The true story is both ironic and historically murky. Here’s a fact checked breakdown with key points on how Israel obtained nuclear weapons.
The U.S. did not want Israel to go nuclear:
Israel lied and stalled:
The theft of uranium (NUMEC incident):
U.S. leadership looked the other way:
It was indeed covered up for decades:
The U.S. didn’t want Israel to go nuclear, but through a mix of espionage, deception, and realpolitik, Israel did it anyway using stolen U.S. material and Washington chose to look the other way. That’s the quiet irony.
- The sitting president at the time, John F. Kennedy, was firmly opposed to Israel developing nuclear weapons. He pressured Israeli leadership repeatedly, demanding inspections of the Dimona nuclear facility and guarantees that it was for peaceful purposes only.
- Israel played a game of deception, famously using the term “textile plant” as a cover for Dimona. They allowed only superficial inspections and deliberately hid key parts of their program from American inspectors.
In the 1960s, hundreds of pounds of enriched uranium went missing from the NUMEC facility in Pennsylvania. Later investigations strongly suggested that it was diverted to Israel with the help of Zalman Shapiro, the plant’s founder, who had ties to Israeli intelligence. Declassified documents now heavily support that this was part of a covert Israeli operation to secure fissile material.
- After Kennedy’s assassination, Lyndon B. Johnson took a less confrontational stance. There’s strong evidence the U.S. intelligence community knew what was happening, but political leadership made the decision to avoid a direct confrontation. By the time Richard Nixon came in, there was an unofficial understanding: Israel would maintain “nuclear ambiguity” don’t test, don’t talk, and the U.S. won’t push.
- The whole affair both the uranium theft and the Dimona deception was buried to avoid political fallout and to preserve the U.S.-Israel alliance. Only recently have heavily redacted and declassified documents started confirming what many analysts long suspected: Israel committed state-level nuclear espionage against the U.S. and got away with it.
The U.S. didn’t want Israel to go nuclear, but through a mix of espionage, deception, and realpolitik, Israel did it anyway using stolen U.S. material and Washington chose to look the other way. That’s the quiet irony.
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