Tag: Israel

  • A Short Review of Israel’s Nuclear Program

    A Short Review of Israel’s Nuclear Program

    Click here for a longer version of this article.

    The State of Israel is considered to be the only country in the Middle East to possess nuclear weapons. It has never confirmed or denied this assertion, on the base of his policy of ambiguity – amimut – according to which Israel “de-emphasizes” the existence of its nuclear capacity.[1]

    Israel was given birth by the end of the British Mandate of Palestine in 1948. Inspired by the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Israeli Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion ordered the development of a nuclear program, that crystallized both Ben-Gurion’s commitment to Zionism, and a defensive tool toward anything that could resemble the atrocity of the Holocaust that was so still vivid in the mind of people.  In 1949, the Israeli Defence Forces (IDF) Science Corps conducted a geographical survey of the Negev desert, where some uranium was found, and in 1952 the Israel Atomic Energy Commission (IAEC) was secretly established. Immediately, Israel established even stronger relationships of collaboration with France, and was allowed to observe the development of the nuclear program at French facilities. In the meanwhile, the United States granted Israel with the construction of a small nuclear research reactor in Nachal Soreq, and placed Israel under the auspices of the U.S. Atoms for Peace framework in 1955 on the promise that its intents were peaceful. However, the check mechanisms made available by the program weren’t adequate, and the relationship of privilege that (always) run between the United States and Israel never created the political will within U.S. administrations to inspect Israel thoroughly and stop its ambition to build the atomic bomb.

    The relationship with France facilitated the construction of a clandestine nuclear reactor in the Negev Desert near Dimona, which was established in 1957. The relationship with the French came to a close in 1966 forcing Israel to seek help and collaboration with Great Britain, Norway and South Africa. Through these newly established relationships Israel could accumulate large quantities of heavy water and uranium, and in 1979 proceeded to a nuclear test off the coast with South Africa. The U.S. Vela satellite detected a double flash of light in the Indian Ocean, off the cost of South Africa, and even though double flashes are associated with nuclear detonations, both Israel and South Africa had always denied any connection to it. However, the secrecy adopted by Israel in the development of its nuclear program has always placed a thick veil of doubt on the veracity of its declaration.

    Despite the existence of murky signs, and despite the fact that preventing the spread of nuclear weapons was at the core of U.S. strategy, no U.S. President has ever factually prevented Israel to develop its nuclear weapons program. Not even when Israel refused to sign the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) in 1968 thus adding ambiguity to its conduct. Through historical recollections, it became clear that allowing Israel to develop its nuclear weapons program served the United States in various ways. First, it created a counterbalance against the Soviet Union and could, indirectly, help the United States to limit the threat of communism. During the Cold War years, Israel was in fact considered as an element that could ensure the victory of the U.S. over the Soviet Union. Secondly, as long as Israel maintained secrecy on its nuclear achievements, the possibility that this could induce alliance to the Arabs was reduced, and the danger of a U.S.-Soviet nuclear confrontation further decreased. Finally, the legacy of the Holocaust induced many American élites to legitimize Israel’s nuclear ambitions, and granted them with the right to pursue its nuclear weapons program wile avoiding public scrutiny.

    This mode of thinking takes the United States to the brink of hypocrisy, as it implies that Israel, unlike Iran for example, has the special “privilege” to base its sense of security on the manufacturing of the nuclear bomb without being questioned. With the compliance of the United States, Israel adopted an aggressive policy toward Iraq on June 7, 1981, by carrying out a preemptive strike on Iraq’s Osiraq nuclear reactor, arguing that it had been designed for the construction of nuclear weapons. Israel could do so in compliance with its unilaterally-established Begin Doctrine, a term referred to Israel’s preventive strikes against potential enemies as a counter-proliferation policy toward their capability to possess weapons of mass destruction, particularly nuclear weapons. For Israel the strike was legitimate as it served to preempt future threats to its very existence and would be repeated against Syria in 2007 (Operation Orchard) with total complacency of the Bush administration. Israel’s action contributed to Iran’s desire to pursue its nuclear ambition during the 1990s, which, in turn, propelled Israel’s decision to develop a sea-based second-strike capability. Israel’s aggressiveness in relying on ambiguity around its nuclear program was also evident with regard to the proposal – advanced on the occasion of the 1995 NPT Review Conference – to establish a Middle East Weapons of Mass Destruction Free Zone (MEWMDFZ), occasion that Israel exploited to establish its predominance against the Arab World, the Palestinians in particular.

    The lack of access to Israeli nuclear facilities made the work of historians very difficult. To quantify Israel’s nuclear armaments and capacity, they could rely only on U.S. declassified documents and the testimonies of those that had inside knowledge of Israel’s nuclear program. In its last report, issued in June 2019, the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) claims that Israel is likely to possess nearly one hundred nuclear weapons,[2] comprising 30 gravity bombs capable of being delivered by fighter jets; an additional 50 warheads that can be delivered by land-based ballistic missiles; and an unknown number of nuclear-armed, sea-launched cruise missiles that would grant Israel a sea-based second-strike capability.

    What seems to be clear is that Israel, supported by the U.S. in its ambiguity, does possess nuclear weapons. On the occasion of a visit to the Dimona nuclear reactor in August 2018, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu stated: “Those who threaten to wipe us out put themselves in a similar danger, and in any event will not achieve their goal.”[3] In addition to the danger posed by the retention of nuclear weapons, there have been revelations that the Dimona nuclear facility has leaked radioactive waste. Considering its ambiguous position Israel can only rely on the clandestine market to acquire outdated nuclear technology, making these revelations very plausible. The reactor is located only thirty miles from Tel Aviv. But the most serious concern is for the city of Dimona, only eight miles from the nuclear site. These warnings haven’t prompted the Israeli government to fix the leaks, allegedly because Dimona is predominantly populated by North African Jews – a marginalized community – and is surrounded by the Negev Desert, home to many Palestinian Bedouin villages,[4] which Israel considers illegal and subjects to cultural and physical annihilation.

    The choice to adopt amimut – as Israel does – is only possible because of the protection the Israeli government receives from a structure of power that privileges some at the expense of others, as the intermittent opposition Israel received, particularly from Washington, since its inception demonstrates. The case of Israel is emblematic and revealing at the same time. In fact, at its very core, amimut demonstrates symmetry between Israel’s nuclear thinking and its internal policies. Both are nothing but racist and genocidal.

    Footnotes

    [1] Israeli, Ofer (2015) “Israel’s nuclear amimut policy and its consequences,” Israel Affairs, Vol 21, no 4, pp. 541-558.

    [2] SIPRI Yearbook 2019. Armaments, Disarmament and International Security. (Retrievable at https://www.sipri.org/sites/default/files/2019-06/yb19_summary_eng_1.pdf Accessed on September 12, 2019).

    [3] Williams, Dan, “At Dimona reactor, Netanyahu warns Israel’s foes they risk ruin,” Reuters, August 29, 2018. (Accessed on September 12, 2019 https://www.reuters.com/article/us-israel-nuclear/at-dimona-reactor-netanyahu-warns-israels-foes-they-risk-ruin-idUSKCN1LE270). See also: Webb, Whitney, “Speaking in front of Israel’s nukes Netanyahu says IDF will hit Iranian forces in Syria with “all its might,” MPN News, August 30, 2018 (Accessed on September 12, 2019 https://www.mintpressnews.com/speaking-in-front-of-israels-nukes-netanyahu-says-idf-will-hit-iranian-forces-in-syria-with-all-its-might/248498/).

    [4] Webb, Whitney, “Israel’s secretive nuclear facility leaking as watchdog finds Israel has nearly 100 nukes,” MPN News, June 17, 2019. (Accessed on September 12, 2019 https://www.mintpressnews.com/international-watchdog-finds-israel-has-nearly-100-nuclear-weapons/259274/).

  • Israel’s Nuclear Program

    Israel’s Nuclear Program

    Click here for a short version of this article.

    The State of Israel is considered to be the only country in the Middle East to possess nuclear weapons, but has refused to confirm or deny this assertion. The author Ofer Israeli explains: “This approach is called amimut in Hebrew, which translates into ‘ambiguity’ or ‘opacity’. Accordingly, Israel has de-emphasized the existence of its nuclear capability, despite the fact that this approach is arguably incompatible with the norms and values of a liberal democracy.”[1] However, there is little ambiguity left about Israel’s possession of nuclear weapons.

    Early nuclear development

    When the British Mandate of Palestine came to a close in 1948, the State of Israel was officially recognized by the United Nations Partition Plan for Palestine, which called for the withdrawal of the colonial occupation of Palestine by the British. The Plan imposed the delineation of boundaries between an Arab and Jewish State, together with the internationalization of Jerusalem. Inspired by the bombing on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and fuelled by nationalism, the Prime Minister of the newly created State of Israel, David Ben-Gurion, ordered the development of a nuclear program. Shimon Peres, who served as Minister of Defense, was Prime Minister twice, and then became President of Israel, declared that Ben-Gurion had believed that “Science could compensate us for what Nature has denied us.”[2] Ben-Gurion firmly believed that the nuclear bomb could back up his commitment to Zionism, the political movement that sustains the creation of an independent Jewish nation. In sum, the nuclear bomb was seen as a defensive tool in response to what the Jewish people endured during the Holocaust.

    Even before the 1948 Declaration of the State of Israel, Prime Minister Ben-Gurion had recruited some Jewish scientists from abroad with the mandate to develop a nuclear program. In 1949 the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) Science Corps – the Hemed Gimmel – were ordered to conduct a geological survey of the Negev desert with the aim of finding sources of uranium, located in phosphate deposits in very small amounts. Also, a few Israeli students were sent abroad, including one who was sent to the University of Chicago to study under the supervision of Enrico Fermi, the creator of the first nuclear reactor. In 1952, the Hemed Gimmel was moved from the IDF to the Ministry of Defense, where it became the Emet, the Division of Research and Infrastructure. In this year, the Israel Atomic Energy Commission (IAEC) was secretly established and Prime Minister Ben-Gurion appointed Professor Ernst David Bergmann as its Chair.[3]

    As scientific works progressed, diplomatic relations between Israel and other countries followed suit. Pivotal for this purpose was Minister of Defense Shimon Peres, who was able to reinforce cooperation with France on the nuclear front since the early 1950s. Israel and France were close allies. In fact, France was the principal arm supplier for Israel, which, in turn, provided intelligence when instability spread in the French colonies in North Africa. Moreover, Israeli scientists helped build the G1 plutonium production reactor and the UP1 reprocessing nuclear plant in Marcoule (France), and earned in exchange the possibility that Israeli scientists could observe the development of the nuclear programs at French nuclear facilities.

