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Writers Articles And Opinions |
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27 April 2010 By Stephen
Lendman
For many years, Israel's open
secret is that it's one of eight known nuclear powers,
including America and Russia with about 97% of the
world's arsenal according to Helen Caldicott in her
book "Nuclear Power Is Not the Answer." The others are
Britain, France, China, India, Pakistan, and Israel -
North Korea a declared but unverified one.
In her January 20, 2009 Canadian
Medical Association Journal article titled, "Obama and
the opportunity to eliminate nuclear weapons"
Caldicott wrote:
"The Cold War is over, but the
threat of nuclear war is not. Little progress has been
made since 1989 when the Berlin Wall collapsed. In
fact, the threat of nuclear annihilation has
escalated. In 1972, when 5 nuclear nations....signed
the Non-Proliferation Treaty, they agreed to rapidly
disarm. They have done the opposite," resulting in a
greater than ever threat, the Pentagon's new Nuclear
Posture Review and US-Russia deal doing nothing to
reverse it.
See http://sjlendman.blogspot.com/2010/04/obamas-brave-nuke-world.html.
In his 1991 book, "The Samson
Option: Israel's Nuclear Arsenal and America Foreign
Policy," Seymour Hersh discussed its strategy to
launch a massive nuclear counterattack if it felt its
existence threatened, the stark message being the next
regional war may be nuclear.
In his 1997 book, "Open Secrets:
Israeli Nuclear and Foreign Policies," Israel Shahak
said that, helped by the Israeli Lobby (and Christian
Zionists), "Israel (is) clearly prepar(ing) itself to
seek overtly a hegemony over the entire Middle East
(with no) hesitati(on) to use for the purpose all
means available, including nuclear ones."
Shahak also explained that Israel
regards "the launching of missiles (onto its
territory) as 'nonconventional' regardless of whether
they are equipped with explosives or poison gas." In
turn, Israel's nuclear doctrine dictates that a "nonconventional"
attack requires one in response, meaning a nuclear
one, the foundation of its grand strategy, according
to Shahak.
According to Hebrew University's
Professor of Military History Martin Van Creveld, "We
have the capability to take the world down with us.
And I can assure you (it) will happen before Israel
goes under."
Israel maintains a double
standard. It won't let another Middle East state
acquire nuclear weapons, but will never give up its
own or the right to use them preemptively.
Background on
Israel's Nuclear Development
It began with its 1948 founding,
David Ben-Gurion (Israel's first prime minister)
having told Ehud Avriel, a European operative and
later MK, to recruit East European Jewish scientists
who could "either increase the capacity to kill masses
or to cure masses; both are important."
One was Avraham Marcus Klingberg,
later an Israeli chemical and biological weapons (CBW)
expert and deputy director of the Israel Institute of
Biological Research in Ness Ziona, south of Tel Aviv.
More on Israel's CBW program below.
Another was Ernst David Bergmann,
"father of the Israeli bomb" in charge of the Israeli
Atomic Energy Commission (IAEC). Ben-Gurion was
determined to have a "nuclear option" and other
"non-conventional" weapons (WMDs) to counter the
Arabs' numerical advantage. In his farewell address to
the Israeli Armaments Development Authority (RAFAEL),
Ben-Gurion defended the strategy saying:
"I am confident, based not only
on what I heard today, that our science can provide us
with the weapons that are needed to deter our enemies
from waging war against us."
Ben-Gurion and later prime
minister Shimon Peres became the leading forces behind
Israel's nuclear and CBWs programs.
In the late 1940s, Israel and
France began collaborating, at the time the IDF
Science Corps searched the Negev desert for
recoverable uranium. In 1952, the IAEC was
established. The Dimona Nuclear Research
Center/reactor was secretly completed in 1964 near
Bersheeba in the Negev - a heavy water moderated,
natural uranium reactor/plutonium reprocessing plant
to make nuclear weapons. Designed as a 24 megawatt
facility, its cooling system had far more capacity
than needed, none for electrical generation, and its
plutonium reprocessing capability signified an intent
to produce nuclear weapons.
