [ordered by Admiral John S. McCain, Jr.,
Commander-in-Chief, U.S. Naval Forces, Europe] was the only
United States Government investigation into the attack."
(Emphasis supplied.) We are most grateful to the Department of
the Navy for this official confirmation of a fact that the USS
LIBERTY survivors, and others in their support, have maintained
over all of these 38 years since the attack. During those years
there have been many published assertions and claims that the
attack had already been "investigated" a dozen or more times, by
various Congressional or other U.S. Government officials or
authorities. We deeply appreciate having that matter laid
authoritatively to rest.
Following immediately upon that helpful clarification, however,
the letter at TAB A states: "The Navy plans no further
investigations into the incident." (Emphasis supplied.) We most
respectfully submit, Mr. Secretary, that such a position by the
Department of the Navy -- if it is to be construed as a firm and
considered determination -- can only be adopted by ignoring a
complex of evidence and circumstances that demonstrate the utter
inadequacy and unreliability of the investigative proceedings
conducted by the Navy Court of Inquiry of June 1967 -- to put
the kindest face on the record of those proceedings. If, on the
other hand, the statement is intended to indicate only that the
Navy has no present plans to reopen the matter -- perhaps
leaving open the possibility of further investigative
proceedings, by the Navy or Congress or other duly constituted
authority -- we most respectfully submit that the Navy, in
consideration of the facts that we shall now enumerate, should
not oppose such further investigative proceedings should they be
conducted or ordered by the Congress, for example -- or by the
Secretary of the Army, who now has just such a request under
consideration in his capacity as Executive Agent for the
Secretary of Defense pursuant to Department of Defense Directive
Number 5810-01B of 29 March 2004.
The Court of Inquiry appointed by Admiral McCain on 10 June 1967
was directed to take the sworn testimony of witnesses and to
submit a verbatim record of its proceedings, including its
findings of fact. It first convened at the London headquarters
of the Convening Authority late on 10 June 1967, then proceeded
to the Mediterranean Sea where it conducted its proceedings,
first aboard USS LIBERTY as she limped under escort toward
Malta, then at Malta where the ship was drydocked.
Upon the initial convening of the Court at London Admiral McCain
had orally directed that it conduct and complete its proceedings
within one week. In its record of proceedings, as a preface to
its Findings of Fact, the Court cited, as an "unusual
difficulty" that it had experienced in conducting its
proceedings, "the necessity [thus imposed] of investigating such
a major naval disaster of international significance in an
extremely abbreviated time frame." Pursuant to that patently
unusual and unreasonable directive and requirement, however, the
Court, after meeting during the three calendar days of 13 to 15
June at Malta [its record presents those Malta sessions as
constituting its "Second" and "Third" days], returned to London
on 16 June 1967 and on that day there conducted its final
"Fourth Day" proceedings. At London, on 16 and 17 June, the
Court's Findings of Fact were formulated and its tape-recorded
proceedings were rendered into a written record which, with its
documentary exhibits and appendages, constituted a document of
over 650 pages.
The official Navy record of the proceedings of that 1967 Court
of Inquiry thus reveals that the Court, pursuant to the one-week
time limit imposed upon it, actually met during portions of five
calendar days -- two days of its allotted time having been
consumed in its travel between London and the Mediterranean. It
is small wonder that the Court fell far short of fulfilling its
directed mission of inquiring into "all the pertinent facts and
circumstances leading to and connected with" that attack.
The failure of the Court to inquire into, and to record, "all
the pertinent facts and circumstances" is both apparent and
clear from multiple circumstances of record. We will flag here,
preliminarily and briefly, some of the most significant and
blatant of those tell-tale indicators:
| (1) |
The arbitrary imposition of a
7-day time limit within which the Court was required to complete its inquiry
into a massively complex event;
|
| (2) |
The fact that, in its three days
in Malta, it had access to and took testimony from only 14 of the 260
surviving members of LIBERTY'S complement -- many of her 172 wounded crewmen,
obviously including many who had been at the heart of the
action, having already been medevaced to other U.S. Navy vessels
and shoreside facilities for medical attention. (Never
thereafter were these critically important eyewitnesses
officially questioned concerning their observations of or
experiences during the attack.)
|
| (3) |
Some of the few crewmen whose testimony was in fact recorded
included in their sworn testimony factual observations
concerning the attack which were eliminated by the Court from
its written record or were otherwise subsequently redacted from
the Court's record as it is now officially held and acknowledged
by the Government;
|
| (4) |
Some of the LIBERTY crewmen who did have an opportunity to
testify before the Court attempted to respond in full, or to
include in or add to their accounts factual observations which
would have been clearly relevant to the "pertinent facts and
circumstances . . . connected with the armed attack" that the
Court had been charged with eliciting -- but were stopped and
expressly forbidden by the Court to testify further in those
areas;
|
| (5) |
The President of the Court and the Court's appointed
Counsel, toward the conclusion of the last day of their
proceedings at Malta on 15 June 1967, discussed the perceived
advisability of the Court's proceeding to Israel in an attempt
to get relevant evidence from Israeli sources; the President of
the Court telephoned Admiral McCain, the Convening Authority,
seeking an extension of the Court's deadline to permit such an
investigative effort; but any such extension was denied by the
Convening Authority and the President was told to "come home
with what you have."
