Israeli Weapons of
Mass Destruction
by John Steinbach*
"Arabs may have the oil, but we have the matches."
Ariel Sharon(2)
"Should war break out in the Middle East again,...
or should any Arab nation fire missiles against Israel,
as the Iraqis did, a nuclear escalation, once
unthinkable except as a last resort, would now
be a strong probability."
Seymour Hersh(1)
With between 200 and 500 thermonuclear
weapons and a sophisticated delivery system, Israel has
quietly supplanted Britain as the World's 5th Largest
nuclear power, and may currently rival France and China
in the size and sophistication of its nuclear arsenal.
Although dwarfed by the nuclear arsenals of the U.S. and
Russia, each possessing over 10,000 nuclear weapons,
Israel nonetheless is a major nuclear power, and should
be publically recognized as such.. Since the Gulf War in
1991, while much attention has been lavished on the
threat posed by Iraqi weapons of mass destruction, the
major culprit in the region, Israel, has been largely
ignored. Possessing chemical and biological weapons, an
extremely sophisticated nuclear arsenal, and an
aggressive strategy for their actual use, Israel
provides the major regional impetus for the development
of weapons of mass destruction and represents an acute
threat to peace and stability in the Middle East. The
Israeli nuclear program represents a serious impediment
to nuclear disarmament and nonproliferation and, with
India and Pakistan, is a potential nuclear
flashpoint.(prospects of meaningful non-proliferation
are a delusion so long as the nuclear weapons states
insist on maintaining their arsenals,) Citizens
concerned about sanctions against Iraq, peace with
justice in the Middle East, and nuclear disarmament have
an obligation to speak out forcefully against the
Israeli nuclear program.
Birth of the Israeli Bomb
The Israeli nuclear program began in
the late 1940s under the direction of Ernst David
Bergmann, "the father of the Israeli bomb," who in 1952
established the Israeli Atomic Energy Commission. It was
France, however, which provided the bulk of early
nuclear assistance to Israel culminating in construction
of Dimona, a heavy water moderated, natural uranium
reactor and plutonium reprocessing factory situated near
Bersheeba in the Negev Desert. Israel had been an active
participant in the French Nuclear weapons program from
its inception, providing critical technical expertise,
and the Israeli nuclear program can be seen as an
extension of this earlier collaboration. Dimona went on
line in 1964 and plutonium reprocessing began shortly
thereafter. Despite various Israeli claims that Dimona
was "a manganese plant, or a textile factory," the
extreme security measures employed told a far different
story. In 1967, Israel shot down one of their own Mirage
fighters that approached too close to Dimona and in 1973
shot down a Lybian civilian airliner which strayed off
course, killing 104.(3) There is substantial credible
speculation that Israel may have exploded at least one,
and perhaps several, nuclear devices in the mid 1960s in
the Negev near the Israeli-Egyptian border, and that it
participated actively in French nuclear tests in
Algeria.(4) By the time of the "Yom Kippur War" in 1973,
Israel possessed an arsenal of perhaps several dozen
deliverable atomic bombs and went on full nuclear
alert.(5)
Possessing advanced nuclear technology
and "world class" nuclear scientists, Israel was
confronted early with a major problem- how to obtain the
necessary uranium. Israel's own uranium source was the
phosphate deposits in the Negev, totally inadequate to
meet the need of a rapidly expanding program. The short
term answer was to mount commando raids in France and
Britain to successfully hijack uranium shipments and,
in1968, to collaborate with West Germany in diverting
200 tons of yellowcake (uranium oxide).(6) These
clandestine acquisitions of uranium for Dimona were
subsequently covered up by the various countries
involved. There was also an allegation that a U.S.
corporation called Nuclear Materials and Equipment
Corporation (NUMEC) diverted hundreds of pounds of
enriched uranium to Israel from the mid-50s to the
mid-60s.
Despite an FBI and CIA investigation,
and Congressional hearings, no one was ever prosecuted,
although most other investigators believed the diversion
had occurred(7)(8). In the late 1960s, Israel solved the
uranium problem by developing close ties with South
Africa in a quid pro quo arrangement whereby Israel
supplied the technology and expertise for the "Apartheid
Bomb," while South Africa provided the uranium.
