Военно-морской следственный суд по делу о захвате эсминца США "Пуэбло-69"
Резюме
Drawing shows five admirals at a court of naval inquiry, led by Vice-Admiral Harold G. Bowen, Jr., in Coronado, California.
Caption from Drawing Justice exhibit: Pueblo Affair Naval Court of Inquiry. An American surveillance ship, the USS Pueblo, was captured by North Korea in the Sea of Japan on January 23, 1968. Believing that he lacked the necessary defensive equipment, Capt. Lloyd M. Bucher surrendered the ship after one crew member was killed and ten were wounded. Following eleven months of imprisonment in North Korea, the captain and crew were released and faced Vice Admiral Harold G. Bowen Jr., president of a naval court of inquiry, who, along with four other admirals, heard testimony from 104 witnesses during two months of hearings. While Bowen recommended a general court martial trial for Bucher for failing to destroy sensitive documents and scuttle his ship, Navy Secretary John H. Chafee overruled him, arguing that the men had endured enough punishment. The ship remains on display in North Korea.
Signed and dated on lower left.
Exhibited: "Drawing Justice" at the Library of Congress Thomas Jefferson Building, Washington, D.C., April - October 2017.
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