FRTDAX, JUNE 9,1967 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE FRIDAY JNE 9,198 THE:MICIGAN DAIY Pas P A ca %J L/ i[in Israeli Attack Ten Killed, 100 Injured fY^,wf In Accident U.S. Lodges Protest, Israel Makes Apology For Clash off Sinai t WASHINGTON (AP) - Israeli warplanes and boats mistakenly y strafed and torpedoed a U.S. Navy ship off the Egyptian coast yes- - terday, the Pentagon said, killing 10 Americans and wounding 100 others. A flight of U.S. jet fighters sped toward the USS Liberty 15 miles niorth of Sinai tvhen the lightly..... armed vessel reported it was un- der attack, officials said. But the U.S. planes returned to their 6th Fleet carriers when a message of apology was received from Tel Aviv. One-third of Crew THE L The 110 .casualties represent desert, nearly one-third of the crew on in Egyp the Liberty, a research ship that had been helping relay communi- PRA cations from U.S. installations inI the Mideast. About 20 of the wounded are in serious condition, said Phil G. Goulding, assistant secretary of defense. Goulding said the vessel was badly damaged by the six strafing runs conducted by an unspecified s number of Israeli jet fighters. The Liberty also was hit on its star- board side by a torpedo launched By SE by one of three Israeli torpedo A boats. Goulding said when first word WASH of the attack reached the 6th but neve Fleet, operating near Crete, the thought, I carriers Saaoa.an mrc reserves, a carrersSaratoga and Amercadefea f each launced four A4 Skyhawk at of 'bombers, covered by an unspeci- tions. fied number of fighter planes. Pentagor Israeli Apology Israeli am Israli poloy .significant The Pentagon said the Israeli war "It's government had informed the when you United States "that the attack the same was made in error by Israeli gressive ti forces." It added: "An apology has combat-tr been received from Tel Aviv. Vietnam. The United States lodged a Sources prompt protest with Israel after tangible a the attack, which occurred about was more g mid-afternoon Israeli time (some than in t hours before Egypt notified the 70,000 sta United Nations it is ready to ac- cept a cease-fire in the four-day- old Middle East war.) T In a letter to Senate Democratic Israf Leader Mike Mansfield, Johnson referred to the attack on the Lib- erty and said: "This tragic episode will underline for all Americans I.I the correctness of our own urgent concern that the fighting should TEL A stop at once." were wary International Waters announced Officials said the 11,510-ton fire. And Liberty was flying its colors wherl whether S it came under attack. They fixed fighting. its location as 15 miles off the An air Sinai Peninsula and 90 miles the black southwest of Tel Aviv-in inter- for a moi national waters, the news. Goulding said the ship was so "Okay, badly damaged that it will require in-but di drydocking and extensive refitting. "You n After the attack, the Liberty began Arabs are steaming north at eight knots. have chos Two U.S. destroyers were going to feat in the its aid. get fresh Secretary of State Dean Rusk men from delivered a speedy oral protest to should kn Israeli Ambassador Avraham Har- army once man- after the Liberty attack. talk cease State Department press officer There w Robert J. McCloskey, after an- tion and r nouncing the protest declared he of Tel Av could not say whether the United said, "I States had informed the warring down in nations (Israel and the Arab heard from States) when it sent ships into the started. area. right." Planes U.S.l IV Mistakenly ival Vessel: Record Arab ..*. .S. Attacks :"r'r :::}:?:3::<:;:"::,"'$: .:};:v'ijr}.-ii}:ii1:: % : : .. Hear Nasser, Hussein {:'r fa4v. "n.::" };}: }". .f 'r:: > Plan To Claim False American War Action TEL AVIV, Israel (/P)-Israel announced yesterday that they had monitored and taped a radio conversation in which Egypt's President Gamel Abdul Nasser dis- :::::} ' :' :;':'cussed with Jordan's King Hus- :.: sein the fabrication of charges A'. {.. .....that U.S. and British planes were ;7:;: <' ';f /:4.}': : >{,;::".::.r~..;:.;.}>}:. supporting Israel in combat opera- tbons. The Israelis said they had tuned in Nasser's talk early Tuesday- after Arab planes had been dis- abled hoesaleby Israeli action. The Defense Ministry played Associated Press transcription tapes, in Arabic, and nto Egypt lies in ruins in the Sinai then issued texts in English. ighborhood of the Suez Canal resulted The translation included the following exchange between Nas- ser and Hussein. Nasser: "Hello, will we say the U.S. and - England or just the U.S.?" Si i ,r Hussein- "The U.S. and Eng- w Sp ritland." Nasser: "Good. King Hussein will make an announcement, and Isra el,4~ I will make an announcement. 151 Thank you. Donot give up :Yes. Rello, good morning, brother. Never mind, be strong. Yes, I med first using airpower to surprise hear." Sand destroy enemy planes on the Hussein: "Mr. President, if you raise ground. nih- IIsraeli tanks were sent rolling have something or any idea at all i furiously along two main fronts .". . at any time." 