    On July 12, 1955 Israel became part of the U.S. Atoms for Peace framework and signed a peaceful nuclear cooperation agreement with the United States, which allowed the U.S., two years later, to assist Israel with the construction of a small research reactor in Nachal Soreq. This site would later be used by Israel to conceal the construction of its clandestine nuclear reactor at Dimona.

    In 1956, Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser decided to nationalize the Suez Canal. His decision prompted Israel, France and the United Kingdom to invade the Sinai with the aim to seize it. Israel was promised by France a nuclear reactor for its support, which it accepted. However, following the invasion of Suez on October 29, 1956, the Soviet Union threatened intervention. This, in turn, prompted the United States to exercise enormous pressure on its allies to induce them to retreat. Through diplomatic cooperation between the U.S. and the Soviet Union for preventing the latter to retaliate, France and the United Kingdom were forced to withdraw within a week, while Israel left only in March 1957. Feeling humiliated, France reinforced its decision to pursue a nuclear weapons program. In October 1957, both France and Israel finalized their relationship thanks to which Israel was able to obtain from France a larger heavy-water reactor (a 24 megawatt EL-102 reactor) together with a reprocessing plant. Israel agreed, in exchange, that the reprocessing of plutonium would only be for peaceful purposes through an agreement that remained secret, as both countries didn’t want to deal with international pressure. It was, therefore, decided that the construction of the Negev Nuclear Research Centre would start at the end of 1957 in the Negev Desert near Dimona, an operation that, since its very beginning, remained shrouded in extreme secrecy. To help with the building of the nuclear site, 2,500 Frenchmen had been secretly living in Dimona. In 2004, The Guardian reported: “In Dimona, French engineers poured in to help build Israel a nuclear reactor and a far more secret reprocessing plant capable of separating plutonium from spent reactor fuel. This was the real giveaway that Israel’s nuclear programme was aimed at producing weapons.”[4] To avoid further scrutiny, the French living in Dimona were forbidden to write directly to family members and friends in France. Instead, they had to send their mail to a mailbox in Latin America.[5]

    The rise of nationalist President Charles de Gaulle in 1959 put the cooperation between Israel and France at risk. President de Gaulle requested that Dimona be open to international inspections, and imposed as a condition for future collaborations that Israel would stop reprocessing plutonium. Through a two-year negotiation between Shimon Peres and the French Foreign Minister Maurice Couve de Murville, Peres secured France’s cooperation until 1966, but the supply of uranium ended in 1963. Due to this, Israel decided to buy uranium from other countries, such as Great Britain and Norway. In 2006, BBC Newsnight[6] reported that the United Kingdom made hundreds of shipments of restricted materials to Israel during the 1950s and 1960s. These shipments included uranium-235 and plutonium, despite the British Intelligence warning the British government that the deal could help Israel build a nuclear bomb. Ignoring the warning, Great Britain also shipped 20 tons of heavy water to Israel via a Norwegian company called Noratom, using the company as a front.[7]

    Israel reached out to Argentina, in addition to Great Britain, which agreed to sell the country 100 tons of uranium oxide, otherwise called yellowcake,[8] that was shipped to Israel between 1963 and 1966.[9] The relationship with Norway went so far that, in 1960, Norway repurchased 20 tons of heavy water it had originally sold to the U.K. and exported it directly from the U.K. to Israel.[10] Israel obtained fissile material from the U.K. and Norway on the promise that it would be used only for peaceful purposes, although, once again, intelligence warned that that could not be the case. Finally, in 1965, Israel received from South Africa 10 tons of yellowcake under the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Safeguards Agreements. It is estimated that this is the year when Dimona’s reactor became operational. The trading relationship between Israel and South Africa continued over the years, and was subject to yearly inspections by the South African Atomic Energy Board. Inspections lasted until 1976, when the two countries agreed to remove the bilateral safeguards through which Israel obtained 500 tons of uranium for plutonium production at the Dimona’s reactor, and gave South Africa, in exchange, 30 grams of tritium.[11]

    Although Israel has never publicly acknowledged that its nuclear program was aimed at building the atomic bomb, it is nonetheless believed that it managed to assemble enough material to build rudimentary nuclear devices during the crisis leading up to the 1967 Six-Day War, otherwise known Third Arab-Israeli War, which began on June 5, when Israel bombed Egyptian airfields and launched a ground invasion of the Sinai Peninsula. Historian Avner Cohen estimated that Israel had planned to give a demonstration of the bomb as a last resort on this occasion, but it turned unnecessary considering the overwhelming victory that Israel achieved at the end of the war, on June 10.[12] The following year, the Mossad secretly purchased 200 tons of yellowcake from the Belgian company Union Minière. Through this operation, known as Operation Plumbat, the Belgian company shipped the uranium from Antwerp to Genoa (Italy). However, on its way to Genoa, the uranium was transferred to another vessel directed to Israel.[13] In this period of time, although Israel’s nuclear capability could not be understood publicly and precisely, its policy of “nuclear opacity” became more prominent, especially when, in 1968, Israel refused to sign the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), even if subjected to intense U.S. pressure. It must be said, however, that the pressure the United States exercised on Israel has always been very controversial. I will touch on this point more extensively later in this paper.

    An unconfirmed nuclear test

    During the 1970s, Israel is believed to have enlarged its nuclear arsenal considerably, producing at least 10 nuclear weapons, as well as aircraft and missiles for their delivery.  Historians believe that Israel was close to deploying its first nuclear-capable ballistic-missile in 1973,[14] the year when Israel was involved in the Yom Kippur War, otherwise called the Ramadan War. [15] On this occasion, Egypt and Syria launched a coordinated attack on Israel to reclaim the Sinai Peninsula and the Golan Heights. The attack was launched on Yom Kippur (October 6), the holiest day in Judaism, which also occurred that year during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan. Although the possibility of resorting to the use of a nuclear device was an option, Prime Minister Golda Meir did not believe Israel’s survival was at stake and declined dropping the nuclear bomb. This war ended, once again, with Israel’s victory.

    Maintaining its politics of ambiguity, Israel has never conducted a publicly recognized nuclear test. However, there are speculations that on September 22, 1979, a U.S. Vela satellite detected a double flash of light in the Indian Ocean, off the cost of South Africa. As Nuclear Threat Initiative explains: “Double flashes are associated with nuclear detonations, where the initial fireball of a nuclear explosion is ‘rapidly overtaken by expanding hydrodynamic shock wave,’ which hides the fireball.”[16] It is believed to have been a joint South African-Israeli nuclear test, but both governments have denied any connection to it.

    U.S.-Israeli relationship

    The policy adopted by the United States towards Israel is of paramount importance for understanding the development of Israel’s nuclear program and the possibility for it to maintain its opaque and destabilizing position over the possession of nuclear weapons. Galen Jackson explains: “Preventing the spread of nuclear weapons […] has been ‘a core, long-standing, and driving goal of U.S. grand strategy,’ one that Washington has pursued ‘since the start of the nuclear age, pursued across presidential administrations despite important changes in the international system.”[17] However, this approach has certainly not been adopted equally across the globe. As Jackson elucidates, President Dwight D. Eisenhower intended to arm NATO allies with nuclear weapons, while his successor, President John F. Kennedy, sought to establish a nuclear relationship with France. Europe wasn’t the only partner in the nuclear arena. Indeed, President Richard M. Nixon, together with his National Security Advisor Henry Kissinger, did not oppose China, Pakistan and India reinforcing their nuclear weapons programs, hoping that they could serve as a counterbalance against the Soviet Union.

    President Eisenhower believed that the spread of nuclear technology for peaceful purposes could be beneficial to U.S. global influence and a way to ensure victory in the Cold War. In this framework, Israel, by signing on to Eisenhower’s Atoms for Peace program, could obtain a small research reactor and start its own nuclear program. The safeguards intended to prevent the misuse of nuclear resources were inadequate and poorly enforced. In addition to the endemic dysfunction of the Atoms for Peace program, U.S. domestic politics was highly influenced by American Jewish organizations and voters, which largely affected the development of an acquiescent attitude toward Israel. In this regard, Long and Shifrinson write: “In an environment where policy guidance on nuclear issues was mixed and U.S. leaders faced domestic incentives not to unnecessarily antagonize Israel, intelligence on the Israeli program was limited,”[18] or discounted.

    Even thought President Eisenhower pressured Israel to abandon the Egyptian territory during the Suez Crisis in 1956, he dismissed, in the following years, the intelligence that assessed that the ongoing close cooperation between France and Israel was capable of providing Israel with nuclear weapons. Likewise, President Eisenhower left uncirculated a CIA report indicating that Norway had finalized the selling of heavy water to Israel, and dismissed photographic evidence of the secret nuclear reactor that was being built at Dimona. Only following media reports about a secret nuclear reactor being built in Israel, did Israeli Prime Minister Ben-Gurion publicly announce on December 21, 1960 that Israel was building a reactor at Dimona. Although Ben-Gurion stated that Israel nuclear program was for peaceful purposes, the secrecy surrounding the construction of the Dimona’s reactor left doubts over the veracity of his statement.