South Africa and the United States
In 1977, the Soviet Union warned the
U.S. that satellite photos indicated South Africa was
planning a nuclear test in the Kalahari Desert but the
Apartheid regime backed down under pressure. On
September 22, 1979, a U.S. satellite detected an
atmospheric test of a small thermonuclear bomb in the
Indian Ocean off South Africa but, because of Israel's
apparent involvement, the report was quickly
"whitewashed" by a carefully selected scientific panel
kept in the dark about important details. Later it was
learned through Israeli sources that there were actually
three carefully guarded tests of miniaturized Israeli
nuclear artillery shells. The Israeli/South African
collaboration did not end with the bomb testing, but
continued until the fall of Apartheid, especially with
the developing and testing of medium range missiles and
advanced artillery. In addition to uranium and test
facilities, South Africa provided Israel with large
amounts of investment capital, while Israel provided a
major trade outlet to enable the Apartheid state avoid
international economic sanctions.(9)
Although the French and South Africans
were primarily responsible for the Israeli nuclear
program, the U.S. shares and deserves a large part of
the blame. Mark Gaffney wrote (the Israeli nuclear
program) "was possible only because (emphasis in
original) of calculated deception on the part of Israel,
and willing complicity on the part of the U.S.."(10)
From the very beginning, the U.S. was
heavily involved in the Israeli nuclear program,
providing nuclear related technology such as a small
research reactor in 1955 under the "Atoms for Peace
Program." Israeli scientists were largely trained at
U.S. universities and were generally welcomed at the
nuclear weapons labs. In the early 1960s, the controls
for the Dimona reactor were obtained clandestinely from
a company called Tracer Lab, the main supplier of U.S.
military reactor control panels, purchased through a
Belgian subsidiary, apparently with the acquiescence of
the National Security Agency (NSA) and the CIA.(11) In
1971, the Nixon administration approved the sale of
hundreds of krytons(a type of high speed switch
necessary to the development of sophisticated nuclear
bombs) to Israel.(12) And, in 1979, Carter provided
ultra high resolution photos from a KH-11 spy satellite,
used 2 years later to bomb the Iraqi Osirak Reactor.(13)
Throughout the Nixon and Carter administrations, and
accelerating dramatically under Reagan, U.S. advanced
technology transfers to Israel have continued unabated
to the present.
The Vanunu Revelations
Following the 1973 war, Israel
intensified its nuclear program while continuing its
policy of deliberate "nuclear opaqueness." Until the
mid-1980s, most intelligence estimates of the Israeli
nuclear arsenal were on the order of two dozen but the
explosive revelations of Mordechai Vanunu, a nuclear
technician working in the Dimona plutonium reprocessing
plant, changed everything overnight. A leftist supporter
of Palestine, Vanunu believed that it was his duty to
humanity to expose Israel's nuclear program to the
world. He smuggled dozens of photos and valuable
scientific data out of Israel and in 1986 his story was
published in the London Sunday Times. Rigorous
scientific scrutiny of the Vanunu revelations led to the
disclosure that Israel possessed as many as 200 highly
sophisticated, miniaturized thermonuclear bombs. His
information indicated that the Dimona reactor's capacity
had been expanded several fold and that Israel was
producing enough plutonium to make ten to twelve bombs
per year. A senior U.S. intelligence analyst said of the
Vanunu data,"The scope of this is much more extensive
than we thought. This is an enormous operation."(14)
Just prior to publication of his
information Vanunu was lured to Rome by a Mossad "Mata
Hari," was beaten, drugged and kidnapped to Israel and,
following a campaign of disinformation and vilification
in the Israeli press, convicted of "treason" by a secret
security court and sentenced to 18 years in prison. He
served over 11 years in solitary confinement in a 6 by 9
foot cell. After a year of modified release into the
general population(he was not permitted contact with
Arabs), Vanunu recently has been returned to solitary
and faces more than 3 years further imprisonment.
