NAVAL POSTGRADUATE SCHOOL
MONTEREY, CALIFORNIA
THESIS
ISRAEL’S ATTACK ON OSIRAQ: A MODEL FOR FUTURE PREVENTIVE STRIKES? by Peter Scott Ford September 2004
Thesis Advisor: Second Reader:
Peter R. Lavoy James J. Wirtz
Approved for public release; distribution is unlimited
THIS PAGE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK
REPORT DOCUMENTATION PAGE
Form Approved OMB No. 0704-0188
Public reporting burden for this collection of information is estimated to average 1 hour per response, including the time for reviewing instruction, searching existing data sources, gathering and maintaining the data needed, and completing and reviewing the collection of information. Send comments regarding this burden estimate or any other aspect of this collection of information, including suggestions for reducing this burden, to Washington headquarters Services, Directorate for Information Operations and Reports, 1215 Jefferson Davis Highway, Suite 1204, Arlington, VA 22202-4302, and to the Office of Management and Budget, Paperwork Reduction Project (0704-0188) Washington DC 20503.
2. REPORT DATE 3. REPORT TYPE AND DATES COVERED September 2004 Master’s Thesis 4. TITLE AND SUBTITLE: Israel’s Attack on Osiraq: A Model for Future 5. FUNDING NUMBERS Preventive Strikes? 6. AUTHOR Peter S. Ford 7. PERFORMING ORGANIZATION NAME(S) AND ADDRESS(ES) 8. PERFORMING Naval Postgraduate School ORGANIZATION REPORT Monterey, CA 93943-5000 NUMBER 9. SPONSORING /MONITORING AGENCY NAME(S) AND ADDRESS(ES) 10. SPONSORING/MONITORING N/A AGENCY REPORT NUMBER 11. SUPPLEMENTARY NOTES The views expressed in this thesis are those of the author and do not reflect the official policy or position of the Department of Defense or the U.S. Government. 12a. DISTRIBUTION / AVAILABILITY STATEMENT 12b. DISTRIBUTION CODE Approved for public release; distribution is unlimited 13. ABSTRACT (maximum 200 words) 1. AGENCY USE ONLY (Leave blank)
The Essay on Political Leaders Information Public People
Political leaders and Governments always tend to increase their power as is seen throughout the history. So in my opinion it may be necessary in some situations for political leaders to withhold information from the public. A very important factor is the judgement that which situation requires such withhold of information. It is never desirable that the information is witholded by the political ...
Twenty-three years ago, Israeli fighter pilots destroyed the Osiraq nuclear reactor and made a profound statement about global nuclear proliferation. In light of the recent preventive regime change in Iraq, a review of this strike reveals timely lessons for future counterproliferation actions. Using old, new, and primary source evidence, this thesis examines Osiraq for lessons from a preventive attack on a non-conventional target. Before attacking Osiraq, Israeli policymakers attempted diplomatic coercion to delay Iraq’s nuclear development. Concurrent with diplomatic actions, Israeli planners developed a state of the art military plan to destroy Osiraq. Finally, Israeli leaders weathered the international storm after the strike. The thesis examines Israeli decisionmaking for each of these phases. The thesis draws two conclusions. First, preventive strikes are valuable primarily for two purposes: buying time and gaining international attention. Second, the strike provided a one-time benefit for Israel. Subsequent strikes will be less effective due to dispersed/hardened nuclear targets and limited intelligence.
. 14. SUBJECT TERMS Osiraq, Israel, Begin Doctrine, Iraq, Counterproliferation, Proliferation, Preventive Strike, Middle East WMD, WMD, and Middle East conflict 17. SECURITY CLASSIFICATION OF REPORT Unclassified
NSN 7540-01-280-5500
15. NUMBER OF PAGES 79 16. PRICE CODE
18. SECURITY CLASSIFICATION OF THIS PAGE Unclassified
19. SECURITY 20. LIMITATION CLASSIFICATION OF OF ABSTRACT ABSTRACT Unclassified UL Standard Form 298 (Rev. 2-89)
Prescribed by ANSI Std. 239-18
i
THIS PAGE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK
ii
Approved for public release; distribution is unlimited
ISRAEL’S ATTACK ON OSIRAQ: A MODEL FOR FUTURE PREVENTIVE STRIKES? Peter S. Ford Major, United States Air Force B.S., United States Air Force Academy, 1990
The Term Paper on Nuclear Nonproliferation part 1
Nuclear Nonproliferation In this paper, I will discover the views of different world countries on the inevitability of nuclear proliferation. I will address what will become of the rising proliferation of nuclear technology. I believe that allowing nuclear weapons to spread will only endanger the world in the long run and that unless we act now, we will not be able to see another two thousand ...
Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of
MASTER OF ARTS IN SECURITY STUDIES (DEFENSE DECISION-MAKING AND PLANNING)
from the
NAVAL POSTGRADUATE SCHOOL September 2004
Author:
Peter S. Ford
Approved by:
Peter R. Lavoy Thesis Advisor
James J. Wirtz Second Reader
James J. Wirtz Chairman, Department of National Security Affairs
iii
THIS PAGE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK
iv
ABSTRACT
Twenty-three years ago, Israeli fighter pilots destroyed the Osiraq nuclear reactor and made a profound statement about global nuclear proliferation. In light of the recent preventive regime change in Iraq, a review of this strike reveals timely lessons for future counterproliferation actions. Using old, new, and primary source evidence, this thesis examines Osiraq for lessons from a preventive attack on a non-conventional target. Before attacking Osiraq, Israeli policymakers attempted diplomatic coercion to delay Iraq’s nuclear development. Concurrent with diplomatic actions, Israeli planners developed a state of the art military plan to destroy Osiraq. Finally, Israeli leaders weathered the international storm after the strike. The thesis examines Israeli decisionmaking for each of these phases. The thesis draws two conclusions. First, preventive strikes are valuable primarily for two purposes: buying time and gaining international attention. Second, the strike provided a one-time benefit for Israel. Subsequent strikes will be less effective due to dispersed/hardened nuclear targets and limited intelligence.
v
THIS PAGE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK
vi
TABLE OF CONTENTS
I.
INTRODUCTION…………………………………………………………………………………………..1 A. BACKGROUND ………………………………………………………………………………….1 B. SOURCES……………………………………………………………………………………………3 C. KEY FINDINGS ………………………………………………………………………………….3 D. ORGANIZATION ……………………………………………………………………………….4 ANATOMY OF A DECISION ………………………………………………………………………..7 A.
The Essay on Nuclear Technology and Countries of the Persian Gulf
Nuclear energy has been used widely only for thirty years . In sixtieth it was an exotic source of power, researched by scientists, and widely discussed in press. Nowadays, as Ilan Lipper & Jon Stone state in their article about nuclear powers and society, it is the second largest energy source in the U. S. There are more than 110 nuclear plants throughout the U. S, and they produce more ...
SETTING THE STAGE……………………………………………………………………….7 1. Israeli Decision Makers ……………………………………………………………..8 2. Israeli Defense Principles …………………………………………………………..8 3. Tactical Dilemma ………………………………………………………………………9 B. KNOW YOUR ENEMY……………………………………………………………………..10 1. Iraqi Technological Signs …………………………………………………………11 Still at War………………………………………………………………………………12 2.
The Essay on Political and social effects that shaped the 60s generation
Massive black rebellions, constant strikes, gigantic anti-war demonstrations, draft resistance, Cuba, Vietnam, Algeria, a cultural revolution of seven hundred million Chinese, occupations, red power, the rising of women, disobedience and sabotage, communes & marijuana: amongst this chaos, there was a generation of youths looking to set their own standard - to fight against the establishment, ...
3. The Butcher of Baghdad ………………………………………………………….13 OUT OF OPTIONS ……………………………………………………………………………13 C. 1. Overt Methods…………………………………………………………………………14 Covert Methods……………………………………………………………………….16 2. 3. Diplomatic Means ……………………………………………………………………17 Lack of Results in United States ……………………………………………….20 4.
D. CONCLUSION ………………………………………………………………………………….23 THE ATTACK ……………………………………………………………………………………………..25 A. SETTING THE STAGE……………………………………………………………………..25 Prime Minister’s Role in Foreign Policy……………………………………26 1. 2. Israeli Political Pressures …………………………………………………………27 3. Domestic Political Timing of the Attack ……………………………………27 4. The Political Costs of Osiraq ……………………………………………………29 B.
