Australia still denies Israel's open secret of a nuclear arsenal
Article in Sydney Morning Herald April 15, 2014:
Phillip Dorling
·
EXCLUSIVE
Israel's nuclear program: did Australia know?
Previously secret
diplomatic files declassified by the National Archives reveal a longstanding
policy to turn a blind eye to Israel's nuclear arsenal. Last week the Department of Foreign Affairs
and Trade again declined to comment on whether the Australian government thinks
Israel is an undeclared nuclear weapons state.
Foreign Affairs
Department briefing papers prepared for former Labor foreign minister Bill
Hayden in 1987 state that ''intelligence assessments are that Israel has a
small arsenal of nuclear weapons (possibly about 20). Israel's technological capabilities would enable it confidently to
deploy such weapons without recourse to a nuclear test.''
Former Foreign Minister Gareth Evans
has publicly described Israel as one of 'nine nuclear-armed states' committed to the
'indefinite retention' of their arsenals. Photo: Peter Rae
In a confidential
exchange with International Atomic Energy Agency chief Hans Blix on September 22, 1987, Mr Hayden ''commented that there appeared no doubt that Israel had nuclear weapons''.
Mr Hayden and Dr
Blix were talking against the backdrop of the treason trial of Mordechai
Vanunu, the Israeli nuclear technician who in 1986 disclosed detailed evidence
of Israel's nuclear weapons production. The Foreign Affairs Department
advised Mr Hayden to publicly deny knowledge of Israel's nuclear weapons capabilities. Mr Hayden told Parliament on September 17, 1987: ''We have no information to corroborate these allegations.''
However, Foreign
Affairs' files, declassified in response to applications by Fairfax Media,
reveal that Australia had been monitoring Israel's nuclear program from its beginnings in the 1950s.
Australia scooped US and British intelligence when in 1966 its Atomic
Energy Commission obtained ''highly sensitive'' information from the French
builders of Israel's Dimona nuclear facility, revealing the existence of a chemical
processing plant to extract plutonium from spent reactor fuel.
By 1970 Australia's Joint Intelligence Organisation thought ''Israel could have some weapons''.
Australian policy
remains unchanged, with the Abbott government deciding last October not to
support a UN General Assembly resolution on nuclear proliferation in the Middle East - 169 countries
voted for the resolution. Only five - the US, Israel, Canada, Palau and the Federated States of Micronesia - voted against. Australia abstained.
Former foreign
minister Professor Gareth Evans has long been closely engaged with nuclear
disarmament issues. Last month he publicly described Israel as one of ''nine nuclear-armed states'' committed to the
''indefinite retention'' of their arsenals.
On Monday Professor
Evans declined to explain why Australia had not acknowledged the existence of an Israeli nuclear weapons
program, saying only: ''The whole world hasn't acknowledged it. I mean, this is
the strange thing, but that's another story for another day.''
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