Scott Horton Show - Just the Interviews - 3/11/22 Larry Bowen and Joe Meadors Tell Their Story of Surviving the Attack on the USS Liberty
Episode Date: March 14, 2022Scott sat down with two of the survivors of the 1967 Israeli attack on the American Navy ship the USS Liberty. They detail their personal experience and fit their story into the broader historical con...text of the attack. Although the events of that day, almost 55 years ago, still haunt them, they are both fighting to make the public aware of what happened and to pressure Congress to properly acknowledge the attack. They are doing this despite official threats that talking about the attack would lead to prosecution and jail time. At the end, they explain how you can join them in this fight. Discussed on the show: Sacrificing Liberty documentary Assault on the Liberty by James Ennes https://www.usslibertyveterans.org/ https://www.usslibertyveterans.blog/ https://www.usslibertydocuments.info/ Get Involved in Helping Us — USS Liberty Veterans Association Larry Bowers is a survivor of the USS Liberty attack where he was stationed by the NSA. He now serves as the President of the USS Liberty Veterans Association where he works to raise public awareness of the attack Joe Meadors is a Navy veteran who served as a Signalman on the USS Liberty during the Israeli attack. Today he works as an activist for his shipmates who perished and those who survived and who, like him, have been silenced for 55 years. This episode of the Scott Horton Show is sponsored by: The War State and Why The Vietnam War?, by Mike Swanson; Tom Woods’ Liberty Classroom; ExpandDesigns.com/Scott; EasyShip; Free Range Feeder; Thc Hemp Spot; Green Mill Supercritical; Bug-A-Salt and Listen and Think Audio. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
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All right, y'all, welcome to the Scott Horton Show.
I'm the director of the Libertarian Institute, editorial director of anti-war.com, author of the book, Fool's Aaron,
Time to End the War in Afghanistan, and The Brand New, Enough Already, Time to End the War on Terrorism.
And I've recorded more than 5,500 interviews since 2004.
almost all on foreign policy and all available for you at scothorton.4 you can sign up the podcast feed there and the full interview archive is also available at youtube.com slash scott horton show all right well i'm here on location in san diego and i'm with larry bowen and joe meters and joe we've spoken before on the phone
Very happy to meet you guys here in person. We've had a great time, went to dinner last night, and got to hang out and become friends here a little bit.
Both of these men are survivors of the Israeli attack on the USS Liberty, June 8, 1967.
And I want to give thanks to Daryl Cooper for helping arrange this too, so this could happen today.
So I guess I want to start with the bottom line, the number of KIA and wounded.
and then we'll get into the story of how events, you know, started unfolding that morning
and try to pick up the gory details here.
I guess first of all, name rank, serial number, what were you guys doing?
You were NSA and you were in Navy, right?
Right.
So go ahead and just talk about your...
Mine was still Navy.
I was a cryptologic technician, radium, and second-class petty officer.
And, you know, my primary duties were to collect international Morse code, copy it, and then it would be processed and sent back to NSA for further processing.
So that morning, the morning of the attack, I had a day watch, and I was sitting in a position, copying code.
And I found out later that morning that what I was copying was pretty significant.
That they were talking about, you know, a major offensive against a target.
Didn't identify the target, but, you know, my buddy Bob Eisenberg told me at lunchtime that it was big.
Somebody was really going to get their butt kicked.
And, of course, I don't know if he knew that it was us, he didn't say it.
But then we were outside of the, you know, secure spaces.
We learned to talk around what's going on, just so that you can, you know, communicate
like we're communicating now.
So I haven't really told you what I was copying or anything else.
But suffice it to say that it was important.
Yeah, sounds like it.
All right, now, and that's Larry, so go ahead, Joe.
What were you doing on the boat that morning?
My rank was a signalman.
I was responsible for visual communications between ships like Flag Oyst and flashing
light in the semaphore.
I had just gotten out of A school, Signalman A school, in Newport, Rhode Island.
And I got assigned to the USS Liberty,
which steams independently, so I couldn't figure out
why they would have me a sigelman on the ship.
But.
And how old were you guys at this time?
I was 19.
You're 19.
I was 21.
And I'm sorry, why wasn't confusing
that they had you being the signal man that day?
Because we steamed independently.
We didn't steam in company with other ships.
So I stood quartermaster watches, which I got very adept at, but kind of not what I was born to do as far as the Navy was concerned.
But then that means that the American flag flying on the ship that morning was your responsibility?
That was virtually the only job I had to do except for lookout watches was to make sure that at the appropriate times the flag was flying.
flying. And now do I have it right from this new documentary sacrificing liberty from true
news? I believe they say that you started out with a five-by-eight-foot flag. Yes, the regular
steaming ensign we called it. It was we had, we normally went out at sea and no ships around
we didn't fly the flag because it would just be destroyed by the by the wind and the the stack
blowing all of its carbon out but when we got close to land or had ships in the area we would
raise the flag I got you so for those of us who aren't Navy sailors how far away would
another ship have to be to be too far away to identify that flag by sight do you think
never mind binoculars and everything but just by naked eye how far away could you
recognize that as an American flag do you think?
About, I'd say about seven or eight miles.
Seven or eight miles.
And so if you're talking about a slow flying reconnaissance plane, for example, that was
buzzing right by the ship, is there any way in the world they could mistake that flag
for any other thing, Joe?
One of the aircraft flew so low, it rattled our deck plane.
So we could see that the aircraft quite clearly the pilots and that we knew from the intercepts
that they were reporting back to their ship, back to their headquarters, that we were an
American ship and flying an American flag.
But let me make a comment about the focus on flying the American flag.
That's, you know, any ship can fly an American flag if they want to.
That is not a specific indicator of the nationality of the ship.
You had things like the color of the ship, the length of the ship, the structure of the superstructure,
and then all that stuff to consider the flag.
There's lighting, too.
Yeah, there's flighting.
There's standard U.S. Navy markings.
And so where it says U.S.S. liberty, that's on the stern?
That's on the stern.
It just said Liberty.
It didn't say U.S.S.
Liberty.
But that was the standard writing.
But an experienced Navy or Air Force would be able to recognize those letters as,
that's American lettering on an American boat.
We're talking broad daylight on a bright sunny morning, right?
Oh, absolutely.
Not a cloud in the sky.
So now in the documentary, they say that you guys saw the Israelis.
Of course, you're rooting for the Israelis.
It's the middle of the 1967, Sixth Day War here.
And so you guys are waving at them and saying,
hey, look, it's our Israeli friends.
How are you guys doing?
Because they're flying surveillance flights over the liberty
for how long that morning.