The Essay on The Nuclear Free World
When President Obama proclaimed his goal of a world free of nuclear weaponry within a satellite of the old Eastern block, he did so as high dreamer. A high dream that may perhaps be viewed as the corner-stone of the twenty-first century or perhaps simply as one of the many great naiveties of this century. Still, it may be naive to believe that a world only comprised of self-help anarchism is the ...
CHOICES…CHOICES………………………………………………………………………30 1. International Legal Factors ……………………………………………………..30 2. Risk versus Reward …………………………………………………………………31 3. Decision Against Commando Raid……………………………………………32 4. Decision on Air Strike………………………………………………………………32 5. Employment Considerations…………………………………………………….33 C. LAUNCH THE FLEET! …………………………………………………………………….34 1.
The Plan ………………………………………………………………………………….34 2. Practice…Practice…Practice……………………………………………………35 3. Execution ………………………………………………………………………………..36 4. Reinforced IDF Dominance ……………………………………………………..39 5. Domestic Perceptions……………………………………………………………….39 D. CONCLUSION ………………………………………………………………………………….40 EFFECTS AND AFTERMATH…………………………………………………………………….41 vii
The Essay on Israel, Gaza Conflict
The article explains how the feud of Israel and Gaza started . It says on the article that the conflict broke out on July 8, when Israel launched Operation Protective Edge in response to Hamas launching rockets toward Israel. Since the conflict began, 1,423 Gazans have died and 8,265 have been injured while 59 Israelis have died. This conflict was triggered because of the three Israeli teenagers, ...
II
III.
IV.
A.
B.
C.
D. V.
SETTING THE STAGE……………………………………………………………………..41 1. Domestic Factors in Israel………………………………………………………..41 2. Knesset Elections……………………………………………………………………..43 International Factors After the Strike ………………………………………44 3. 4. IAEA Aftershocks ……………………………………………………………………45 5. United Nations Resolutions ………………………………………………………46 BOMB DAMAGE ………………………………………………………………………………46 Physical Results at the Osiraq Reactor……………………………………..47 1. 2. Immediate Strike Implications …………………………………………………48 3. Domestic Factors in Iraq ………………………………………………………….49 4. Arab Responses ……………………………………………………………………….49 THE VALUE OF PREVENTIVE STRIKES ……………………………………….50 1. Short Term Value ……………………………………………………………………51 2. Long Term Value …………………………………………………………………….52 3. Asymmetric Effects………………………………………………………………….53 CONCLUSION ………………………………………………………………………………….55
CONCLUSION …………………………………………………………………………………………….57 A. INTRODUCTION………………………………………………………………………………57 SUMMARY OF FINDINGS ……………………………………………………………….57 B. C. POLICY RECOMMENDATIONS ……………………………………………………..58
LIST OF REFERENCES …………………………………………………………………………………………61 INITIAL DISTRIBUTION LIST ……………………………………………………………………………..63
viii
LIST OF FIGURES
Figure 1. Figure 2. Figure 3. Figure 4.
Saddam Hussein and Jacques Chirac in Nuclear laboratory……………………….12 God’s Eye View of the Strike ………………………………………………………………..37 A HUD Image Showing the Initial Explosion of the Osiraq Reactor…………..38 After Effects of Osiraq Reactor ……………………………………………………………..47
ix
THIS PAGE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK
x
LIST OF TABLES
Table 1. Table 2. Table 3. Table 4.
Overt Israeli actions against Iraqi Nuclear Program………………………………….16 Covert Israeli actions against Iraqi Nuclear Program ………………………………..17 Israeli Diplomatic actions with France, Germany, Iran, and Italy……………….20 Israeli Diplomatic Results in the United States ………………………………………..23
xi
THIS PAGE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK
xii
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
I thank my thesis advisor, Dr. Peter Lavoy. His advice and guidance made sure I did not stray too far from the path. All of the contacts he gave me were tremendously helpful and willing to tolerate a misplaced fighter pilot in a world far above his cranium. I also thank, Dr Jim Wirtz for encouraging me to write about this subject in the first place. I received valuable insights from Dr. Avner Cohen, Dr. Eli Levite, Mr David Ivry, Mr. Avi Barber and Mr Dov ‘Doobi’ Yoffe and his wife, Michal. My beautiful bride, Jennifer was encouraging and remains my best friend.
xiii
THIS PAGE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK
xiv
I.
