Quite
apart from the Americans' won use of chemical weapons.
Israel
stockpiled chemical weapons decades ago – CIA document
Israel
is believed to have secretly built up its own stockpile of chemical
and biological weapons decades ago, reports Foreign Policy, citing a
recently unearthed CIA document.
11
September, 2013
American
surveillance satellites uncovered in 1982 “a probable CW
[chemical weapon] nerve agent production facility and a storage
facility... at the Dimona Sensitive Storage Area in the Negev
Desert,” states the secret
1983 CIA intelligence estimate obtained by Foreign
Policy (FP).
“Other CW production is believed to exist within a
well-developed Israeli chemical industry,”
the document adds.
According
to FP, US intelligence agencies are almost certain that Israel
possesses a stockpile of nuclear weapons that the Middle Eastern
country developed in the 1960s and 1970s as part of its defense
against a possible attack from Arab neighbors.
The
FP report is based on a page from a secret, Sept. 15, 1983, CIA
Special National Intelligence Estimate entitled “Implications of
Soviet Use of Chemical and Toxin Weapons for US Security Interests.”
Part of the document was released in 2009 in the National Archives,
but the piece on Israel was extracted from that version.
For
years, arms control analysts have speculated that Israel built up a
range of chemical and biological weapons to complement its alleged
nuclear arsenal.
Experts’
attention, in particular, was focused on the Israel Institute for
Biological Research (IIBR) at Ness Ziona, located 20 kilometers south
of Tel Aviv. The highly-classified research center operated and
funded by the Israel Ministry of Defense is alleged to be a military
facility manufacturing chemical and biological weapons. The
IIBR was allegedly involved in several “accidents.” In one of
them, according to the British Foreign Report in 1998, authorities
were close to ordering evacuation of homes in the area before
scientists discovered there was no threat to the population.
However,
to date not much evidence has been published about Israel possessing
chemical or nuclear weapons. The newly-discovered CIA memo may be the
strongest indication yet, FP writes.
“While
we cannot confirm whether the Israelis possess lethal chemical
agents,”
the CIA document is quoted as saying, “several
indicators lead us to believe that they have available to them at
least persistent and non-persistent nerve agents, a mustard agent,
and several riot-control agents, marched with suitable delivery
systems.”
The
“non-persistent agent”
mentioned in the secret document was likely sarin – a nerve gas
that was allegedly used in the August 21 chemical weapons attack in a
Damascus suburb, FP writes. The US blamed the Syrian government for
the attack and threatened to launch a military strike in response.
The
1983 CIA memo reveals that US intelligence was aware of Israeli
alleged chemical weapons-testing activities since the early 1970s –
when they learned from intelligence sources about the existence of
chemical weapons testing grounds. It is almost certain that these
test areas were located in Negev Desert, in southern Israel, FP
writes.
Israel
stepped up its research and development work on chemical weapons
following the end of the 1973 Arab-Israeli War, according to the CIA
document. The war began when Egypt and Syria launched a joint
surprise attack against Israel as the nation was celebrating Yom
Kippur – the most sacred day in the Jewish calendar.
“Israel,
finding itself surrounded by frontline Arab states with budding CW
capabilities, became increasingly conscious of its vulnerability to
chemical attack,”
the document says. “Its
sensitivities were galvanized by the capture of large quantities of
Soviet CW-related equipment during both the 1967 Arab-Israeli and the
1973 Yom Kippur wars. As a result, Israel undertook a program of
chemical warfare preparations in both offensive and protective
areas.”
The
report also claims that in January 1976, American intelligence
detected “possible tests” of Israeli chemical weapons very likely
to have taken place in the Negev Desert. FP cites a former US Air
Force intelligence officer, who told the magazine that the National
Security Agency intercepted communications indicating that Israeli
air force fighter-bombers carried out a simulated low-level chemical
weapons delivery missions at a bombing range in the Negev.
It
is unknown whether Israel still keeps its alleged stockpile of
chemical weapons. In 1992, the Israeli government signed the Chemical
Weapons Convention, which outlaws such arms. Crucially, however,
Israel has not ratified the agreement.
The
author of the FP article claims that after a search on Google Maps,
he found what he believes to be “the
location of the Israeli nerve agent production facility and its
associated chemical weapons storage area”
in the Negev Desert east of the village of al-Kilab, about 10 miles
west of the city of Dimona.
The
Israeli embassy in Washington did not respond to FP’s requests to
comment on the article.
The
CIA document emerged as the US mulls over a possible “limited”
military strike against the Syrian regime that President Barack Obama
was pushing for following the chemical weapons attack last month.
On
Tuesday, Obama the urged the US Congress to postpone
a vote to authorize military action, and said he was seeking a
diplomatic solution to the ongoing Syrian war. Obama cited the
Russian
proposal
to put Syria’s chemical weapons under international control among
the reasons for the delay. Damascus has this week agreed to hand over
its chemical weapons to international supervisors, and to sign
the Chemical Weapons Convention
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