How many planes came to check you guys out?
I'd say about a dozen times, really.
About a dozen times.
And they would circle the ship.
Like I say, we'd wave to the pilots.
And did that seem odd, though,
that they kept coming back and back
and different kinds of planes and everything?
It wasn't uncommon that we would have aircraft come out from the, you know, from the west coast of Africa where we normally steamed up and down during that trip anyway.
It was common for a reconnaissance aircraft to come out and check us out, so we didn't think anything about it.
Okay, so then unless I'm leaving anything out, we go ahead now to the first indications of trouble here that morning.
They just, a fighter jet just opened fire, strafing the ship, is that right?
Yeah, I was on the pilot house.
We had just secured from General Quarters drill.
It was a little after 2 o'clock in the afternoon.
And Lloyd Painter was the officer at the deck,
and he was watching the surface search radar.
And he noted on the radar some very high speed.
He assumed we aircraft coming, approaching us,
flying up our starboard side and so we all ran up to the signal bridge we thought
it would just be another circling of the ship but when the aircraft got it's a little
ahead of us they turned left immediately to what we think was another circling of the ship
but they got straight in and directly in front of us turned immediately left and began
strafing and then we all went down to the pilot house and
And so at that point, the captain's on the microphone, giving y'all instructions, telling y'all, what are we supposed to do?
I guess the ship is only armed with a couple of light machine guns.
Is that correct?
Well, 450 caliber machine guns.
And so somebody jumps on the guns and starts shooting?
No.
No?
No.
Well, there's one of the guys in the headquarter, or this, excuse me, the, the, uh,
General Quarters station was at Mount 51, which was on the starward side up on a
Fauxhall, and he was on a 50-caliber machine gun, and he fired one bullet at the attacking
torpedo boats, actually, because I don't think we fired at the aircraft, they were moving
too fast, but he fired one bullet, and the Israelis says that removed all doubt that we
were in enemy ship.
Here we were here after going an ungodly barrage from attacking jets without firing a single shot at them
and then torpedo boats appear and we fired one shot and poof they were you know they were they were the enemy
yeah they're just making up excuses after the fact at that point because isn't it right later the the torpedo boats didn't even approach
until the planes had already been tacking for quite a while right how long had the the air attack been going on before the torpedo
about 25 to 30 minutes. Yeah. And it was a two-prong kind of attack. They did the
strafing several passes on the, you know, firing 50 caliber, you know, armor-piercing
shells and rockets at the ship. So the air attack and and later the motor torpedo boat attack
ended up with, we had 821 rocket-sized holes in the ship's hull on superstructure.
So, but the torpedo boats came, you know, pretty much after the air attack.
Now, I'll want to change the subject. We'll pick it back up at the torpedoes for a second.
But before we started recording, Joe, you mentioned how, you know, of course, virtually all veterans who, you know, go through actual combat, have some kind of PTSD from this thing.
But at least, you know, for these other guys that can go through some therapy, some kind of thing, by the way to put it behind them.
But because you guys' story is suppressed, you guys have to dedicate your lives to being full.
time activists to try to tell the truth about this story to let the people of this country
even know that this happened that you can't ever put it behind you i can tell when he's talking
this is really hard for you still isn't it you know very hard yeah it's an incredible amount of
violence and seen in the documentary the way they show a lot of the bullet holes and the damage
and i guess some kind of dramatization of what it was like at the time um
But 34 dead, that's not dying in their sleep.
That's torn apart by these bullets coming in at this high speed, right?
And one thing, when I do my talks, and I haven't done very many recently,
but when I do them, normally you write out your notes,
you know, whether they're a bullet or written out speech that you give,
I can't do that.
I have to go up there and just give it a virtually off-the-cuff conference.
about the attack because it's always constantly with me and if I had to write it
down it's I just have to be reliving it in detail and that's that's that
affects me yeah and have you guys had therapy and and had professional help
with yeah I'm still under therapy for PTSD yeah see I was
I was a CT, so as a communications technician, I had top secret clearance and knew enough
that when they told us never to speak of it or would be fine or imprisoned or both, you know,
it was like the normal for me to just clam up and not say anything. And then after I retired
from the Navy in 1986, I went to work as a defense contractor still needing my
clearances. And so again, I suppressed all of the trauma. I mean, I was having
nightmares and wake up with cold sweats and just my wife knew that there was
something wrong, but she didn't quite understand what
what I was going through until that docu-series by True News.
When she saw that, it kind of opened her eyes to, you know, the trauma that we experienced.
And so, but I've been going through therapy now for about four or five years because I didn't open up until after I retired.
Wow, so it wasn't even until, what, in 2016 or 17 or something?
Maybe first, I'm not 2016.
Yeah.
I reconnected with Ron Kukle.
And, you know, we started talking about, you know, the ship and the Liberty Veterans Association
and getting actively involved.
And it helped me so that I can talk to you now without breaking down.
I when I first started therapy I you know I couldn't talk about it and there's
still parts of the attack that are blank for me I I was as a secondary or maybe it's
a third assignment I had during the attack I was detailed back to the
fan tail as a phone talker because our phone talker Larry Weaver had been hit by a
rocket and tore them up pretty bad so I got detailed to go back there and be the
phone talker and when I saw the torpedo boats coming back for the second time
I had to relay that to the bridge but I that's
then there's a part of that that's just blank for me.
I don't know if they were still firing at us,
or if they were just coming back, not to offer assistance,
but I'm not sure what their purpose was.
But I can't recall what I was doing back there,
other than trying to hide behind this wench that we,
use for you know the anchor and uh but again the uh the therapy has helped me to be able to
discuss those kinds of things now without uh without breaking down so so that's a good thing
plus i'm on medication yeah so no that is a good thing it's a tragedy it took 50 years 50 years for
you to 49 to be able to take that step.
I'm really glad it's helping you.
Is that the same for you, Jim?
Yeah, you've got a good counselor here?
I started talking about the Liberty
when I read Jim Ennis's book,
and it was an interesting way I found out about it.
My wife was a voracious reader,
and she went into Barnes & Noble looking for a specific book.
And so she went up to the desk and asked the clerk
to look it up on her computer to find out if they have it.
and as luck would have it instead of her book Jim Ennis's book appeared so she
she bought that book and gave it to me and I read it in one sitting and what
years is this was 79 and I read it in one sitting and I wouldn't would
speak to anybody for a couple days and I haven't to be honest I haven't picked it
up since yeah man that must have been
stuff well so I mean I don't know maybe I would like to think that doing the
activism that you do and telling the truth about it and trying to bring the
story to light it's helpful but I guess you're saying it's actually really
hurtful too it's really makes it difficult it's a brick wall when I went to
after about 35 years I finally went to the vet center to ask for some
counseling and they they wouldn't give me group counseling they went
had me individually with the sociologist.