Introduction
Twenty-three years ago, Israeli fighter pilots whistled relaxingly in the relative calm of the 100-foot low-level ingress as they raced toward a date with destiny and a profound statement on global nuclear proliferation.1 In less than 90 seconds, eight Israeli F-16s demolished the Osiraq nuclear reactor. Before exercising this military option, Israeli policymakers attempted seven years of diplomatic, overt, and covert actions to stop Iraq’s nuclear plans. Concurrent with its non-military efforts, Israeli leaders planned a state of the art military operation. The execution and timing of this strike held marked political risks together with the obvious military dangers. In light of the recent events in Iraq, the Osiraq strike is important to current and future counterproliferation actions. Putting the Osiraq strike in perspective will confirm measures other nations may take before resorting to military counterproliferation actions. It also will indicate the level of success a second preventive strike can have.
A.
BACKGROUND Israel’s attack on Osiraq was a bold preventive strike. It reinforced Israel’s
doctrine regarding nuclear weapons. According to Menachem Begin, “Israel would not tolerate any nuclear weapons in the region.”2 Israel still enforces this Begin Doctrine today. The thesis determines lasting lessons from the first attack. These lessons are important as the world anticipates an Iranian nuclear weapon in several years.3 The purpose of the thesis is to determine the strategic implications of the 1981 Israeli attack on Iraq’s Osiraq nuclear reactor complex. What are the lasting effects of using non-conventional weapons as a means of counterproliferation against a nuclear
1Personal interview, 5 Aug 2004, with retired IAF Colonel Dov ‘Doobi’ Yoffe at his home in Israel after
viewing the Heads Up Display (HUD) video of the 7 June 1981 strike. The video was a compilation of all F-16 aircraft that participated in the raid. It included take-off, ingress, pre-strike maneuvering, footage of the attack, post-strike defensive maneuvering, and egress back to Israel. Doobi whistled to relax, while others talked to themselves or verbally rehearsed critical portions of the attack. 2Quoted in Avner Cohen, “The Lessons of Osirak and the American Counterproliferation Debate,” in International Perspectives on Counterproliferation, ed. Mitchell Reiss and Harald Muller (Washington D.C.: Woodrow Wilson Center for International Studies, 1995), 85. 3 Israel Weighs Strike on Iran (26 September 2003) [Internet] (JANE’S INTELLIGENCE DIGEST, 2003 [cited 15 April 2004]); available from .
1
threat? The strike “killed” the Iraqi nuclear capability in the short term, but did this action diminish the long-term nuclear threat to Israel? This watershed event in the Middle East created new regional military and political realities,4 forcing nuclear proliferators to harden nuclear facilities that increased the cost to any regional country of going nuclear. However, the long-term consequences of the attack are global. A preventive strike would no longer be so easy to get away with, nor would the required intelligence assessments about nuclear proliferators be as easy, due to a near universal emphasis on denial and deception following the Osiraq raid. This paper identifies several lasting ramifications United States policymakers contend with resulting from this strike. The overarching question of this thesis is whether the Israeli Strike on Osiraq was an effective counter to Iraq’s nuclear weapons program. Evaluating the strategic factors that drove Israel to attack Osiraq frames the problem. How and when Israeli policymakers carried out the strike reveals the empirical results. Finally, the short and long-term military, political, and diplomatic results paint a more complete picture of the strategic implications of this strike. The thesis argues that the Osiraq strike had two major purposes. First, it slowed down the Iraqi nuclear weapons program. Second, it achieved domestic political benefits at a critical juncture. The strike had several unintended consequences, however. Other nuclear proliferators hardened their nuclear facilities or sought redundant facilities. These efforts reduced the time succeeding preventive strikes would buy. Furthermore, Saddam Hussein did not sacrifice his goal of developing nuclear weapons, but he did significantly change tactics to achieve this goal. Although the preventive strike has several short-term benefits, this action demonstrated that deterrence is not a long-term effect of such strikes. In fact, it is more likely that a country will restart a nuclear weapons program as soon as it clears the rubble.
4″Interagency Intelligence Assessment; Implications of Israeli Attack on Iraq,” in Declassified Government
Intelligence Assessment via internet http://www.foia.cia.gov/, ed. Central Intelligence Agency (Washington D.C.: CIA, 1981), p. 1
2
B.
