The Fateful Cover-Up

by Paul Findley

Israel's war crimes against the USS Liberty and its crew on June 8, 1967midway through the Six-Day War between Israel and Arab statesprovoked a startling, profound U.S. response, a cover-up that marked the beginning of America's 38 years of Israel-centric foreign policies. It became a costly, radical turn for the worse that sent America's prestige and credibility plunging and imposed on the American people ever-growing new burdenseven warwith no end in sight.

The assault remains perplexing to the few Americans aware of its details but no more so than the strange behavior of President Lyndon B. Johnson while the attack was still underway. Most Americans have no knowledge of the assault on Liberty or the cover-up, but these are certain to make indelible pages in future history books.

When attacked, the Liberty, an unarmed reconnaissance ship of the U.S. Navy, was moving slowly in international waters off the coast of Gaza and the Sinai. The day's horrors are detailed in a report filed on behalf of the ship's survivors in a U.S. circuit court in California on the 38th anniversary of the assault. Among the Israeli crimes cited in the lawsuit are the following:

  1. Sustained rocket, cannon and torpedo fire from air and sea that killed U.S. 34 sailors, wounded 173 others, and riddled the defenseless ship with holes, one of them 40 feet wide.
  2. Gun fire that destroyed rubber lifeboats that were put in the water when the ship's captain ordered preparations to abandon ship.
  3. The firing of napalm on the open deck where defenseless sailors were attempting to protect the ship.

The assault was deliberate. It was committed in broad daylight during a two-hour span in the afternoon that followed a series of close-in aerial surveillance flights by Israeli aircraft hours earlier The assault did not begin until three hours after Israel's naval command precisely identified the target as an unarmed U.S. Navy reconnaissance vessel. The American flag flew in a brisk breeze at the ship's stern. The large U.S. Navy insignia was clearly visible on the ship's hull.

When General Moshe Dayan issued the order to destroy the Liberty, one of the generals on his staff remonstrated: "This is pure murder." Several Israeli pilots, knowing the target was American, refused to take part. Testimony of survivors leaves no doubt that Israel's military high command intended to sink the ship and kill all personnel aboard, leaving no trace of Israel's responsibility.

It was a monstrous example of ingratitude. At the very moment Israeli forces murdered U.S. sailors, President Lyndon B. Johnson was secretly providing unmarked U.S. military aircraft and personnel to aid Israel in its war against neighboring Arab states. It is difficult to imagine a goal that would lead the government of Israel, a beleaguered nation whose only substantial international support came from the United States, to attempt to destroy a military vessel and crew of its only benefactor.

Liberty survivors believe Israel's most likely goal was to lure the United States into joining the Jewish state as a fighting partner in its war against Arab states. The goal would be tempting. With America's mighty military forces battling at its side, Israel could reasonably expect that its nation's security would be guaranteed far into the future. Another motivation might have been the concern that the Liberty crew would learn that Israel planned to invade Syria the next day and transmit that message to Washington. The scheme would work only if Israel could make Egypt, the leading Arab combatant, appear to be responsible for obliterating the Liberty and its crew. That, of course, would require that Israel succeed in destroying all evidence of its own guilt.

Whatever the motivation, the risk of disclosure was immense. If only one U.S. sailor survived to tell the true story or if just one outraged Israeli officer spoke out, the American people would demand severe retribution against Israel. The scheme might have worked, except for the ingenuity of Liberty radiomen. It failed because, despite Israel's intense jamming of airways and bombardment that wrecked the ship's radio equipment, the crew managed to transmit one lone message--a call for help that was received by a nearby U.S. aircraft carrier, as well as by Israeli intelligence.

The Liberty message spoiled any Israeli plans to blame Egypt. Israel sent diplomats immediately by helicopter offering help to Liberty survivorsan offer scornfully refused by the ship's skipper, Commander William McGonagle, still on the bridge despite severe leg wounds. Israel also sent regrets to the White House, claiming that Israeli forces believed their target was Egyptian.