    President John F. Kennedy seemed to be more oriented to upholding non-proliferation policies. According to historians Avner Cohen and William Burr, Kennedy wanted to prevent Israel from getting the nuclear bomb, and considered this requirement “central to his efforts to avoid nuclear proliferation.”[19] They notice that since the very first moment of his presidency, Kennedy insisted that regular inspections take place at Dimona. However, he did virtually nothing to make this a reality. When inspections took place, they never challenged the suspicions that the Israelis were pursuing nuclear weapons capability. In fact, the inspections at Dimona were strictly controlled by the Israelis, and could only be conducted at the first floor of the nuclear facility. Moreover, U.S. inspectors could not use their technical instruments, or take measurements, or see the control room. Therefore, they couldn’t produce any evidence related to nuclear weapons activities. It was later acknowledged that, in order to cover up the real activities at the Dimona reactor, the Israelis had walled up elevator banks down to the underground reprocessing facility to evade discovery of plutonium production activities.[20] Galen Jackson comments on this point: “Aside from the fact that the visit, as is widely recognized, had been tightly controlled by the Israelis, the mission given to the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) scientists who had visited Dimona, as Cohen points out in his book, had been “not to challenge what they were told, but to verify it.”[21]  Further in his paper he explains the reason behind the U.S. unwillingness to challenge Israel’s secret nuclear program:

    [T]he prime minister [Ben-Gurion] had regularly made the point that Israel could not afford to give up its nuclear program without getting something in return from the Americans. His successor, Levi Eshkol, was even more forthright on the matter. “[T]he question of whether or not nuclear weapons appear in the [Middle East],” he candidly told a British representative in July 1963, “depends on the Great Powers and their willingness to provide Israel with the security assurance it seeks.” The prime minister’s basic approach to the matter was to tell Kennedy, “If you want it, there will be no [nuclear weapons]. [But] give us something else which will deter [the Arabs].” Indeed, his position seems to have been quite clear: “[W]e have Dimona … . If you are opposed to that, what can you promise? If you can [give a security guarantee] please [tell us] how and why.” In any case, it was the Kennedy administration’s assumption by the spring of 1963, when the White House did finally turn its attention to the nuclear question, that to keep Israel nonnuclear the United States would need to grant it such an assurance. Washington’s “hole card with Israel,” National Security Council (NSC) staffer Robert Komer explained, was Jerusalem’s “desire for a US security guarantee; if possible we should tie this not only to Jordan but to Israeli agreement not to develop nuclear weapons.” Kennedy, Assistant Secretary of State Phillips Talbot wrote on 20 May, felt “it important to give serious consideration to Israel’s strong desire for a more specific security guarantee.” It was the president’s belief, he added, that “only through allaying Israel [sic] fears about the long-range threat to its existence that leverage to forestall possible Israel [sic] preventive warfare and to prevent proliferation of nuclear weapons can be maintained.” Kennedy, however, was deeply reluctant to make such a bargain, fearing it would undercut Washington’s ability to maintain a balanced policy between the Arabs and Israelis. “Each matter arising in our relationship with Israel,” the State Department stressed, “is carefully weighed in terms of its effect on our policy of impartiality as between Israel and the Arabs and of its effect on Israel’s security.” If the United States were to align itself more closely with Israel it “[w]ould constitute a direct challenge to the Arabs by the US” and “destroy growing Arab confidence in our impartiality.” Probably of even greater concern to Kennedy, an alliance of this type would “render the US responsible in Arab eyes for every Israeli military venture” and “encourage the more fanatical Arabs to seek a similar relationship with the Soviet Union.”[22]

    It is, therefore, important to understand how much weight the geopolitical context and the legacy of the Holocaust had in defining Kennedy’s policy towards Israel, as well as Dwight Eisenhower, who preceded Kennedy, and Richard Nixon and Lyndon B. Johnson, subsequently. During this period of time, in addition to the emergence of the Soviet Union as a rival nuclear power, the U.S. also feared West Germany’s potential nuclearization,[23] and the possibility that China also could acquire the atomic bomb.  However, with the signing of the Limited Test Ban Treaty by the United States, United Kingdom and Soviet Union in 1963, the West German and Chinese nuclear questions became less stringent. For this reason, Kennedy released some pressure. He adopted the policy through which he made sure that the Israelis could at least project the image of not wanting to pursue nuclear capability, while reassuring them that the U.S. would not protest Israel’s nuclear development.

    Lyndon Johnson, who became President of the United States in 1963, adopted a much subtler attitude toward Israel’s nuclear ambitions. In his paper, Jackson, states: “The president, it seems, only used tough language during his formal meeting with Eskol [then Israeli Prime Minister] to appease his subordinates and thereby neutralize them.”[24] Following the 1965 negotiations over Dimona, where the U.S. and Israel discussed the need to pursue inspections at the Israeli nuclear reactor, Israel simply reiterated that the nuclear program was intended for peaceful purposes, and the Johnson administration deployed a very limited scope of technical intelligence resources. To this point, Long and Shifrinson clarify that:

    Between on-site inspections, U.S. insight into Israeli nuclear operations was constrained. Furthermore, since the inspections were subject to Israeli whims, Israeli leaders could stymie U.S. collection efforts. Indeed, contemporary U.S. analysts worried that Israel would simply obtain fissile material by running fuel through the reactor between U.S. visits. Second, the IC [intelligence community] continued to play catch up with the Israeli program and often missed or only belatedly recognized subsequent developments that might have provided further warning that a nuclear weapon stockpile – more than just a breakout capacity – had become the Israeli objective.[25]

    The year 1965 also marks a pivotal event that depicts how loose the intelligence was around Israeli nuclear ambitions. Known as the 1965 Apollo Affairs, it refers to the stealing of approximately 200 kg of highly-enriched uranium from a nuclear reprocessing plant in Pennsylvania, which was owned by Zalman Shapiro who had close ties with the government of Israel. What reinforces the speculation around Israel’s responsibility in this matter is that the evidence collected by the FBI was barely analyzed, and the coordination between the FBI, the Department of Energy, and the CIA was very limited.

    The Non-Proliferation Treaty

    Two years later, in April 1967, National Security Advisor Walt Rostow wrote to President Johnson:

    Israel has never leveled with us on its nuclear intent. Our intelligence people have scattered – but as yet unconfirmed – evidence that Israel is quietly but steadily placing itself in a position to produce nuclear weapons on short notice. We also know that Israel is investing large sums in a French built surface-to-surface missile designed to carry a nuclear warhead. I must emphasize that we do not know exactly what Israel is doing or what its position on the [Non-Proliferation Treaty] will be. But we know enough to be seriously concerned. [26]

    Apart from confirming the seriousness of the situation, predominantly induced by Israel’s ambiguity around its nuclear program, Rostow’s words also refer to another important element: that is, the refusal by Israel to sign the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, which was in the making at the time of Rostow’s report to Johnson, and became open for signature from 1968. As briefly mentioned before, on this point, the United States always succumbed to the refusal by Israel to be part of the Treaty, and kept its conventional arms trade open with Israel. For example, in 1968, the U.S. sold 50 F-4 Phantom aircrafts that Israel desperately wanted.[27] The U.S. could have used this occasion, like many others, as a lever against Israel to induce it to a) allow more thorough inspections, and b) sign the NPT. But it chose not to. Indeed, the U.S. attitude of ‘hear nothing, see nothing’ constituted tacit assurance of alliance against Soviet ambitions in the region. Jackson comments on this point:

    The administration feared that if the United States intervened, it would wreck its position in the Arab world—thereby polarizing the Middle East along Cold War lines—and potentially spark a region-wide war that could escalate to the superpower level. Moreover, because the United States was already involved militarily in Southeast Asia, Johnson lacked the necessary support at home for a major US operation in the Middle East. [28]

    Moreover, he adds:

    “The existence of a large, well-organized group of Israel sympathizers within the U.S. body politic,” one State Department paper noted, “obviously puts a limit on the degree to which the [United States government] might contemplate a different policy.”[29]

    Allowing Israel to become nuclear would therefore spare the United States the need to intervene in a future conflict to protect both Israeli and American interests.

    U.S. President Richard Nixon did not divert from the policy of subordinating nonproliferation goals to other political interests, as long as Israel maintained secrecy on its achievement, namely the manufacturing of nuclear weapons. Once again, the reason was to not “spark Soviet nuclear guarantees to the Arabs, tighten the Soviet hold on the Arabs and increase the danger of US-Soviet nuclear confrontation.”[30] Allowing Israel to publicly declare its possession of nuclear weapons, would have prevented, or largely complicated, an Arab-Israeli settlement, and exposed the United States to a “charge of complicity in helping Israel go nuclear […].”[31] Concern for nonproliferation wasn’t a priority. A final condition that explains U.S. policy toward Israel is the feeling, by many American élites, that the legacy of the Holocaust had somehow legitimized Israeli nuclear ambition, giving them “every right to acquire weapons that could prevent its destruction.”[32] It is for this reason, that on September 26, 1969, President Nixon had a meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meir in which they agreed that Israel could pursue its nuclear ambition without any interference by the U.S. with the only condition being that Israel would refrain from testing its nuclear devices and going public about their possession. In exchange, the U.S. would not press Israel to sign the NPT. The documents proving the discussion that Nixon and Meir had during this meeting – known as the Nixon-Meir Agreement – were kept secret until they were declassified by the Obama administration.[33]

    Hypocrisy

    This mode of thinking takes the United States to the brink of hypocrisy, as it implies that Israel, unlike Iran, for example, had the special “privilege” to base its sense of security on the manufacturing of the nuclear bomb without being questioned. In this fashion, all the evidence supporting the assembly of nuclear weapons by Israel in the context of the Yom Kippur War; the acquisition of uranium and plutonium via clandestine channels through the years; and the likely 1979 nuclear test off the coast of South Africa were dismissed or downplayed.

    Israel, with the compliance of the United States, adopted an aggressive policy toward Iraq on June 7, 1981, by carrying out a preemptive strike on Iraq’s Osiraq nuclear reactor, arguing that it had been designed for the construction of nuclear weapons. For Israel the strike was legitimate as it served to preempt future threats to its very existence. The government issued a statement on the strike: “On no account shall we permit an enemy to develop weapons of mass destruction against the people of Israel. We shall defend the citizens of Israel in good time and with all the means at our disposal,”[34] thus outlining what would become part of Israel’s counter-proliferation policy, known as the “Begin Doctrine.”[35] Contrary to Israel’s expectations, the strike reinforced Iraq’s nuclear ambition, and contributed to render even more clandestine its own nuclear program. In a snowball effect, Israel’s action contributed to Iran’s desire to pursue its nuclear ambition during the 1990s, which, in turn, propelled Israel’s decision to develop a sea-based second-strike capability. Israel would commission its first submarines from Germany at the end of the 1990s.[36]

    Israel’s aggressiveness in relying on ambiguity around its nuclear program would also be evident with regard to the proposal – advanced on the occasion of the 1995 NPT Review Conference – to establish a Middle East Weapons of Mass Destruction Free Zone (MEWMDFZ). At this time, the assurance that the Israeli government had obtained during Nixon’s presidency was no longer tenable under President George H. W. Bush. The Israeli government took the MEWMDFZ framework as an occasion to state that peace in the Middle East was a precondition to the establishment of a nuclear-free zone in the Middle East, while the Arab states were sustaining that peace would only be possible with the renouncing of nuclear weapons by Israel.[37] The same entitlement to a level of superiority and abuse that Israel has adopted through the years against the Palestinians – with more serious consequences for them – is directed, in nuclear matters, toward the rest of the Arab world.