SOURCES My thesis uncovers new information from personal interviews about the Osiraq
mission and the domestic political interaction preceding the strike. Aside from these first-hand sources, the thesis draws from select books on the subject. It also incorporates numerous scholarly articles, government documents, recently declassified information, foreign policy speeches, and media sources worldwide.
C.
KEY FINDINGS This thesis confirms the short-term benefits of a successful preventive strike. It
also illustrates the long-term drawbacks a nation must be ready for prior to ordering a preventive strike. A successful preventive strike, especially a conventional weapons strike on a non-conventional sight like Osiraq, serves to buy time for the striker. In the case of Osiraq, the first modern conventional strike on a nuclear reactor, the strike bought Israel at least five to ten years of reprieve from an Iraqi nuclear threat. Another side effect of a preventive strike is the concomitant international media blitz the strike draws. The media results are both positive and negative. In the long-term however, a preventive strike such as Osiraq may reinforce a state’s desire to acquire nuclear weapons. Such was the case with Iraq. The second conclusion of this thesis points to the importance of the diplomatic process of nonproliferation. Israeli decision makers attempted to counter Iraq’s nuclear plans diplomatically for seven years before concluding a military option was the only appropriate solution. Israeli policymakers justified the strike based on their perception of apparent U.S. indifference toward Iraq’s nuclear proliferation. U.S. diplomats had many more tools at their disposal to allay Israeli fears that went unused. The next preventive strike against a nuclear proliferator will neither be as successful nor buy as much time as the first. Other nations seeking a nuclear option also have learned valuable lessons from the strike on Osiraq. Second, the media backlash after a strike will radicalize the proliferator’s stance toward accomplishing the goal of going nuclear. Third, as the global hegemon, U.S. decision makers should balance the 3
weight of nonproliferation system management wisely against valuable alliance considerations. Decision makers should make every attempt to work within the confines of current global constructs for stability. If this means taking diplomatic and economic actions against proliferators or pushing Israel to abandon the Begin doctrine, then quick decisive action is best done through International Atomic Energy Association (IAEA) or United Nations (UN) auspices with full United States backing. Lastly, U.S. leaders must weigh the potential misperception between slow, steady pressure to reverse proliferation, and Israel’s view of state survival. If U.S. policymakers fail to take decisive action, Israeli decision makers may once again take preventive military action.
D.
ORGANIZATION This thesis consists of five chapters. Chapter I sets the stage by introducing the
dilemma of proliferation in the Middle East and the opposing Israeli Begin doctrine. This chapter briefly covers Israel’s Osiraq strike, and its importance for current proliferation matters in the region. The chapter then covers methodology, key findings, and organization. Chapter II illustrates how key Israeli decision makers decided to attack by reviewing Israeli defense principles. Israel predominantly relies on deterrence, autonomy, preparation, and aggressiveness as defense principles. Historically, these principles work well to dissuade hostility against Israel. However, Israel’s diplomatic, overt, and covert efforts did not dissuade the Saddam Hussein regime from attempting to build a nuclear weapon. Chapter III delivers the fine points of the attack itself and several previously uncovered facets of the strike. Israel faced significant domestic political pressures yet still employed sophisticated planning and execution well beyond the ability of its neighbors. The implementation of this strike speaks clearly of Israeli resolve regarding counterproliferation. Israel’s past ability to employ western-style planning and execution lends credibility to Israel’s ability to execute advanced military options against nuclear proliferators now.
4
Chapter IV reviews the physical effects and political aftermath of the Osiraq strike. A distinct comparison between short-term goals and the long-term effects is readily apparent in the post Operation Iraqi-Freedom environment of 2004. Previous literature focuses specifically on the short-term benefits of preventive strikes like Osiraq. This chapter also describes the domestic and regional ramifications of the attack. Chapter V summarizes the paper’s findings and identifies several policy recommendations regarding preventive strikes. It also gives a broad perspective on the applicability of the Begin Doctrine in current regional affairs and potential U.S. policymaker actions vis-à-vis Middle East nuclear proliferation.