Just as astounding as the assault itself was the reaction of President Lyndon B. Johnson during that day and those that followed. He acted as if his chief responsibility was to protect Israel from harm and criticism. When he learned that a U.S. carrier had launched fighter aircraft to defend the Liberty, the president ordered the aircraft back to the carrier, the only time in U.S. naval history that rescue aircraft were called back while a Navy vessel was under assault. It was stark evidence that Johnson considered Israeli sensitivities and the well-being of Israeli attack personnel more important than the lives of Liberty crewmen.

After the assault, Johnson continued to place Israel's interests above Liberty survivors. He immediately took steps to protect Israel from any public protest that might arise. He accepted quickly Israel's excuse of mistaken identity that his administration knew to be false. He ordered an immediate Navy Court of Inquiry but instructed the chairman, Admiral Isaac Kidd, to absolve Israel of guilt. [In a recent sworn statement, retired Navy Captain Ward Boston, Jr., a member of the Court of Inquiry, declared that he and Kidd were convinced all along that the assault was deliberate, not a case of mistaken identity.]

The president also ordered Kidd to keep survivors from talking about their ordeal. As soon as they were brought ashore, Kidd complied with the presidential order by threatening the sailors, some still bedridden, with court martial and imprisonment if they said anything publicly. When the court completed its quick, limited inquiry and prepared a report, Kidd admitted privately to a colleague that he knew it was misleading. Before it was released to the media, its text was further sanitized for Israel's benefit by Department of Defense civilian attorneys. One of the items they deleted was testimony by survivor Lloyd Painter who told the court he witnessed Israeli forces deliberately shooting lifeboats to pieces.

Medals were issued to survivors but in quiet ceremonies far from the White House and the president. Many public documents related to the assault remain classified. Over the years, Liberty survivors have pleaded repeatedly with administration officials, congressional committees, individual Members of Congress and the media for full disclosure of the truth. Only a few periodicals and networks responded. Only a handful of individual Members of Congress, none in a leadership position, dared to speak out.

The court's false and misleading inquiry was the only official one ever held. Johnson's thorough cover-up was maintained by all of his successors in the presidency. Why the cover-up?

Three years ago, Condoleeza Rice, now President George W. Bush's secretary of state and then his national security adviser, unwittingly explained why in a remarkable burst of candor. She said: "We have an Israel-centric foreign policy." Rice's statement was profound and accurate. Although she spoke nearly a half-century after the assault her words explain why the cover-up began and why it continues to this day.

Three years ago, Condoleeza Rice, now President George W. Bush's secretary of state and then his national security adviser, unwittingly explained why in a remarkable burst of candor. She said: "We have an Israel-centric foreign policy." Rice's statement was profound and accurate. Although she spoke nearly a half-century after the assault her words explain why the cover-up began and why it continues to this day.

Since 1967, many people in and out of government have learned the truth abut the cover-up. Why were they silent? Why did the reporters ignore tips that would surely lead to top news stories?

The sad and simple truth is that most Americans, especially those in public office and even those in the presidency, have a deadly fear of being called anti-Semitic. They will not utter or write criticism of Israel, no matter how well documented, for fear it will draw that unwarranted and unwelcome charge. Former U.S. Ambassador the UN George W. Ball once stated that the most powerful instrument of intimidation employed by Israel's U.S. lobby is the "reckless charge of anti-Semitism."

The fear is endemic but rarely mentioned. It reaches all government offices and intimidates all levels and sections of our societybusiness, education, academia, preachers, publishing and other media. Dwight D. Eisenhower was the only president to demand that Israel abide by international law. In 1956, on the eve of his successful bid for reelection, he forced Israel to halt its illegal military assault on Egypt's Suez Canal.

Pro-Israel forces long ago successfully redefined anti-Semitism to mean any criticism of the State of Israel. The new definition is false, malicious and damaging to our national interests, but the Liberty crew and their supporters are among the few willing to risk an anti-Semitic smear.