And it just turned into, instead of, you know,
describing the attack and what I was feeling at the time,
it turned into a bit session about how my members
of Congress have treated us for, at the time,
for past 45 years.
And it helped me then, but after I got out of the session,
I went back to trying to interface with these members of Congress and the silence that we received from us.
I mean, that must be so difficult.
They're just, I mean, the Congress, what can you say?
They're the worst.
And, I mean, you get any encouragement?
We talked a little bit last night about Devin Nunes, cared a little bit.
He was one member of the House who was willing to stick up for you guys.
gave an award to one of your buddies, right?
Yeah, he gave one of the Silver Star to Terry Albarrier.
He was the E.T. who put together the antenna that we finally got out to our SOS to the Sixth Fleet.
And I know James Trafficant used to stick up for you guys back when.
Was there anybody else really in Congress?
No.
Who has your back this whole time?
It's a matter of speaking of members of Congress, before the blood on the deck was dry,
we had senators from New York City apologizing for the Israeli mistaken attack on the liberty.
Before one word of any testimony was taken, they just assumed that it was a mistaken attack
and got up in Congress to apologize for Israel.
before they got the memo that they just shouldn't mention it at all.
I mean, we're just going to put this in the memory hole.
They don't talk about it now.
That's just amazing.
I told you guys when we were talking last night,
I hadn't heard about the USS Liberty until I was in my,
probably, I think, mid-20s, 24, 25, right when the Israelis were helping the lies into the Iraq war,
and I was starting to learn a lot more about American-Israel's relationship
than somebody brought, have you ever heard of this?
Never heard of this.
Yeah.
It's this huge event, just incredible.
The suppression of the history of it is it's a story almost as remarkable as the event itself,
that they're able, in this society, in the USA, the land of the First Amendment and all of these things,
the very kind of the notion of free speech, First Amendment, notwithstanding,
but the value that the American society has always held
in pre-exchange of ideas and telling the truth and the news
and digging into revisionist history
and retelling old stories in new ways and all these things.
But the USS Liberty, dead silence.
It's just incredible.
There was a time when we would hold a annual memorial service
at either the site of the mass grave in Arlington National Cemetery
or lately at the Navy Memorial in Washington.
Every year we would invite members of Congress to attend
and none of them, none of them attended.
I remember one time sticks in my mind.
We were having a memorial service at the mass grave.
And right after the memorials,
we had invited the Navy to participate
So, after the memorial was completed, the chaplain showed up from the Navy.
And I thought, how ironic that they showed up at the end of the memorial service.
Yeah.
This reminds me of the 16 hours that took them to Ruan rendezvous with us after the attack.
Yeah, well, let's talk about that.
I'll make a note the 16 hours.
So let's talk about the back to the attack here.
You guys say the planes were essentially machine gunning and napalming the ship for about 25 minutes.
It was a well-coordinated attack.
They started by jamming our radios on both U.S. Navy and U.S. Navy Tactical and International
Maritime Distress frequencies.
They used unmarked aircraft.
They initiated the attack with the high-speed mirage aircraft that took out every gun-tile
had rockets in every gun tub and every antenna mount to remove any defensive or
communications capabilities we had then they brought in this lower
mysterious aircraft to napause so just let me stop here right there this is all
those surveillance flights that have been going on in the in the morning there
apparently they did a really good job of planning this thing back at headquarters
that we're going to identify all their little guns and every little different
antenna and you're going to hit them here, here, here and here. Very well planned.
It's hard to reconcile that with any spin that this was some kind of accident when they were
being that careful and picking the individual small targets on the ship itself, which is different
than just while they tried to sink it, right? Like the first thing, as you're saying, the first
thing they did was very specifically jam all your signals and, in fact, destroy as much of
your radio equipment as they could. Yeah, the, uh, the attention.
The attack was very well coordinated, and the Israelis claim that the attacking aircraft
circled the ship a few times at low and slow speeds to unidentification runs, well, we
know for a fact because we were there watching them that they never circled the ship.
And I don't think anybody would claim that a jet aircraft could fly over the ship at low altitude,
to nobody hear it, nobody would see it.
Sure.
So they're definitely lying about that news for only one thing.
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Well, and as Larry was saying, they saw him coming in on the radar.
Uh-oh, somebody's coming in hot here.
These aren't those earlier surveillance planes flying slow.
somebody's coming in fast
and then the next thing you know there's machine gun fire
so there's no time for a
slow circle there doesn't sound like
in your story there
now the torpedo boats show up
and I'm no Navy guy
I was surprised to hear in the documentary
here I don't know if I already knew this
I'd forgotten that five
torpedoes were fired in total
but four
of them failed to hit the ship
now if I'm shooting
a BB gun at the side of a barn, I ought to be able to hit it.
So can you guys explain to me how four out of five torpedoes missed that giant steel
ship?
I mean, how evasive of maneuvers could they have possibly been engaged in to dodge those
torpedoes?
How does that happen?
They probably weren't very well practiced in launching torpedoes, but one of the things
that I'd like to
yesterday
Larry was in the
interview with
with Jocko
he mentioned the fact that
in the research spaces
the CTs
stayed down there
after I'm sorry the CTs
were down in the
communications technicians
they were the spies on the ship
in their research spaces
I've called them research spaces
After the torpedo attack started, the word was passed to stand by for a torpedo attack, Starward
aside.
Now, these CTs were below the water level, and they stayed there, knowing that a torpedo was
headed toward them.
And I'd just like to acknowledge to Larry how proud I am that those guys stayed at their
posts even knowing that they were in mortal danger yeah and that they were again 34 killed
seems like a miracle that was less than that or it wasn't more than that but now okay so on the
torpedoes the I guess I'm to understand that the boat would have been sunk just by the one
torpedo other than just the sheer luck that it slammed straight into an eye beam that served as a shield essentially and made the damage much less worse than it otherwise would have been is that correct yeah the the the five torpedoes that they admit to firing four of them missed and one hit the eye beam and it should be noted that well in one version of the Israeli claim of what happened during the attack
they claimed they mistook us for the El Cazir, which was an Egyptian tramp steamer,
half our size, black hull, rusted out, chained to appear in Alexandria at the time.
But forensic analysis of the torpedo hit tells us that those torpedoes were set to run at a depth
they would allow, or that have the torpedo run completely under the El Cazir without his striking it.