5
THIS PAGE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK
6
II
ANATOMY OF A DECISION
A dramatic chain of events began thirty years ago when Saddam Hussein approached Jacques Chirac requesting the purchase of a French nuclear reactor. Hussein perceived that Iraq, an oil rich nation, needed a nuclear weapon to balance against Israel and as a status symbol. Israeli policymakers scrutinized the events altogether differently. According to Israeli government official and scholar, Uri Bar-Joseph, unlike the superpowers’ relationship of Mutually Assured Destruction (MAD) that stabilized a nuclear balance of power, Israel’s leadership believed that a similar situation in the Middle East was a remote possibility “because of Israel’s vulnerability and the nature of the Arab regimes-especially that of Saddam Hussein.”5 This chapter explores the strategic factors that lead Israel to attack the Osiraq nuclear reactor. It first examines Israel’s strategic doctrine regarding threats in the region. Second, it asks what the perceived threat from the Saddam Hussein regime was and whether this threat was credible and imminent. Third, the chapter examines the means and methods Israeli decision makers employed to prevent Iraq from developing a nuclear weapon. Although the nation of Israel was oversensitive to threats, its policymakers correctly perceived the threat from Saddam Hussein’s regime. Fourth, the chapter shows the failure of Israel’s overt, covert, and diplomatic actions to dissuade Iraq from obtaining nuclear weapons prior to the Osiraq strike. A. SETTING THE STAGE Israel is in a dangerous neighborhood. Several factors influence how Israel copes with emerging threats. The most critical of these factors are Israeli defense principles and inherent tactical dilemmas. Israel’s leadership creates doctrine that influences how it handles emerging threats. As Israel developed defense principles for nuclear weapons, it found several inherent problems with conventional defense principles.
5Amos Perlmutter, Michael I. Handel, and Uri Bar-Joseph, Two Minutes over Baghdad, 2nd ed. (London;
Portland, OR: Frank Cass, 2003), xl.
7
1.
Israeli Decision Makers
An elite group of policymakers has led Israel. These men and women have very similar backgrounds and ideological values. According to Efraim Inbar, “Israeli decision making in defense matters has always been extremely centralized and has remained the coveted privilege of the very few. The defense minister is the most important decision maker. He has almost exclusive authority within his ministry.”6 This fact was especially true for Prime Minister Menachem Begin after Ezer Weizman resigned. Begin took over the job of Defense Minister as well as Prime Minister after Weizman resigned as Defense Minister. This made it much simpler to carry through with the decision to strike Osiraq. It also narrowed the amount of dissenting opinion the cabinet heard. The policy-making elite are familiar with military affairs. Indeed, most of the members of Begin’s cabinet fought side by side in Israel’s wars. Inbar states for the period 1973-1996, “Most decision makers, grew up in the defense establishment, and had a good grasp of national security problems.”7 During and after the time of the strike on Osiraq, most defense decision-makers got their start in the Israeli Defense Force (IDF) and moved to politics once their military careers finished. This continuity gave Israel a relatively constant set of principles for its defense doctrines. 2. Israeli Defense Principles
Israel relies on a steady set of values regarding its defense. Decision-makers believe deterrence, autonomy, preparation, and aggression each pay dividends in the nation’s defense. The most critical element is a strong deterrence stance without enticing an enemy into further aggression.8 According to Inbar, “A strong Israel is necessary for its acceptance as an unchallengeable fact, but Israeli military strength and the occasional use of force needed to maintain a reputation for toughness and readiness to fight could generate traditional fears in the Arab world regarding Israeli expansionism.”9 Prime
6Efraim Inbar, “Israeli National Security, 1973-96,” The Annals of the American Academy of Political and
Social Science 555, no. 1 (January 1998): 63.
7Ibid.: 64. 8Efraim Inbar indicates a similar but fundamentally different set of strategic elements. However,
deterrence is at the heart of both and drives most other parts of Israel’s Defense Principles. The Begin Doctrine is meant to deter Israel’s enemies. However, it also forces Israel to remain prepared for any regional nuclear threat and speaks to Israel’s willingness to act autonomously if necessary. 9Ibid.: 74.
8
Minister Begin acted upon this principle when he issued the directive that became Israel’s nuclear doctrine. The Begin Doctrine is a clear order: under no circumstances would Israel permit a neighboring state on terms of belligerency with Israel to construct a nuclear reactor that threatens the survival of the Jewish state. This doctrine provides deterrence, preparation, and aggression to work and remains within Israel’s defense principles. The introduction of weapons of mass destruction exacerbated the Israeli sensitivity to loss of life. Even before the introduction of a nuclear threat, policymakers viewed the strategic environment with a much greater pessimism after the 1973 war. Inbar states, “The 1973 war…did not provide Israel with a sense of victory. Israel suffered a painfully high number of casualties during the hostilities, and afterward it was isolated internationally. It also shattered Israel’s confidence in the IDF and caused the fundamentals of Israeli strategic thinking to be questioned.”10 This lack of confidence forced decision makers to choose overaggressive postures on several occasions and reinforced Israel’s need to act autonomously.