|
Some, or perhaps all, of these investigative deficiencies are
directly attributable to the "unusual difficulty" that the Court
itself acknowledged at the time that it had experienced in
conducting its proceedings -- "the necessity of investigating
such a major naval disaster of international significance in an
extremely abbreviated time frame."
Moving from the hasty proceedings of the Court of Inquiry to the
submission and processing of its results -- on the afternoon of
17 June 1967 the record of the Court's proceedings was delivered
by the Court's appointed Counsel to the senior Navy Judge
Advocate General's Corps officer then on the CINCUSNAVEUR staff
-- then-Captain Merlin H. Staring, JAGC, USN. In delivering the
record the Court's Counsel simply told the CINCUSNAVEUR Staff
Judge Advocate that Admiral McCain was sending it to him for his
review. The Staff Judge Advocate thus charged with that review
-- a normal and anticipated procedure whereby the Convening
Authority would have available a legal opinion and
recommendations concerning the Inquiry proceeding and its
results -- turned immediately to his detailed examination and
consideration of the record. He continued that process steadily
into the early morning hours of 18 June 1967, then after a
four-hour rest break resumed his review at 6:00 AM on 18 June
1967.
Early in the forenoon of 18 June the Court's Counsel, again as
an emissary from the Convening Authority, reappeared and
inquired of the Staff Judge Advocate concerning the status of
his review and when it might be expected to be completed. The
Staff Judge Advocate advised that he had by then read only about
a third of the record -- that there were many clerical and
typographical flaws in the physical record that should be
remedied before it was formally forwarded to the high
governmental authorities who undoubtedly awaited it -- that,
more importantly, the reviewer had not yet been able to find, in
the parts of the record that he had so far reviewed, testimony
or other evidence to support some of the Court's stated findings
-- and that he could not yet estimate when he could complete his
review and recommendations but was continuing to devote himself
solely to that task.
The Court's Counsel departed with that information, reported it
to Admiral McCain and the President of the Court, Rear Admiral
Kidd, then returned to the Staff Judge Advocate about 20 minutes
later with the message that CINCUSNAVEUR, the Convening
Authority, had directed him to come and get the Court's record
from the Staff Judge Advocate and bring it back to the Convening
Authority. The Staff Judge Advocate accordingly surrendered the
record to the emissary exactly as he had received it; he was
neither then nor later asked for any of his work or any opinions
that he might have formed to that point; and he had no further
contact with the Court of Inquiry or its results at any time
during the remaining eight years of his active Navy career.
The records ultimately declassified and released by your
Department, Mr. Secretary, show that the record of proceedings
of the Court of Inquiry, as thus produced, was formally
submitted by the President of the Court to Admiral McCain, the
Convening Authority, by letter dated 18 June 1967. Your records
also show that, on that same 18 June 1967 date, Admiral McCain
endorsed the record forward, addressed to the Judge Advocate
General of the Navy as required by the Navy's investigative
procedures -- the Judge Advocate General being then charged with
the responsibility of circulating the investigative record to
all cognizant or interested Navy officials and commands and,
ultimately, with the permanent custody and safekeeping of the
official record. Admiral McCain's endorsement consisted of five
typewritten pages of substantive or procedural comments,
concluding with his unqualified approval of the proceedings and
findings of the Court of Inquiry "based upon knowledge available
as of 191425Z" (emphasis supplied). [Since we will have occasion
to refer to a number of provisions of that endorsement, a full
copy of it is attached for your convenient reference as TAB B.]
[CLICK HERE to read Tab B.]
Rear Admiral Kidd, the President of the Court, departed the
London CINCUSNAVEUR headquarters on the afternoon or evening of
18 June 1967 en route to Washington, DC, with the thus-endorsed
record of the Court of Inquiry for delivery to the Department of
the Navy. Whether he did so on 18 June as thus understood, or on
19 June as might be indicated by the "191425Z" date time group
which rather illogically concludes Admiral McCain's 18 June
endorsement, it is certain that the drafting of that
endorsement, and such consideration of the content of the
650-plus-page record as may have underlain it, was all
accomplished - presumably by Admiral McCain with or without the
assistance of his nonlegal staff (or perhaps Rear Admiral Kidd)
-- within either about five hours [up to 181425Z June 1967] or
about 29 hours [up to 191425Z June 1967].