Yeah.
And we'll get back to all that different wild and varied and changing excuses for this attack here in a little bit.
But now, and I'm so sorry to say, I meant to get to this, and I did not get to watch the whole new documentary.
I've seen documentaries about it in the past.
Al Jazeera 1 has some great stuff where they have the audio of the fighter pilot saying,
sir, this is definitely American ship.
You sure you want me to fire on it?
and headquarters says, you heard me, follow your orders, and hit the ship.
But I did not get to see the second two parts of the new documentary.
It's sacrificing liberty.
Don't feel better.
I haven't watched it all either.
Yeah.
We all need to get on that.
But now, so I didn't get to see if they addressed this,
but I remember this from either talking to you before or from talking to Ron Koukul,
that y'all deployed lifeboats into the water and started evacuating guys into the lifeboat.
No, we didn't, the life raft rafts weren't manned.
Oh, they weren't.
They were empty.
Oh, I see, but they just strafed them before you guys could get in.
We had eyewitness testimony before the U.S. Navy Court of Inquiry,
or Lloyd Painter, the officer of the deck,
witnessed the machine gunning of the life rafts.
And he testified to that fact during his testimony
before the U.S. Navy Record of Inquiry,
but his testimony has been removed from a record,
Not redacted.
I guess I had misunderstood that.
I thought that you had already had sailors in those life rafts when they were being stricken.
They straped the life raft so no one could use them.
Yeah.
It was the same difference.
They wanted you to go down with the ship, not with the raft.
The war crime is removing any chance of survival should we have sunk.
That's a war crime that the U.S. government has allowed to be committed with impunity.
Right.
And now, you guys told me, too, last night that maybe Phil mentioned this, that once the ship is disabled, even your enemy, even if they still thought you were the terrible Egyptians that they were at war with, once they had disabled the ship, they were obligated to come and rescue you guys.
Under the law of the sea and the laws of war and all of that, they can't let you drown.
They have to come and save you, right?
That's right.
But they didn't do that.
No, they left the scene and came back about an hour later, probably hoping that we would already have been sunk.
But they came back about an hour later with an offer of assistance.
Of course, we thought the attack was still on, and I thought it was just a ruse to get access to the ship.
So Captain McGonigal said no in not so polite terms.
So now, the obvious question here, I'm sure everyone's wondering as they listen to this.
Where the hell is the rest of the U.S. Navy during this?
The Sixth Fleet was roughly 500 miles away.
But they did, you know, once they got R.S.OS on the USS Saratoga,
they scrambled jets to come to array.
And before those jets got over the horizon,
Robert McNamara, Secretary of Defense,
recalled, you know,
he called, you know, on a
high com, I guess it was, or...
It was a telephone call.
Yeah, it was a telephone talk.
And he called and told him, you know,
bring those jets back.
I didn't say why.
He just said, recall those jets.
So in other words, I mean,
am I right then that that means that the Israelis
were already on the phone with Washington
in D.C. saying we tried to sink your battleship here and so we're in the middle of trying
to sink it so don't go rescue your guys I mean what could possibly be the explanation for his
call at that time we didn't know we didn't report to a six fleet who we were going to be under
attacked by right so the assumptions should have been it's the Egyptians we got to go save
our guys from the Egyptian exactly and there's no other reason to think now do we
is there any other indication that we know of from Matt and Ameris side of the story of
what he was doing there. Does he have an official excuse for that?
According to Larry Geis, who was the
commander of Carrier Division 4, I think it was,
he took the call from LBJ and McNamara.
And it was relayed through Morocco,
and we've been in contact with a guy named Tony Hart
who was stationed there and actually handled the phone call.
He listened to it. And LBJ said he didn't care
if the ship sunk.
his concern was for the well-being of the Israelis.
Yeah, the only thing that came out during, I don't know,
the course of the investigations is that there was thought that
because the Sixth Fleet had been conducting nuclear drills earlier in the day
that possibly McNamara thought that they,
the aircraft were nuclear armed.
So when they got the notification to recall the first wave of jets,
the carriers, both the Saratoga and the America,
ended up reconfiguring their jets to conventional weapons,
and they relaunched a second wave.
And that's when McNamara got it back on the phone
and said, you know, I told you to recall those jets.
That's when Admiral Geis said,
I want it from a higher authority.
And that's when Johnson got on, like Joe was saying,
and said, I don't care if the boat sinks
and everybody on board goes on the bottom of the met,
I'm not going to embarrass an ally.
I'm sorry, let me just make sure I understand that you're saying
that they kind of have a plausible excuse
for turning the planes back the first time
they thought they might have been armed with nukes,
but then they launched planes that they knew
for certain were armed only with conventional weapons.
And then that was when the president himself intervened
and said, you heard me.
Yes.
And this is while you guys are being attacked by the planes still
at the same time frame?
Yes.
Yes.
This is before the torpedo boats.
If, and I think Joe mentioned it yesterday
during our interview that if the jets
have been allowed to proceed and come to our aid,
the torpedo boats,
never would have gotten there to attack us
because the jets would have been able to turn them back.
And that would have saved 25 guys' lives.
When the torpedo head in the communication spaces,
we lost 25 sailors.
Yeah, I was just wondering,
how fast do those planes fly again?
If they're 500 miles away.
They could have made it less than an hour.
Yeah.
Even if I had to go on afterburners all the way
and they were dry, I don't know,
they ran out of,
and could almost run out of fuel by the time they got there.
A, they would be, they would have driven off the aggressors.
And if they did run out of fuel,
they could fly to an Israeli air base and refuel.
If they wouldn't get shot out of sky at that point, right?
For coming to y'all's aid.
Oh man.
But it should be noted that,
the radio men in the 6th Fleet were listening to our calls for help knowing that those aircraft had been recalled and that had to affect them.
Have they talked about that much?
You have testimony from the guy who fielded the phone call here.
Because you're right, they must have been all sitting there cringing to death.
We've been in contact with some radio men from the various ships and they said that, you know, it really,
affected them. Yeah, man, this is such an unbelievable story. Now, well, I want to talk about the
motive, but I want to make sure that I'm not missing too much of the actual story of the battle
itself, such as it was, the massacre. One of the things that I learned, and we don't have to go
into this, guys, if you don't want to, I mean that. But one of the things that they really talk about
in the documentary is the scene in the med bay and in I guess the messhole afterwards which was
being shifted into a temporary med bay again these guys weren't dying in their sleep these
guys were being torn to bits and and dying right there in front of you guys trying to save them
and all of that I mean can you describe that scene the chaos on the ship after the attack finally ended
The mestex was made into a dispensary with, we put, took mattresses off our bunks, put them on the mess tables and then put the seriously wounded shipmates on, you know, makeshift beds out on the mastex.
