June 1995, Pages 12, 91
Israeli Nuclear Stockpile Undercuts U.S. Credibility
at NPT Conference
By Frank Collins
The United States applied heavy pressure on Egypt, Mexico, Indonesia
and many other countries to support the permanent and unconditional
extension of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) at the month-long
conference that opened April 17 in New York. However, before and
during the proceedings President Bill Clinton did not put the slightest
pressure on Israel to sign the NPT, saying privately that the United
States "understands" the Israeli position.
In fact the U.S. government has refused to acknowledge that Israel
has developed nuclear weapons at all, although specialists say Israel
has a stockpile of between 200 and 300 weapons, which would place
it in the class of China and Britain. It is this obfuscation that
undercut U.S. credibility from the beginning of the conference,
and imperiled a cornerstone of U.S. nuclear policy based upon renewal
of the NPT.
The deadly nuclear arms race has been slowed by the NPT, which
became effective in 1970. Many observers believe that, in the absence
of this treaty, the number of countries which have declared that
they possess nuclear weapons would have risen from the present five
to as many as 30. Because of the misgivings of a number of the parties
when the treaty was drafted, the life of the treaty was set at 25
years. Its renewal depended upon the negotiations that began this
year.
The 1970 NPT was written as a compromise between the five declared
nuclear powersthe United States, the U.S.S.R. (now supplanted
by Russia), China, Britain and Franceand the non-nuclear countries,
which were assumed at the time to constitute the rest of the world.
The chief inducement to the non-nuclear countries to sign was the
pledge by the five nuclear powers that they would abolish their
nuclear weapons and become non-nuclear like the rest of the signatories.
Signatory countries were assured that the treaty would obligate
their non-nuclear neighbors to forgo acquiring nuclear weapons for
as long as the NPT was in effect.
Since that time, Israel, India and Pakistan are believed either
to have developed or continued to develop nuclear weapons or components
that could rapidly be assembled into such weapons. Thus the expected
benefit of the NPT to non-nuclear countries has plummeted.
In the case of the Indian, Pakistani and Chinese triangle, a system
of mutual deterrence has come into being, resembling the U.S.-U.S.S.R.
stand-off in the Cold War. However, there being no other possessor
of nuclear weapons in the Middle East, Israel can directly threaten
all of its neighbors under its policy of unilateral deterrence without
the possibility of nuclear retaliation. The United States could
put an end to this unstable situation by acknowledging the existence
of Israel's nuclear arsenal. Since the Symington amendment to the
Foreign Assistance Act requires cutting military assistance to any
country developing nuclear weapons in defiance of the NPT, Israel
would have to sign the agreement or lose a third of its present
U.S. aid.
The Principal Bone of Contention
The principal bone of contention at the New York meeting on the
extension of the NPT is that the five nuclear powers have done little
or nothing to move toward nuclear disarmament. Under the conditions
of the Cold War, the stocks of nuclear weapons of the United States
and the Soviet Union grew as rapidly as they could be produced.
The remaining declared nuclear powers produced these weapons more
slowly. Of the undeclared nuclear countries, Israel evidently has
produced nuclear weapons at the probable maximum rate set by its
capacity, while India and Pakistan are acknowledged to be capable
of each quickly assembling much smaller numbers from materials on
hand.
Current estimates of nuclear weapons stockpiles, according to the
Washington Post of April 9, 1995, are:
Given the huge disparity between the U.S. and Russian stockpiles
and those of the other six countries, the agreed-upon demolition
of thousands of surplus American and Russian nuclear weapons, without
concrete steps toward total nuclear disarmament, is viewed by many
of the non-nuclear countries as simply a reduction to more practical
levels of weaponry, rather than real disarmament. With respect to
all of these figures, it is well to remember the damage to Hiroshima
and Nagasaki produced by two relatively unsophisticated atomic bombs.
Israel can directly threaten all of its neighbors
without the possibility of nuclear retaliation.
In addition to the above nuclear countries, several other countries
are believed to have taken initial steps to produce nuclear weapons,
or be actively planning to do so. Among them are Iraq, North Korea,
Iran, Syria and Libya. All of these countries are signatories of
the NPT and so are subject to inspection of their facilities devoted
to the peaceful uses of the atom by the International Atomic Energy
Agency (IAEA).
Iraq, whose Osirak reactor was bombed by Israel in June 1981, was
found still to be pursuing the nuclear weapons option after the
Gulf war to the consternation of the IAEA, which had been inspecting
the Iraqi nuclear facilities over the years. While IAEA inspection
procedures are being strengthened, there remains controversy as
to whether the improved procedures will be 100 percent effective
in the case of other countries. Both North Korea and Iran are involved
in presently unresolved and well- publicized questions with respect
to the purposes of their nuclear power plants.
In all cases, nuclear power plants and other peaceful uses of radioactivity
are permitted under Article IV of the NPT, which reads:
1. Nothing in this Treaty shall be interpreted as affecting
the inalienable right of all parties to develop research, production
and use of nuclear energy for peaceful purposes without discrimination
and in conformity with Articles I and II of this Treaty.
2. All the Parties to the Treaty undertake to facilitate in
the fullest possible exchange of equipment, materials and scientific
and technological information for the peaceful uses of nuclear energy.
