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Accused of Treason: The US Army's Witch Hunt for a Jewish Spy [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 304 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 231x150x30 mm, kaal: 499 g, Illustrations
  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-Apr-2020
  • Kirjastus: Post Hill Press
  • ISBN-10: 1642934518
  • ISBN-13: 9781642934519
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Hardback, 304 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 231x150x30 mm, kaal: 499 g, Illustrations
  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-Apr-2020
  • Kirjastus: Post Hill Press
  • ISBN-10: 1642934518
  • ISBN-13: 9781642934519
Teised raamatud teemal:
February 1997 was the date that changed the Tenenbaum family's lives forever.

Dr. David A. Tenenbaum is a civilian mechanical engineer who works for the Army at the TACOM base in Warren, Michigan. In 1997, he was falsely accused of being an Israeli spy'and having dual loyalty to the State of Israel simply because he is Jewish'by a known anti-Semite and several other anti-Semitic coworkers who referred to Tenenbaum as the 'little Jewish spy.' The FBI conducted a full-scale criminal investigation of Tenenbaum and his family. It resulted in an official report to FBI Director Louis Freeh, that there was no evidence Tenenbaum had ever done anything wrong. In fact, Tenenbaum was not even working on classified programs. Instead, he was concentrating on an approved and unclassified program known as the Light Armor Systems Survivability (LASS) to up-armor the Army's HMMWVs because, following Somalia, it was a known fact that the HMMWVs were death traps.

The Tenenbaums' federal lawsuit for religious discrimination was dismissed after the Army falsely claimed that they 'would not be able to disclose the actual reasons or motivations for their actions without revealing state secrets.' Senator Carl Levin ordered the IG-DOD to investigate the Tenenbaum case and determine if the Army was guilty of anti-Semitism. After over two years, the IG-DOD issued a report which confirmed that the US Army was guilty of anti-Semitism.

To this day, the Army refuses to make Tenenbaum whole and compensate him for the false accusations against him. Tenenbaum is one of the only persons for whom a favorable Inspector General report has been issued to not be compensated. The government has never been held accountable for their anti-Semitism.

Senators Gary Peters and Claire McCaskill of the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee have pushed the Army, but the Army refuses to acknowledge the Inspector General's findings of religious discrimination against Tenenbaum. The Army also refuses to accept that the price of prejudice against Tenenbaum was borne by the soldiers lost in Humvees who would have benefitted from the LASS program.
Foreword xi
Introduction xv
A War Story
1(14)
Chapter 1 That Thing Is a Target
3(6)
Chapter 2 What He Didn't Know
9(6)
Mogadishu
15(24)
Chapter 3 Setting the Trap
17(8)
Chapter 4 The Security Ruse
25(14)
The Olympic Park Bombing
39(16)
Chapter 5 Wired
41(7)
Chapter 6 The Fluctuating Needle
48(7)
War Zone Training
55(28)
Chapter 7 Cat and Mouse
57(14)
Chapter 8 Finding a Support System
71(12)
"Going Boom"
83(20)
Chapter 9 Search and Intimidation
85(11)
Chapter 10 The Smear Campaign
96(7)
Improvised Armoring
103(18)
Chapter 11 A Man without a Home
105(10)
Chapter 12 A Culture of Paranoia
115(6)
The Anxiety of Travel
121(12)
Chapter 13 The Police State
123(5)
Chapter 14 Enough Is Enough
128(5)
Stranded in the Desert
133(12)
Chapter 15 Jews Can't Be Trusted
135(5)
Chapter 16 The Loss of LASS
140(5)
Franz Gayl, Fellow Whistleblower
145(16)
Chapter 17 The End Is Not the End
149(4)
Chapter 18 Pariah
153(8)
The Marble ER
161(20)
Chapter 19 The Return to Base
163(12)
Chapter 20 A Crusader Is Born
175(6)
Mike Helms, Insult to Injury
181(16)
Chapter 21 The Veil of State Secrets
185(4)
Chapter 22 New Partners in the Fight
189(8)
New Convoy Operations Training
197(22)
Chapter 23 The Inspector General
199(11)
Chapter 24 Cut and Paste
210(9)
Photography of the Army Dead
219(18)
Chapter 25 Experience and Deceit
221(11)
Chapter 26 The Light Shines on the Truth
232(5)
The Restriction and Replacement of Humvees
237(12)
Chapter 27 Aftermath
239(7)
Chapter 28 Are We There Yet?
246(3)
Epilogue 249(2)
Author's Note 251(3)
Appendices 254(21)
Acknowledgments 275(1)
Endnotes 276