As a consequence, most citizens are unaware of the startling fact that for years our U.S. Middle East policy has not been crafted by seasoned experts who are committed to America's basic national interests. Instead it is made by lobbies for two politically-powerful religious communities whose goals are narrowly focused. One community is relatively small in number but powerful in influence. It consists mainly of zealous secular Jews, as well as ultra-Orthodox Jews. They are perhaps best described as extreme Zionists. The other community is very large, consisting of many millions of Christians who accept a controversial interpretation of the Bible's Book of Revelations.

Both groups believe present-day Israel is a resurrection of ancient Israel and a preeminent part of God's plan. Both believe the Jewish state must be kept strong and united until the arrival on earth of each group's messiah. They have attained such political power that Congress dutifully appropriates billions to Israel without conditions or serious discussion, much less real debate. Because of this unrestricted aid year after year, Israeli leaders have been able to violate human rights, engage in lawless behavior, abandon the idealism of Judaism, and lure America into damning complicity in this scofflaw conduct.

The complicity reached a fateful peak in 1982 when the U.S. government supplied the arms and material that Israel used in slaughtering 18,000 Beirut civilians, then, adding insult to injury, immediately replenished Israel's supply of weapons and ammunition. Osama bin Laden recently stated publicly that he planned 9/11 as the payback for the U.S. supportive role.

The lobby's grip on our government is unhealthy for both Israel and the United States. It is also unhealthy for both Christianity and Judaism. If our nation is to emerge from today's peril, we must face openly and critically the role of these religious groups and their passionate, dangerous attachment to a single small scofflaw government. If we keep tip-toeing around reality, we risk still greater peril tomorrow.

The Liberty cover-up will someday be recognized as an historic but wrong turning point for America. It convinced Israeli leaders that they could get by with anything, even mass murder of U.S. sailors, with only a helpful reaction from Washington, because that is what actually happened.

It proved ultimately to be a fateful blunder for both Israel and America. It was the first major example of America's Israel-centric foreign policy that has led our people into ever-deepening trouble. It inaugurated endless, ever-mounting U.S. aid to Israel, all of it unconditional and without accountability required. For Israel, it cleared the path for more aggressive military conquest and abuse. It reinforced its contempt for legal constraints and world opinion.

As I ponder the awful price paid by the Liberty survivors, I marveland recoilat the grip the government of Israel, a small nation of about five million people, maintains over America, a nation of nearly 300 million.

After many years in politics, I am convinced that America's greatest burden today is the quiet but firm domination of our national life by Israel, a phenomenon that reaches far broader and deeper than the fate of the Liberty and its crew, important as their fate is to hundreds of families and in the proud annals of the U.S. Navy. Israel's assault, although an egregious example of this how costly this burden can be, is not the only example, nor the most recent one.

Our longstanding Israel-centric policies are the main reason why America, once revered, is today reviled worldwide. Our war in Iraq and even 9/11 can be traced to the extreme anti-Arab bias in our Israel-centric foreign policies.

The cover-up of the Liberty assault signaled the day that tiny Israel took firm control of mighty America's Middle East policies. This, in turn, provoked rising worldwide Arab/Muslim fury against America as well as Israel.

If the truth about the assault on the Liberty had been officially disclosed in detail at any point since 1967, public outrage would have forced an immediate end to our Israel-centric foreign policy. Unconditional aid to Israel would come to a halt. All future U.S. aid would have been tied to firm conditions and accountability procedures like those demanded of all other recipients. This, I believe, would have protected Israeli from law-breaking. Years ago, I heard Moshe Dayan, then Israel's preeminent political and military leader, state plainly that Israel would have no choice but to obey U.S. requirements if they were conditions of eligibility for U.S. aid.

The report filed in federal court by Liberty survivors could become America's turn for the better. If the Bush administration responds positively, the benefits can be great A bright new day can dawn for America. Our nation's relationship with powerful religious groups can become rational, as adherents for the first time become aware of Israel's perfidy. People in almost all lands everywhere, including Israel, can reasonably expect a better tomorrow.

Paul Findley was a United States congressman for 35 years and is the author of "Dare They Speak Out", a best-selling book on the influence of the Jewish lobby in America. His email address is findley1@verizon.net.

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Human Liberation, Volume 1 Issue 1, Fall 2005

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