The carnage was just unbelievable.
There were people there with missing body parts.
There were people there with shrapnel wounds
that, I mean, looked like they'd been through a meat cutter.
And I remember one of the fellas had his head split open,
split open where you could actually see the gray matter of his brain.
And I think he also had a thumb missing or something.
And he asked Phil Turney to find his thumb.
I mean, and of course, Phil couldn't.
I mean, he had no idea where to even start to look.
But here's a guy that's got, you know, his whole
forehead wide open and he's more worried about his thumb. And during the night, those of us that
could walk through those spaces there on the Mestex, trying to comfort the guys that were laying
there in pain. And we only had one doctor on board. Lieutenant
Pfeiffer. And then we had two corpsmen. And I mean, they had their work cut out for them because it had 70% of the crew was either killed or injured.
Oh, 70% killed or injured.
Yep, 70%. There were 34 killed and 174 wounded out of the complement of 294.
So there was, there were other places that we had injured, you know, other than just
in the Mestex because there just wasn't enough room.
Yeah.
And I'm sorry, I want to go back one step to, you mentioned, I think, Joe, the story of the
guy who, and this is, whenever I interview Ray McGovern about this story, he always loves to tell
the story of the hero.
who requested permission from the captain
to risk his neck under heavy fire
to go and reconnect at a broken antenna
and make the antenna work so he could send the SOS.
Can you talk about that?
Yeah, it was Terry Haldiardier,
who was a, I think, a third class E.T.
And he knew of an antenna that had been,
what we call surveyed.
It means it wasn't working.
And he got that intent up and working again.
And that was the only intent that was working on a frequency that we could call out to.
And that's how we got our SOS message out to the Sixth Fleet.
So Lyndon Johnson himself calls off the air support.
But then these ships, he said if they're 500 miles away,
do they at least start steaming towards you to rescue you the next time?
rescue you the next day or who comes to your rescue finally it was 16 hours
later the USS Massey and USS Davis came out of the morning fog and
and rendezvoused with us and then we saw the aircraft carriers and the
cruisers that were in the 6th Fleet they came to our assistance and then
not not in time yeah definitely not so and then I guess this
As soon as they rescue you, some admiral tells you, you all better keep your mouth shut and never talk about this ever again, like immediately, right?
And you guys just, you don't even have a chance to complain where the hell were you guys while we were getting shot because you're already sworn to secrecy before you can even say that, right?
That's right. Admiral Kidd came on board and he took his admiral stars off and he says, okay, tell me what happened?
And so the guys took...
Wait, wait, wait, what does that mean? He took his admiral stars off before he asked.
He said, I'm just one of you guys now.
This is between you and me, Joe.
Just talk to me straight kind of thing.
Right.
So the guys told him exactly what happened.
And so after they did, he put his stars back on and says,
okay, I'm the admiral now, you're the seaman.
You're not to talk about this to anybody.
Not your wife, not your girlfriend, not your family, not your friends, nobody.
Not each other.
Not each other?
during it for the rest of your life you're not to say anything or we will come after you and
you'll spend some time in jail and you're on the deck of the liberty still while he's reading you
this rat act or you're already on his ship no you're still on the liberty when he's talking is
we're on the liberty yeah unbelievable what a story this is just okay now i mean i almost don't
even want to spend time on the Israeli shoddy excuses here um let's hold that for a second let's talk
about and I guess this is speculation but can we talk about what you guys think is the
most probable motive or are there a few different choices of what are I've heard
different versions of what was the purpose of this vicious assault on an allied ship
you know just before we came in here to record we were talking to the nice lady
out front and I told you want to hear a crazy story these guys were sailors on a
ship that was attacked by Israel. And she said, what? But we're best friends. They always have
our back. I said, well, it's the other way around. We always have theirs, but they ain't necessarily
the best friends of ours. But she just was so amazed to hear that. First time in her life,
guarantee she ever heard of the USS literally. But that sounds crazy. That sounds like the
Canadians attack in us or the British. Why would our friends, in fact, this little country
that is so dependent on American goodwill,
under what crazy idea
would they think that this was a risk worth taking
to try to kill you guys?
What do you think?
Let me say at the outset
that nobody here in the official Washington
has bothered to ask the Israelis why they attacked.
But the one reason that has garnered some support
is the fact that the Israelis delayed the invasion of the Golan Heights for a day
while we were there and thinking that they could you know keep the US government
from finding out about the attack on the Golan Heights until it was a fait
complete and the fear being that the Americans would pick up the phone and say
no no no that's too far don't take them but those people who who support that
theory are apparently ignorant of the fact that we had an embassy in Tel Aviv and
undoubtedly there were CIA and NSA guys there listening to the to the Israeli
communications so why didn't they attack the the American embassy there I mean
that might have been a bit more of a problem but it's a good point though that
it would have been redundant information as far as you know
DC is concerned. They would have already known anything that they could have learned from you guys
about that. That's right. But now, so one theory that I had heard before was that they had
rounded up all of these Egyptian prisoners and they had either massacred them or they were
about to massacre them in the Sinai and that they were worried that you guys would find out
about that. That's one theory. And then I guess the most severe one of all is that they were
hoping to sink the ship to the bottom and then they were going to blame it on Egypt.
and hope to provoke the United States into going to war against NASA's Egypt?
Is that right?
That's correct.
And I think that's the most prevailing theory because the United States had already activated
or put on alert their nuclear forces, strategic air forces.
And, of course, the Sixth Fleet was there and ready to go in.
and launch a major attack against Egypt because, like you said, that's who we thought was doing the attacking.
The aircraft that came out for the attack were all unmarked.
So, you know, again, it was a very thought-out, planned attack.
It wasn't something that was just mistaken identity
and we'll go out with our, you know,
Sard David aircraft and blow it out of the water.
They didn't want us to be able to, you know, identify them.
So they were using unmarked aircraft.
The only time that that changed was when the torpedo boats
came on the scene and they were flying the Star David.
I see.
So, yeah, if you just look at the,
the tactics they used for the attack. Initiate by jamming our radios, use unmarked
aircraft, you send in torpedo votes and fire five torpedoes ostensibly to a strike
us five times, only once, thankfully, machine gun life wraps in the water and and
followed by Heliborne assault troops to undoubtedly to try to repel down to the ship.
and kill all the survivors.
That would, that leads to a conclusion
that their intent was to sink the ship
and kill any survivors.
And then undoubtedly blame it on the Egyptians.