Predictably, The Vanunu revelations were largely ignored
by the world press, especially in the United States, and
Israel continues to enjoy a relatively free ride
regarding its nuclear status. (15)
Israel's Arsenal of Mass
Destruction
Today, estimates of the Israeli
nuclear arsenal range from a minimum of 200 to a maximum
of about 500. Whatever the number, there is little doubt
that Israeli nukes are among the world's most
sophisticated, largely designed for "war fighting" in
the Middle East. A staple of the Israeli nuclear arsenal
are "neutron bombs," miniaturized thermonuclear bombs
designed to maximize deadly gamma radiation while
minimizing blast effects and long term radiation- in
essence designed to kill people while leaving property
intact.(16) Weapons include ballistic missiles and
bombers capable of reaching Moscow, cruise missiles,
land mines(In the 1980s Israel planted nuclear land
mines along the Golan Heights(17)), and artillery shells
with a range of 45 miles(18). In June, 2000 an Israeli
submarine launched a cruise missile which hit a target
950 miles away, making Israel only the third nation
after the U.S. and Russia with that capability. Israel
will deploy 3 of these virtually impregnable submarines,
each carrying 4 cruise missiles.(19)
The bombs themselves range in size
from "city busters" larger than the Hiroshima Bomb to
tactical mini nukes. The Israeli arsenal of weapons of
mass destruction clearly dwarfs the actual or potential
arsenals of all other Middle Eastern states combined,
and is vastly greater than any conceivable need for
"deterrence."
Israel also possesses a comprehensive
arsenal of chemical and biological weapons. According to
the Sunday Times, Israel has produced both chemical and
biological weapons with a sophisticated delivery system,
quoting a senior Israeli intelligence official, "There
is hardly a single known or unknown form of chemical or
biological weapon . . .which is not manufactured at the
Nes Tziyona Biological Institute.")(20) The same report
described F-16 fighter jets specially designed for
chemical and biological payloads, with crews trained to
load the weapons on a moments notice. In 1998, the
Sunday Times reported that Israel, using research
obtained from South Africa, was developing an "ethno
bomb; "In developing their "ethno-bomb", Israeli
scientists are trying to exploit medical advances by
identifying distinctive a gene carried by some Arabs,
then create a genetically modified bacterium or virus...
The scientists are trying to engineer deadly
micro-organisms that attack only those bearing the
distinctive genes." Dedi Zucker, a leftist Member of
Knesset, the Israeli parliament, denounced the research
saying, "Morally, based on our history, and our
tradition and our experience, such a weapon is monstrous
and should be denied."(21)
Israeli Nuclear Strategy
In popular imagination, the Israeli
bomb is a "weapon of last resort," to be used only at
the last minute to avoid annihilation, and many well
intentioned but misled supporters of Israel still
believe that to be the case. Whatever truth this
formulation may have had in the minds of the early
Israeli nuclear strategists, today the Israeli nuclear
arsenal is inextricably linked to and integrated with
overall Israeli military and political strategy. As
Seymour Hersh says in classic understatement ; "The
Samson Option is no longer the only nuclear option
available to Israel."(22) Israel has made countless
veiled nuclear threats against the Arab nations and
against the Soviet Union(and by extension Russia since
the end of the Cold War) One chilling example comes from
Ariel Sharon, the current Israeli Prime Minister "Arabs
may have the oil, but we have the matches."(23) (In 1983
Sharon proposed to India that it join with Israel to
attack Pakistani nuclear facilities; in the late 70s he
proposed sending Israeli paratroopers to Tehran to prop
up the Shah; and in 1982 he called for expanding
Israel's security influence to stretch from "Mauritania
to Afghanistan.") In another example, Israeli nuclear
expert Oded Brosh said in 1992, "...we need not be
ashamed that the nuclear option is a major
instrumentality of our defense as a deterrent against
those who attack us."(24) According to Israel Shahak,
"The wish for peace, so often assumed as the Israeli
aim, is not in my view a principle of Israeli policy,
while the wish to extend Israeli domination and
influence is." and "Israel is preparing for a war,
nuclear if need be, for the sake of averting domestic
change not to its liking, if it occurs in some or any
Middle Eastern states.... Israel clearly prepares itself
to seek overtly a hegemony over the entire Middle
East..., without hesitating to use for the purpose all
means available, including nuclear ones."(25)
Israel uses its nuclear arsenal not
just in the context of deterrence" or of direct war
fighting, but in other more subtle but no less important
ways. For example, the possession of weapons of mass
destruction can be a powerful lever to maintain the
status quo, or to influence events to Israel's perceived
advantage, such as to protect the so called moderate
Arab states from internal insurrection, or to intervene
in inter-Arab warfare.(26) In Israeli strategic jargon
this concept is called "nonconventional compellence" and
is exemplified by a quote from Shimon Peres; "acquiring
a superior weapons system(read nuclear) would mean the
possibility of using it for compellent purposes- that is
forcing the other side to accept Israeli political
demands, which presumably include a demand that the
traditional status quo be accepted and a peace treaty
signed."(27) From a slightly different perspective,
Robert Tuckerr asked in a Commentary magazine article in
defense of Israeli nukes, "What would prevent Israel...
