The Truth About Israel’s Secret Nuclear Arsenal

Israel has been steal­ing nuclear secrets and covert­ly mak­ing bombs since the 1950s. And west­ern gov­ern­ments, includ­ing Britain and the US, turn a blind eye. But how can we expect Iran to curb its nuclear ambi­tions if the Israelis won’t come clean?

Deep beneath desert sands, an embat­tled Middle Eastern state has built a covert nuclear bomb, using tech­nol­o­gy and mate­ri­als pro­vid­ed by friend­ly pow­ers or stolen by a clan­des­tine net­work of agents. It is the stuff of pulp thrillers and the sort of nar­ra­tive often used to char­ac­terise the worst fears about the Iranian nuclear pro­gramme. In real­i­ty, though, nei­ther US nor British intel­li­gence believe Tehran has decid­ed to build a bomb, and Iran’s atom­ic projects are under con­stant inter­na­tion­al monitoring.

The exot­ic tale of the bomb hid­den in the desert is a true sto­ry, though. It’s just one that applies to anoth­er coun­try. In an extra­or­di­nary feat of sub­terfuge, Israel man­aged to assem­ble an entire under­ground nuclear arse­nal – now esti­mat­ed at 80 war­heads, on a par with India and Pakistan – and even test­ed a bomb near­ly half a cen­tu­ry ago, with a min­i­mum of inter­na­tion­al out­cry or even much pub­lic aware­ness of what it was doing.

Despite the fact that the Israel’s nuclear pro­gramme has been an open secret since a dis­grun­tled tech­ni­cian, Mordechai Vanunu, blew the whis­tle on it in 1986, the offi­cial Israeli posi­tion is still nev­er to con­firm or deny its existence.

When the for­mer speak­er of the Knesset, Avraham Burg, broke the taboo last month, declar­ing Israeli pos­ses­sion of both nuclear and chem­i­cal weapons and describ­ing the offi­cial non-dis­clo­sure pol­i­cy as “out­dat­ed and child­ish” a rightwing group for­mal­ly called for a police inves­ti­ga­tion for trea­son.

Meanwhile, west­ern gov­ern­ments have played along with the pol­i­cy of “opac­i­ty” by avoid­ing all men­tion of the issue. In 2009, when a vet­er­an Washington reporter, Helen Thomas, asked Barack Obama in the first month of his pres­i­den­cy if he knew of any coun­try in the Middle East with nuclear weapons, he dodged the trap­door by say­ing only that he did not wish to “spec­u­late”.

UK gov­ern­ments have gen­er­al­ly fol­lowed suit. Asked in the House of Lords in November about Israeli nuclear weapons, Baroness Warsi answered tan­gen­tial­ly. “Israel has not declared a nuclear weapons pro­gramme. We have reg­u­lar dis­cus­sions with the gov­ern­ment of Israel on a range of nuclear-relat­ed issues,” the min­is­ter said. “The gov­ern­ment of Israel is in no doubt as to our views. We encour­age Israel to become a state par­ty to the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty [NPT].”

But through the cracks in this stone wall, more and more details con­tin­ue to emerge of how Israel built its nuclear weapons from smug­gled parts and pil­fered technology.

The tale serves as a his­tor­i­cal coun­ter­point to today’s drawn-out strug­gle over Iran’s nuclear ambi­tions. The par­al­lels are not exact – Israel, unlike Iran, nev­er signed up to the 1968 NPT so could not vio­late it. But it almost cer­tain­ly broke a treaty ban­ning nuclear tests, as well as count­less nation­al and inter­na­tion­al laws restrict­ing the traf­fic in nuclear mate­ri­als and technology.

The list of nations that secret­ly sold Israel the mate­r­i­al and exper­tise to make nuclear war­heads, or who turned a blind eye to its theft, include today’s staunchest cam­paign­ers against pro­lif­er­a­tion: the US, France, Germany, Britain and even Norway.

Meanwhile, Israeli agents charged with buy­ing fis­sile mate­r­i­al and state-of-the-art tech­nol­o­gy found their way into some of the most sen­si­tive indus­tri­al estab­lish­ments in the world. This dar­ing and remark­ably suc­cess­ful spy ring, known as Lakam, the Hebrew acronym for the innocu­ous-sound­ing Science Liaison Bureau, includ­ed such colour­ful fig­ures as Arnon Milchan, a bil­lion­aire Hollywood pro­duc­er behind such hits as Pretty Woman, LA Confidential and 12 Years a Slave, who final­ly admit­ted his role last month.

Do you know what it’s like to be a twen­tysome­thing-year-old kid [and] his coun­try lets him be James Bond? Wow! The action! That was excit­ing,” he said in an Israeli documentary.

