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(Issac Goldberg) wrote in message . com...
ojunk (Mike Weeks) wrote: http://libertyincident.com/documents.htm Finally! After lots of name calling, changing the subject and non sequiturs, Weeks gives a source which he alleges contains information concerning Congress investigating the Liberty and concluding that the attack was an accident. Mike had given his sources in the past, quite a few times. You feel that Mike had a duty to spoon-feed you, and treat you with respect, even though you had no idea what you were talking about. I don't really care about your hurt feelings. First, rather that 5 or 6 Congressional investigations, there are only two alleged investigations into the USS Liberty. But, as we will see, these two committees did not conduct conclusive investigations into the major points of controversy concerning the USS Liberty. It is not the job of Congress to investigate everything. The US Navy's Court Of Inquiry did a pretty good job establishing the facts. (And please read those 727 pages before you claim your "facts." Mike did it, no reason why you can't.) Congress trusted the Navy investigation, which seems to be pretty professional and unbiased. There was no point taking the 158 pages of testimony, under oath, and have the same witnesses repeat the same testimony in front of Congress. 1) House Armed Services Committee Investigation Lo and behold, rather than "A Report on the attack on the USS Liberty," the link takes you to a report on "Review of Department of Defense Worldwide Communications." That was the one point that, from a military point of view was not clear. How, a couple of years after Tonkin, the US Navy sent a ship into a war zone? Did the Navy officers have no clue what a mess another Tonkin could cause? There were two explanation, a communication error from home, or an error by the crew. Congress did a pretty good job checking that. (IMO the commander of the ship had to realize the danger of going to a war zone and protest, loud, to highers up. The US Navy appreciates "follow the orders" much more than I do, and does not share my opinion.) In your opinion, what data, not in the Navy's Court Of Inquiry report, could Congress find? Which witnesses should have been called? What documents could they request? a) Whether the attack was intentional, The US Navy decided that it was not. b) Whether Israel had previously identified the Liberty, Israel admitted indentifying the ship earlier, but losing its position later. I don't think that the US notification that none of its ships were near the war zone helped much. c) Whether rescue aircraft were recalled, Why is that important? d) Whether an American intelligence plane recorded conversations between the attacking Israeli aircraft and their controllers, and what those conversations were. The US government has this data, and the Navy's Court had the power to subpoena it. The US government wants to keep the data secret, just like it keeps plenty of other military data secret. If you think that the *US* government, in the last eight adminstrations (Johnson, Nixon, Ford, Carter, Reagan, Bush, Clinton, Bush), is a part of a cover- up then you need a better story to explain that. In fact the only issue considered in the report deals with problems with DOD communications. Because that seemed, to Congress, like a major issue that can end up in another Tonkin. Pueblo shows that Congress had a clue. 2) Senate Foreign Relations Committee Investigation However, there are some comments by Senators which indicate their feelings on the assault on the USS Liberty: Senator Hickenlooper: "I think it was a deliberate assault on [the USS Liberty.] ... I think they had ample opportunity to identify it as an American ship. ... It is inconceivable to me that the ship could not have been identified." I wonder why those Monday morning quarter-backs never talk that way when US forces attack US forces... Talk is cheap, having a clue how to prevent "friendly fire" incidents is not. Senator Aiken: "I think, not only the committee, but the public wants better information than they have had so far." The committee could subpoena the information. Choosing not to do so, and then whining about missing information, is what I would expect Senators to do. Would not you? Senator Mundt also expresses doubts about the failure of the attacking Israeli pilots to identify the ship "in broad daylight." And how much experience does Senator Mundt have flying jets? (BTW Israeli pilot had little training in attacking ships, and they used the wrong bombs for sinking ships.) So, based on the only three Senators who were quoted, the conclusion of the Committee, if there had been a report, would have been the rejection of the contention that the attack was accidental. Again, talk is cheap; making a case is much harder. To make a case you have to explain most data, not just pick and choose. The senators did not want to sign their names on a report that made claims without proof; it could be a long term liability. If this is an example of what Cristol alleges was an investigation of the Liberty which exonerates the Israelis, Cristol is a failure. Have you read Cristol book? Yes or No? (I did not read most of the book BTW; I wait to the consipracy guys to make a real case before I'll bother disproving it.) Hillel "That the Congress approves and supports the determination of the President, as Commander in Chief, to take all necessary measures to repel any armed attack against the forces of the United States and to prevent further aggression." |
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(Issac Goldberg) wrote in message . com...