After the 1967 Six Day War,
Defense Minister Moshe Dayan ordered full-scale
production, averaging 4 - 12 bombs per year. US
presidents since Lyndon Johnson supported the program.
At the same time, it's believed testing took place in
the Negev, jointly with France in Algeria, later in
the Indian Ocean, and perhaps elsewhere.
By the early 1970s, Israel had
advanced nuclear technology, world class scientists,
and several dozen bombs ready to launch. Today it's
believed it has hundreds and a delivery system able to
hit distant targets accurately.
Earlier, with inadequate uranium
supplies, it acquired some clandestinely, and by the
late 1960s through close collaboration with South
Africa - supplying technological expertise in return
for the needed material, the arrangement lasting until
apartheid ended in the early 1990s.
France and South Africa were
Israel's main collaborators, but also America by going
along, staying silent to this day, and initially
providing a 5 megawatt highly enriched uranium
research reactor as part of Eisenhower's "Atoms for
Peace" program. According to journalist Mark Gaffney,
Israel's program "was possible only because of (its)
calculated deception....and willing complicity on the
part of the US."
Israeli scientists were trained
at US universities and had access to domestic weapons
labs. Since the early 1970s, advanced technology
transfers were made, including supercomputers able to
design sophisticated nuclear weapons and delivery
systems. Mordechai Vanunu's mid-1980s documented
revelations provided proof.
Mordechai
Vanunu - Heroic Whistleblower/Victim of Israeli
Retaliatory Viciousness
A Dimona nuclear technician, he
smuggled out dozens of photos and scientific
documents, published by the London Sunday Times on
October 5, 1986, headlined:
"Revealed - the secrets of
Israel's nuclear arsenal/Atomic technician Mordechai
Vanunu reveals secret weapons production," saying:
"THE SECRETS of a subterranean
factory engaged in the manufacture of Israeli nuclear
weapons have been uncovered by the Sunday Times
Insight team.
Hidden beneath the Negev desert,
the factory has been producing nuclear atomic warheads
for the last 20 years. Now it has almost certainly
begun manufacturing thermo-nuclear weapons, with
yields big enough to destroy entire cities."
The Times named Vanunu as its
source, having worked at Dimona for nearly 10 years in
"Machon 2 - a top secret, underground bunker built to
provide the vital components necessary for weapons
production...."
Nuclear experts examined Vanunu's
documents, called them genuine, and concluded that
Israel's sophisticated technology enabled it "to build
up a formidable nuclear arsenal."
According to Theodore Taylor, a
world expert at the time:
"There should no longer be any
doubt that Israel is, and for at least a decade has
been, a fully-fledged nuclear weapons
state....considerably more advanced than (earlier)
indicated...."
Other top nuclear scientists
agreed - Israel was, and today is, a world nuclear
power, possessing sophisticated technology and
weapons. Vanunu's revelations cost him dearly. On
October 12, 1986, The Times headlined his September 30
disappearance, five days before his story broke.
Mossad lured him to Rome, then
beat, drugged, and kidnapped him. He was secretly
tried in 1986-87, and sentenced to 18 years in prison
for espionage and treason - in harsh isolated
confinement in a six square meter cell.
Released in 2004, his behavior
and movements were restricted. As a result, harassing
arrests followed after giving foreign journalists
interviews and trying to leave Israel. He said he
suffered "cruel and barbaric treatment" in prison, no
surprise since torture is official Israeli policy,
usually for Palestinians, but for anyone security
services target.
On July 2, 2007, Vanunu was again
imprisoned for six month for speaking to foreign
journalists, later reduced to three months by the
Jerusalem District Court "In light of (his) ailing
health and the absence of claims that his actions put
the country's security in jeopardy."
Daniel Ellsberg called him "the
preeminent hero of the nuclear era." He says "I am
neither a traitor nor a spy, I only wanted the world
to know what was happening." On December 28, 2009, he
was arrested again following his alleged meeting with
his girlfriend, a Norwegian national, then transferred
to house arrest.
On April 14, 2010, Vanunu said
"The restrictions, not to leave the country for one
more year (were) renewed. Now 7 years since my release
AFTER 18 years in Israel PRISON."