    Everything that so far in this paper has been treated as speculation regarding Israel’s nuclear program came to light in 1986, when a nuclear technician, Mordechai Vanunu, revealed to the British Press that Israel had produced at Dimona dozens of kilograms of plutonium each year between 1980 and 1986, and was also producing fuel which could have been used for boosted fission or fusion weapons, with Israel possessing between 100-200 nuclear weapons.[38] Following his revelations, the Mossad managed to lure Vanunu to Italy, where he was kidnapped and taken to Israel. He was sentenced to eighteen years of prison, eleven of which he spent in solitary confinement. He still faces restrictions today, notably of speech and movement. Daniel Ellsberg has defined him “the preeminent hero of the nuclear era.”[39] Moreover, in 1987, he was awarded the Right Livelihood Award for “his courage and self-sacrifice in revealing the extent of Israel’s nuclear weapons programme.” Vanunu’s declarations exposed Israel’s nuclear program, supplemented by the underestimation of evidence gathered by U.S. intelligence by different U.S. administrations: General Ford, in charge when Israel crossed the nuclear threshold following the Yom Kippur War; Jimmy Carter, in charge when the Vela incident took place; and Ronald Reagan, who, following Vanunu’s revelations, didn’t change U.S. policy toward Israel.

    With regards to his policy toward Israel, President George H. W. Bush is credited for creating opportunities for Israeli-Palestinian peace talks to happen. His foreign policy, with regard to Israel, aimed at stopping the growth of Israeli settlements in the Occupied Palestinian Territories. He didn’t restrain Israel’s nuclear program because its policy toward Iraq constituted a reassurance for the United States during the 1991 Gulf War. His successor, President Bill Clinton, reportedly engaged in correspondence with the Israeli government to reassure “the Jewish state that no future American arms-control initiative would “detract” from Israel’s “deterrent” capabilities […].”[40] Under Clinton, Israel signed the Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty (CTBT), but didn’t ratify it, and refused to participate in the negotiations that led to the drafting of the Fissile Material Cut-Off Treaty. As had happened in previous U.S. administrations, Israel was spared any pressure. President George W. Bush didn’t adopt a different policy either, but, apart from explicitly denying Israel an arrangement of peaceful nuclear assistance (as the U.S. did with India in 2005), he never effectively constituted an obstacle for Israel. Under Bush, Israel pursued Operation Orchard in 2007, a preventive strike launched by Israel as part of the Begin Doctrine on a facility in Syria suspected to be a nuclear reactor, without sparking any outcry within the U.S. administration.

    During the Obama years, Iran’s nuclear program became Israel’s number one security issue. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has often referred to Iran as an unacceptable threat to the region and to the very existence of Israel. There are also allegations that Israel was behind the assassination of a number of Iranian nuclear scientists.[41] As reported by the Nuclear Threat Initiative, even though Netanyahu has called for military action against Iran,[42] many within the Israeli establishment were against attacking Iran in the same fashion as Iraq and Syria were attacked.  They feared that both the Islamic Republic and its proxies, namely Hamas and Hezbollah, could retaliate against Israel. In this regard, President Barack Obama always declined Israel’s call to declare a “red line” over Iran’s nuclear program, which would have resulted in an open military confrontation on many fronts. Moreover, President Obama never agreed to attacking Iran because the latter never manufactured an atomic weapon. It goes without saying that the signing of the Joint Comprehensive Plan Of Action (JCPOA) by the P5+1 (China, France, Russia, the United Kingdom, the United States + Germany) and Iran on June 14, 2015 was not welcomed by Israel.

    All this said, and even though President Obama had a frosty relationship with Prime Minister Netanyahu, he never used U.S. aid and military assistance as a leverage to force Israeli concessions on either the nuclear front, nor on the advancement of the Israeli settlements on Palestinian Territories, despite the U.S. renewed call for the establishment of a nuclear weapons-free zone in the Middle East during the 2010 NPT Review Conference. However, Israel’s refusal to join has, once again, gone unchallenged. As reported by The New Yorker:

    Ahead of a nonproliferation conference in 2010, Netanyahu became concerned, once again, that Israel could come under international pressure to disarm. In response, Obama made a public statement that echoed the contents of [some] secret letters [between the U.S. and the Israeli government], without revealing their existence. “We discussed issues that arose out of the nuclear-nonproliferation conference,” Obama said, after meeting with Netanyahu on July 6, 2010. “And I reiterated to the Prime Minister that there is no change in U.S. policy when it comes to these issues. We strongly believe that, given its size, its history, the region that it’s in, and the threats that are leveled against . . . it, that Israel has unique security requirements. It’s got to be able to respond to threats or any combination of threats in the region. And that’s why we remain unwavering in our commitment to Israel’s security. And the United States will never ask Israel to take any steps that would undermine their security interests.”[43]

    President Donald Trump kept this condition of exclusivity intact. Moreover, he withdrew from the 2015 JCPOA on May 18, 2018, and from the INF (the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty)[44] on August 2, 2019, thus wiping away thirty years of efforts to reduce the nuclear race between the two countries that, together, retain more 90% of nuclear power in the world. On the Israeli front, President Trump has also reportedly signed a secret letter – a legacy stemming from Reagan, who initiated it in an oral form referred to in the above quotation – that pledged not to put Israel under pressure and induce it into relinquishing its nuclear weapons program.[45] It is obvious how the protection surrounding Israel’s nuclear program is undermining the project to realize a nuclear weapons-free zone in the Middle East, and the possibility that Israel could join the NPT. It also further increases division amongst the attendants at the NPT Review Conference scheduled to take place in 2020, and reduces the possibility that one of its stronger members – the United States – would finally decide to exercise its power over Israel. Finally, it diminishes even further the hope that both Israel and the United States could ratify the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW), adopted at the United Nations in July 2017. The TPNW is the first legally binding international agreement to prohibit nuclear weapons, with the goal of leading towards their total elimination. Specifically, “it prohibits nations from developing, testing, producing, manufacturing, transferring, possessing, stockpiling, using or threatening to use nuclear weapons, or allowing nuclear weapons to be stationed on their territory. It also prohibits them from assisting, encouraging or inducing anyone to engage in any of these activities.”[46] The TPNW will enter into legal force once 50 countries have signed and ratified it. As of August 29, 2019, seventy states have signed it and twenty-six[47] have ratified it. The U.S., like all other nuclear states, including Israel, refuses to sign and ratify it. More precisely, following the treaty’s adoption, the permanent missions of the United States, the United Kingdom and France issued a joint statement indicating that they did not intend “to sign, ratify or ever become party to it.”[48]

    In its last report, issued in June 2019, the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) claimed that Israel is likely to possess nearly one hundred nuclear weapons,[49] comprising 30 gravity bombs capable of being delivered by fighter jets; an additional 50 warheads that can be delivered by land-based ballistic missiles; and an unknown number of nuclear-armed, sea-launched cruise missiles that would grant Israel a sea-based second-strike capability. As previously mentioned, other authors, such as Long and Shifrinson, quantify Israel’s nuclear arsenal between 100 and 200 warheads. Without access to Israel’s nuclear facilities, unfortunately, it is impossible to achieve an exact quantification in the same way that it was difficult, for historians and inspectors in the past, to measure the development of Israel’s nuclear program. To achieve quantification of Israel’s nuclear power, historians can only rely on limited access to U.S declassified government documents and on the testimonies of those who have inside knowledge of Israel’s nuclear program. What seems to be clear is that Israel, supported by the U.S. in its ambiguity, does possess nuclear weapons. On the occasion of a visit to the Dimona nuclear reactor in August 2018, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu stated: “Those who threaten to wipe us out put themselves in a similar danger, and in any event will not achieve their goal.”[50]

    In addition to the danger posed by the retention of nuclear weapons by Israel, there have been revelations that the Dimona nuclear facility has leaked radioactive waste. It is very plausible, that, because of its ambiguous position, Israel can only rely on the clandestine market to acquire outdated nuclear technology. The reactor is located only thirty miles from Tel Aviv. But the most serious concern is for the city of Dimona, only eight miles from the nuclear site. These warnings haven’t prompted the Israeli government to fix the leaks, allegedly because Dimona is predominantly populated by North African Jews – a marginalized community – and is surrounded by the Negev Desert, home to many Palestinian Bedouin villages,[51] which Israel considers illegal and subject to cultural and physical annihilation.

    The possession of nuclear weapons, and, prior to that, their testing, is inherently genocidal, and racist. Some of the most powerful nuclear countries, namely France, the United Kingdom, and the United States, have repeatedly conducted their testing, dropped their atomic bombs and deployed uranium-enriched munitions on lands inhabited by indigenous, non-white populations; thus, polluting the environment, and condemning to death and disabilities people living in the Pacific Islands, Africa, South-East Asia, Iraq, and others, for generations to come. As Hayley Ramsay-Jones points out: “[N]uclear weapons are problematic because by nature they are genocidal. If we think about the idea of the willingness of a group of people, or a nation, to destroy in whole, or in part, another group of people, or another nation; to obliterate their culture, their way of life; to destroy their religious, ethnic, racial identities.  This is the very definition of genocide and that’s xenophobic and racist.”[52] The choice to adopt amimut – as Israel does – is only possible because of the protection the Israeli government receives from a structure of power that privileges some at the expense of others, as the intermittent opposition Israel received, particularly from Washington, since its inception demonstrates. The case of Israel is emblematic and revealing at the same time. In fact, at its very core, amimut demonstrates symmetry between Israel’s nuclear thinking and its internal policies. Both are nothing but racist and genocidal.

    Footnotes

    [1] Israeli, Ofer (2015) “Israel’s nuclear amimut policy and its consequences,” Israel Affairs, Vol 21, no 4, p. 542.

    [2] Cohen, Avner (1998) Israel And The Bomb, New York: Columbia University Press, p. 11.

    [3] https://www.nti.org/learn/countries/israel/nuclear/ (Accessed on September 12, 2019).

    [4] Borger, Julian, “The truth about Israel’s secret nuclear arsenal,” The Guardian, January 15, 2014. (Accessed on September 12, 2019 https://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/jan/15/truth-israels-secret-nuclear-arsenal).

    [5] Ibidem.

    [6] Meiron, Jones, “Secret sale of UK plutonium to Israel,” BBC Two – Newsnight, March 10, 2006 (Accessed on September 12, 2019 http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/programmes/newsnight/4789832.stm).

    [7] Cohen, Avner and William Burr, “How Israel did its secret nucelar weapons program,” Politico, April 15, 2015 (Accessed on September 12, 2019 https://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2015/04/israel-nuclear-weapons-117014_Page2.html).

    [8] https://www.atomicheritage.org/history/israeli-nuclear-program (Accessed on September 12, 2019).

    [9] “Argentina sold Israel yellowcake uranium in 1960s,” The Jerusalem Post, July 2, 2013 (Accessed on September 12, 2019 https://www.jpost.com/International/Report-Argentina-sold-Israel-yellowcake-uranium-in-the-1960s-318432).

    [10] https://www.nti.org/learn/countries/israel/nuclear/ (Accessed on September 12, 2019).

