They did.
In May 1968, Israel paid $3.32 million to the U.S. government for the families of the 34 Americans killed.
In March 1969, Israel paid an additional $3.57 million for the roughly 171 men wounded.
In December 1980, Israel agreed to pay $6 million as a final settlement for damage to the ship itself, plus 13 years of interest.
@lalovestrump@Kalshi So they nullified the bet? I would think if they suspect the bet could be a fix/manipulated they would have to end the bet. I guess.
What more support would they need for US support? The U.S. had sent a detachment of four RF-4C aircraft to the Negev painted them in Israeli colors and they flew missions to collect photo and electronic intelligence against Egypt. Of course this was secret at the time and I believe it still is. The crew would think it's deliberate as would I but accidents actually happen.
@Magnus_Veritas@RealAlexJones Ok, why did Israel strike the Liberty while at the same time the U.S. had sent a RF-4 detachment to a airbase in the Negev desert so they could provide real time photo and electronic intelligence to Israel?
It's worth noting that while Israel accidentally struck the U.S.S. Liberty the U.S. did send a small detachment of RF-4C Phantom reconnaissance jets (a modified version of the F-4 Phantom) to an abandoned airfield in Israel's Negev Desert to provide real-time photo reconnaissance and damage assessment support for Israel. So this whole narrative people have come up with makes no sense.
@lalovestrump I know its against the law but it wouldn't surprise me that there are postal stamps out there for people who want to do nefarious things.