He was nominated for the Nobel
Peace Prize each year from 1988 - 2004. In March 2009,
he asked the Nobel Committee to remove his name from
consideration, and in February 2010 again declined the
honor, most often given war criminals.
In 1979, he was awarded the Right
Livelihood Award, the alternative Nobel Prize, "for
outstanding vision and work on behalf of our planet
and its people," and in 2001, Norway's University of
Tromsoe honored him as a Doctor Honoris Causa
(History).
John Steinbach
on Israel's Nuclear Program
In 2009, The Emirates Center for
Strategic Studies and Research (ECSSR-
nuclearfiles.org) published Steinbach's paper titled,
"The Israeli Nuclear Weapons Program," saying:
"With several hundred weapons and
a robust delivery system, Israel has quietly
supplanted Britain as the world's fifth largest
nuclear power, and now rivals France and China in
terms of the size of its nuclear arsenal," despite an
official ambiguity about an advanced sophisticated
program. As a result, a combination of expert analysis
and whistleblower revelations provided what's known.
Also occasional slips, like in December 2006 when
Prime Minister Ehud Olmert told Germany's Sat. 1
channel:
"Iran, openly, explicitly and
publicly, threatens to wipe Israel off the map. Can
you say that this is the same level, when they are
aspiring to have nuclear weapons, as America, France,
Israel and Russia?" Backtracking after a meeting with
Chancellor Angela Merkel, he said:
"Israel has said many times - and
I also said this to German television in an interview
- that we will not be the first country that
introduces nuclear weapons to the Middle East....That
was our position (earlier). That is our position (now)
- nothing has changed."
Since the 1970s, Israel's
official position is that it chose "an option to
produce electricity using nuclear reactors. (This)
requires promoting nuclear knowledge and research,
preparing sites suitable for building nuclear power
plants," and weighing the economic benefits.
According to
Steinbach:
"Despite this claim, an
exhaustive search of publicly available sources
indicates the existence of no meaningful Israeli
civilian nuclear energy program, past or
present....From its inception, the Israeli nuclear
program has centered on developing a nuclear weapons
program, with any other nuclear program being
incidental."
Steinbach also cites estimates of
Israel's arsenal at "from 100 to over 400 bombs,"
there being "little doubt that (its) weapons are among
the world's most sophisticated, and largely designed
for war fighting." They include:
-- "boosted fission weapons and
small neutron bombs, designed to maximize deadly gamma
radiation while minimizing blast effects and long-term
radiation - in essence designed to kill people while
leaving property intact;"
-- long range ballistic
missiles;
-- sophisticated aircraft able to
deliver a nuclear strike;
-- cruise missiles, artillery
shells, and land mines with the same capability;
-- "In June 2000, an Israeli
submarine launched a cruise missile that hit a target
950 miles away, making Israel only the third nation
(besides) the US and Russia with that capability;"
-- Israel maintains triad
strength, including strategic bombers, ballistic
missiles, and submarines, able to strike well beyond
the Middle East; and
-- overall, Israel's capability
"is much greater than any conceivable need for
defensive deterrence;" like America, it's for
preemptive offense, and given both nation's
belligerence, some day they may launch them
aggressively without cause, claiming, of course, it's
defensive.
According to Jane's Intelligence
Review, Dimona's reactor "is suffering severe damage
from 35 years of operation," worrisome enough for
Israeli nuclear scientists to call for its shutdown to
avert a potential catastrophe. Also at issue are
internal radiological hazards, revealed on a March
2003 BBC program with five Dimona workers discussing
the effects on their health.
Israel's
Chemical and Biological Weapons (CBW)
Israel signed the 1993 Chemical
Weapons Convention (CWC) but didn't ratify it. It
refused to sign the 1972 Biological Weapons Convention
(BWC), and maintains a policy of CBW ambiguity. It's
not known but believed that its Nes Tziyona Biological
Institute produces sophistical chemical and biological
weapons and state-of-the-art delivery systems.