3.
Tactical Dilemma
As Iraq sought a nuclear capability in 1974, Israeli leaderships’ strategic outlook was pessimistic and confidence in the IDF faltered. To Israeli policymakers, this shattered confidence combined with Israel’s natural weaknesses accentuated their susceptibility to attack. Israel has very little geostrategic depth. It is approximately 220 miles long and 45 miles wide at its farthest points. The population of neighboring states outnumbers Israel more than ten to one. In the past, Israel’s military preparedness and autonomy allowed it to succeed on the conventional battlefield. As Iraq grew closer to gaining a nuclear capability, however, it appeared conventional military deterrents, preparation, and autonomy would not overcome Israel’s lack of strategic depth in population or territory.
10Inbar, “Israeli National Security, 1973-96,” 63.
9
This predicament forced Israel to compensate for weaknesses with alliances. U.S. policymakers continually reaffirmed the alliance to allay any Israeli fears. This statement from Secretary of State Alexander Haig after the raid typifies the kind of information that affirmed the alliance but also reaffirmed Israel’s need to be autonomous: The United States recognized the gaps in Western military capabilities in the region, and the fundamental strategic value of Israel, the strongest and most stable friend and ally the Unites States has in the Mideast. Consequently, the two countries must work together to counter the full range of threats that the Western world faces in the region. While we may not always place the same emphasis on particular threats, we share a fundamental understanding that a strong, secure and vibrant Israel serves Western interests in the Middle East, We shall never deviate from that principle, for the success of our strategy depends thereupon.”11 Israel sought an ironclad guarantee against nuclear attack, but no ally could provide that guarantee. In 1980, Secretary of State Edmund Muskie informed Israeli Foreign Minister Yitzhak Shamir, “In spite of being the leader of the West, the world’s greatest superpower did not wield unlimited power…also international bodies experience difficulty in effective supervision on nuclear activity, because nuclear materials are available from a variety of sources, not all subject to control.”12 Without the needed infallible pledge, Israel chose the Begin Doctrine as its choice of strategic doctrine against potential nuclear threats in the region. It remains Israel’s choice in 2004.
B.
KNOW YOUR ENEMY Saddam Hussein made Israel’s doctrine choice an easy selection. His constant
offensive rhetoric and abrasive foreign policy were clear signs of aggression. It is critical to view the perceived threat Hussein’s regime caused in Israel with an equally important analysis of the credibility of that threat. Iraqi technological progress provides clear indication that Israel’s perception matched the credibility of threat. Iraq also proved its hostility toward Israel by remaining outside the 1949 Armistice agreement and not recognizing the legitimacy of Israel as a state. Lastly, Saddam Hussein made it clear he
11Shelomoh Nakdimon, First Strike: The Exclusive Story of How Israel Foiled Iraq’s Attempt to Get the
Bomb (New York: Summit Books, 1987), 273.
12Ibid., 148.
10
would not hesitate to employ nuclear weapons if he possessed them. These indicators show Israel faced a rising credible threat matched to an unhesitatingly hostile regime. 1. Iraqi Technological Signs
Iraqi scientists were in the infancy stages of nuclear research in 1974. Scientific experiments in their Soviet nuclear reactor did not explore the full capability of the research reactor. According to Nakdimon, “The level of Iraq’s nuclear research at that time could not justify the acquisition of an Osiris reactor. The Iraqis had barely begun to take advantage of the research possibilities offered by their Soviet reactor. Their interests stemmed from its plutogenic [plutonium producing] traits.”13 Additionally, policymakers in the Soviet Union did not consent to releasing weapons grade uranium to Iraq along with the reactor it supplied. This forced Iraq to search for a reactor with dual use purposes. For Iraqi scientists, the two purposes of an Osiris type reactor were to maintain a legitimate scientific front while possessing the ability to harness nuclear energy for a weapon. Legitimate purposes for nuclear reactors were primarily production of electricity. Nakdimon states, “Had the Iraqis indeed desired an electric-power reactor, they could have applied for one of the newer American-designed models the French were now manufacturing. But on learning that a gas-graphite reactor could not be supplied, the Iraqis showed no further interest, temporarily, in any French-built reactor.”14 Saddam Hussein pressured Jacques Chirac for a gas-graphite reactor and uranium enriched to at least ninety-three percent for Iraq’s nuclear reactor (figure 1).
