REVEALED: BRITAIN SECRETLY BELIEVES ISRAEL HAS NUCLEAR WEAPONS, BUT WON’T ADMIT IT
Declassified files show Whitehall has long
assessed Israel as having an atomic arsenal, contrary to what ministers tell
parliament.
19 APRIL 2023
- UK military official feared that “openly admitting” knowledge of
Israeli nuclear arms would “create pressure for action against Israel”.
- Israelis were described as “probably the world’s greatest
proliferators” by British diplomat who went on to head the Foreign Office
- UK diplomats secretly agreed with Seymour Hersh’s 1991 book on
Israel’s nuclear capability
- Revelations contradict what current foreign secretary James
Cleverly recently told parliament.
British officials have privately regarded Israel as a
nuclear-armed power for at least 40 years, while telling the public they cannot
make an assessment.
Israel has never formally declared it has a nuclear
weapons programme, a position UK ministers do not publicly contradict.
But behind the scenes in Whitehall, staff in the
Foreign Office and Ministry of Defence (MoD) have long believed Israel has
developed nuclear arms.
The revelations are contained in files released to the
UK National Archives as recently as last year and found exclusively by Declassified
UK.
They severely undermine statements made to parliament
by successive government ministers including the current foreign secretary,
James Cleverly.
He told MPs
last February how “Israel has never declared a nuclear weapons programme” and
insisted the UK government was encouraging Tel Aviv to sign the
non-proliferation treaty as a “Non-Nuclear Weapon State”.
However, a file from
1983 and marked “secret” shows the MoD believed Israel “probably produces
enough plutonium for one nuclear weapon per year.” It added: “Thus she may now
have a stock of about twenty,” having gone into production in 1964.
A group of British military officers were then told in
1985 by Israeli defence minister (and former PM) Yitzhak Rabin that: “Israel
will not be the first to introduce nuclear weapons, but she will keep the
option in case the Arabs get the bomb”.
A British diplomat in Tel Aviv, Tim Dowse, regarded
the second part of Rabin’s comment to be “as close as we are ever likely to come
to an explicit confirmation that Israel has a nuclear capability.”
Hersh was right
The issue resurfaced in the early nineties after US
investigative journalist Seymour Hersh published a book The
Samson Option, which contained new evidence about the alleged scale of
Israel’s nuclear programme.
Although Hersh has faced an establishment backlash
over his most recent claims about the US bombing the Nord Stream 2 pipeline,
British officials took his research on Israel’s nuclear programme seriously.
His book prompted questions in 1992-3 from a Labour
peer, Lord Kennet, about whether Whitehall agreed with Hersh’s claim that
Israel had nuclear weapons.
An official from the MoD nuclear policy department,
David G. Johnson, privately told colleagues:
“Although we believe there is such a programme, the fact remains
that we do not have firm evidence for this.”
The first part of that statement was kept from Kennet,
and Conservative defence minister Arthur Gore simply
told the peer: “We have no firm evidence either to confirm or to deny that
Israel may have a nuclear weapons programme.”
On seeing that answer, Foreign Office staffer Peter
Spoor commented privately:
“Strictly speaking this is true, since we have no direct evidence. But it is
slightly disingenuous; there is a wealth of circumstantial evidence in the
public domain and we work on the assumption that Israel has a nuclear
capability.”
The MoD official, David Johnson, feared that “openly
admitting our suspicions…would do more to undermine the credibility of the
nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty than does the current ambiguity surrounding
the status of Israel’s nuclear programme.”
Johnson added: “It would also create pressure for
action against Israel which would be difficult to satisfy”.
Spoor worried similarly that “the inability of the
international community to agree on an effective response would raise a
political storm and help legitimise proliferation by other states.”
Under the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty of 1970,
countries without nuclear weapons agreed to avoid acquiring them.
Israel is one of only three countries never to have
signed the treaty,
despite its programme being an open secret.
The Stockholm International Peace Research Institute
(SIPRI) estimates Israel
now has 90 nuclear warheads and is “believed to be modernizing its nuclear
arsenal”.
‘World’s greatest proliferators’
By 1993, a colleague of Spoor’s in the Foreign
Office’s non-proliferation and defence department (NPDD) had made an even more
stark internal assessment. Peter January wrote:
“We have no hard evidence but we believe that Israel possesses nuclear
weapons”.
His boss, the NPDD’s assistant head, Simon Fraser, said the
Israelis “are, after all, probably the world’s greatest proliferators, and I
think we need to maintain a fairly crisp tone of voice with them.”
Fraser went on to run the Foreign Office from 2010-15.
A British diplomat in Tel Aviv, Andrew Pearce,
tried to strike a softer note, saying: “Israel is almost certainly a nuclear
weapons possessor, but I would hazard a guess that she would be one of the last
countries in the world to pass nuclear secrets or technology to those countries
with current nuclear ambitions (e.g. the Iranians, Iraqis etc) i.e. to
proliferate as opposed to possessing herself.”
His argument received short shrift from colleagues in
the arms control division. David Gordon-MacLeod sought to “re-emphasise at the
outset that NPDD employs the acquisitive/possessive concept of proliferation.
On this basis therefore Israel remains a proliferator.”
Ten years later, the UK would illegally invade Iraq
based on fabricated intelligence that Saddam Hussein possessed weapons of mass
destruction.
Israel, meanwhile, has become one of Britain’s closest
allies in the Middle East – despite its increasingly far-right government.
Both London and Tel Aviv regularly denounce Iran’s
alleged attempts to obtain nuclear weapons, and British ministers have unequivocally said:
“Iran must never develop a nuclear weapon”.
Israel is even suspected of assassinating the head of
Iran’s nuclear programme.
The UK government’s refusal to publicly acknowledge
Israel as a nuclear state is one of the ways Whitehall shields Tel Aviv from
international criticism.
Reacting to our findings, Alicia Sanders-Zakre, a
spokesperson for the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons,
commented: “Israel, alongside the other eight nuclear-armed states retains a
capability to commit mass atrocity – indiscriminately slaughtering hundreds of
thousands if not millions of people with weapons of mass destruction.
“Israel must take immediate steps to eliminate its
nuclear arsenal, including by joining the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear
Weapons.”
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