Concern about Iran prompts Israel to weigh acknowledgement of its own nuclear weapons
By James M. Dorsey
On their way from Tel Aviv
airport to Jerusalem in 1977 then Israeli Deputy Prime Minister Yigael Yadin asked
President Anwar Sadat, the first Arab leader to ever officially visit Israel,
why the Egyptian military had not moved deeper into the Sinai during the 1973
Middle East war. “You have nuclear arms. Haven’t you
heard?” Mr.
Sadat replied.
Mr. Sadat’s
strategic calculations in the war, the last all-out military confrontation
between Israel and Arab states, takes on renewed significance coupled with a
recent report that asserts that Iranian nuclear advances are
irreversible
and have reached a stage at which Iran needs only one month to produce enough
weapons-grade uranium for a single bomb.
The report
has sparked public debate in Israel about whether the Jewish state, which is
long believed to have multiple nuclear weapons but consistently stopped short
of confirming or denying the assertion, should finally do so to lay down a
marker for Iran.
Israeli
acknowledgement of its nuclear capabilities would likely force it to join Iran
as a signatory to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT).
It would also constitute a tectonic shift in the geopolitical environment that
frames thinking about a future security architecture in the Middle East.
The debate
theoretically creates an opportunity for the administration of US President Joe
Biden to position the rejiggering of the United States’ commitment to the
region’s security in a totally different light and make a significant
contribution to a situation in which the Middle East’s numerous conflicts and
disputes can be better managed in the absence of resolutions.
The
administration has a first chance to explore the opportunity when Eyal Hulata,
the head of Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett’s national security council,
meets this week in Washington with Mr. Biden’s national security
advisor, Jake Sullivan.
Mr. Sullivan
has just returned from a visit to the Middle East during which he focused on the war
in Yemen and Iran and became the administration’s highest official to meet with
Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, days before the third anniversary of
the killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi.
Mr. Bennett,
despite warning in remarks last month to the United Nations General Assembly
that Israel would not shy away from military action to prevent Iran from
obtaining a nuclear weapon, reportedly disagrees with the conclusion of the
report
by the Washington-based Institute for Science and International Security. The
report’s conclusions are supported by the likes of former Israeli prime
minister and chief of staff Ehud Barak and Aluf Benn, the editor of Israeli newspaper
Haaretz.
A senior
Israeli official said that Mr. Bennet had read Mr. Barak’s
assertion
in a recent oped that Iran had “probably crossed the point of no return” and
that Israel should reconsider its policy of nuclear ambiguity.
“Bennett
doesn’t think that it's game over about Iran’s nuclear program. He thinks that
Iran is indeed very close to that point, but that there is still time, and if
Israel acts on its own and with its allies in a systematic way, it is still
possible to stop them.,” the official said.
Mr. Bennett’s
position appears to be backed by former prime minister Ehud Olmert who argued
that Israeli acknowledgement of its nuclear capability would allow Iran to justify the development of a capability
of its own.
Mr. Olmert’s opposition is rooted in his belief that Israel is not able to
permanently destroy Iranian nuclear facilities with a conventional military
strike.
Even so, acknowledgement
would facilitate an international negotiation that focuses not only on Iran but
also on Israel and, in doing so, helps lay the groundwork for a more
sustainable regional security architecture.
John Carlson, a nuclear expert,
argued, in a report published earlier this year by the United Nations Institute
for Disarmament Research (UNIDR), that negotiation of a Middle East zone free
of nuclear weapons would “itself help build regional confidence and trust.”
In the absence of a tectonic shift in
Israeli policy, Israeli
Chief of Staff Avi Kohavi has suggested on various occasions this year that
Israel was developing “operational plans” for a potential strike prompted by Iran’s nuclear progress. Mr. Kohavi said last month that Israel had “greatly accelerated” preparations.
The potential opportunity created by
an Israeli acknowledgement would not only contribute to averting the threat of
a new Middle East war but also help fend off possible Saudi and Turkish thinking about expanding the region’s nuclear club. That league is
currently a club of one if one ignores Pakistan that sits on the Middle East’s
periphery.
The moral of
Mr. Sadat’s reply to Mr. Yadin’ question is that Israeli ambiguity about its
nuclear capabilities may no longer serve a purpose and that acknowledgement of
its long-standing open secret may help ensure greater regional stability.
Mr. Sadat was
telling Mr. Yadin that both he and Syrian President Hafez al-Assad were fully
aware of Israel’s nuclear capability as they planned the war and were
determined to ensure that the attack would not push the Jewish state to the
point where it would use nuclear weapons to ensure its survival. In other
words, it was the knowledge of Israeli capabilities, not whether Israel
acknowledged them, that shaped their strategy.
Disagreement
in Israel’s national security community is not limited to whether the Jewish
state should radically shift gears but also includes the question of how close
Iran may be to being able to produce a nuclear weapon.
Countering alarmist
assessments, Maj.-Gen. Tamir Hayman, the head of Israel’s military
intelligence, argued this weekend that “there is an enriched amount [of
uranium] in volumes that we have not seen before, and it is disturbing. At the
same time, in all other aspects of the Iranian nuclear project, we see no
progress. Not in the weapons project, in the financial area, not in any other
sector… They are not heading toward a bomb
right now:
It may be in the distant future.”
A podcast version of this story is available on Soundcloud, Itunes, Spotify, Stitcher, TuneIn, Spreaker, Pocket Casts, Tumblr,
Podbean, Audecibel, Patreon
and Castbox.
Dr. James M. Dorsey is an award-winning
journalist and scholar and a Senior Fellow at the National University of
Singapore’s Middle East Institute.
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