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is one program on which the Israelis have
persistently deceived us and may even have
stolen from us.
 Published: November 28, 2007Nixon Papers
Recall Concerns on Israel's Weapons By David Stout WASHINGTON, Nov. 28 -- In July
1969, while the world was spellbound by the Apollo
11 mission to the moon, President Richard M.
Nixon and his close advisers were quietly
fretting about a possible nuclear arms race in the
Middle East. Their main worry was not a potential
enemy of the United States, but one of America's
closest friends. "The
Israelis, who are one of the few peoples whose
survival is genuinely threatened, are probably more
likely than almost any other country to actually
use their nuclear weapons," Henry A.
Kissinger, right, the national security
adviser, warned President Nixon in a memorandum
dated July 19, 1969.
Israel's nuclear arms program was believed to
have begun at least several years before, but it
was causing special fallout for the young Nixon
administration. For one thing, President Nixon was
getting ready for a visit by Prime Minister
Golda Meir of Israel, who was also in her
first year in office and whose toughness was
already legendary. Should Washington insist that Israel rein in its
development of nuclear weapons? What would the
United States do if Israel refused? Perhaps the
solution lay in deliberate ambiguity, or
simply pretending that
America did not know what Israel was up to.
These were some of the options that Mr. Kissinger
laid out for President Nixon on that day before men
first walked on the moon. The Nixon White House's concerns over Israel's
weapons were recalled in documents held by the
Nixon Presidential Library that were released today
by the National Archives. They provide insights
into America's close, but by no means problem-free,
relationship with Israel. They also serve as a
reminder that concerns over nuclear arms
proliferation in the Middle East, currently focused
on Iran, are decades-old. The
papers also allude to a campaign by friends of
W.
Mark Felt, left, who was then the
second-ranking F.B.I. official, to have him
succeed J. Edgar Hoover as director of the
bureau in 1972. President Nixon, of course, did not
take the advice, choosing L. Patrick Gray
instead, and Mr. Felt later became the famous
anonymous source "Deep Throat," whose
Watergate-scandal revelations helped to topple the
president.
There are also snippets about Washington's
desire to manipulate relations with Saudi Arabia,
so that the Saudis might help to broker a peace in
the Mideast; discussion of possibly supporting a
Kurdish uprising in Iraq; and a 1970 incident in
which four Israeli fighters shot down four Russian
Mig-21's over eastern Egypt, even though the
Israelis were outnumbered two-to-one in the
battle. But perhaps the most interesting material
released today, and the most pertinent given the
just-completed Mideast peace conference in
Annapolis, concerns Israel and its relations with
its neighbors, as well as with the United
States. "There is
circumstantial evidence that some fissionable
material available for Israel's weapons
development was illegally obtained from the
United States about 1965," Mr. Kissinger noted
in his long memorandum. One problem with trying to persuade Israel to
freeze its nuclear program is that inspections
would be useless, Mr. Kissinger said, conceding
that "we could never cover all conceivable Israeli
hiding places." "This is one program on which the Israelis have
persistently deceived us," Mr. Kissinger said, "and
may even have stolen from us." Israel has never officially acknowledged that it
has nuclear weapons, but scientists and arms
experts have almost no doubt that it does. The
United States's reluctance to press Israel to
disarm has made America vulnerable to accusations
that it is a preacher with a double standard when
it comes to stopping the spread of weapons of mass
destruction in the Middle East. Mr. Kissinger's memo, written barely two years
after the Six-Day War and while memories of the
Holocaust were still vivid among the first
Israelis, implicitly acknowledged Israel's right to
defend itself, as subsequent American
administrations have done. After President Nixon met Prime Minister Meir at
the White House in late September 1969, he said:
"The problems in the Mideast go back centuries.
They are not susceptible to easy solution. We do
not expect them to be susceptible to instant
diplomacy." Copyright
2007 The New York Times Company .
George
Koval, an American 'regular guy' was a Russian
top spy in Manhattan Project. He was a top
Soviet spy, code named Delmar, trained by
Stalin's ruthless bureau of military
intelligence
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