Milchan’s life sto­ry is colour­ful, and unlike­ly enough to be the sub­ject of one of the block­busters he bankrolls. In the doc­u­men­tary, Robert de Niro recalls dis­cussing Milchan’s role in the illic­it pur­chase of nuclear-war­head trig­gers. “At some point I was ask­ing some­thing about that, being friends, but not in an accusato­ry way. I just want­ed to know,” De Niro says. “And he said: yeah I did that. Israel’s my country.”

Milchan was not shy about using Hollywood con­nec­tions to help his shad­owy sec­ond career. At one point, he admits in the doc­u­men­tary, he used the lure of a vis­it to actor Richard Dreyfuss’s home to get a top US nuclear sci­en­tist, Arthur Biehl, to join the board of one of his companies.

According to Milchan’s biog­ra­phy, by Israeli jour­nal­ists Meir Doron and Joseph Gelman, he was recruit­ed in 1965 by Israel’s cur­rent pres­i­dent, Shimon Peres, who he met in a Tel Aviv night­club (called Mandy’s, named after the host­ess and own­er’s wife Mandy Rice-Davies, fresh­ly noto­ri­ous for her role in the Profumo sex scan­dal). Milchan, who then ran the fam­i­ly fer­tilis­er com­pa­ny, nev­er looked back, play­ing a cen­tral role in Israel’s clan­des­tine acqui­si­tion programme.

He was respon­si­ble for secur­ing vital ura­ni­um-enrich­ment tech­nol­o­gy, pho­tograph­ing cen­trifuge blue­prints that a German exec­u­tive had been bribed into tem­porar­i­ly “mis­lay­ing” in his kitchen. The same blue­prints, belong­ing to the European ura­ni­um enrich­ment con­sor­tium, Urenco, were stolen a sec­ond time by a Pakistani employ­ee, Abdul Qadeer Khan, who used them to found his coun­try’s enrich­ment pro­gramme and to set up a glob­al nuclear smug­gling busi­ness, sell­ing the design to Libya, North Korea and Iran.

For that rea­son, Israel’s cen­trifuges are near-iden­ti­cal to Iran’s, a con­ver­gence that allowed Israeli to try out a com­put­er worm, code­named Stuxnet, on its own cen­trifuges before unleash­ing it on Iran in 2010.

Arguably, Lakam’s exploits were even more dar­ing than Khan’s. In 1968, it organ­ised the dis­ap­pear­ance of an entire freighter full of ura­ni­um ore in the mid­dle of the Mediterranean. In what became known as the Plumbat affair, the Israelis used a web of front com­pa­nies to buy a con­sign­ment of ura­ni­um oxide, known as yel­low­cake, in Antwerp. The yel­low­cake was con­cealed in drums labelled “plumbat”, a lead deriv­a­tive, and loaded onto a freighter leased by a pho­ny Liberian com­pa­ny. The sale was cam­ou­flaged as a trans­ac­tion between German and Italian com­pa­nies with help from German offi­cials, report­ed­ly in return for an Israeli offer to help the Germans with cen­trifuge technology.

When the ship, the Scheersberg A, docked in Rotterdam, the entire crew was dis­missed on the pre­text that the ves­sel had been sold and an Israeli crew took their place. The ship sailed into the Mediterranean where, under Israeli naval guard, the car­go was trans­ferred to anoth­er vessel.

US and British doc­u­ments declas­si­fied last year also revealed a pre­vi­ous­ly unknown Israeli pur­chase of about 100 tons of yel­low­cake from Argentina in 1963 or 1964, with­out the safe­guards typ­i­cal­ly used in nuclear trans­ac­tions to pre­vent the mate­r­i­al being used in weapons.

Israel had few qualms about pro­lif­er­at­ing nuclear weapons knowhow and mate­ri­als, giv­ing South Africa’s apartheid régime help in devel­op­ing its own bomb in the 1970s in return for 600 tons of yellowcake.

Pictures of the secret Dimona nuclear reactor in Israel, showing where the plant has allegedly been
Pictures of the secret Dimona nuclear reac­tor in Israel, show­ing where the plant has alleged­ly been cam­ou­flaged. Photograph: space imaging

Israel’s nuclear reac­tor also required deu­teri­um oxide, also known as heavy water, to mod­er­ate the fis­sile reac­tion. For that, Israel turned to Norway and Britain. In 1959, Israel man­aged to buy 20 tons of heavy water that Norway had sold to the UK but was sur­plus to require­ments for the British nuclear pro­gramme. Both gov­ern­ments were sus­pi­cious that the mate­r­i­al would be used to make weapons, but decid­ed to look the oth­er way. In doc­u­ments seen by the BBC in 2005 British offi­cials argued it would be “over-zeal­ous” to impose safe­guards. For its part, Norway car­ried out only one inspec­tion vis­it, in 1961.

