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Israel admits stockpiling nuclear weapons
By Jean Shaoul
12 February 2000
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At the beginning of February, the Israeli Knesset (parliament)
held the first public discussion on the country's nuclear arms
programme for nearly 40 years. It was greeted with deafening silence
by the international establishment.
Military censorship has always forbidden reports in the Israeli
media about its nuclear arsenal, and successive governments have
refused to discuss the issue. Finally, Issam Mahoul, an Arab Israeli
MP who is a member of the Hadash (Communist) Party, went to the
Supreme Court to seek a ruling forcing the government to permit
a parliamentary debate. Parliament Speaker Avraham Burg backed
down in order to avoid a Supreme Court decision.
In the televised debate, Mahoul stated that according to experts'
estimates, Israel has stockpiled huge numbers of nuclear warheads.
This had increased to what he described as the "insane amount
of 200-300". The weapons had been developed with the help
of the South African apartheid regime.
He further alleged that three new German-built submarines just
purchased by Israel were to be fitted with nuclear weapons. Their
stated purpose was "to cruise deep in the sea and constitute
a second strike force in the event that Israel is attacked with
nuclear weapons".
Mahoul said this undermined government claims that its nuclear
arsenal was a deterrent. "That means that not only do the
hundreds of bombs that Israel possesses not pose a defence, they
have actually caused the military establishment to fear a nuclear
early strike, which escalates the spiral of the non-conventional
arms race further and further, at the cost of billions of dollars,"
he said.
He declared that Iran and Iraq were "threatened by Dimona"
[Israel's nuclear reactor], and not the other way round. "The
nuclear reactor at Dimona in the Negev desert has produced a huge
amount of nuclear waste which, if leaked, would contaminate Israel
for centuries," he said.
He warned that the nuclear stockpile was a hazard turning "this
little piece of territory into a nuclear garbage bin, poisoned
and poisoning, that could send us all up in a mushroom cloud".
He said that Israeli citizens were kept in the dark about the
nuclear stockpile and conditions at the ageing Dimona reactor
that constituted a huge environmental threat.
The MP referred to reports that Israel had exported nuclear
waste to Mauritania in North West Africa. He attacked the cloak
of secrecy surrounding the nuclear missile sites near Kfar Zechariah
on the outskirts of Jerusalem, and near Yodfat in the Galilee.
He also said publicly what has been widely known for yearsthat
Israel was producing "biological warfare" weapons at
the government's Biological Institute in Ness Ziona.
Mahoul described the government's official policy of "nuclear
ambiguity" as "nothing but self-delusion". He said,
"All the world knows that Israel is a vast warehouse of atomic,
biological and chemical weapons that serves as an anchor for the
Middle East arms race.
He repeatedly referred to Mordechai Vanunu, the Israeli nuclear
technician who worked at the Dimona nuclear reactor for nine years
and was subsequently jailed for publicly revealing the extent
of Israel's nuclear arsenal.
In 1986, Britain's Sunday Times published Vanunu's photographs
from inside the reactor and his claim that Israel had stockpiled
about 100 nuclear weapons. Vanunu's detailed allegations about
the scope and sophistication of Israel's nuclear weapons have
never been denied or challenged by Israeli officials or knowledgeable
Israeli civilian defence experts. Indeed, independent assessments
by international arms-monitoring organisations have concluded
that Israel's nuclear stockpile is exceeded only by those of the
United States, Russia, China, France and the United Kingdom. The
Bulletin of Atomic Scientists, citing what it said was a classified
United States Department of Energy study, said only a few months
ago that Israel has the sixth largest nuclear arsenal in the world.
Vanunu, having blown the whistle on Israel, was lured by Mossad,
the Israeli secret service, to Rome, where he was kidnapped and
taken back to Israel to stand trial as a spy and a traitor. He
was sentenced in 1988, after a secret trial, to 18 years in prison.
He has served most of the 13 years since then in solitary confinement.
His revelations were deemed so sensitive that it was only last
November that the government finally released more than 1,200
pages of court statements, albeit censored, to the Israeli newspaper
Yediot Aharanot, in order to avoid a legal challenge. Only
recently has the government allowed even a photograph of Vanunu
in jail to be published.
Mahoul's hope that his comments would spark a debate within
parliament was mistaken. Although many representatives of international
anti-nuclear groups and foreign governments attended the parliamentary
session, few Israeli MPs stayed for the debate. It was all over
in 52 minutes.
Two dozen right-wing Knesset members walked out in protest
and five Arab members were expelled for heckling. Haim Ramon,
a cabinet minister speaking on behalf of the government, and the
only other speaker in the debate, refused to respond
to Mahoul. In effect calling Mahoul a traitor, he declared, "To
do so would aid the enemy. Do you want us to tell Iran and Iraq
exactly what we have and what we don't have?... It's unheard of."
Yediot Aharanot devoted almost 10 pages to the case
and the subject dominated the airwaves within the region. While
the international press reported the debate, the absence of critical
comments in the Western media contrasted starkly with their almost
relentless propaganda drive regarding Iraq's supposed possession
of weapons of mass destruction, used to justify continuing
air raids and sanctions which have killed hundreds of thousands
of Iraqis.