We would first note that the U.S. Navy commander who appointed
the Court of Inquiry directed it "to inquire into all the
pertinent facts and circumstances leading to and connected with
the armed attack[, the] damage resulting therefrom[, and the]
deaths of and injuries to naval personnel." In contrast to the
fully warranted and completely justified breadth of that
investigative assignment, the recent letter from your Department
to the Congress purports to restate -- and, in the process,
seeks to narrow -- both the scope and significance of that Court
of Inquiry investigation. Noting simply that the Court had been
ordered "to investigate the circumstances surrounding the
attack," it told the Congress that the investigation had
"focused primarily on U.S. military communications problems
prior to the attack" and upon "the heroic efforts of LIBERTY'S
crew in damage control during the aftermath of the attack." To
the extent that these latter representations may be true, they
constitute in themselves an acknowledgment that the 1967 Court
of Inquiry fell far short of inquiring into "all the pertinent
facts and circumstances leading to and connected with the armed
attack," as had been clearly directed by the Convening
Authority.
The Court's very first recorded Finding of Fact was to the
effect that the attack by Israeli forces upon USS LIBERTY
resulted from a mistaken identification of that ship, (thus was
not an intentional assault on the part of the Israelis). The
Convening Authority, in paragraph 15 of his endorsement,
addressed that vital aspect of the matter only briefly,
attributing his conclusion that "the attack was in fact a
mistake" to his series of preceding "comments," most of which
did indeed relate to "U.S. military communications problems
prior to the attack." (One exception: His almost-admiring
comments in his paragraph 11 concerning the "remarkable
efficiency of the coordinated Israeli air and surface attack"
and the "particularly noteworthy . . . efficacy of [the
Israelis'] air-delivered rockets" with respect to "their
penetrating capabilities and devastating accuracy.")
Only one of the prior comments upon which the Convening
Authority thus relied in support of his conclusion that the
attack "was in fact a mistake" bore even tangentially upon the
possibility of "mistake," versus "intentional attack" -- his
paragraph 14, seemingly bemoaning a deterioration of the
competence of both the United States and the Israelis in visual
identification procedures. In connection with that rather pious
observation he professed that the LIBERTY'S national colors had
been "shot down in the opening stages of [the] action," taking
no account whatsoever of the testimony, in the Court's record,
that those colors had been promptly replaced by the ship's
larger and even more visible "holiday colors." In addition, he
expressly noted that both "intense fires on the ship," ignited
in the early stages of the attack - "coupled with herculean
efforts by [LIBERTY'S] engineer department to increase speed . .
. produced heavy black smoke which compounded the recognition
problem facing the attacking forces." It is far from clear in
what manner the USS LIBERTY, or any other United States force,
displayed in this event any apparent deficiency "in our
recognization (sic) competence" which would prompt such a
gratuitous and misleading attempt to assume for our nation a
shared responsibility.
Beyond these observations concerning the incomplete, the
shallow, and the contrived comments by the Convening Authority
in his endorsement on the Court's record, Mr. Secretary -- an
endorsement as demonstrably hasty and ill-considered as the
Court's proceedings themselves -- there is yet more to
demonstrate more specifically that the 1967 Navy Court of
Inquiry into the unprovoked attack upon the USS LIBERTY was and
is totally inadequate as a basis for an accurate historical
record of that tragic event -- and a totally inadequate record
of the actions, the merits, and the entitlements of the
survivors of that event and of the families and survivors of the
34 Americans who were killed in that event.
At the very outset, in orally ordering that the Court of Inquiry
complete and submit its work within one week, the Convening
Authority imposed a condition that was totally and blatantly
unreasonable in the circumstances. A basically unarmed United
States Navy ship had been subjected to a sudden, concerted, and
unprovoked attack by unmarked forces of a foreign nation.
Thirty-four Americans had been killed in the assault; 172 others
had been wounded - - many of them disabled in varying degrees
for life; and the ship devastated beyond further use. To require
the official investigation of an event of such magnitude and
complexity to be completed in one week was not only to invite a
superficial, incomplete, and unreliable result - - but to ensure
it.
There is still now available, Mr. Secretary, a very substantial
volume of live and fully competent testimony -- officially
unheard testimony -- to the events of 8 June 1967 and to the
widespread aftermath of those events. Over 30 of the Navy and
Marine Corps survivors of the Israeli attack are still available
-- many of them having overcome or tolerated grievous wounds and
having carried (and suffered), for 35 years, graphic memories of
the events of 8 June 1967. Those survivors, once they ultimately
overcame the fear of threatened consequences that had been
drilled into them by the 1967 Court of Inquiry, have now for
years sought to be heard -- and they both stand ready and seek
now to state their observed truths about the assault on the
LIBERTY and its aftermaths.
