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 USS Liberty incident
 
 [1967]
 
 
 Nick Tabor
 Fact-checked by
 
 
 
 The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
 Article History
 
 
 
 Quick Facts
 
 
 Date:  								June 8, 1967
 
 
 Location:  								 Mediterranean Sea
 
 
 Participants:  								 Israel
 
 
 USS Liberty incident,  attack on the USS Liberty, a  United States Navy  signals intelligence ship, by the  Israel Defense Forces (IDF) on June 8, 1967, in the middle of the  Six-Day War. In all, 34 people on the ship were killed, and roughly another 170 were  wounded. Decades after the event,  The Washington Post called it “one of the most bloody and bizarre peacetime encounters in U.S. naval history.”  Israel’s  government claimed in the aftermath that there had been a communication  lapse between its military personnel and that the men carrying out the  attack had thought the Liberty was an enemy ship. However, a  number of U.S. military and intelligence officials have maintained over  the years that the attack was deliberate. The incident remains a source  of controversy.
 
 The Liberty began its sailing life as the SS Simmons Victory, an armed  merchant steamer that put to sea in the closing months of  World War II.  After the war, the 455-foot (140-meter) ship had its deck guns removed,  and it was contracted out as a civilian cargo carrier until it was  retired from active service in 1958. The U.S. Navy acquired the ship in  1963 and renamed it the USS Liberty in June of that year. In late May 1967 the U.S.  National Security Agency (NSA) requested the ship’s deployment in the eastern  Mediterranean. Conflicts between Israel and several Arab countries—mainly  Syria,  Egypt, and  Jordan—were  intensifying, and the NSA hoped to gather more intelligence on the  situation. The ship was equipped with several dozen antennas, which were  designed to pick up radio  transmissions. Its mission was to monitor the communications of the Arab countries but not those of Israel.
 
 The  Six-Day War began on June 5, 1967, when Israel launched air strikes  against the Arab countries. Israel successfully destroyed the Egyptian  air force on the ground, and for the remainder of the war it controlled the skies. The U.S. did not take a side in the war.
 
 
  
 The USS Liberty under attack by Israeli forcesAn Israeli Super Mystère fighter-bomber passing over the USS Liberty while the ship was under attack by Israeli forces off the Sinai Peninsula, June 8, 1967.
 On June 8 the Liberty was in international waters off the  Sinai Peninsula, and that morning several Israeli reconnaissance planes flew overhead. The Liberty was flying the American flag, and the ship’s hull number—GTR-5—was clearly visible at the bow and  stern. The attack started at 3:05 pm when two Israeli  Mirage fighter-bombers strafed the Liberty with 30-mm cannons. The Liberty’s  armament consisted of just four deck-mounted .50-caliber machine guns,  and some of the ship’s crew attempted to return fire at the attacking  aircraft. These guns, as well as the ship’s communication antennas, were  quickly destroyed. A flight of Israeli Super Mystère fighter-bombers  soon followed, dropping  napalm on the ship and targeting it with cannons. Much of the Liberty caught fire.
 
 About 3:20 pm three Israeli  torpedo boats approached the ship. They raked the Liberty  with their deck guns and began launching torpedoes. One blast alone  reportedly killed 25 men and wounded dozens more. The attack was finally  called off about 4:30 pm. Israeli officials have said this was when they realized that the vessel belonged to the  United States. Altogether, 34 people on the ship were killed, and another 171 were wounded.
 
 
  
 USS LibertyThe seriously damaged USS Liberty  en route to the port of Valletta, Malta, for repairs following the  attack by Israeli torpedo boats and aircraft, June 8, 1967. The  helicopter hovering over the bow of the ship is removing the dead and  wounded to the aircraft carrier USS America.
 When U.S. Pres.  Lyndon Johnson was notified of the attack, he initially assumed that the  Soviet Union was responsible. Israel soon told the U.S. that it had attacked the Liberty,  thinking it was an enemy ship. An investigation by the Israeli  government later found that its naval headquarters had known the ship  was American at least three hours before the attack but that this  information had not been  conveyed to the people who ultimately authorized firing on the Liberty.
 
 The  Johnson administration did not publicly contradict Israel’s explanation  for the attack. And when Johnson released a memoir four years later, he  claimed again to accept the Israeli government’s explanation: “This  heartbreaking episode grieved the Israelis deeply,” he wrote, “as it did  us.” However, in the immediate aftermath of the attack, he told a  Newsweek reporter that he believed the attack had been deliberate. He thought Israel’s motive was to prevent the Liberty from eavesdropping on Israeli transmissions.
 
 
 
 
 
 
   
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 Battle damage to the USS LibertyThe USS Liberty  in port at Valletta, Malta. The ship shows obvious damage from an  attack by Israeli aircraft and torpedo vessels on June 8, 1967.
 Most  senior U.S. administration officials shared these suspicions in  private. The NSA’s director, Lieut. Gen. Marshall Carter, said in a 1988  interview that he believed the attacks “couldn’t be anything else but  deliberate.” Many survivors and their families were also convinced that  Israel knew the ship was American, and over the decades they continued  to call for a full congressional investigation, but without success. In  1997, on the 30th anniversary of the attack, Capt. William McGonagle,  who had been the Liberty’s commander, said that for years he  had wanted to believe the attack was “pure error,” but he couldn’t  accept that explanation. He joined the call for an investigation.
 
 Michael  Oren, an Israeli politician and scholar who previously served in the  IDF and has written extensively on the war, has been a  persistent  champion of the Israeli government’s position. He wrote an article in  2000 called “The ‘USS Liberty’: Case Closed,” in which he argued that  all the official documents that had been declassified made it clear that  the attack was a sincere mistake.
 
 Nevertheless, the matter remains in dispute. In 2007 a number of military and intelligence personnel told the  Chicago Tribune  they had seen communications that showed the Israelis knew they were  attacking an American ship. “I’m willing to swear on a stack of Bibles  that we knew they knew,” said Oliver Kirby, the NSA’s deputy director  for operations at the time of the attack.
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