    [11] Polakow-Suransky, Sasha (2010) The Unspoken Alliance: Israel’s Secret Relationship with Apartheid South Africa, New York: Vintage Books. See also: McGreal, Chris, “Israel and apartheid: a marriage of convenience and military might,” The Guardian, May 23, 2010 (Accessed on September 12, 2019 https://www.theguardian.com/world/2010/may/23/israel-apartheid-south-africa-nuclear-warheads). Tritium is one of the most valuable substances in the world per weigh, costing almost $30,000 per gram, approximately. Only Plutonium is within the list of most expensive material, costing $3,000 per gram, approximately (https://www.telegraph.co.uk/business/2016/05/18/the-most-valuable-substances-in-the-world-by-weight/tritium/). Uranium-235 is not even close, costing $60 per kilogram ($0,066 per gram), approximately, at the time of writing (https://sightlineu3o8.com/2019/02/uranium-is-it-a-dead-market/).

    [12]  Cohen, Avner (1998) Israel And The Bomb, New York: Columbia University Press.

    [13] Zoellner, Tom (2009) Uranium. New York: Penguin.

    [14] Jackson, Galen (2019) “The United States, the Israeli Nuclear Program, and Nonproliferation, 1961–69,” Security Studies, Vol. 28, no 2, pp. 360-393. See also Long, Austin G. & Joshua R. Shifrinson, (2019) “How long until midnight? Intelligence-policy relations and the United States response to the Israeli nuclear program, 1959–1985,” Journal of Strategic Studies, Vol. 42, no. 1, pp. 55-90.

    [15] The war is known to the Israelis as the Yom Kippur War, and to the Arabs as the October War. The root causes of this war were set six years prior, when in 1967 Israel attacked Egypt, Jordan and Syria, unleashing the June War. The June War resulted in the Israeli occupation of what remained of historic Palestine, as well as the Egyptian Sinai Desert, and the Golan Heights for Syria. Read more from “The October Arb-Israeli War of 1973: what happened?,” Aljazeera, October 7, 2018 https://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/features/2017/10/arab-israeli-war-of-1973-what-happened-171005105247349.html (Accessed on Septemebr 12, 2019).

    [16] https://www.nti.org/learn/countries/israel/nuclear/ (Accessed on September 12, 2019).

    [17] Jackson, Galen (2019) “The United States, the Israeli Nuclear Program, and Nonproliferation, 1961–69,” Security Studies, Vol. 28, no 2, p. 361.

    [18] Long, Austin G. & Joshua R. Shifrinson, (2019) “How long until midnight? Intelligence-policy relations and the United States response to the Israeli nuclear program, 1959–1985,” Journal of Strategic Studies, Vol. 42, no. 1, p. 66.

    [19] Cohen, Avner and William Burr, “How the Israelis hoodwinked JFK on going nuclear,” Foreign Policy, April 26, 2016. (Accessed on September 12, 2019 https://foreignpolicy.com/2016/04/26/how-the-israelis-hoodwinked-jfk-on-going-nuclear-dimona-atoms-for-peace/).

    [20] https://www.nti.org/learn/countries/israel/nuclear/ (Accessed on September 12, 2019).

    [21] Jackson, Galen (2019) “The United States, the Israeli Nuclear Program, and Nonproliferation, 1961–69,” Security Studies, Vol. 28, no 2, p. 369.

    [22] Ibidem., pp. 370-371.

    [23] Ibidem., p. 374.

    [24] Ibidem., p. 378.

    [25] Long, Austin G. & Joshua R. Shifrinson, (2019) “How long until midnight? Intelligence-policy relations and the United States response to the Israeli nuclear program, 1959–1985,” Journal of Strategic Studies, Vol. 42, no. 1, p. 73.

    [26] Ibidem., p. 75.

    [27] Rodman, David, “Phantom Fracas: the 1968 American sale of F-4 aircraft to Israel,” Middle Eastern Studies, November 2004, Vol. 4, no. 6, pp. 130-144.

    [28] Jackson, Galen (2019) “The United States, the Israeli Nuclear Program, and Nonproliferation, 1961–69,” Security Studies, Vol. 28, no 2, p. 383.

    [29] Ibidem., p. 384.

    [30] Ibidem., p. 387.

    [31] Ibidem., p. 388.

    [32] Ibidem., p. 391.

    [33] Oren, Amir, “Newly declassified documents reveal how U.S. agreed to Israel’s nuclear program,” Haaretz, August 30, 2014 (Accessed on September 12, 2019 https://www.haaretz.com/.premium-how-the-u-s-let-israel-go-nuclear-1.5262274).

    [34] Reuters, “Israeli and Iraqi statements on raid on nuclear plant,”, The New York Times, June 9, 1981. (Accessed on September 12, 2019 https://www.nytimes.com/1981/06/09/world/israeli-and-iraqi-statements-on-raid-on-nuclear-plant.html).

    [35] The Begin Doctrine is a term referred to Israel’s preventive strikes against potential enemies as a counter-proliferation policy toward their capability to possess weapons of mass destruction (WMD), particularly nuclear weapons. It took its name from the Prime Minister of Israel Manachem Begin who adopted in 1981 against Iraq.

    [36] Cohen, Avner (2010) The Worst Kept Secret: Israel’s Bargain with the Bomb, New York: Colombia University Press, p. 83.

    [37] https://www.nti.org/learn/countries/israel/nuclear/ (Accessed on September 12, 2019)

    [38] Long, Austin G. & Joshua R. Shifrinson, (2019) “How long until midnight? Intelligence-policy relations and the United States response to the Israeli nuclear program, 1959–1985,” Journal of Strategic Studies, Vol. 42, no. 1, pp. 80-81.

    [39] Ellsberg, Daniel, “Nuclear hero’s crime was making us safer,” Los Angeles Times, April 21, 2004. (Accessed on September 12, 2019 https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2004-apr-21-oe-ellsberg21-story.html).

    [40] Entous, Adam, “How Trump and Three Other U.S. Presidents Protected Israel’s Worst-Kept Secret: Its Nuclear Arsenal,” The New Yorker, June 18, 2018. (Accessed on September 12, 2019 https://www.newyorker.com/news/news-desk/how-trump-and-three-other-us-presidents-protected-israels-worst-kept-secret-its-nuclear-arsenal).

    [41] https://www.nti.org/learn/countries/israel/nuclear/ (Accessed on September 12, 2019).

    [42] Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has called for military action against Iran, for the only fact that the Islamic Republic is allegedly capable of manufacturing nuclear weapons, not for having actually made one. In this regard, the Nuclear Threat Initiative states: “Israeli officials argue that a “red line” should be drawn at a nuclear capability – defined vaguely in terms of “a stage in the enrichment or other nuclear activities that they cannot cross.” (See https://www.nti.org/learn/countries/israel/nuclear/ Accessed on September 12, 2019).

    [43] Entous, Adam, “How Trump and Three Other U.S. Presidents Protected Israel’s Worst-Kept Secret: Its Nuclear Arsenal,” The New Yorker, June 18, 2018. (Accessed on September 12, 2019 https://www.newyorker.com/news/news-desk/how-trump-and-three-other-us-presidents-protected-israels-worst-kept-secret-its-nuclear-arsenal).

    [44] The INF was a treaty signed between the U.S. signed with the Soviet Union on December 8, 1987, which banned the United States and the Soviet Union from possessing, testing and deploying ground-launched cruise and ballistic missiles with ranges between 300 and 3,400 miles.

    [45] Staff, Toi, “Trump signed secret pledge to safeguard Israeli nukes – report,” The Times of Israel, June 19, 2018. (Accessed on September 12, 2019 https://www.timesofisrael.com/trump-signed-secret-pledge-to-safeguard-israeli-nukes-report/). See also Entous, Adam, “How Trump and Three Other U.S. Presidents Protected Israel’s Worst-Kept Secret: Its Nuclear Arsenal,” The New Yorker, June 18, 2018. (Accessed on September 12, 2019 https://www.newyorker.com/news/news-desk/how-trump-and-three-other-us-presidents-protected-israels-worst-kept-secret-its-nuclear-arsenal).

    [46] http://www.icanw.org/the-treaty/ (Accessed on September 12, 2019).

    [47] The 26 states that have already ratified the Treaty are: Austria; Bolivia; Cook Islands; Costa Rica; Cuba; El Salvador; Gambia; Guyana; Holy See; Kazakhstan; Mexico; New Zealand; Nicaragua; Palau; Palestine; Panama; St Lucia; St Vincent & Grenadines; Samoa; San Marino; South Africa; Thailand; Uruguay; Vanuatu; Venezuela; Vietnam.

    [48] “Joint Press Statement From the Permanent Representatives to the United Nations of the United States, United Kingdom, and France Following the Adoption”, July 7, 2017, NYC (Retrievable at https://usun.usmission.gov/joint-press-statement-from-the-permanent-representatives-to-the-united-nations-of-the-united-states-united-kingdom-and-france-following-the-adoption/?_ga=2.6023674.872746484.1568326853-1959156917.1568326853 Accessed on September 12, 2019).

    [49] SIPRI Yearbook 2019. Armaments, Disarmament and International Security. (Retrievable at https://www.sipri.org/sites/default/files/2019-06/yb19_summary_eng_1.pdf Accessed on September 12, 2019).

    [50] Williams, Dan, “At Dimona reactor, Netanyahu warns Israel’s foes they risk ruin,” Reuters, August 29, 2018. (Accessed on September 12, 2019 https://www.reuters.com/article/us-israel-nuclear/at-dimona-reactor-netanyahu-warns-israels-foes-they-risk-ruin-idUSKCN1LE270). See also: Webb, Whitney, “Speaking in front of Israel’s nukes Netanyahu says IDF will hit Iranian forces in Syria with “all its might,” MPN News, August 30, 2018 (Accessed on September 12, 2019 https://www.mintpressnews.com/speaking-in-front-of-israels-nukes-netanyahu-says-idf-will-hit-iranian-forces-in-syria-with-all-its-might/248498/).

    [51] Webb, Whitney, “Israel’s secretive nuclear facility leaking as watchdog finds Israel has nearly 100 nukes,” MPN News, June 17, 2019. (Accessed on September 12, 2019 https://www.mintpressnews.com/international-watchdog-finds-israel-has-nearly-100-nuclear-weapons/259274/).

    [52] Robinson, Tony, “By definition, nuclear weapons are genocidial, xenophobic and racist,” Pressenza, November 11, 2018. (Accessed on September 12, 2019 https://www.pressenza.com/2018/11/by-definition-nuclear-weapons-are-genocidal-xenophobic-and-racist/).