In addition, there are still available a substantial number of
other competent witnesses who, while not among the heroic
victims and survivors of the attack, were privy in various ways
to relevant June 1967 events. Such additional testimony
includes, but is not limited to, the following:
| (1) |
Eye witness accounts of aircraft surveillance, well prior to
the Israeli attack on the LIBERTY, with the Israeli Star of
David identification on one of those surveillance aircraft
plainly visible to members of LIBERTY'S crew.
|
| (2) |
Evidence that the LIBERTY herself was, except for her
special antennas, nothing more than a Victory ship converted for
U. S. Navy purposes -- a type which dominated the U. S. Navy's
Service and Transport Forces at the time. Her profile, paint,
and bow designation were identical to those of a plethora of
U.S. Navy ships that had plied the Mediterranean during the
1960's, every day of the year. Based on those characteristics
alone, no military pilot of a Mediterranean littoral country
could have failed to identify her, prior to the attack, as an
American ship -- without even considering all of the other forms
of identification she displayed at the time, including
particularly, of course, her U.S flag.
|
| (3) |
Evidence that the communication foul-ups which resulted in
LIBERTY'S being some one-hundred miles from where the JCS had
ultimately intended her to be -- a major focus of the cursory
endorsement placed on the investigative report by the
Commander-in-Chief, U S. Naval Forces, Europe -- is somewhat
beside the point in view of the subsequent telephonic contact
established between the Secretary of Defense and the President,
in Washington, with Rear Admiral Lawrence R. Geis, USN, the
Commander of Carrier Task Force 60.1 who flew his flag on USS
AMERICA (CV-66). Within range to succor LIBERTY, Admiral Geis
had authorized AMERICA's Captain, Don Engen, to launch fighter
aircraft that could, by their mere presence, have without
further bloodshed ended any mistaken-identity claim by the
attackers. Ordered by the President to recall the fighter
aircraft that had been launched to aid the LIBERTY in response
to her distress call, Admiral Geis had no alternative to
compliance with that direct order from the Commander-in-Chief.
That order thus ended any chance of alleviating the loss of life
and damage to which USS LIBERTY was being subjected.
|
Although the CINCUSNAVEUR endorsement to the LIBERTY Court of
Inquiry may have been stamped "TOP SECRET" for reasons of
"State," we do not hesitate to observe here that, had its
contents become public knowledge at the time, it would have been
greeted with derision and disgust by every officer and sailor in
our Fleet, world-wide.
In the long-continued and still continuing attempt by the U. S.
Government -- and the Navy -- to keep the true facts of the
attack on the USS LIBERTY from general knowledge -- as well as
the efforts of its crew to save their ship, which they
accomplished without outside assistance -- their rightful place
in the annals of the U. S. Navy's historic tradition -- "Don't
Give Up The Ship" -- has been denied to them. We submit that it
is time -- and there is still time -- to right a great wrong.
As we have indicated briefly above, Mr. Secretary, The Liberty
Veterans Association -- the survivors of the attack -- have on 8
June 2005 filed with the Secretary of the Army, in his capacity
as Executive Agent for the Secretary of Defense, a formal and
well-documented Report of War Crimes Committed Against U.S.
Military Personnel on June 8, 1967, during the Israeli attack on
the USS LIBERTY on that date. That documented report seeks to
generate the convening, by the Secretary of the Army, of an
investigating body to undertake "the complete investigation [of
the attack on LIBERTY] that should have been carried out
thirty-eight years ago." One of the several War Crimes
specifically reported in that submission by the survivors
involves the actions of the attacking Israeli forces in firing
at and destroying or sinking the humanitarian life rafts that
the LIBERTY had launched, or was preparing to launch, in an
effort to save some of her wounded personnel. At least one
survivor witness before the 1967 Navy Court of Inquiry
testified, under oath, specifically on those actions by the
Israeli forces -- but that portion of his sworn testimony was
omitted from the Court's written record -- or was thereafter
deleted from the official record of those proceedings as held
and produced (belatedly) by the Department of the Navy as its
official custodian.
Because of the official interest that the Secretary of the Army
thus has in these circumstances -- and because of the relevance
of this entire communication to the consideration that he is now
giving to this Department of Defense matter -- we are
simultaneously delivering a copy of this letter to the Secretary
of the Army for his information and consideration as well.
We most respectfully ask, Mr. Secretary, that you carefully
consider our foregoing presentation -- that you examine and
appraise, objectively, the official records of your Department
to which we have referred, and the validity and accuracy of
those records that we have challenged -- and that you now,
before it is too utterly late, both consent to and support the
efforts of the LIBERTY survivors and their supporters to
generate a full, fair, and objective United States Government
investigation into the facts and records of the 8 June 1967
attack by Israel upon the USS LIBERTY (AGTR-5).
Most sincerely, and very respectfully,
|