Which they would have gotten away with
because he was going to be around
to tell any other story than that.
But we survived and we're telling the story.
Right.
And what effect has that had on Israeli policies?
Oh, I think probably nothing.
However, it's extremely enlightening for the American citizens who get to learn this story.
And for the Navy sailors who get to hear this story.
You know, you guys mistake an assumption that morning that, oh, look, those are our friends.
Yeah, well, that's not altogether clear, is it?
And a severe reason for doubt.
Now, so we talk about these excuses here.
First of all, on the mistaken identity.
We talked about how you put up a 5-by-8 flag
just because you're near a war zone, so you put up a flag.
But then I think he said, too,
that once the attack started, you put up a much bigger American flag.
Isn't that right, a 13-by-7 or something?
Yeah, after, in high school.
side I think it was the low between the air attack and the torpedo attack. We noticed
that the steaming incident had been shot down so Frank Brown and I got the
largest flag we had on board holiday colors and hauled that up and that was that
was flying throughout the torpedo boat attack and and that's 13 by 7 I get
that right or something like that. Something like that I don't know exactly the
dimensions. That's a big flag. Mm-hmm. Yeah.
I mean, three plywoods across is 12 feet, so people picture that.
That's 13 feet's pretty wide.
Okay, so, and then, as you said before, the color of the ship, the silhouette of the ship,
all these pilots should be absolutely trained, what every different Navy's boats look like anyway.
You said the riding on the back, Liberty, would have been unmistakable as any other Navy's ship.
Is that correct?
That's right.
Yes.
but they claim that they mistook us for a 40-year-old black hole
russed up Egyptian tramp steamer that was chained to a pier in Alexandria
which they knew good and well what was chained to what pier in Alexandria at the time
you know like we even have to mention that like they were confused about where all
Egypt's boats were at the moment okay and now so in terms of well look I mean we
already know right because you guys have all heard the audio too like we can't really
translate from Hebrew but you have the translations on the screen there of the
pilot saying this is the fire pilots I guess they weren't briefed on who they
were attacking right they were the surveillance planes had gathered the intel but
the pilot seemed surprised and says sir this is an American ship and sir says you
heard me hit it yes follow your orders and hit it so there's just that's it
ain't no point in trying to tell that lie anymore no that's not an accident
It just couldn't possibly be.
Of course, the question in my mind is, where's the rest of the tapes?
Right.
Why didn't you just release that?
Why did you, you know, to hear the Israeli people, their proponents, talk about the three segments of tape that have been recorded,
that's about 23 minutes in total.
You're trying to tell me that NSA people or whoever was mine,
monitoring the traffic would switch off their recording machines after a few minutes,
and then turn them back on, then turn them off, and then turn them back on again.
No way, not in the middle of a battle like that.
But then didn't you guys tell me, too, that the, who was it at NSA,
was ordered to destroy all of this stuff, right?
Isn't that right?
What was the question?
Somebody at NSA was ordered to destroy all the recordings and records of this,
but then he, was it Phil was telling the story last night,
that they went ahead and found a loophole
and made it training material
and put the transcripts in the training material
was the only way some of this survived at all.
Isn't that right?
I haven't heard that.
I thought that was the story Phil was telling the last time, I guess.
I wasn't aware of that.
I know the NSA made a report in 1980
was supposedly the classified truth
story of what happened on the USS Liberty.
And I had a copy of that report because I was still, you know,
cleared for those.
And the report never, never talked about the purpose,
you know, why Israel attacked or anything like that.
It was mainly concentrating on the fact that we did not
receive a communication from the Pentagon
that was supposed to move us 100 nautical miles
off the coast.
But the problem with that is, you know,
we needed line of site communications, you know,
we had to be in at that 13 and a half, 14 mile,
you know, range so that we could get the ground calm
and, you know, line-of-sight communications.
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And then plus, I mean,
in your experience did that ever happen that the Pentagon told you to sail somewhere
but that the message accidentally went to the Philippines instead of to you
that does sound like a catch-22 type scenario I could believe that like in any other
circumstance I might buy that that an order went to Antarctica it was supposed to go
to the eastern bed no that's I mean you would think because of the type of
communications that we had the direct link
that we had between the ship and national security agency,
that we should have been able to get that, you know, direct.
You could hear everything else they were telling you.
Right, right.
The one order that they're essentially, in other words,
they're lying and making this up after the fact that,
oh, we told them to move 100 miles away and they didn't,
but when there's no actual evidence that that ever happened at all, right?
No, there's no evidence to show that that method,
ever got transmitted to the U.S. Liberty.
How about to anybody else?
Did they get it in the Philippines?
Hey Liberty, move away from the Egyptian shore.
They got it in Morocco, and they got it in the Philippines,
and the Sixth Fleet got it.
I mean, that's why their ships were...
Oh, but you're saying there is evidence that the order went out.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, there's evidence that the order went out,
but we were supposed to be under the umbrella of the
sixth fleet for comms during um during that so are you saying it is a possibility
then that the sixth fleet was supposed to relay this order to you guys and they just
never did or something like that yeah yeah hmm yeah this story is a
mind-blower man I know it is I'll say again I'm really thrilled that Jocko had you
guys on I think this is really gonna make a difference I'm moving the ball for
it on this because you know
like even if it was the Joe Rogan show
which he has a much bigger audience overall
but Jocko's got
every Navy base on the planet
is going to listen to that interview.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
Like there's going to be
captains and admirals
and since and everybody
are going to be here in this thing
on all seven seas.
You know, all around the world.
And that's, he asked
what would be a win?
win, when, you know, as a result of the interview yesterday.
Yeah.
And, you know, what we were hoping for is his listeners to do a letter campaign to their legislators,
you know, trying to get a USS Liberty Remembrance Day.
Part of what our goal has been for the Liberty Veterans Association,
is to get recognition for our 34 fallen shipmates.
If only you would just accept the lie that it was a big accident,
you could probably get your memorial, right?
But if it was, you know, an accident,
why would it be the most decorated ship in the U.S. Navy since World War II
for a single engagement?
There's, you know, the Congressional Medal of Honor, the bronze stars, the silver stars,
the 208 Purple Hearts, the Combat Action Ribbon, the Presidential Unit Citation,
that Navy Commendation Medals.
I mean, it was individual recognition,
but they were all done in private.
It was, you know, and that's another thing that, you know,
when you get an award.
But it's a secret.
Yeah, yeah.
Mine was given to me at Captain Burns' office over in Birmingham, Germany.