For some reason, I cannot reply directly to Hillel's post. The main point, which Hillel does his best to avoid is: Congress never conducted an investigation solely concerning the USS Liberty affair, and Cristol's web page does not refute that. ojunk (Mike Weeks) wrote: http://libertyincident.com/documents.htm Finally! After lots of name calling, changing the subject and non sequiturs, Weeks gives a source which he alleges contains information concerning Congress investigating the Liberty and concluding that the attack was an accident. First, rather that 5 or 6 Congressional investigations, there are only two alleged investigations into the USS Liberty. But, as we will see, these two committees did not conduct conclusive investigations into the major points of controversy concerning the USS Liberty. 1) House Armed Services Committee Investigation Lo and behold, rather than "A Report on the attack on the USS Liberty," the link takes you to a report on "Review of Department of Defense Worldwide Communications." The only connection with the attack on the Liberty was the misrouted message ordering the Liberty to leave the area due to the hostilities. No other aspect of the attack on the Liberty was looked at. The topics not looked at included: a) Whether the attack was intentional, b) Whether Israel had previously identified the Liberty, c) Whether rescue aircraft were recalled, d) Whether an American intelligence plane recorded conversations between the attacking Israeli aircraft and their controllers, and what those conversations were. In fact the only issue considered in the report deals with problems with DOD communications. If this is an example of what Cristol alleges was a Congressional investigation of the Liberty which exonerates the Israelis, Cristol is a failure. 2) Senate Foreign Relations Committee Investigation Lo and behold, rather than "An Investigation into the attack on the USS Liberty," the link takes you to hearings on the "Foreign Assistance Act of 1967." It is not a report giving conclusions of an investigation into the attack on the USS Liberty; it is merely hearings. They are two different things. However, there are some comments by Senators which indicate their feelings on the assault on the USS Liberty: Senator Hickenlooper: "I think it was a deliberate assault on [the USS Liberty.] ... I think they had ample opportunity to identify it as an American ship. ... It is inconceivable to me that the ship could not have been identified." Senator Aiken: "I think, not only the committee, but the public wants better information than they have had so far." Senator Mundt also expresses doubts about the failure of the attacking Israeli pilots to identify the ship "in broad daylight." So, based on the only three Senators who were quoted, the conclusion of the Committee, if there had been a report, would have been the rejection of the contention that the attack was accidental. If this is an example of what Cristol alleges was an investigation of the Liberty which exonerates the Israelis, Cristol is a failure. Cristol is 0 for 2. Cristol is a failure. There was no Congressional investigation of the USS Liberty which concluded that the Israeli attack was an accident. And this was from the link that Weeks provided. Maybe Weeks will continue to provide other links which disprove his contentions. |
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#It is not the job of Congress to investigate everything.
#The US Navy's Court Of Inquiry did a pretty good job establishing #the facts. (And please read those 727 pages before you claim #your "facts." Mike did it, no reason why you can't.) # #Congress trusted the Navy investigation, which seems to be pretty #professional and unbiased. (Issac Goldberg) wrote in message . com... The main point, which Hillel does his best to avoid is: Congress never conducted an investigation solely concerning the USS Liberty affair, and Cristol's web page does not refute that. Congress never conducted an investigation of *MOST* affairs. Congress usually investigates only if there is a high profile case or there are indications that the executive branch lied; e.g. Joseph McCarthy communists' hunt, Iran-Contra affair, Watergate. Unless you can show some good reasons why US Navy's Court Of Inquiry can't be trusted in the Liberty case, I don't see why Congress should waste its time duplicating the court's job. |
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wrote in message . com...
[snip] (Issac Goldberg) wrote in message . com... The main point, which Hillel does his best to avoid is: Congress never conducted an investigation solely concerning the USS Liberty affair, and Cristol's web page does not refute that. Congress never conducted an investigation of *MOST* affairs. Congress usually investigates only if there is a high profile case or there are indications that the executive branch lied; e.g. Joseph McCarthy communists' hunt, Iran-Contra affair, Watergate. Congress has thoroughly investigated every disaster involving the US Navy EXCEPT for the USS Liberty. [snip] |
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#Congress never conducted an investigation of *MOST* affairs. Congress
# usually investigates only if there is a high profile case or there # are indications that the executive branch lied; e.g. Joseph McCarthy # communists' hunt, Iran-Contra affair, Watergate. (Issac Goldberg) wrote in message . com... Congress has thoroughly investigated every disaster involving the US Navy EXCEPT for the USS Liberty. Really?! Would you like to compare the The USS Stark Incident (see http://eightiesclub.tripod.com/id344.htm), with 37 American seamen dead, to the Liberty? Can you please tell us what special investgation Congress did about the Stark and not about the Liberty? Come on, you made a claim now prove it. BTW my impression is that Congress usually accepts the Navy's Court of inquiry conclusions; e.g. USS Greeneville. If you have some counter examples, where Congress rejected the Navy's Court of inquiry conclusions, then please post them. |
#7
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ojunk (Mike Weeks) wrote:
Jim Watt _way wrote: (Mike Weeks) wrote: Jim Watt _way wrote: (Mike Weeks) wrote: Oops; it's a comment made in 2002 by the 1967 [then-CIA director] Helms in that BBC trash production of "Dead on the Water" Is it trash because it comes to a different conclusion to you? You should really appreciate this; it's trash because it's a fairy tale. And the evidence for that statement is? You have yet to show any evidence that the book "The Liberty Incident" is a fairy tale; since you admit to not having read it. This is not evidence. This is 'changing the subject.' Whether or not Watt read Cristol's book is hardly evidence that the BBC production is a 'fairy tale.' This is just another example of the kind of non sequitur Weeks often uses to muddy the waters. How typical. I've seen this video, and when they use a cropped BDA photo taken from a Mirage IIICJ(R) which has been widely published since 1967 showing destroyed EAF MiGs on the ground and attempt to pass it off as having been taken from an USAF RF-4C flying for the IAF, piloted by USAF crews ... The cropped photo doesn't show the Mirage's shadow at the bottom ... You get just one example. Come back after you've read Cristol's book ... Again, to imply that Watt's reading Cristol's book or not is 'evidence' that the BBC production is a 'fairy tale' is totally bogus. Your alleged proof concerning a cropped photo is your own personal view, and as such is not evidence, it is just your opinion. This just another example of the non-entity know as Weeks being omniscient. |
#8
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