Israel’s nuclear-weapons project could nev­er have got off the ground, though, with­out an enor­mous con­tri­bu­tion from France. The coun­try that took the tough­est line on counter-pro­lif­er­a­tion when it came to Iran helped lay the foun­da­tions of Israel’s nuclear weapons pro­gramme, dri­ven by by a sense of guilt over let­ting Israel down in the 1956 Suez con­flict, sym­pa­thy from French-Jewish sci­en­tists, intel­li­gence-shar­ing over Algeria and a dri­ve to sell French exper­tise and abroad.

There was a ten­den­cy to try to export and there was a gen­er­al feel­ing of sup­port for Israel,” Andre Finkelstein, a for­mer deputy com­mis­sion­er at France’s Atomic Energy Commissariat and deputy direc­tor gen­er­al at the International Atomic Energy Agency, told Avner Cohen, an Israeli-American nuclear historian.

France’s first reac­tor went crit­i­cal as ear­ly as 1948 but the deci­sion to build nuclear weapons seems to have been tak­en in 1954, after Pierre Mendès France made his first trip to Washington as pres­i­dent of the coun­cil of min­is­ters of the chaot­ic Fourth Republic. On the way back he told an aide: “It’s exact­ly like a meet­ing of gang­sters. Everyone is putting his gun on the table, if you have no gun you are nobody. So we must have a nuclear programme.”

Mendès France gave the order to start build­ing bombs in December 1954. And as it built its arse­nal, Paris sol­ds mate­r­i­al assis­tance to oth­er aspir­ing weapons states, not just Israel.

[T]his went on for many, many years until we did some stu­pid exports, includ­ing Iraq and the repro­cess­ing plant in Pakistan, which was crazy,” Finkelstein recalled in an inter­view that can now be read in a col­lec­tion of Cohen’s papers at the Wilson Centre think­tank in Washington. “We have been the most irre­spon­si­ble coun­try on nonproliferation.”

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.

By the end of the 50s, there were 2,500 French cit­i­zens liv­ing in Dimona, trans­form­ing it from a vil­lage to a cos­mopoli­tan town, com­plete with French lycées and streets full of Renaults, and yet the whole endeav­our was con­duct­ed under a thick veil of secre­cy. The American inves­tiga­tive jour­nal­ist Seymour Hersh wrote in his book The Samson Option: “French work­ers at Dimona were for­bid­den to write direct­ly to rel­a­tives and friends in France and else­where, but sent mail to a pho­ny post-office box in Latin America.”

The British were kept out of the loop, being told at dif­fer­ent times that the huge con­struc­tion site was a desert grass­lands research insti­tute and a man­ganese pro­cess­ing plant. The Americans, also kept in the dark by both Israel and France, flew U2 spy planes over Dimona in an attempt to find out what they were up to.

The Israelis admit­ted to hav­ing a reac­tor but insist­ed it was for entire­ly peace­ful pur­pos­es. The spent fuel was sent to France for repro­cess­ing, they claimed, even pro­vid­ing film footage of it being sup­pos­ed­ly being loaded onto French freighters. Throughout the 60s it flat­ly denied the exis­tence of the under­ground repro­cess­ing plant in Dimona that was churn­ing out plu­to­ni­um for bombs.

Producer Arnon Milchan with Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie at the premiere of Mr and Mrs Smith.
Producer Arnon Milchan with Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie at the pre­mière of Mr and Mrs Smith. Photograph: L Cohen

Israel refused to coun­te­nance vis­its by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), so in the ear­ly 1960s President Kennedy demand­ed they accept American inspec­tors. US physi­cists were dis­patched to Dimona but were giv­en the run-around from the start. Visits were nev­er twice-year­ly as had been agreed with Kennedy and were sub­ject to repeat­ed post­pone­ments. The US physi­cists sent to Dimona were not allowed to bring their own equip­ment or col­lect sam­ples. The lead American inspec­tor, Floyd Culler, an expert on plu­to­ni­um extrac­tion, not­ed in his reports that there were new­ly plas­tered and paint­ed walls in one of the build­ings. It turned out that before each American vis­it, the Israelis had built false walls around the row of lifts that descend­ed six lev­els to the sub­ter­ranean repro­cess­ing plant.

As more and more evi­dence of Israel’s weapons pro­gramme emerged, the US role pro­gressed from unwit­ting dupe to reluc­tant accom­plice. In 1968 the CIA direc­tor Richard Helms told President Johnson that Israel had indeed man­aged to build nuclear weapons and that its air force had con­duct­ed sor­ties to prac­tise drop­ping them.

The tim­ing could not have been worse. The NPT, intend­ed to pre­vent too many nuclear genies from escap­ing from their bot­tles, had just been drawn up and if news broke that one of the sup­pos­ed­ly non-nuclear-weapons states had secret­ly made its own bomb, it would have become a dead let­ter that many coun­tries, espe­cial­ly Arab states, would.
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