According to Article IV, the furnishing of a light-water reactor
and technical know-how by Russia to Iran, opposed by the United
States, seems to be fully permitted.
The proposal of the nuclear weapons powers at the conference that
the NPT be unconditionally and permanently renewed is viewed by
many of the non-nuclear countries as no less than an attempt to
freeze the status quo for all time, especially in the absence of
an explicit plan and a timetable to abolish all nuclear weapons.
Article VI of the NPT reads:
Each of the Parties to the Treaty undertakes to pursue negotiations
in good faith on effective measures relating to cessation of the
nuclear arms race at an early date and to nuclear disarmament, and
on a treaty on general and complete disarmament under strict and
effective international control.
The non-nuclear signatories of the NPT complain that none of the
Big Five, except very provisionally China, have made statements
or have presented any concrete evidence that they have programs
that would take the final step in the foreseeable future of going
beyond nuclear deterrence to total nuclear disarmament.
As far as the United States is concerned, the opposite of disarmament
is taking place. Announced U.S. security doctrine holds that the
nation must continue to retain nuclear weapons into the indefinite
future. Although the supply of radioactive tritium from dismantled
warheads will not be exhausted until 2011, the U.S. Energy Department
is now debating the type of process to be used for the production
of this material for the continuing production of hydrogen bombs
for as many as 40 years beyond the above date. Total nuclear disarmament,
besides abolishing the danger of nuclear war, would also eliminate
the preferred status and special prerogatives of the five nuclear
powers under the NPT.
A number of the non-nuclear countries present at the New York negotiations
insisted that the permanent extension of the treaty would extinguish
for all time the possibility of their putting leverage on the nuclear-weapons
five to comply with Article VI. These non-nuclear countries demanded
instead that the extension be for some single stated period or else
for a series of such periods. This would be authorized under Article
Xb of the NPT, which states:
[Within] 25 years of the entry into force of the Treaty, a conference
shall be convened to decide whether the Treaty shall remain in force
indefinitely, or shall be extended for an additional fixed period
or periods. This decision shall be taken by a majority of the Parties
to the Treaty.
The United States is the chief supporter of unconditional and permanent
extension of the NPT. Ambassador Thomas Graham, Jr., President Clinton's
special representative to the NPT talks, has visited over 40 countries
whose stand on the permanent extension is less than clear, pressuring
them to vote for permanent extension.
The U.S. argument has been that the slightest doubt about some
future extension of the NPT could cause present non-signatories
to continue to abstain from the treaty and might also cause present
signatories to drop out of the NPT.
On the other hand, U.S. insistence on the permanent extension of
the NPT opened a deep schism in the New York negotiations, increasing
the number of NPT signatories unwilling to vote for an extension.
During the conference, Ambassador Graham told journalists that more
than 100 signatories out of the previous 178 would sign a permanent
extension. Others doubted that even a simple majority would emerge
for extension.
A Tenuous Majority
Surely a more flexible position of the United States and the other
four nuclear powers about the extension of the NPT would have insured
a consensus instead of a tenuous majority at best.
As the only remaining superpower, the United States evidently
regarded the NPT as an instrument to promote exclusively American
foreign policy objectives instead of designing an approach whereby
the NPT would unite nations of many differing outlooks in the all-important
endeavor to reduce the danger of nuclear war.
It is at this point that the ambiguous position of the United States
with respect to the large Israeli nuclear stockpile becomes moot.
Two serious questions arose in connection with U.S. insistence
on extending the NPT indefinitely: (1) Has the U.S. appointed Israel
to be its agent of nuclear deterrence in the Middle East for all
time? (2) Has the pro-Israel lobby in the United States sufficient
power to prevent the U.S. from ever raising the question of Israel's
nuclear weapons?
These questions alarm all Middle East countries. Besides the notable
case of Iran, history records many instances of American friends
changing into foes in the Middle East, in part because of U.S. double
standards for Israel and its neighbors. The disquiet among Middle
East states about Israel's nuclear weapons role is well illustrated
by Egypt, a U.S. ally receiving an annual grant of $2.1 billion
from the United States. Despite this, Egypt threatened that it would
vote against the permanent extension of the NPT unless Israel became
a signatory, or else indicated some time frame in which it would
sign. This triggered not only very heavy pressure on Egypt from
the Clinton administration, but also Israel's face-saving announcement
that it would sign the NPT after general peace is established in
the Middle East.
As for the long-term influence of the pro-Israel lobby over U.S.
non-proliferation policy, an indication of the strength and depth
of this influence is the silence of the mainstream U.S. media regarding
the Israeli nuclear stockpile and Israeli refusal to sign the NPT.
To take one example: while the Washington Post has finally
admitted the existence of Israel's nuclear arms, its recent six-article
series on the renewal of the NPT, which totalled more than 7,500
words, devoted less than three dozen words to Israel and none to
the reasons behind the reluctance of Egypt to vote for the permanent
extension.
The case of the Washington Post is far from unique. In the
outpouring of material in English about the renewal of the NPT,
there was virtually no discussion about the conundrum for U.S. policy
makers posed by Israel's ongoing program of nuclear weapons storage
and development.
Frank Collins writes frequently on Middle East issues. |