from pursuing a hawkish policy employing a nuclear
deterrent to freeze the status quo?"(28) Possessing an
overwhelming nuclear superiority allows Israel to act
with impunity even in the face world wide opposition. A
case in point might be the invasion of Lebanon and
destruction of Beirut in 1982, led by Ariel Sharon,
which resulted in 20,000 deaths, most civilian. Despite
the annihilation of a neighboring Arab state, not to
mention the utter destruction of the Syrian Air Force,
Israel was able to carry out the war for months at least
partially due to its nuclear threat.
Another major use of the Israeli bomb
is to compel the U.S. to act in Israel's favor, even
when it runs counter to its own strategic interests. As
early as 1956 Francis Perrin, head of the French A-bomb
project wrote "We thought the Israeli Bomb was aimed at
the Americans, not to launch it at the Americans, but to
say, 'If you don't want to help us in a critical
situation we will require you to help us; otherwise we
will use our nuclear bombs.'"(29) During the 1973 war,
Israel used nuclear blackmail to force Kissinger and
Nixon to airlift massive amounts of military hardware to
Israel. The Israeli Ambassador, Simha Dinitz, is quoted
as saying, at the time, "If a massive airlift to Israel
does not start immediately, then I will know that the
U.S. is reneging on its promises and...we will have to
draw very serious conclusions..."(30) Just one example
of this strategy was spelled out in 1987 by Amos Rubin,
economic adviser to Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir, who
said "If left to its own Israel will have no choice but
to fall back on a riskier defense which will endanger
itself and the world at large... To enable Israel to
abstain from dependence on nuclear arms calls for $2 to
3 billion per year in U.S. aid."(31) Since then Israel's
nuclear arsenal has expanded exponentially, both
quantitatively and qualitatively, while the U.S. money
spigots remain wide open.
Regional and International
Implications
Largely unknown to the world, the
Middle East nearly exploded in all out war on February
22, 2001. According to the London Sunday Times and
DEBKAfile, Israel went on high missile alert after
receiving news from the U.S. of movement by 6 Iraqi
armored divisions stationed along the Syrian border, and
of launch preparations of surface to surface missiles.
DEBKAfile, an Israeli based "counter-terrorism"
information service, claims that the Iraqi missiles were
deliberately taken to the highest alert level in order
to test the U.S. and Israeli response. Despite an
immediate attack by 42 U.S. and British war planes, the
Iraqis suffered little apparent damage.(32) The Israelis
have warned Iraq that they are prepared to use neutron
bombs in a preemptive attack against Iraqi missiles.
The Israeli nuclear arsenal has
profound implications for the future of peace in the
Middle East, and indeed, for the entire planet. It is
clear from Israel Shahak that Israel has no interest in
peace except that which is dictated on its own terms,
and has absolutely no intention of negotiating in good
faith to curtail its nuclear program or discuss
seriously a nuclear-free Middle East,"Israel's
insistence on the independent use of its nuclear weapons
can be seen as the foundation on which Israeli grand
strategy rests."(34) According to Seymour Hersh, "the
size and sophistication of Israel's nuclear arsenal
allows men such as Ariel Sharon to dream of redrawing
the map of the Middle East aided by the implicit threat
of nuclear force."(35) General Amnon Shahak-Lipkin,
former Israeli Chief of Staff is quoted "It is never
possible to talk to Iraq about no matter what; It is
never possible to talk to Iran about no matter what.