  • Mandela and Vanunu – Men of Courage

    Mairead MaguireThis week the World’s political leaders stood united in admiration at the memorial service in South Africa to honor the memory of Nelson Mandela, leader of his country, and a man of courage who gave inspiration to many people around the world.

    Across the world in East Jerusalem in solitude sits another man of courage, Mordechai Vanunu. In l986 Vanunu, the Israeli nuclear whistle-blower, told the world about Israel’s secret nuclear weapons. For this he served 18 years in an Israeli prison, 12 in solitary confinement, and since his release in 2004 he has been forbidden to leave Israel, speak to foreigners, and is constantly under surveillance.

    On 25th December, 2013, he will be brought again before the Israeli Supreme Court and will, yet again, ask for his right to leave Israel. The Supreme Court can give him his freedom to go get on a plane and leave Israel as he wishes to do. I appeal to President Shimon Perez, to Prime Minister Netanyahu, to let him go. He is a man of peace, desiring freedom, who followed his conscience. He is no threat to Israel. He, like Mandela, has served now 27 years and deserves his freedom.

    To the world’s political leaders who recognized in Mandela, a man of honor and courage and saluted him, I appeal to you to do all in your power to help Vanunu get his freedom now. You have it in your power to do so. Please do not be silent whilst Mordechai Vanunu suffers and is refused his basic rights.

    To the world’s media, I appeal to you to report on Vanunu’s continuing isolation and enforced silence by Israel.

    To civil communities everywhere, I appeal to you to increase your efforts for Vanunu’s freedom and demand that “Israel let our brother Mordechai Go. We cannot be free while he is not free.”

  • Kenneth Waltz is not Crazy, but he is Dangerous: Nuclear Weapons in the Middle East

    Richard FalkIt seems surprising that the ultra-establishment journal, Foreign Affairs, would go to the extreme of publishing a lead article by the noted political scientist, Kenneth Waltz, with the title “Why Iran Should Get the Bomb” in its current issue. It is more the reasoning of the article than the eye-catching title that flies in the face of the anti-proliferation ethos that has been the consensus lynchpin of nuclear weapons states, and especially the United States. At the same time, Waltz takes pain to avoid disavowing his mainstream political identity. He echoes without pausing to reflect upon the evidence undergirding the rather wobbly escalating assumption that Iran is seeking nuclear weapons at this time. Waltz does acknowledge that Iran might be only trying to have a ‘breakout’ capability of the sort long possessed by Japan and several other countries, that is, the technological capacity if facing a national emergency to assemble a few bombs in a matter of months. Nowhere does Waltz allude to the recently publicized agreement among the 14 American intelligence agencies that there is no evidence that Iran has decided to resume its military program that had been reportedly abandoned in 2003. In other ways, as well, Waltz signals his general support for the American approach to Israeli security other than in relation to nuclear weapons, and so, it should be clear, Waltz is not a political dissenter, a policy radical, nor even a critic of Israel’s role in the region.


    Waltz’s Three Options


    Waltz insists that aside from the breakout option, there are two other plausible scenarios worth considering: sanctions and coercive diplomacy to induce Iran “to abandon its pursuit of nuclear weapons,” which he deems unlikely to overcome a genuine appetite for the bomb, or Iran defies the pressures and acquires nuclear weapons, which he regards as the most desirable of the three options. It seems reasonable to wonder ‘why.’ In essence, Waltz is arguing that experience and logic demonstrate that the relations among states become more stable, less war-prone, when a balance is maintained, and that there is no reason to think that if Iran acquired nuclear weapons it would not behave in accordance with the deterrence regime that has discouraged all uses of nuclear weapons ever since 1945, and especially during the Cold War confrontation between the United States and the Soviet Union. In this regard, Waltz is expressing what I regard to be a wildly exaggerated faith in the rationality and prudence of leaders who make decisions on matters of war and peace.


    He does make a contextual argument that I mostly agree with, namely, that Israel alone possessing a regional nuclear monopoly is more dangerous and undesirable than Iran becoming a second nuclear weapons state in the region. In effect, a regional nuclear monopolist is worse than a regional system of balance that incorporates deterrence logic. For Israel to be deterred would contribute to peace and security in the region, and this seems likely to reduce somewhat, although at a level of risk far short of zero, the prospect of any use of nuclear weapons and other forms of aggression in the Middle East. But to say that A (Iran gets the bomb) is better than B (breakout capability but no bomb) and C (sanctions and coercive diplomacy induce Iran to forego bomb) is to forget about D, which is far better than A, B, and C in relation to sustainable stability, but also because it represents an implicit acknowledgement that the very idea of basing security upon the threat to annihilate hundreds of thousand, if not more, innocent persons is a moral abomination that has already implicated the nuclear weapons states in a security policy, which if ever tested by threat and use, would be genocidal, if not omnicidal, and certainly criminal. This anti-nuclear posture was substantially endorsed by a majority of judges in a groundbreaking Advisory Opinion of the International Court of Justice on 8 July 1996, although these strong findings as to international law were, not surprisingly, cast aside and ignored by the nuclear weapons states, most defiantly by the United States.


    The Case for Option D


    What then is Option D? Option D would involve the negotiation and implementation of a nuclear weapons free zone throughout the Middle East (MENFZ), reinforced by non-aggression commitments, normalization of economic and political relations, and ideally accompanied by genuine progress toward a just and sustainable Palestine/Israel peace accord. Significantly, Waltz does not even pause to consider it as in all likelihood he regards such an approach as completely inconsistent with the hard power realities of global diplomacy, making it foolish and irrelevant to take the possibility of a MENFZ seriously. Needless to say, D is also not in the Netanyahu playbook, and quite likely no future Israeli leader will be prepared to give up the nuclear weapons arsenal that Israel has been consistently acquiring and developing over the last four decades. And it seems fair to conjecture that anyone who proposes a MENFZ would be at odds with the realist camp in international relations, and such a piece would almost certainly be rejected by the editors of Foreign Affairs, among the most ardent guardians of the realist status quo.


    Waltz’s preference for A, favoring an Iranian bomb, is an extension of his long-standing belief that proliferation as actually desirable based on a view of global security that depends on sustaining power balances. In my judgment this carries confidence in the logic of deterrence (that is, the rationality of not using the bomb because of a fear of nuclear retaliation) to absurd degrees that go well beyond even the extreme rationality relied upon by the most influential war thinkers during the Cold War era. In this sense, Waltz is correct to equate the Middle East with the rest of the world, and not engage in the widespread practice of ethno-religious profiling: that is, Israel’s bomb is okay because it is a rational and ‘Western,’ while Iran’s bomb would be a world order disaster as it is irrational and governed by Islamic zealots that have declared their implacable hostility to Israel. If such distinctions are to be made, which is doubtful, it should be appreciated that Israel is the antagonist that has been threatening war and pushing for coercive diplomacy, while it is Iran that has so far peacefully tolerated a variety of severe provocations, acts of war, such as the assassination of several of its nuclear scientists, the infecting of its enrichment centrifuges with the Stuxnet virus, and verified violent covert acts designed to destabilize the Tehran regime. Had such incidents been reversed, it is more than 100% likely that Israel would have immediately gone to war against Iran, quite likely setting the entire region on fire.


    Objections to Option A


    My basic objection to the Waltz position is a disagreement with two of his guiding assumptions: first, with respect to the region, that other countries would not follow Iran across the nuclear threshold, an assessment he bases largely on their failure to acquire nuclear weapons in response to Israel’s acquisition of the capability. Surely Saudi Arabia and Turkey would not, for reasons of international status and perceived security, want to be non-nuclear states in a neighborhood in which both Israel and Iran had the bomb. Such an expansion of the regional nuclear club would become more prone to accident, miscalculation, and the sort of social and political pathology that makes nuclear weaponry generally unfit for human use in a conflict, whatever the region or occasion. In this respect, the more governments possess the bomb, the more likely it becomes that one of those horrible scenarios about a nuclear war will become history.


    And secondly, Waltz does not single out nuclear weapons for condemnation on either ethical or prudential grounds. In fact, he seems to hold the view that we can be thankful for the bomb as otherwise the Cold War would likely have resulted in a catastrophic World War III. In my view to have sought the bomb and then used it against the helpless Japanese at the end of World War II was certainly one of the worst instances of Promethean excess in human history, angering not only the gods but exhibiting a scary species death wish. Leaders have acknowledged this moral truth from time to time, most recently by Barack Obama in his 2009 Prague speech calling for a world without nuclear weapons, but politicians, including Obama, seem unable and unwilling to take the heat that following through would certainly entail. In the end, anti-nuclearism for leaders seems mainly an exercise in rhetoric, apparently persuasive in Norway where the Nobel Prize committee annually ponders the credentials of candidates, but without any behavioral consequences relating to the weaponry itself.  To be sure nuclear policies are challenged from time to time by a surge of anti-nuclear populism. In this regard, to favor the acquisition of the bomb by any government or political organization is to embrace the nuclearist fallacy relating to security and the absurd hubris of presupposing an impeccable rationality over long stretches of time, which has never been the case in human affairs.


    The secrecy surrounding policy bearing on nuclear weapons, especially the occasions of their possible use, also injects an absolutist virus into the vital organs of a democratic body politic. There is no participation by the people or even their representatives in relation to this most ultimate of political decisions, vesting in a single person, and perhaps including his most intimate advisors, a demonic capability to unleash such a catastrophic capability. We now know that even beyond the devastation and radiation, the smoke released by the use of as few as 50 nuclear bombs would generate so much smoke as to block sunlight from the earth for as long as a decade, dooming much of the agriculture throughout the world, a dynamic that has been called ‘a nuclear famine.’ As disturbing as such a possibility should be to those responsible for the security of society, there is little evidence that such a realization of the secondary effects of nuclear explosions is even present in political consciousness. And certainly the citizenry is largely ignorant of such a dark eventuality bound up with the retention of nuclear weapons.


    It is for these reasons that I would call Kenneth Waltz dangerous, not crazy. Indeed, it is his extreme kind of instrumental rationality that is dominant in many influential venues, and helps explain the development, possession, and apparent readiness to use nuclear weapons under certain conditions despite the risks and the immorality of the undertaking. If human society is ever to be again relatively safe, secure, and morally coherent, a first step is to renounce nuclear weapons unconditionally and proceed with urgency by way of an agreed, phased, monitored, and verified international agreement to ensure their elimination from the face of the earth. It is not only that deterrence depends on perfect rationality over time and across space, it is also that the doctrine and practices of deterrence amounts to a continuing crime against humanity of unprecedented magnitude and clarity!   

