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Israeli and
American officials have admitted collaborating to deploy US-supplied
Harpoon cruise missiles armed with nuclear warheads in Israel's fleet of
Dolphin-class submarines, giving the Middle East's only nuclear power
the ability to strike at any of its Arab neighbours.
The unprecedented
disclosure came as Israel announced that states 'harbouring terrorists'
are legitimate targets, responding to Syria's declaration of its right
to self-defence should Israel bomb its territory again.
According to
Israeli and Bush administration officials interviewed by the Los Angeles
Times, the sea-launch capability gives Israel the ability to target Iran
more easily should the Iranians develop their own nuclear weapons.
Although it has
been long suspected that Israel bought three German diesel-electric
submarines with the specific aim of arming them with nuclear cruise
missiles, the admission that the two countries had collaborated in
arming the fleet with a nuclear-capable weapons system is significant at
a time of growing crisis between Israel and its neighbours.
According to the
paper, the disclosure by two US officials is designed to discourage
Israel's enemies from against launching an attack amid rapidly
escalating tensions in the region following a raid by Israeli jets on an
alleged terrorist training camp near the Syrian capital, Damascus.
In a clear echo of
the Bush doctrine of pre-emption, the Foreign Ministry's senior
spokesman, Gideon Meir, insisted: 'Israel views every state that is
harbouring terrorist organisations and the leaders of those terrorist
organisations who are attacking innocent citizens of the state of Israel
as legitimate targets out of self defence.'
The disclosure, is
certain to complicate UN-led efforts to persuade Iran to make a full
disclosure of its nuclear programme. It will also complicate the Bush
administration's efforts to reach out to moderate Arab states when they
are pressing for an equal disclosure of Israel's nuclear weapons
programme.
Although Israel
has long been known to possess nuclear weapons, in the past it has
abided by a deal struck with President Richard Nixon in 1969 that it
would maintain 'ambiguity' about its retention of weapons in exchange
for the US turning a blind eye. According to reliable estimates, Israel
has around 200 nuclear warheads.
It acquired the
three Dolphin class submarines, which can remain at sea for a month, in
the late Nineties. They are equipped with six torpedo tubes suitable for
the 21-inch torpedoes that are normally used on most submarines.
It had been
understood they would carry a version of the 'Popeye Turbo' cruise
missiles being developed by Rafael Armament Development Authority of
Israel.
Israel's seaborne
nuclear doctrine is designed to place one submarine in the Persian Gulf,
the other in the Mediterranean, with a third on standby. Secret test
launches of the cruise missile systems were understood to have been
undertaken in May 2000 when Israel carried out tests in the Indian
Ocean.
'We tolerate
nuclear weapons in Israel for the same reason we tolerate them in
Britain and France,' one of the LA Times' sources told the paper. 'We
don't regard Israel as a threat.'
Despite the
anonymity of the source, the sentiment is almost identical to that of
the US Under Secretary of State for Arms Control, John Bolton, who told
British journalists last week that America was not interested in taking
Israel to task for its continuing development of nuclear weapons because
it was not a 'threat' to the United States.
Even if Bolton was
not one of the sources for the story, his comments, coming on top of
that of the two other sources, suggest the degree to which senior
members of the Bush administration can now not even be bothered to hide
America's assistance and encouragement for Israel's nuclear programme.
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