Certainly about nuclearization. With Syria we cannot
really talk either."(36) Ze'ev Shiff, an Israeli
military expert writing in Haaretz said, "Whoever
believes that Israel will ever sign the UN Convention
prohibiting the proliferation of nuclear weapons... is
day dreaming,"(37) and Munya Mardoch, Director of the
Israeli Institute for the Development of Weaponry, said
in 1994, "The moral and political meaning of nuclear
weapons is that states which renounce their use are
acquiescing to the status of Vassal states. All those
states which feel satisfied with possessing conventional
weapons alone are fated to become vassal states."(38)
As Israeli society becomes more and
more polarized, the influence of the radical right
becomes stronger. According to Shahak, "The prospect of
Gush Emunim, or some secular right-wing Israeli
fanatics, or some some of the delerious Israeli Army
generals, seizing control of Israeli nuclear
weapons...cannot be precluded. ...while israeli jewish
society undergoes a steady polarization, the Israeli
security system increasingly relies on the recruitment
of cohorts from the ranks of the extreme right."(39) The
Arab states, long aware of Israel's nuclear program,
bitterly resent its coercive intent, and perceive its
existence as the paramount threat to peace in the
region, requiring their own weapons of mass destruction.
During a future Middle Eastern war (a distinct
possibility given the ascension of Ariel Sharon, an
unindicted war criminal with a bloody record stretching
from the massacre of Palestinian civilians at Quibya in
1953, to the massacre of Palestinian civilians at Sabra
and Shatila in 1982 and beyond) the possible Israeli use
of nuclear weapons should not be discounted. According
to Shahak, "In Israeli terminology, the launching of
missiles on to Israeli territory is regarded as
'nonconventional' regardless of whether they are
equipped with explosives or poison gas."(40) (Which
requires a "nonconventional" response, a perhaps unique
exception being the Iraqi SCUD attacks during the Gulf
War.)
Meanwhile, the existence of an arsenal
of mass destruction in such an unstable region in turn
has serious implications for future arms control and
disarmament negotiations, and even the threat of nuclear
war. Seymour Hersh warns, "Should war break out in the
Middle East again,... or should any Arab nation fire
missiles against Israel, as the Iraqis did, a nuclear
escalation, once unthinkable except as a last resort,
would now be a strong probability."(41) and Ezar
Weissman, Israel's current President said "The nuclear
issue is gaining momentum(and the) next war will not be
conventional."(42) Russia and before it the Soviet Union
has long been a major(if not the major) target of
Israeli nukes. It is widely reported that the principal
purpose of Jonathan Pollard's spying for Israel was to
furnish satellite images of Soviet targets and other
super sensitive data relating to U.S. nuclear targeting
strategy. (43) (Since launching its own satellite in
1988, Israel no longer needs U.S. spy secrets.) Israeli
nukes aimed at the Russian heartland seriously
complicate disarmament and arms control negotiations
and, at the very least, the unilateral possession of
nuclear weapons by Israel is enormously destabilizing,
and dramatically lowers the threshold for their actual
use, if not for all out nuclear war. In the words of
Mark Gaffney, "... if the familar pattern(Israel
refining its weapons of mass destruction with U.S.
complicity) is not reversed soon- for whatever reason-
the deepening Middle East conflict could trigger a world
conflagration." (44)
Many Middle East Peace activists have
been reluctant to discuss, let alone challenge, the
Israeli monopoly on nuclear weapons in the region, often
leading to incomplete and uninformed analyses and flawed
action strategies. Placing the issue of Israeli weapons
of mass destruction directly and honestly on the table
and action agenda would have several salutary effects.
First, it would expose a primary destabilizing dynamic
driving the Middle East arms race and compelling the
region's states to each seek their own "deterrent."
Second, it would expose the grotesque double standard
which sees the U.S. and Europe on the one hand
condemning Iraq, Iran and Syria for developing weapons
of mass destruction, while simultaneously protecting and
enabling the principal culprit. Third, exposing Israel's
nuclear strategy would focus international public
attention, resulting in increased pressure to dismantle
its weapons of mass destruction and negotiate a just
peace in good faith. Finally, a nuclear free Israel
would make a Nuclear Free Middle East and a
comprehensive regional peace agreement much more likely.
Unless and until the world community confronts Israel
over its covert nuclear program it is unlikely that
there will be any meaningful resolution of the
Israeli/Arab conflict, a fact that Israel may be
counting on as the Sharon era dawns.
