By not declaring itself to be nuclear armed, Israel
also skirts a U.S. ban on funding countries that
proliferate weapons of mass destruction. It can thus
enjoy more than $2 billion in aid.

So has any of your local congresspersons called on the
US to stop its aid since Israel proliferated WMD?

Cheers, Ken Hanly








Israelis piqued by Gates nuclear "confirmation" By Dan
Williams
Thu Dec 7, 2:28 PM ET



Robert Gates, the incoming U.S. secretary of defense,
won plaudits in Washington this week for his candor on
the Iraq war.

Some Israelis were less pleased, however, to hear
Gates mention with equal frankness what U.S.
administrations have long avoided uttering in public
-- that the Jewish state has the Middle East's only
nuclear arsenal.

To be fair, it was pretty oblique.

During his Senate confirmation hearing on Tuesday,
Gates speculated on why Iran might be seeking the
means to build an atomic bomb. "They are surrounded by
powers with nuclear weapons: Pakistan to their east,
the Russians to the north, the Israelis to the west
and us in the Persian Gulf," he said.

The statement led Israeli news bulletins, with some
pundits suggesting that former CIA chief Gates may
have breached a U.S. "don't ask, don't tell" policy
dating back to the late 1960s.

"I haven't a clue why Gates made those remarks,"
Binyamin Ben-Eliezer, a member of Israel's security
cabinet, said in a radio interview.

A retired Israeli diplomat, speaking to Reuters on
condition of anonymity, called the testimony "quite
unprecedented" and added: "I can only assume he
(Gates) has yet to get to grips with the
understandings that exist between us and the
Americans."

According to recently declassified documents cited by
the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists magazine, under
President Richard Nixon the United States knew Israel
had developed nuclear weapons but opted against
insisting that its ally come clean on the capability
and accept international regulation.

Israel neither confirms nor denies having the bomb, as
part of a "strategic ambiguity" policy that it says
fends off numerically superior enemies while avoiding
an arms race.

annual military and other aid from Washington.By not
declaring itself to be nuclear armed, Israel also
skirts a U.S. ban on funding countries that
proliferate weapons of mass destruction. It can thus
enjoy more than $2 billion in aid.
DOUBLE-STANDARD SEEN

This sanctioned reticence is a major irritant for
Arabs and Iran, which see a double-standard in U.S.
policy in the region.

Former U.S. Secretary of State Donald Rumsfeld was
careful not to discuss the Israeli nuclear option
explicitly. Pressed on it during a 2004 briefing, he
said only that Israel had "arranged itself so it
hasn't been put in the sea" by its foes.

Though Gates replaces Rumsfeld as part of a move by
President Bush to revitalize prospects for Iraq and a
wider peace in the Middle East, no one has yet gone as
far as to propose openly that Washington review
Israel's open secret.

"I am not aware of any change in U.S. policy on
discussing Israel and its nuclear capability," said
Stewart Tuttle, spokesman for the U.S. embassy in Tel
Aviv.

Shimon Peres, who helped found Israel's main atomic
reactor in the 1950s -- officially for civilian use --
and is now deputy to Prime Minister Ehud Olmert,
sounded similarly unperturbed.

"This announcement makes no fundamental difference,"
he told Israel Radio.

"Whether or not Israel has nuclear weapons, the fact
is that Israel is the only country threatened with
destruction ... Israel is not threatening any country.
Weapons do not fire themselves, people fire them."

He was apparently referring to arch-foe Iran, whose
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has called for the
elimination of the "Zionist regime" but denied his
country seeks nuclear arms.



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