And he told us when we got in there to, you know,
that there wasn't going to be any.
any photographs no public recognition of the award you know we were
authorized to wear it but we still couldn't talk about it yeah and that's
the cover-up is just I mean did you guys get awarded something
Purple Heart and a presidential incitation and combat action ribbon
Yeah.
But here's your reward, but nobody's allowed to know about it.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah, the only people that are sailing around in the Met at the time with the Purple Heart would
know Vietnam Medal.
Yeah.
Huh.
So, now I'm interested in, well, there's so many different angles here, but before we talk about
Dean Rusk and Admiral Moore and all of these guys, you know, taking outside, which I think
really important
I guess
I wanted to
ask about
a few of the different excuses
that the Israelis
have put forward
there was just the mistaken identity
as we talked about
they thought it was an Egyptian trawler
but they had said something about someone
had been shelling their beach that morning
and they thought it was you
but you guys your ship was only armed
with you said 50 caliber machine guns and that was it right
yeah so that just did not happen at all
because you would have known if there was any other ship in the neighborhood.
That was just totally made up out of whole cloth, right?
Exactly.
And then what was it?
You said in 1980, oh, this was the second excuse that they came up with was that they had warned,
they tried to warn you to be 100 miles to move 100 miles away.
But that, at that point they're admitting that they knew it was an American ship,
but they're just saying tough luck because you were in the wrong spot and you shouldn't have been?
They knew earlier that day on June 8th, they actually had us plotted in their war room, on their map as a friendly ship.
And later that morning, they had a change of, you know, watch.
And what I understand happened was that they removed the pin from the board.
thinking that well we were would have moved off of the area out of the area but
they they absolutely knew that it was the USS Liberty that we were an
intelligence ship and and the the torpedo boats when they when they got us on
radar another part of an excuse from their part said that they were
that we were steaming at like 35 knots.
And in their mind, that made us a warship.
We couldn't do over 17 or 18 knots
without every boat, you know, the ship rattling.
So it was another fabrication, another lie
that they came up with trying to justify the attack.
Plus their torpedo boats at a maximum speed of 27 knots.
So if we were going 35 knots, how did they catch up to us?
Right.
Yeah.
Yeah, they refute themselves just right there.
Is there much other spin, or they mostly just ignore the story and just hope it goes away?
Or did they come up with any other excuses?
Yeah, in 1982, after the publication of Jim Minnis' book,
on the liberty. The Israeli Defense Forces History Department did a complete
review of all of the documents available for the attack and they claim now
that the reason they attacked was that we weren't displaying the proper
Israeli markings to indicate that we were an Israeli ship.
An Israeli ship. Yeah. So they were cleared
to attack now that would put every ship in the area under the threat so they that's so funny you
know I swear when you said that to me yesterday I thought you just misspoke and I let it go but then
you just said it again and you meant what you're saying that's what they're saying is well they
weren't flying an Israeli flag so it was open season on our allies the Americans yeah okay boy
They're sure scraping the bottom of the barrel of excuses there, huh?
Oh, yeah.
And I've been trying to find the email address to somebody in the IDF history department
to pursue that with them, but I can't do it.
That's just incredible.
Okay, now, the Secretary of State, Dean Rusk, was a real hawk.
He's with you guys on this.
Yeah.
And same for who all else, that Admiral Thomas Moore, he was ahead of CIA at the time,
is that correct?
The DCI?
Moore was at the time.
Chief of Naval Operations.
Oh, okay.
Yeah.
After the attack.
He is the only U.S. Navy Admiral that's ever been the commander of the Sixth Fleet and the Fifth Fleet.
I see.
And then, so who else in the prominent positions in the Johnson government has come out and been honest about this?
All of the intelligence chiefs come out and supported us.
All of them.
All of them.
Every one of them.
Director of NSA, Carter, said that there was no way that it could be anything but a deliberate attack.
And who was the DCI at that time?
I don't know.
I have to go back. I forgot to.
There's certainly something to see in that documentary, Dean Rusk, saying,
I'd never believe these excuses at all.
And you could tell he's upset about it, too.
No. Because it's his responsibility in a way, right? He's the secretary's state of the time.
Of course, Magnemer, he's been on camera saying he didn't even remember the incident.
Is that right?
Oh, yeah.
Is that in the fog of war? Does he ask him about it, the fog of war?
No, I don't know.
Yeah. I bet he didn't even ask him about it in the fog of war.
He says he doesn't even remember it happening at all.
That one time that the Israelis almost sank one of his ships when he was the secretary of defense.
slip my mind
what were we talking about again
I don't remember
that happens to me too
you know I understand Bob
oh man
okay so
I know you need to get going here
Larry so let's wrap this up
with the work that you guys are
doing now
your friends
Phil Turney and Ron Cookel
the rest of your group
and all the work you're doing
with Congress
the different organizations you say
you guys told me last night you have
section at a museum in Wisconsin
somewhere or something like that. Let's hear about all of this stuff
all the good news about the ball being moved forward. In fact, look, the reason
that we're having this conversation right now here in San Diego is because
I'm here and you guys are here to do interviews with Jaka Willing
who y'all sat down with and talked to yesterday
which that to me is just huge event itself. That
interview is short to get such traffic and among
members of the U.S. military.
So I'm extremely excited
to find out about the reverberations
from that. So go ahead and talk about
that. The interview with Jocko, how that went.
Talk about the organization,
y'all's P.O. Box and
website and whatever, wherever people can contact
you, whatever they can do to help you,
your letter writing campaign to Congress
that you're doing all these things. Let a rip.
Okay.
Y'all flip a coin.
Who goes first?
The letter writing campaign,
that you're talking about is a is an attempt on our part to get the establishment of
June 8th as the USS Liberty Remembrance Day it doesn't doesn't cost anything
for Congress to do that it's just making that date annually the
remember the USS Liberty and
In my mind, and I think in the rest of the Liberty Veterans Association crew members' minds,
that will start to show, you know, a little more recognition for the 34 men who lost their lives.
And, you know, we're not going to get a congressional investigation.
I mean, it's been 55 years.
They've already said that there's been congressional investigations,
and there haven't been.
Well, there's make up
another lie and throw it away, you know?
Right.
So, but...
Yeah, you know, that makes me wonder
about the dads of the boys that died there, too,
we're talking to all these young men.
All this time, like, there must have been,
obviously they'd all grown old and died by now,
but have they been part of this?
The parents of some of the slain here
have been, have they've been working with you guys at all?
Yeah, some of the family members have actually come to our reunions to express their, you know, pleasure in what the Liberty Veterans Association is trying to do.
