a_unique_person said:
I think the link has a different definition of what constitutes a congressional investigation to you. Either way, it appears to claim that investigations by the US were nobbled. Like I said before, the Gulf of Tonkin incident was enough to start a full blown war, and nothing even happened in that.
OK, can you define congressional investigation for me please? Because I thought Senate and House investigations were Congressional investigations. How do you define them? You said there were no high level inquiries. Ssibal has links showing inquiries from, among others:
U.S. Navy Court of Inquiry
CIA
Joint Chiefs of Staff
Senate Committee on Foreign Relations
Senate Armed Services Committee
House Appropriations Committee
House Armed Services Committee
Senate Select Committee on Intelligence
National Security Agency
House Armed Services Committee
Most of those inquiries concluded that the attack was at worst "gross negligence" but no inquiry found premeditation. With the release of the transcripts, that seems to support the findings.
Who did you think should have conducted the high level inquiries?
How do you define "official high level inquiry"
Who "nobbled" all these investigations?
Have you read the transcripts, previously linked and quoted?
Do you agree that the Israeli pilots believe this was an Egyptian ship?
Does that change any of your prior beliefs about this incident?
You actually did not say "nothing even happened in that" You said, like I quoted you before
It is worth comparing this to the Gulf of Tonkin. An attack that never happened was enough to cause a full blown war. When a US ship is directly attacked, there is not even an official high level inquiry.
If these inquiries concluded that is was an accident or even "gross negligence", what should have happened, in your opinion?