However, in 1993, the US Congress
Office of Technology Assessment WMD proliferation
assessment included Israel as a nation having
undeclared offensive chemical warfare capabilities. In
1998, former Deputy Assistant Defense Secretary Bill
Richardson said:
"I have no doubt that Israel has
worked on both chemical and biological offensive
things for a long time. There's no doubt they've had
stuff for years."
It's also believed it has a
sophisticated BW capability, and is likely producing,
maintaining, and updating its stockpile.
On August 7, 2006, Paola
Manduca's Global Research article headlined, "New and
unknown deadly weapons used by Israeli forces: 'direct
energy weapons, chemical and/or biological agents, in
a macabre experiment of future warfare."
It referred to the summer
Lebanon/Gaza offensives, citing reports of "New and
strange symptoms....reported amongst the wounded and
the dead.
Bodies with dead tissue and no
apparent wounds; 'shrunken' corpses; civilians with
heavy damage to lower limbs that require amputation,
which is nevertheless followed by unstoppable necrosis
(dying cells and living tissue) and death;
descriptions of extensive internal wounds with no
trace of shrapnel, corpses blackened but not burnt,
and others heavily wounded that did not bleed."
On July 11, 2006, Ma'an News
Service cited the Palestinian health ministry saying
Israel used a new type explosive in Gaza, containing
"toxins and radioactive materials which burn and tear
the victim's body from the inside and leave long term
deformations."
On July 11, 2006, Gulf News said
a Palestinian doctor "accused Israel of using a type
of chemical ammunition which causes burns and injuries
in soft tissue and cannot be traced by X-ray." Severe
internal wounds were reported.
Since the second Intifada's
inception, reports cite "unknown gas" attacks,
possibly a nerve agent, anyone breathing it losing
consciousness immediately for about 24 hours with high
fevers and rigid muscles. Some needed urgent blood
transfusions. Asked but not known is whether this is
chemical/and or biological warfare.
International law bans these
weapons. Israel tests new ones in conflict zones - in
2006 in Lebanon and Gaza and against Gazans during
Operation Cast Lead.
Treating the victims, Norwegian
Dr. Mads Gilbert cited white phosphorous that burns
flesh to the bone. Also depleted uranium and a new
close-range explosive causing severe injuries,
including battlefield amputations. Children, he said,
had their legs cut off, abdomens sliced open, or
simply killed outright.
Final Thoughts
On September 9, 2004, Haaretz (by
DPA) headlined, "ElBaradei: Israel's nuclear arms
blocking Mideast peace," quoting him from the Sydney
Morning Herald saying:
Addressing Israel's nuclear
arsenal must be part of a peace process settlement.
"This is not really sustainable that you have Israel
sitting with nuclear weapons capability there while
everyone else is part of the non-proliferation
regime....It is a very emotional issue in the Middle
East."
While Israel maintains ambiguity
and world leaders keep mum, Turkey's Prime Minister
Recep Erdogan, not shy about confronting Israel, said
this before attending Obama's nuclear summit:
"We have yet to see an
international community, which is so sensitive about
Iran's nuclear program, taking a firm stance against
Israel," a notorious nuclear outlaw. "We do not want
to see nuclear armament in our region. Our policy on
this issue is very clear no matter which country has
it. That could be Israel or Iran or any other
country."
On April 14 in Paris, Erdogan
called Israel the biggest threat to Middle East peace,
not just because of its nuclear arsenal, but for its
disproportionate force against Palestinians. His
comments came a day after Israel compared him to
Libya's Gaddafi and Venezuela's Chavez, a sign of
continued frayed relations between the two nations,
including an angry exchange with Israeli President
Shimon Peres at the January World Economic Forum.
He's now confronting Israel's
nuclear threat, a real one under its first strike
doctrine to destroy the entire region if threatened.
With its history of open belligerence, the possibility
is too great to ignore, and too important not to
confront given the consequences if initiated.
Stephen Lendman lives in
Chicago and can be reached at lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.
Also visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com and
listen to cutting-edge discussions with distinguished
guests on the Progressive Radio News Hour on the
Progressive Radio Network Thursdays at 10AM US Central
time and Saturdays and Sundays at noon. All programs
are archived for easy listening.
http://www.progressiveradionetwork.com/the-progressive-news-hour/.
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