Israel’s Nuclear Weapons Haven’t Led to Regional Proliferation https://mosaicmagazine.com/picks/israel-zionism/2016/04/israels-nuclear-weapons-havent-led-to-regional-proliferation/

April 5, 2016 | Robert Farley
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While Jerusalem has never officially acknowledged possession of nuclear weapons, there is little doubt in anyone’s mind that it has them. Critics of Israeli “nuclear ambiguity” argue that it has encouraged other Middle Eastern states to pursue such weapons and interfered with global nonproliferation efforts. Refuting this contention, Robert Farley also defends the Jewish state’s reasons for possessing a nuclear arsenal:

[I]t is difficult to argue that any nuclear proliferant has developed its program specifically in response to Israel’s (with the possible exception of Syria), and it is hardly clear that the Israeli example made much difference to decision-makers in India, North Korea, or Pakistan. . . . Declaring a “nuclear-free zone” in the Middle East might have changed minds in Tehran about the utility of a deterrent, but more likely Iran would have continued to pursue what it saw as its national interest. . . .

[It is possible that] the Israeli nuclear program may not have made much difference at all, either to Israel’s security or to regional nonproliferation efforts. Since the development of the program, but largely unrelated to its existence, the political situation has tipped in Israel’s favor, the conventional balance has grown to favor Israel, and the threat profile presented by Israel’s opponents has moved in an unconventional direction [by embracing terrorism and rocket attacks rather than regular warfare]. . . .

This isn’t to say that Israel was wrong to embark on a nuclear program, or that it should unilaterally give up its nukes now. The political developments of the 1970s and 1980s, including the defanging of Egypt, the cauldron of the Iran-Iraq conflict, and the end of the cold war, were difficult to foresee from the vantage point of the mid-1960s. Perhaps most importantly, the ironclad relationship between Israel and the United States did not exist when the Israelis established their program. Given the decision, taken in the late 1940s, to try to make Israel the epicenter of Jewish global life, nuclear aspirations to defend that epicenter hardly seem unreasonable.

Read more on National Interest: http://nationalinterest.org/feature/what-if-israel-didnt-have-nuclear-weapons-15666