Footnotes:
1. Seymour Hersh, The Samson
Option: Israel's Nuclear Arsenal and American
Foreign Policy, New York,1991, Random House, p. 319
(A brilliant and prophetic work with much original
research)2
2. Mark Gaffney, Dimona, The
Third Temple:The Story Behind the Vanunu Revelation,
Brattleboro, VT, 1989, Amana Books, p. 165
(Excellent progressive analysis of the Israeli
nuclear program)
3. U.S. Army Lt. Col. Warner
D. Farr, The Third Temple Holy of Holies; Israel's
Nuclear Weapons, USAF Counterproliferation Center,
Air War College Sept 1999 <www.fas.org/nuke/guide/israel/nuke/farr,htm
(Perhaps the best single condensed history of the
Israeli nuclear program)
4. Hersch, op.cit., p. 131
5. Gaffney, op.cit., p. 63
6. Gaffney, op. cit. pp 68 -
69
7. Hersh, op.cit., pp. 242-257
8. Gaffney, op.cit., 1989, pps.
65-66 (An alternative discussion of the NUMEC
affair)
9. Barbara Rogers & Zdenek
Cervenka, The Nuclear Axis: The Secret Collaboration
Between West Germany and South Africa, New York,
1978, Times Books, p. 325-328 (the definitive
history of the Apartheid Bomb)
10. Gaffney, op. cit., 1989,
p. 34
11. Peter Hounam, Woman From
Mossad: The Torment of Mordechai Vanunu, London,
1999, Vision Paperbacks, pp. 155-168 (The most
complete and up to date account of the Vanunu story,
it includes fascenating speculation that Israel may
have a second hidden Dimona type reactor)
12. Hersh, op. cit., 1989, p.
213
13. ibid, p.198-200
14. ibid, pp. 3-17
15. Hounman, op. cit. 1999, pp
189-203
16. Hersh, 1989. pp.199-200
17. ibid, p. 312
18. John Pike and Federation
of American Scientists, Israel Special Weapons Guide
Website, 2001, Web Address
<http://www.fas.org/nuke/guide/israel/index.html (An
invaluable internet resource)
19. Usi Mahnaimi and Peter
Conradi, Fears of New Arms Race as Israel Tests
Cruise Missiles, June 18, 2000, London Sunday Times
20. Usi Mahnaimi, Israeli Jets
Equipped for Chemical Warfare October 4, 1998,
London Sunday Times
21. Usi Mahnaimi and Marie
Colvin, Israel Planning "Ethnic" bomb as Saddam
Caves In, November 15, 1998, London Sunday Times
22. Hersh, op.cit., 1991, p.
319
23. Gaffney, op.cit., 1989, p.
163
24. Israel Shahak, Open
Secrets: Israeli Nuclear and Foreign Policies,
London, 1997,Pluto Press, p. 40 (An absolute "must
read" for any Middle East or anti-nuclear activist)
25 ibid, p.2
26. ibid, p.43
27. Gaffney, op.cit., 1989, p
131
28. "Israel & the US: From
Dependence to Nuclear Weapons?" Robert W. Tucker,
Novenber 1975 pp41-42
29. London Sunday Times,
October 12, 1986
30. Gaffney, op. cit. 1989. p.
147
31. ibid, p. 153
32. DEBKAfile, February 23,
2001 WWW.debka.com
33. Uzi Mahnaimi and Tom
Walker, London Sunday Times, February 25, 2001
34. Shahak, op. cit., p150
35. Hersh, op.cit., p. 319
36. Shahak, op. cit., p34
37. ibid, p. 149
38. ibid, p. 153
39. ibid, pp. 37-38
40. ibid, pp 39-40
41. Hersh, op. cit., p. 19
42. Aronson, Geoffrey, "Hidden
Agenda: US-Israeli Relations and the Nuclear
Question," Middle East Journal, (Autumn 1992),
619-630.
43 . Hersh, op. cit., pp.
285-305
44. Gaffney, op. cit., p194
* DC Iraq
Coalition, March 2002
Centre for
Research on Globalisation (CRG),
globalresearch.ca, 3 March 2002
Copyright, John
Steinbach, DC Iraq Coalition, 2002.
The URL of this article is:
http://globalresearch.ca/articles/STE203A.html
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