'as a with other tank and infantry units Nasser: "Will his majesty make Id. usted to mop up remnants of the an announcment on the participa- any Egyptian army scattered behind tion of Americans and the Brit- ould the lines. ish?" ac- American experts also applaud- Answer not clear. the ed the use of paratroopers to make. Nasser: "By God, I say that I actic initial contact at the key Egyptian will make an announcement and fortress of Sherm el Sheikh on the you will make an announcement "An Gulf of Aqaba. and we will see to it that the here These tactics, one officer noted, Syrians will make an announce- ower "were right out of Ft. Benning or ment that American and British , its Ft. Knox the U.S. Army's main in- airplanes are. taking part against etra- fantry-training bases. They are us from aircraft acrriers. We will fundmentals operations." issue an announcement, we will Is Arabs Static stress the matter, and we will nin- Tnc drive point home." IN WAR'S WAKE: Territory Disputes Snarl New Middle East Outlook AST TRAIN FROM CAIRO after the Israeli advance i Wednesday. The Israeli advance which reached the ne t agreeing to a UN cease fire yesterday. SE TACTICS: nag 0on Sees Mo ;Keys to Victory By CHARLES STORER Associated Press News Analyst UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. ()-- A complex territorial tangle snarls the Middle East in the wake of the Arab-Israeli war, as diplomats foresee arduous negotiations cen- tering on what happens to the land gained by military conquest. For obvious reasons Israel is likely to want to keep some of the territory she gained. For sec- urity reasons she would like to straighten out at least part of the bulge on her east which has been Jordanian since 1950, and retain the narrow stretch on her south- west frontier known as the Gaza Strip. If Israel did these two things she would be adding more than a million Arabs to her population of 2.5 million. Many of those added would be Arab refugees, implaca- bly bitter enemies of Israel. The likelihood is that much of ,the hard bargaining will take place at the United Nations. This is where the current attempts to arrange a cease-fire are centered. And the world organizations has had an intimate association with the Middle East quarrel ever since it began in the mid-1940s. The fruitless effort of the Se- curity Council to agree on a call for withdrawal of the combatants to their original positions in the early hours of the fighting Mon- day was a clear forecast of the difficulties ahead. Israeli officials at the United Nations, including Foreign Min- ister Abba Eban, were tight-lipped about terms for a settlement. They said these matters could wait until the fighting stopped. In Tel Aviv Israeli leaders, in- cluding Premier Levi Eshkoisand Defense Minister Moshe Dayan de- clared their war aims did not in- clude acquisition of any additional territory. "We have no aim of territorial conquest," Dayan said. Wednesday, after Israeli forces had completed the seizure of the Old City of Jerusalem from Jor- dan, Dayanedeclared Israel would not give upany part of the city. "We have returned to the holiest of our holiest places,, never to de- part from it again," he told troops at the Wailing Wall, the last vestige of Solomon's S e c o n d Temple. Of transcedent interest to Israel is the Tiran Strait at the mouth of the Gulf of Aqaba, which con- trols sea traffic to the southern Israeli port of Elath. Egypt for years has barred Is- raeli shipping from the Suez Canal, and Elath is Israel's only outlet to the Indian Ocean and the Far East. Ninety per cent of her oil is brought in through the port. Egyptian occupation of com- manding positions at Sharm el Sheik overlooking Tiran backed Egypt's threat to close the gulf to Israeli shipping and was a key World News Roundup By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - The White House has acknowledged the Washington-Moscow "hot line" has been used by President John- son and Premier Alexei M. Kosy- gin several times this week-most recently yesterday' morning after a U.S. communications ship was attacked by Israeli torpedo boats off the Egyptian coast. Press secretary George Chris- tian said the direct link between the two capitals, installed on Aug. 30, 1963, never had been used be- fore on serious business. Johnson, he said, sent a mes- sage to Moscow on Thursday morning telling of the ship attack so the Soviet Union would under- stand why carrier-based aircraft of the 6th Fleet were scrambling and heading toward the stricken vessel. SAIGON--The war in South Vietnam continued in a lull de- spite an attack by U.S. Navy jets which exploded North Vietnamese surface-to-air missiles at a secret bases in a forest 50 miles south- west, of Hanoi yesterday. The sec- ond major target of 112,missions flown over North Vietnam was the Kep Airfield, a MIG base 37 miles northeast of Hanoi. ,, * * SANTA FE, N.M.