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59 Years Later, Lawmaker Demands Answers on Israel's Deadly Attack on USS Liberty
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By News
Published 1 hour ago on
June 9, 2026

Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.) speaks to reporters outside the Capitol as the House was voting in Washington, on Tuesday, Nov. 18, 2025.(Tierney L. Cross/The New York Times)

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Fifty-nine years after Israeli forces attacked the USS Liberty in international waters off Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula, survivors and researchers continue to question why the incident faced so little official scrutiny, Al Jazeera reported.

On June 8, 1967, Israeli air and naval forces struck the U.S. Navy technical research vessel during the Six-Day War, killing 34 sailors and wounding 171.

Israel maintained the assault was a case of mistaken identity, claiming pilots believed the ship was Egyptian — despite the vessel flying a U.S. flag and having exchanged waves with Israeli aircraft that morning.

Congress never formed a committee to formally investigate the attack.

Former CIA officials and survivors have disputed the misidentification explanation, with some alleging the strike was deliberate. The event remains one of the deadliest attacks ever carried out against the U.S. Navy by an ally.

Rep. Massie Speaks

Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.) marked the 59th anniversary of the attack by taking the rare step of addressing the USS Liberty on the House floor Monday, with survivors in attendance.

Massie cast doubt on Israel’s mistaken-identity claim, noting Israeli aircraft had surveilled the vessel the day before the assault. “The Israelis were intent on leaving no survivors,” he said.

He called on Congress to pass a resolution honoring the victims and open a new investigation, saying survivors deserve closure “while they’re still alive”.

The renewed push comes as a Ninth Circuit court weighs a FOIA lawsuit seeking the release of additional government records related to the attack.

Read more at AlJazeera. 

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