  • A Nuclear-Free Middle East: Necessary, Desirable and Impossible

    This article was originally published by Al Jazeera.


    Richard FalkFinally, there is some discussion in the West that supports the idea of a nuclear-free zone for the Middle East. Such thinking is still treated as politically marginal, and hardly audible above the deafening beat of the war drums. To the extent proposed, it also tends to be defensively and pragmatically phrased to reinforce the prevailing anti-Iran consensus.


    For instance, in a recent New York Times article by Shibley Telhami and Steven Kull a full disclosure title gives the plot away: “Preventing a Nuclear Iran”. The authors offer us a prudential argument against attacking Iran to avoid a damaging Iranian retaliation and in view of the inability of an attack to do more than delay Iran’s nuclear programme by a few years. Beyond this, an attack seems likely to create irresistible pressures in Iran to do everything possible to obtain a nuclear option with a renewed sense of urgency, as well as to disrupt Western interests wherever possible.


    This Telhami/Kull position is reinforced by evidence that Israeli society is not as war-prone as claimed, and would be receptive to a more cautious and less belligerent approach. They refer readers to a recent Israeli poll finding that only 43 per cent of Israelis favour a military strike, while 64 per cent support establishing a nuclear-free zone (NFZ) in the region that included Israel.


    In effect, then, establishing a NFZ that includes Israel would seem politically feasible, although not a course of action that seems within the range of options being considered by the current Israeli political leadership.


    The failure of the United States to raise the possibility of a solution to the conflict other than either an Iranian surrender with respect to its enrichment rights or an impending military attack is also discouraging. The silence of Washington with respect to a peaceful regional solution to the conflict with Iran confirms what is widely believed around the world – that the US Government will not deviate from the official Israeli line on security issues in the Middle East.


    The fact that the Israeli public may be more peace-oriented than its elected leaders seems to make no difference to strategic thinking in the US, and what is more, the realisation that the exercise of the military option would have a likely huge negative impact on national and global interest is also put to one side.


    Prince Turkis proposals


    Another variant of NFZ thinking is more oriented to the realities of the Middle East. It has most clearly formulated by the influential Saudi Prince, Turki Al-Faisal, former Saudi ambassador to the United States and once the head of his country’s intelligence service. He argues that NFZ is preferable to the military option for many reasons, and he believes, in contrast to President Obama, that it should be removed from the bag of tricks at the disposal of diplomats.


    Prince Turki believes that sanctions have not, and will not alter Iran’s behaviour. His proposal is more elaborate than simply advocating a NFZ. He would be in favour of coercive steps against Iran if there is ever convincing evidence that it actually possesses nuclear weapons, but he also argues for the imposition of sanction on Israel if it fails to disclose openly the full extent of its nuclear weapons arsenal.  


    Prince Turki’s approach has several additional features: extending the scope of the undertaking to all weapons of mass destruction (WMD), that is, including biological and chemical weapons; a nuclear security umbrella for the region maintained by the five permanent members of the UN Security Council; a resolution of outstanding conflicts in the region in accordance with the Mecca Arab proposals of 2002 that calls for Israeli withdrawal from Palestinian territories and the Golan Heights occupied in 1967, as well as the political and commercial normalisation of relations between Israel and the Arab world.


    Prince Turki warns that if some such arrangement is not soon put in place, and Iran proceeds with its nuclear programme, other countries in the region, including Turkey, will almost certainly be drawn into an expensive and destabilising nuclear arms race.


    In effect, as with Telhami/Kull, Prince Turki’s approach is designed to make sure that worst case scenarios do not happen. It is more contextually framed to encompass several larger challenges in the Middle East, rather than confining its rationale to addressing the Israel/Iran confrontation.  


    The Turki proposals have some problematic aspects, including the idea that governments in the region could be expected to rely on the five permanent members of the Security Council to co-operate effectively if faced with a challenge to the NFZ. From another perspective, the proposal might be questioned as a historically insensitive effort to delegate authority over future security issues in the region to former colonial powers.


    NFZ or WMDFZ without Israel


    There is another perplexing feature of Prince Turki’s vision of a peaceful future for the Middle East. He urges the adoption of such a collective commitment to the elimination of WMD in the region with or without Israeli support at a conference of parties to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty scheduled for later this year in Finland, which seems to play into the hands of Western hawks.


    Israel is not even a party to the NPT, has so far not indicated its willingness to attend the conference, and if participating, would likely play an obstructive role. What is the point of a NFZ or WMDFZ without Israel? As long ago as the 1995 NPT Review Conference, the Arab countries put forward a proposal to establish in the Middle East a WMD-free zone, but it has never been subsequently invoked.


    Israel, which is not a member of the NPT, has consistently taken the position over the years that only after peace prevails throughout the region, will it consider lending support to a legal regime, prohibiting the possession of nuclear weapons.


    The NFZ or WMDFZ initiatives need to be seen in the setting established by the NPT regime. An initial observation involves Israel’s failure to become a party to the NPT coupled with its covert nuclear programme that resulted in the acquisition of the weaponry more than 20 years ago with the complicity of the West as documented in Seymour Hersh’s 1991 The Samson Option.


    This Israeli pattern of behaviour needs to be contrasted with that of Iran, a party to the NPT that has reported to and accepted, although with some friction in recent years, international inspections on its territory by the Western oriented International Atomic Energy Agency. Iran has consistently denied any ambition to acquire nuclear weapons, but has insisted on its rights under Article IV of the treaty to exercise “… its inalienable right… to develop research, production and use of nuclear energy for peaceful purposes without discrimination…”


    Iran has been under constant threat of an attack by Israel. It has also been the target for several years of Israel’s extremely dirty low intensity war, as well as being the subject of a US Congressionally funded destabilisation programme of the US that is reinforced by a diplomacy that constantly reaffirms the relevance of a military option, and operates in a political climate that excludes consideration of Israel’s nuclear arsenal.


    What is surprising under these circumstances is that Iran has not freed itself from NPT obligation as it is entitled to do. All parties to the NPT have a treaty right to withdraw set forth in Article X requiring only that a withdrawing state give notice to other treaty parties and provide an explanation of its reasons for withdrawing.


    Geopolitical priorities


    Comparing these Israeli and Iran patterns of behaviour with respect to nuclear weapons, it would seem far more reasonable to conclude that it is Israel, not Iran, that should be subjected to sanctions, and put under pressure to participate in denuclearising negotiations. After all, Israel acquired the weaponry secretly and defiantly, has not been even willing to accept the near universally applicable discipline of the NPT, and has engaged periodically in aggressive wars against its neighbours that have resulted in several long-term occupations.


    It can be argued that Israel was entitled to enhance its security by remaining outside the NPT, and thus is acting within its sovereign rights. This is a coherent legalistic position, but we should also appreciate that the NPT is more a geopolitical than a legal regime, and that Iran, for instance, would be immediately subject to a punitive response if it tried to withdraw from the treaty. In other words, geopolitical priorities override legal rights in the NPT setting.


    The history of the NPT has reflected its geopolitical nature. This is best illustrated by the utter refusal of the nuclear weapons states, above all the US, to fulfill its core obligation under Article VI “to pursue negotiations in good faith on effective measures relating to the cessation of the nuclear arms race at an early date and to nuclear disarmament, and on a treaty on general and complete disarmament under strict and effective international control.”


    The International Court of Justice (ICJ) in its 1996 Advisory Opinion on The Legality of Nuclear Weapons unanimously affirmed in its findings the legal imperative embodied in Article VI: “There exists an obligation to pursue in good faith and bring to a conclusion negotiations leading to nuclear disarmament, and on a treaty on general and complete disarmament in all its aspects under strict international control.”


    This finding that has been completely ignored by the nuclear weapons states (who had made full use of their diplomatic leverage in a failed effort to convince members of the UN General Assembly not to seek guidance from the ICJ with respect to the legal status of nuclear weapons and the obligations of the NPT). The refusal to uphold these obligations of Article VI would certainly appear to be a material breach of the treaty that under international law authorises any party to regard the treaty as void.


    Again, the international discourse on nuclear weapons is so distorted that it is a rarity to encounter criticism of its discriminatory application, its double standards as between nuclear and non-nuclear states, and its geopolitical style of selective enforcement. In this regard, it should be appreciated that the threat of military attack directed at Iran resembles reliance on the so-called Bush Doctrine of preventive war that had been used to justify aggression against Iraq in 2003, and represents a blatant geopolitical override of international law.


    Need to avoid war


    In summary, it is of utmost importance to avoid a war in the Middle East arising from the unresolved dispute about Iran’s nuclear programme. One way to do this is to seek a NFZ or a WMDFZ for the entire region that must include the participation of Israel. What has given this approach a renewed credibility for the West at this time is that such a measure seems to be the only way to prevent a lose/lose war option from materialising in an atmosphere where mainstream pundits are increasingly predicting an attack on Iran during 2012. 


    A NFZ plan has some prudential appeal to change minds in Tehran and Tel Aviv before it is too late, and could also encourage Washington to take a less destructive and self-destructive course of action. Whether this prudential appeal is sufficiently strong to overcome the iron cage of militarism that constrains policy choices in Israel and the US remains doubtful.


    Thinking outside the militarist box remains a forbidden activity, partly reflecting the domestic lock on the political and moral imagination of these countries by their respective military industrial media think-tank complexes.


    I would conclude this commentary with three pessimistic assessments that casts a dark shadow over the regional future:



    (1) an NFZ or WMDFZ for the Middle East is necessary and desirable, but it almost certainly will not be placed on the political agenda of American-led diplomacy relating to the conflict;


    (2) moves toward nuclear disarmament negotiations that have been legally mandated and would be beneficial for the world, and for the nuclear weapons states and their peoples, will not be made in the current atmosphere that blocks all serious initiatives to abolish nuclear weapons;


    (3) the drift toward a devastating attack on Iran will only be stopped by an urgent mobilisation of anti-war forces in civil society, which seems unlikely given other preoccupations. 


    To overcome such pessimism requires a broader vision of peace and justice that is even broader than the contextual approach taken by Prince Turki. It would centre on demilitarisation of the region through disarmament, as well as a firm regional commitment to avoid entangling alliances with external actors, meaning no military deployments or bases in the region. With drones engaging in lethal missions in the Middle East and an array of American military bases, this seems like a utopian fantasy, and maybe it is.


    But maybe also we have reached a paradoxical stage in the region, and possibly the world, where only the utopian imagination can offer us a realistic vision of a hopeful human future.