-Ries Lopez Tijerina, sought as leader of arm- ed raiders who claim millions of acres in the Southwest under old Spanish land grants, was quoted yesterday as saying the group had hoped to make a citizens' arrest of a district attorney when they attacked a courthouse where members were being held Mondai night. contribution to the rising tensions that led to war Monday. Israel reported the capture of Sharm el Sheik during its 1956 war with Egypt but gave it up to the UN force. The UN troops re- mained until last month, when Egypt got their withdrawal. Israel is unlikely to give up Sharm el Sheik this time without foolproof, ironclad international guarantees for transit rights. r - YMOUR M. HERSH P Military Analyst NGTON-Outnumbered, r out-fought or out- srael relied on mobility, nd spirit in its stunning much larger Arab na- n analysts described the my's spirit as the most factor of the Mideast simply what happens put aggressive troops on battlefield with non-ag- roops," said one officer ained in Korea and stressed that the in- sset of leadership never graphically demonstrated his war pitting Israel's nding troops and 230,000 reservists against 400,000 ar Arab regulars. U.S. officers had high pi for the tactics of the Isrelir tary leaders. "In a sense, it w textbook war," one officer sai "The Israelis used what well-led heavy armor units sh use--surprise, firepower, shock tion," he added. "They applied German blitzkrieg miltiary ti to desert warfare." Another source noted that, open area like a desert is w you can maximize the sheer pc of armor-its ability to move ability to make deep pene tions." This is precisely how the raelis moved in the Sinai Pe sul against the Egyptianss Collins iv 5A " * i 1 after elis Hesitant To Trust se-f ire Pact with Egypt VIV, Israel ()--Israelis last night about Egypt's acceptance of a cease- there was anxiety about yria would agree to stop raid warden patrolling ed-out streets thought ment when he was told so Nasser finally gave d he? Never know what the up to. Nasser might en this moment of de- e Sinai battles to try and tanks, planes and even Algeria. I think we ock out the Egyptian e and for all before we -fire with Nasser." vas some feeling of ela- elief. The night reporter viv's newspaper Maariv am happy for my boy the desert. I haven't n him ever since the war But I know he is all An Israeli officer said, "Until Damascus accepts a cease-fire the war won't be over. And we just cannot afford leaving the Syrians in their strategic hilltop positions along the northern frontier. 'They Won't Let Us Live' "We cannot go on living under their guns, because they won't let us live. We must drive them out." The U.S. Embassy in Cairo an- nounced meanwhile the U.S. gov- ernment had chartered the Greek passenger ship Karena to remove all Americans from Egypt tomor- row. The embassy anticipated there will be room on the Karena for all American citizens who wish to leave and for certain other na- tionals as arranged. A Swedish ship was reported at Port Said to pick up Swedish, Brazilian, Danish, Norwegian, In- dian, and Yugoslav members of the U.N. Emergency Force. Two Yugoslav passenger ships will evacuate the remaining units of the U.N. force. out of static defensive positions. Dne battleground report said many Arab tanks were simply used as artillery pieces, and dug turret deep into the sand. Other Egyptian troops operated out of concrete pill bxes and slit trenches in the dunes of the pen- insula. The fortifications even- tually trapped many Arab troops. Israel's use of reservists was no handicap, U.S. officers said, be- cause these irregulars are kept at a high state of readiness and mo- tivation. Mobilization exercises are held frequently and all units can be assembled, equipped, and ready for combat within 48 hours. Both reserve and regular Israeli officers serve three to five-year terms with rigorous selection and highly competitive promotion. After Sophocles, Yeats, Growtowski, Artraud, et al OEDIPUS LAEX from LUGG'S PLAYERS June 13, 14, 15-7:30 P.M. June 16-7:30 & 9:30 P.M. A CANTERBURY HOUSE 9.: Tickets from Centicore Bookshop, S.U. "Plaster of Paris" Boutique, Maynard/E. William And at Door f$ U U or, THE 330 Maynard Street Presents THE RON BROOKS TRIO Mercury Recording Artists Returning fron European Tour IN CONCERT 1A 0 - - - O l 1 A1 k m L - ___ Dearborn Campus of the University of Michigan Chicago Symphony Baroque Orchestra ANTONIO JAN IGRO, Guest Conductor SUN., JUNE 11, 4:00P.M. SUN., JUNE 11, 8:30 P.M. (One hour later than originally announced) Handel-Concerto Grosso, G minor, Locatelli-Concerto Grosso, C minor, Op. 6, No. 6 A Op. 1, No. 2 Telemann-Concerto for Three Horns, Vivaldi-Concerto for Bassoon, E minor, No. 6 D major Vivoaldi-d'lndy-Sonata V forCeloTelemann-Concertofor Three Trumpet E minoranTwObe Vivaldi-Concerto for.Piccolo, C major, No. 5 and Two Oboes Marcello--Concerto for Violin, D major Telemann-Concerto for Two Violins, C major Vivaldi-Concerto for Flute, Op. 10, No. 3 Telemann-Concerto for Trumpet, D major Pergolesi-Ricciatti---Concertino 11, Handel-Concerto Grosso, D major, G major Op. 6, No. 5 CARAMOOR OPERA PRODUCTIONS WEDNESDAY, JULY 5, 8:30-"Curlew River" THURSDAY, JULY 6, 8:30-"Burning Fiery Furnace YEHUDI MENUHIN AND BATH FESTIVAL ORCHESTRA SUNDAY, JULY 16-4:00 and 8:30 P.M. (Yehudi Menuhin, Violin and Hephzibah Menuhin, Piano-Soloists) STRATFORD FESTIVAL ORCHESTRA OSCAR SHUMSKY, Director of Music cilb~3%AV 1111 v.' 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