Israel developed its nuclear programme in the 1950s. It was
originally claimed that the Dimona reactor would provide the cheap
nuclear energy required to make water desalination a viable project.
But its real purpose was to enable the development of nuclear
weapons.
Shimon Peres, who was Labour Prime Minister at the time of
the Vanunu trial and is a member of the present government, is
credited with organising the development of Israel's nuclear arsenal
when he was an aide to former Labour Premier David Ben-Gurion.
Under the present Labour Prime Minister Ehud Barak, the government
has followed the same nuclear policy as all its predecessors,
one of ambiguity. As a Ha'aretz editorial noted,
this ambiguity is backed by a long-standing understanding with
the US administration, according to which Israel will not reveal
its nuclear capability and the US will consider Israel an exception
to its global policy. Consequently Washington will not pressure
Israel to join the Nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty (NPT). As
a result, every arm of the state has worked for nearly 40 years
to ensure that no public debate of Israel's nuclear policy, or
even acknowledgement of its existence, takes place. Hence the
secrecy of Vanunu's trial.
This has allowed Israel to become the sole nuclear power in
the Middle East. Israel even bombed Iraq's nuclear plant in 1981
to ensure that it would retain this status.
While discussion within Israel is very limited, considerable
information has become available through intelligence reports,
books and publications like Jane's Defence Weekly. In 1991,
journalist Seymour Hersh said in his book The Sampson Option
that Israel had "hundreds" of tactical and strategic
nuclear weapons, including more than 100 nuclear artillery shells
and "hundreds of low-yield neutron warheads capable of destroying
large numbers of enemy troops".
In 1992, Israeli human rights activist Professor Israel Shahak
wrote a series of articles on Israel's nuclear and foreign policies,
since published as a book. When dealing with the long-concealed
events of the October 1973 war, he pointed out that the Israeli
High Command, including possibly the then-Minister of Defence
Moshe Dayan, were in favour of using nuclear weapons against Syria.
They were only restrained by Prime Minister Golda Meir and US
Secretary of State Henry Kissinger.
In 1997 Jane's Intelligence Weekly examined satellite
photographs of what it described as an Israeli military base at
Kfar Zechariah. It concluded that "Israel's nuclear arsenal
is larger than many estimates".
The site was said to house about 50 Jericho-2 missiles, believed
to have a maximum range of about 3,000 miles with a warhead of
about 2,200 pounds. The report also said the installation contained
nuclear bombs for use from bombers. It claimed that the five bunkers
could easily store 150 weapons. "This is more than other
reports state and supports indications that the Israeli arsenal
may contain as many as 400 nuclear weapons with a total combined
yield of 50 megatons," the study said.
In 1998 the New York Times cited an article in Ha'aretz
reporting a Rand Corporation study commissioned by the Pentagon
which concluded that Israel had enough plutonium to make 70 nuclear
weapons.
In his book Israel and the Bomb, Avner Cohen traced
the development of Israel's nuclear bomb. He drew on thousands
of American and Israeli government documents, most of them only
recently declassified, and more than 100 interviews with key players.
Cohen described the assistance Israel received from France,
which provided the necessary sophisticated technology, and the
initial failure of American intelligence to identify the Dimona
project for what it was. He revealed that Israel crossed the nuclear
weapons threshold on the eve of the 1967 Six-Day War, and the
negotiations between President Nixon and Prime Minister Golda
Meir that led to the current policy of secrecy.
According to a special report by Jane's Defence Weekly,
"Israel first deployed its nuclear weapons in 1968 to deter
an unconstrained Soviet attack." Jane's continued,
"For decades the Israeli Defence Force general staff had
to plan to execute stopwatch wars, knowing that the USSR would
intervene politically to rescue their client states when they
were on the verge of total defeat."
The evidence shows that Israel's nuclear arsenal has been an
open secret for years. It could hardly be otherwise, since the
US has bankrolled the country for decades to the tune of billions
of dollars a year in military aid, most of which must be spent
in the US. Israel's nuclear weapons have gone unpublicised because
the country serves as the custodian of US interests in the Middle
East.
But changing realities pose challenges to Israel's nuclear
policy. The peace process exposes Israel to questions, led by
Egypt, as to why Israel needs strategic deterrence when it intends
to open its borders. It has intensified political tensions between
Barak's increasingly beleaguered government and the Arab MPs upon
whom he depends for his majority in parliament. The increasing
polarisation within Israeli society, moreover, brings to the fore
environmental questions concerning the treatment of nuclear waste,
reactor safety and the accountability of state institutions that,
until now, have been shrouded in secrecy.
References
Cohen, A., Israel and the Bomb,
Columbia University Press, New York, 1998.
Hersh, S., The Sampson Option, Random
House, New York, 1991.
Shahak, I., Open secrets: Israeli Foreign
and Nuclear policies, Pluto Press, London, 1997
See Also:
Israel
and Palestine
[WSWS Full Coverage]
State Department
documents confirm
US hypocrisy on human rightsthe case of Israel
[17 September 1999]
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