Israel Has Sub-Based Atomic Arms Capability
The Washington Post
Saturday, June 15, 2002
by Walter Pincus
Israel has acquired three diesel submarines that it is arming with
newly designed cruise missiles capable of carrying nuclear warheads,
according to former Pentagon and State Department officials,
potentially giving Israel a triad of land-, sea- and air-based
nuclear weapons for the first time. The U.S. Navy monitored Israeli
testing of a new cruise missile from a submarine two years ago off
Sri Lanka in the Indian Ocean, according to former Pentagon
officials. One former senior American official said U.S. analysts
have studied the nuclear capability of the cruise missile. But,
according to a former Pentagon official, "It is above top secret
knowing whether the sub-launched cruise missiles are nuclear-armed."
Another former official added, "We often don't ask."
The possible move to arm submarines with nuclear weapons suggests
that the Israeli government might be increasingly concerned about
efforts by Iraq and Iran to develop more accurate long-range
missiles capable of knocking out Israel's existing nuclear arsenal,
which is primarily land-based. Although developing a sea-based leg
would preserve the deterrent value of Israel's nuclear force,
according to analysts, it would complicate U.S. efforts to keep
other countries in the Middle East and elsewhere from seeking to
acquire nuclear arms. It also could spur a nuclear arms race in the
Middle East.
Israel has long refused to confirm or deny it has nuclear weapons.
U.S. analysts say it has a modest arsenal of short- and medium-range
nuclear-capable missiles, nuclear bombs that could be delivered from
jet fighters and Harpoon missiles that could be launched from planes
or ships.
Mark Regev, spokesman for the Israeli Embassy, confirmed that his
country had recently acquired three submarines from Germany but
would not comment on whether they were being outfitted with nuclear
weapons. "There has been no change in Israel's long-standing
position not to introduce nuclear weapons in the Middle East," Regev
said.
A book published this week by the Carnegie Endowment for
International Peace reported that Israel was attempting to arm its
diesel submarines with nuclear cruise missiles.
"Probably the most important nuclear-related development in Israel
is the formation of its sea-based nuclear arm," wrote Joseph
Cirincione, director of the Carnegie Endowment's nonproliferation
project and a former staff member of the House Armed Services
Committee who served as chief author of the book.
The U.S. government "favors" Israel's preserving the ambiguity
surrounding its nuclear force, just as it has since the late 1960s,
a former senior U.S. diplomat said. "It gives it a strategic
deterrence," he said, adding, "If [Israel] were being explicit, that
would create problems with its neighbors like Egypt and Syria . . .
whose leaders years ago agreed that [ambiguity] did not pose an
offensive threat to them."
Iraq and Iran, he added, are different because "they are
destabilizing" countries and could launch a first strike against
Israel or U.S. forces in the region if they succeed in developing
and deploying nuclear weapons.
There have been published reports going back to 1998 that describe
Israel's acquisition of the diesel submarines and its testing of a
cruise missile.
In an article two years ago in the Israeli newspaper Ha'aretz,
Reuven Pedatzur, a former Israeli fighter pilot and director of the
Galili Center for Strategy and National Security, wrote that Israel
was motivated by "the need to find deterrence solutions . . . from
the probability that during the next decade Iran, and maybe even
Iraq, will acquire the nuclear ballistic capability to hit Israeli
targets."
Pedatzur said that faced with that threat, a submarine force armed
with missiles is a reliable deterrent because Israel's enemies would
not be able to locate and destroy them and thus "that it is
impossible to avoid their lethal counterstrike."
The Carnegie Endowment book said Israel "is believed to have
deployed" 100 Jericho short-range and medium-range missiles that are
nuclear-capable. In addition, it has nuclear bombs that could be
delivered from U.S.-made F-16 jet fighters and U.S.-built Harpoon
missiles that could be launched from planes or ships.
Israel's nuclear-capable, sea-launched cruise missiles were tested
in May 2000, the book said, and might have a range of more than 900
miles. With three submarines, Israel could "have a deployment at sea
of one nuclear-armed submarine at all times," the book said.
"Such a survivable deterrent is perceived as essential because of
Israel's unique geopolitical and demographical vulnerability to
nuclear attack, and one that no potential enemy of Israel could
ignore," it said.
Cirincione said Israel's possession of nuclear weapons and
modernization of its systems creates an "extremely difficult
situation" not just for the United States, but also for preventing
other countries that have signed the Nuclear Non-Proliferation
Treaty from breaking away. Israel's possession of weapons remains
officially ambiguous, but Israel, along with Pakistan and India, did
not sign the treaty.
Israel is only one of 15 countries discussed in the book, which
describes the spread of nuclear, chemical and biological weapons and
their missile delivery systems. It updates a similar volume produced
by the Carnegie Endowment four years ago.
Cirincione said at least eight countries have nuclear weapons -- the
United States, Russia, Britain, France, China, Israel, India and
Pakistan -- and three more are apparently seeking them -- Iraq, Iran
and North Korea. Four countries, he said, have in recent years given
up their weapons -- South Africa and the former Soviet republics
Ukraine, Belarus and Kazakhstan.
The book attributed Iran's decision to seek nuclear, chemical and
biological weapons to its experience during its war with Iraq in the
1980s, when Iraqi President Saddam Hussein used chemical weapons
against Iranian forces. Iran is influenced by its "extended
neighborhood [where] it sees Israel, India and Pakistan with
advanced nuclear weapons" and Iraq's weapons program no longer
subject to inspection by the United Nations, the book said. The
authors said U.S. sanctions against Iran, which have hurt its
ability to build conventional military forces, "have likely worked
toward reaffirming belief in the utility of unconventional weapons."
Iraq's search for nuclear and biological weapons rests on Hussein's
desire to be the "dominant power in the Middle East" and his belief
that "a nuclear bomb would provide him with the ultimate symbol of
military power," the book said. It said "Iraq may have a workable
design for a nuclear weapon" and that if Baghdad "were to acquire
material from another country, it is possible that it could assemble
a nuclear weapon in months."
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