LBJ, Robert McNamara, and the USS Liberty Cover-Up

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On June 8, 1967, while America was deeply entangled in the morass of Vietnam and the Middle East was engulfed in the Six Day War, one of the most shocking and controversial attacks on American military personnel in modern history unfolded in the waters off the Sinai Peninsula. 34 Americans were killed and 171 were wounded. The victim was not an enemy warship. It was the USS Liberty, a United States Navy intelligence vessel operating in international waters under a clearly visible American flag.Nearly 60 years later, the bloodshed itself remains controversial. What is not controversial is that the Johnson Administration moved with astonishing speed to bury the incident, suppress difficult questions, and accept explanations that many survivors, intelligence officers, admirals, and government officials found wholly unconvincing. The greatest scandal surrounding the USS Liberty may not be the attack itself. It may be what happened afterward. The official explanation has always been that Israel mistakenly identified the Liberty as an Egyptian vessel and attacked it in the confusion of war. That conclusion was accepted by successive administrations and remains the official position of both governments today. Yet the testimony of survivors, intelligence personnel, and several senior American officials has created a cloud of suspicion that has never dissipated.Stone Cold Truth with Roger Stone is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.The facts are stubborn things. Israeli reconnaissance aircraft reportedly flew over the Liberty multiple times before the attack. The weather was clear. The ship flew a large American flag. The vessel possessed distinctive hull markings. The attack itself was not a single accidental strafing run by a nervous pilot. It was a sustained assault involving fighter aircraft, rockets, cannon fire, napalm, torpedo boats, and machine gun attacks that lasted well over an hour.Captain William McGonagle, despite suffering grievous wounds, kept the ship afloat and saved the lives of countless crew members. His heroism earned him the Medal of Honor(MOH). Yet even that award ceremony carried the odor of political embarrassment. Unlike most Medal of Honor recipients, McGonagle was not publicly honored by the President at the White House. The ceremony was conducted quietly at a Navy Yard with remarkably little fanfare. It was as if Washington wanted Americans to forget the Liberty ever existed.That desire to forget brings us directly to Lyndon Baines Johnson. There is no conclusive evidence proving that Johnson ordered the attack. Despite decades of speculation, no document has emerged demonstrating that LBJ directed Israeli forces to strike the Liberty. Claims that Johnson personally orchestrated the attack remain highly speculative and unsupported by definitive evidence. What is far better documented is Johnson’s role in ensuring that the incident disappeared from the headlines as quickly as possible.Numerous witnesses have testified that American aircraft launched to assist the stricken vessel were recalled. Survivors and later investigators have alleged that Washington’s primary concern became avoiding a diplomatic crisis rather than uncovering the full truth. Former Secretary of State Dean Rusk later expressed serious doubts that the attack had been accidental. Admiral Thomas Moorer, former Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, would eventually describe the affair as a deliberate attack followed by a massive cover-up. Most explosive of all was the affidavit of Captain Ward Boston, senior counsel to the Navy Court of Inquiry. Decades after the event, Boston stated that President Johnson and Defense Secretary Robert McNamara pressured officials to conclude that the attack was a case of mistaken identity regardless of contrary evidence. Boston alleged that the Court of Inquiry was essentially prevented from conducting a full and independent examination.If Boston’s account is accurate, then the official investigation resembled less a search for truth and more a political stage play whose ending had already been written before the curtain rose.That brings us to Robert Strange McNamara, the architect of so many disastrous decisions during the Vietnam era. McNamara’s fingerprints appear throughout the Liberty controversy. According to multiple accounts, he participated in the decision to recall American aircraft that had been dispatched to aid the ship. Critics have argued that McNamara’s actions reflected a determination to avoid confrontation at almost any cost. If Johnson was the political conductor of the orchestra, McNamara was the first violinist faithfully playing every note.The former Ford Motor Company executive had already become notorious for reducing warfare and human tragedy to charts, graphs, percentages, and statistical abstractions. In Vietnam he measured success through body counts. In the Liberty affair he appeared equally willing to subordinate the pursuit of truth to broader geopolitical calculations.To many Liberty survivors, McNamara became the embodiment of bureaucratic indifference. While sailors buried their dead and tended to horrific wounds, Washington’s elite appeared more concerned with preserving diplomatic relationships than with demanding accountability. The central question remains simple. Why would Johnson and McNamara allegedly suppress a more aggressive investigation if the mistaken identity explanation was unquestionably true? That question continues to haunt historians. One possibility is that the administration feared a rupture in relations with Israel during the height of the Cold War. Another is that Johnson, already drowning in the political quicksand of Vietnam, had no appetite for another international crisis. Still others argue that exposing the full truth could have revealed sensitive intelligence operations that both governments preferred to keep hidden. Whatever the motivation, the result was the same. The surviving crew members spent decades fighting for recognition, transparency, and answers. Many believed they had been abandoned not only during the attack but afterward by the very government they had sworn to serve.Subscribe nowAdding to the controversy is what many researchers and survivors describe as a substantial body of evidence challenging the mistaken identity narrative. They point to eyewitness testimony, intelligence reports, intercepted communications, and statements from senior military and government officials that they argue are inconsistent with the official story. Supporters of this view frequently cite what they refer to as the “official story” and contend that key facts were ignored, minimized, or excluded from public investigations. Whether one accepts those conclusions or not, the persistence of these competing accounts helps explain why the USS Liberty remains one of the most fiercely debated incidents in modern American naval history.In fact, nearly six decades later, the controversy remains very much alive. On the June 8, 2026 anniversary of the attack, recently defeated Representative Thomas Massie of Kentucky announced that he would deliver a rare House floor speech devoted to the USS Liberty and invited surviving crew members to attend from the House gallery. Public congressional discussion of the USS Liberty has been exceedingly uncommon over the years, making the departing Massie’s decision noteworthy in itself. The renewed attention underscores how unresolved the matter remains for many survivors. The USS Liberty Survivors Association continues to press for the release of additional government records and a fuller accounting of what occurred before, during, and after the attack. Survivor Mickey LeMay summarized the sentiment shared by many crew members when he stated, “All we want is the truth.”The push for disclosure extends beyond Congress. A Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit filed by Michelle Kinnucan and currently before the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals seeks the release of additional classified or unreleased federal records concerning the attack and the government’s response. The litigation reflects a continuing belief among researchers, survivors, and advocates that important documents remain hidden from public scrutiny. The controversy persists because too many questions were never fully answered and too many witnesses felt they were never fully heard.The tragedy of the Liberty is not merely that 34 Americans died under attack from a nation considered an ally. The greater tragedy may be that generations of Americans were left wondering whether their own government preferred silence over truth. Lyndon Johnson did not need to order the attack to bear responsibility for what followed. If the allegations of suppression, intimidation, and predetermined conclusions are true, then his administration helped construct one of the most enduring cover-ups in modern American history. Robert McNamara, ever the consummate bureaucratic technician, stands accused of helping cement that narrative into official history.The dead sailors of the USS Liberty deserved complete transparency. Their surviving shipmates deserved a full and fearless investigation. Instead, they received a hurried inquiry, unanswered questions, and decades of official indifference.Massie’s congressional remarks, the continuing efforts of survivors, and the ongoing court battle over government records demonstrate that the USS Liberty story is far from settled. Whether one accepts the official mistaken identity explanation or believes critical facts remain concealed, the demand for transparency has not faded with time.For that reason, the USS Liberty remains more than a naval tragedy. It remains a cautionary tale about power, politics, and the dangerous temptation of governments to place expediency above truth.Thanks for reading Stone Cold Truth with Roger Stone! This post is public so feel free to share it.Share