  • Mairead Maguire’s 10-Year Deportation from Israel

    Press Release – 8th October, 2010

    Nobel Peace Laureate Mairead Maguire was deported from Israel at 4 a.m., on Tuesday 5th October, 2010 and arrived back in Belfast later that afternoon. Maguire had arrived in Israel on Tuesday 27th September, to attend a Nobel Women’s Initiative visit, and support those working in Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territories – particularly women groups – for human rights and justice.

    On arrival she was detained in Ben Gurion Detention Centre, Tel Aviv. The Israeli security tried to forcefully deport Maguire the following day but she peacefully resisted sitting quietly on the tarmac beside the plane refusing to be forcefully deported. The KLM pilot refused to allow her to be forcefully taken on by Israeli guards, so she was taken back into detention, where she remained for seven days in solitary confinement under harsh conditions causing her to be hospitalized at the end of a week. During the seven days she had three court appearances to appeal her conviction of 10-year deportation from Israel.   

    At the Supreme Court appeal, Maguire spoke to the three judges saying that she loved the Israeli and Palestinian peoples and was saddened by their suffering. However, she insisted that peace will not come to Israel until the Israeli government end Apartheid. She also made in the Supreme Court an appeal, through the media, for the Israeli government to end apartheid and ethnic cleansing of the Palestinian people.

    On arriving home Maguire said:

    “I am sorry to be deported for 10 years from Israel and have asked my attorney, Adalah, to challenge this order on my behalf, as I very much wish to return to Israel and the occupied Palestinian territories to support all those working for change.   I do not feel I have been treated justly by the Israeli Court.  In June 2010, I and my colleagues on the “Rachel Corrie” boat were illegally hijacked in international waters by the Israeli navy, whilst trying to break the siege of Gaza and bring humanitarian aid to people suffering under illegal collective punishment by Israel.  I am not a criminal and ask, “How can I be deported from Israel when I had been taken at gunpoint and forced to come to Israel against my will in June, 2010?” I wish the three Supreme Court judges had been braver and upheld their proposal to the Israeli state prosecution that I be allowed to stay for a few days and join the NWI. However, they showed how little independence the Israeli judiciary have, and obeyed the Israeli security authorities that were determined to uphold my 10-year deportation from Israel, a form of silencing those who are critical of Israeli policies.

    “Sadly also, the Israeli media were very selective and negative regarding me, carrying misrepresentations such as reporting that I was in a plane and shouting and creating a scene, clearly Israeli propaganda against me. In truth I went to Israel in good faith, with nothing but love for Israelis and Palestinians, and wishing a good future for both peoples to live in justice and peace.   Being a voice critical of the Israeli government policies does not make me an enemy of Israel or her people, but an upholder of an ethic of human rights and nonviolence, and a believer that peace is possible between both peoples when justice reigns. It is my sincere hope that I can return to Israel and the occupied Palestinian territories to meet my friends soon again.”

  • Nuclear Dangers and Opportunities in the Middle East

    Iran’s uranium enrichment program has drawn much criticism, and there has been talk in both Israel and the United States of possible attacks against Iranian nuclear facilities.  The drift toward a military solution seems to be gathering an alarming momentum, with little public discussion of alternative approaches in the mainstream US media.  There would likely be very heavy costs associated with carrying out such attacks.

    Iranian leaders have a variety of instruments available for retaliation, and there is little reason to think that these would not be used. It is highly probable that Israel would be attacked in response by Hezbollah and Hamas, both of which have the capabilities to inflict serious damage. Even more damage could be done by Iran itself, which is developing long-range delivery capacities by way of advanced missile technology and a type of bomb-carrying drone aircraft.   

    There exists also the Iranian option to block passage through the Strait of Hormuz through which two-thirds of the world’s imported oil travels, undoubtedly producing supply shortages, a spike in prices, long gas lines in countries around the world, and global economic chaos.  Beyond this, there are a variety of unresolved conflicts in the region that could be easily inflamed by Iranian interventions, most obviously Iraq.   

    Attacks against Iran, as a non-defensive recourse to force, would violate international law and the UN Charter. Force is only lawful in international conflict situations if used as self-defense in response to a prior armed attack. The core Charter commitment in Article 2(4) prohibits threats as well as uses of force.  By that standard, both Israel and the United States, by their threats alone, may already be viewed as law-breakers.  The actual use of force would leave no doubt.

        A far better option than attacking Iran would be attempting to negotiate a Middle East Nuclear Weapon-Free Zone. There is widespread support for this initiative among the governments in the region and the world.  It was a priority goal agreed to by consensus at the 2010 Non-Proliferation Treaty Review Conference.  But there is one large catch that has so far been a decisive inhibitor: Israel is unalterably opposed, as the establishment of the zone would require Israel to dismantle its own nuclear weapons arsenal.

    Obviously, the idea of a Middle East Nuclear Weapon-Free Zone has little regional appeal if it does not include Israel.  Israel’s insistence on retaining nuclear weapons while being ready to wage a war, with menacing repercussions, to prevent Iran from acquiring such weaponry is expressive of the deeply troubling double standards that are an overall feature of the nonproliferation regime.

    A Middle East Nuclear Weapon-Free Zone would immediately improve overall regional stability and, as well, take account of the prospect of many Arab countries poised to embark on nuclear energy programs of their own. Indeed, without such a zone, there is a substantial possibility of a regional nuclear arms race that would tempt countries such as Turkey, Egypt, Syria, and Saudi Arabia, as well as Iran, to have the supposed deterrent benefits of a nuclear arsenal.

    A Middle East Nuclear Weapon-Free Zone that includes all the countries of the region is an issue that demands U.S. leadership.  Only the United States has the leverage and stature to bring the diverse cast of regional actors to the negotiating table to make the needed effort to avert war. There can be no advance assurances that such a diplomatic initiative would succeed, but to fail to try would be lamentable.

  • Choose Peace – End the Siege of Gaza

    Choose Peace – End the Siege of Gaza and the
    Occupation of Palestine

    On Saturday June 5, 2010, thirty-five heavily armed Israeli Navy Seals
    commandeered our boat, the MV Rachel Corrie, one of the Freedom Flotilla, in international
    waters (30 miles off the coast of Gaza). 
    As they did so, we eighteen humanitarian activists and crew, sat on the
    deck.  We were quietly anxious, aware of the solitary figure in the
    wheelhouse with his hands held high against the window. He was in full view of
    the three Israeli warships, four approaching zodiacs and two commando carriers,
    whose guns were pointing in his direction.  I personally wondered if the
    courageous Derek Graham would live to tell the tale, conscious of what happened
    on the Turkish ship, Mavi Marmara, earlier in the week.

    On Monday May 31, 2010, we heard via satellite phone that the Israeli
    Commandoes had boarded the Turkish Ship, MV Mavi Marmara, in international
    waters from a helicopter and Zodiacs killing and injuring many people.  It
    was later confirmed that eight unarmed Turkish civilians and one Turkish-American
    civilian were shot (two were shot in the head and several were shot in the back).
    During Israel’s attack, which
    injured over forty people, all six boats on the Freedom Flotilla were commandeered
    by the Israeli Navy and were taken to back Israel.  

    The killing of unarmed civilians was unexpected and devastating news to us all. Everyone
    participating in the Freedom Flotilla was there because they were moved by the people
    of Gaza
    suffering.  The people aboard the Freedom Flotilla were not terrorists;
    they were human beings who cared for others who were suffering.  Gaza is land locked and
    sea locked as its port has been closed since the Israeli occupation. If the
    Free Gaza Rachel Corrie cargo boat had been able to enter Gaza, it would have been the first cargo boat
    ever to do so. Gaza has rightly been described
    as the largest open air prison in the world, with Israel holding all the keys for its
    one and a half million people living under a policy of collective
    punishment.  Under siege for over three years now with a shortage of
    medicine and basic building materials, the twenty-two day bombardment by Israel in December 2009 and January 2010 left Gaza and its people in a
    place of suffering and isolation. The Flotilla’s purpose was to not only to
    bring humanitarian aid, books for children, toys, and writing materials, but also
    to help break the siege of Gaza
    which is slowly strangling its people.

    Israel
    violated international law and the incident is well documented by the UN and
    many independent human rights bodies. These violations of international
    law were committed under the guise of ‘national security’ and a policy of isolating
    Gaza to weaken
    Hamas.  It is a policy that is clearly not working.  As we have
    learned in Northern Ireland,
    violence never works. So why not try talking to Hamas just as the British
    Government had to talk to representatives of IRA and Loyalist paramilitaries in
    order to move toward peace.  

    The brutal and illegal attack of aid ships in international waters on May
    3lst and the subsequent boarding of the MV Rachel Corrie, also in international
    waters, is a symptom of the culture of impunity under which Israel
    operates. The Israeli government was quick to blame the activists on board the
    MV Mavi Marmara, claiming they attacked the Israeli Navy first and that they
    were members of terrorist groups. They also claimed that the HLL, the Turkish humanitarian
    group who organized the Mavi Marmara, had terrorist links.  The HLL is not
    a banned organization in Turkey
    and has no links to terrorist organizations.  It was disappointing to see
    how many international governments and media outlets immediately accepted Israel’s
    version of the story without further investigation.  While there have been
    calls for a ‘prompt, impartial, credible and transparent’ investigation into
    the events of May 3lst by the United Nations Security Council, the United
    States and others still seem to think that Israel can conduct such an investigation
    on its own.  In the words of my colleague, Nobel Laureate Jody Williams,
    this is like “the fox accounting for the number of chickens left in the
    henhouse”.  Such a response cannot stand, and nothing less than an independent
    investigation will be acceptable to the international community.

    The attack on the Freedom Flotilla is a tipping point.  It is time for
    the international community to finally stop allowing Israel to act with blatant
    disregard for human life, human rights, and international law.  The
    partial lifting of the siege shows what international pressure can achieve, but
    it is not enough. Only a full lifting of the siege can bring real freedom to
    the people of Gaza.
    It is time for Israel
    to choose peace.  It is time for world leaders and the international community
    to join together and call on Israel
    to lift the siege of Gaza completely, end the
    occupation of Palestine,
    and allow the Palestinian people their right to self-determination. We can all
    do something to help bring the day of reconciliation closer to reality. Supporting
    the BDS campaign, calling for an end to EU special trading status with Israel, and insisting that the USA end its economic and military assistance to Israel
    until it upholds its international commitments, are important initiatives in
    the steps toward peace. Palestine is a key to
    peace in the Middle East. If everyone refuses
    to be ‘silent’ in the face of Israel’s
    continued apartheid policies, we can move closer to ending all violence in the Middle East.

    Mairead Maguire (Nobel Peace Laureate)

    www.peacepeople.com

    19th June, 2010