Joe's the curator of one of our websites that, you know, I mean, we've got a webmaster that actually takes care of it.
but shows, you know, one of the major contributors to that
to make sure he's got the right information in there.
And I'll let Joe talk about that.
But it's, you know, what we're hoping for
is to have the listeners contact their legislators
and say, hey, look, here's the USS Liberty
that was, you know, attacked back in 1967,
And nothing hasn't been done publicly for the crew.
And that's what we're looking for.
We've got three websites, one, USSlibertrins.org, which is the master website.
Then we have USS Libertyveterans.org, which is my, admittedly not very well.
updated attempt to spread the word about the USS Liberty in various articles
that I write but and we also have USS Liberty Documents. info which is it's
supposed to be an archive of all the documents available about the US Liberty it's
by definition it's it's constantly in the state of flux I'm sure yeah but
if you go to the USS Liberty veterans dot
blog one of the tabs on there is I forget exactly the wording but is if you want to
help us and you go to that tab and you have four letters that you can send and
all it is is one of these things where you just fill in your name and address
and all that stuff and hit a button and it'll send a letter to your members of
Congress one asks for the you to ask the your congressional delegation for a
copy of the US government's investigation or the congressional investigation of the
attack all the people that have sent that letter and nobody has ever gotten a
response another one asks for the members of Congress to contact the
congressional research service and ask them if the US government has ever
investigated the attack on the US Liberty of all the ones that I've sent and
others have sent in to only one congressman actually
that to the Congressional Research Service.
Now you can't, as a civilian, you can't send a request
to the Congressional Research Service.
It has to go through a member of Congress.
I see.
And the Congressional Research Service in effect said, no,
there has been no congressional investigation,
no US government investigation of the attack on the Liberty.
And there's another letter that asks
for members of Congress to accept
USS Liberty survivors' bullets or points in their responses to their constituents who write about the USS Liberty in the past and continuing to today.
The members of Congress use bullets or points provided by Israeli partisans.
they refuse to use facts submitted to them by the survivors of the USS Liberty.
And even if we contact them regarding that, they just ignore our letters.
Yeah.
Well, now, so I know a lot of people, you know, are pretty cynical about the use of democratic politics to achieve a little D.
I mean, and I am too.
they're pretty cynical about that
however
if there is a time to write letters to
congressmen it's when you know
a lot of other people are doing
the same thing at the same time that
it's not just some one-off that ends up in the
trash but some staffer
maybe 435
staffers have to say to
435 congressmen
sir we keep getting these letters
about the USS Liberty and it
doesn't stop they keep asking
and we got 10 of them today and we got
20 of them yesterday and they keep coming, that's when the difference gets made.
And so now it's really good time.
And, you know, I've got a, I'm proud of the size of my audience for what it is.
But with you guys doing the Jock Willem show and the amount of attention that that is going
to bring to this, I mean, if just a small part of my audience took advantage of the
opportunity to know that a very small part of Jocco's audience are also going to be
participating in this at the same time.
Now you're talking about hundreds and hundreds
and hundreds and hundreds of letters at a minimum
here. And that does make the difference.
And I know just from doing this show and
talking to people who work on Capitol Hill
or who are like activists
trying to lobby on Capitol Hill,
that it does make a difference.
Phone calls and letters they do.
It's just a marginal difference. But a lot of times
the margin is what it takes.
Right? You have all these
congressmen, they pay all this lip
service all day long to our
heroic service members. Well, here's some who deserve some attention. And then the only contrary
argument is, yeah, but a foreign state that's responsible for their pain won't like it. Yeah,
well, out of 435, maybe we can find one or two who aren't going to care so much about that
and will, in fact, care about you more. You know, it's absolutely worth to try to do. I'm going
to click those buttons and send those letters. I hope people will do that. And let's create that
seen in those congressional offices.
Sir, these things keep coming in the email.
They just won't quit.
And maybe we need to do something about this and just let's at least put them in the
position of having to discuss it among themselves.
This is a part of reality.
How many of these congressmen have ever even heard of this in their lives?
How many of them are going to have to do research to even find out that they're not
allowed to talk about this and that they better shut up?
They might not even understand that they're not allowed to talk about it until they
been talking about it for a week and a half and someone finally comes to shush him right we don't know
right so worth a shot that's my rant i'm so happy you guys are doing this um and i'm so grateful
for jaco having you all on too one counter to the claim that has happened 54 years ago how
no what can the investigation do now it's a it's a federal crime to commit war crimes
It's also a federal crime to be an accessory after the fact.
So members of Congress, people in the DOD are in a position to investigate the war crimes committed during the attack on the U.S. Liberty.
And there were war crimes committed during the attack on the U.S. liberty.
Their refusal to do that makes them accessories after the fact committing war crimes.
They do that today, not 54 years ago.
So they've been doing that today.
They probably will get a letter from somebody
and they will refuse to initiate an investigation today
that makes them accessories after the fact.
Which might be a reason.
Invitations on that.
No, which probably plays in
is the reason that they don't want to investigate it
because they will be held accountable
for their actions or their inactions.
Well, they should know that the Department of Justice
would never hold them accountable in any way
and they might as well just tell the truth, so at least we have that.
In 2005, we submitted a war crimes report to the Department of the Army,
which is the proper vehicle to submit those reports.
And we outlined, you know, just get a prima facie case of the war crimes that were committed.
They're obligated under the DoD Law of War Program to investigate all allegations of the violations of the law,
of war whether committed by or against the United States. They waived that of
that requirement under the DOD. I sent a copy of the DOD the war crimes report
that we prepared. I sent it to the federal prosecutor in Houston. Silence, not
one word, not an acknowledgement that they received at all. Yeah. It's kind of fun to
imagine the scene in the office when they get that. What do we
we do with this.
Yeah.
Boy, it's so thorough and well done,
and yet we don't want to touch it.
It's radioactive, so, you know,
at least you're putting them through a little bit of stress, Joe, you know?
All right, listen, we better write this up because you've got to get to the airport.
Larry Bowen and Joe Waters.
Thank you both so much for doing this interview.
For all your hard work on this, it's so important.
And I'm happy to whatever little small part I can play and help bringing y'all's story to others' attention.
So really appreciate you.
Thank you both very much for doing it.
Just that and advertise their well websites and Jocco's.
Absolutely.
We'll have all the links in the show notes at Scott Horton.org when we post this up.
All right.
Thank you both again.
Thank you.
The Scott Horton Show, Anti-War Radio, can be heard on KPFK 90.7 FM in L.A.
APSRadio.com, anti-war.com, ScottHorton.org, and Libertarian.org, and Libertarian.
Arturian Institute.org