15 To deliver such a reactor to Iraq, France had to supply an older reactor type. Newer reactors were more efficient, less expensive, used Caramel (enriched to only twenty-thirty percent enriched uranium) fuel and offered greater safety. Possessing an Osiris type reactor offered two primary benefits to Hussein: its plutogenic traits offered him a potential source of weapons grade nuclear material and the fuel used to run Osiris also was weapons grade material.
13Ibid., 58. 14Ibid., 54. 15From: 1998 Strategic Assessment: Engaging Power for Peace, Ch. 12 “Nuclear Weapons”, National
Defense University, Washington, D.C., March 1998
11
Figure 1. 2.
Saddam Hussein and Jacques Chirac in Nuclear laboratory
Still at War
Iraq insisted on remaining in a state of war with Israel. All other Arab states signed armistice agreements with Israel in 1949. Iraq could not sign an armistice because it did not recognize Israel as a state. Iraqi soldiers have participated in every war against Israel. In 1969, Hussein ordered Iraqi Jews in Baghdad executed. Additionally, he took every opportunity to remind the Iraqi people they were at war with Israel. Nakdimon states, “In an interview published in the United States on May 16, 1977 Hussein stated, never shall we recognize Israel’s right to exist as an independent Zionist state.” On October 24, 1978 one week prior to the ninth Arab summit an official statement from an Iraqi ambassador to India reaffirmed the continuing hostility, “Iraq does not accept the existence of a Zionist state in Palestine the only solution is war.”16 This state of affairs between the two countries did not allow any diplomatic contact and any interaction between the two came through a third party.
16See Nakdimon pages 79 and 97 for these two quotations. There are multiple references inferring Iraq’s
intent to remain at war with Israel and the Iraqi government’s stated intent of removing the Zionist entity from the Palestinian land. Nakdimon’s most telling account of these facts are from a Kuwaiti newspaper, the a Siasia on 24 Mar 1978 [see p. 89-90 Nakdimon]
12
3.
The Butcher of Baghdad
Israel witnessed Hussein’s repeated use of chemical weapons on his own people and fellow Arabs. During the Iran-Iraq war, Israel observed Iraq’s merciless use of chemical weapons. Hussein took no care in launching the deadly poison as long as he received benefit from its use. Israel noted that Hussein’s use of these weapons were against people whom he professed not to hate. How much more devastating would an attack be on those whom he professed to hate? Policymakers in Israel were convinced the Iraqi government under Saddam Hussein would employ nuclear weapons if they possessed them. Hussein and members of his regime also expressed this openly. Immediately after the final negotiations on Osiraq, in a September 1975 interview, Hussein stated: “the Franco-Iraqi agreement was the first actual step in the production of an Arab atomic weapon, despite the fact that the declared purpose for the establishment of the reactor is not the production of atomic weapons.”17 Five years later, following two unsuccessful Iranian attempts to destroy the reactor, the Iraqi newspaper ath-Thawra quoted Deputy Prime Minister Tarik Aziz, “The Iranian people should not fear the Iraqi nuclear reactor, which is not intended to be used against Iran, but against the Zionist enemy.”18 For these myriad reasons, Israel correctly perceived the threat from Iraq’s nuclear program and foresaw with certainty that Saddam Hussein would not hesitate to use nuclear weapons on Israel.
C.
OUT OF OPTIONS Israel used countless means and methods to prevent Iraq from developing a
nuclear capability. It planned each of these methods to delay or destroy Iraqi indigenous nuclear capability. None of these methods proved able to stifle Saddam Hussein’s motivation to join the nuclear club. Israel used overt methods consisting primarily of media reports and open contact with critical personnel. It reportedly used several covert methods to influence those involved in the Iraqi reactor project. Additionally, Israeli political leaders employed diplomatic tools to pressure the global community into
17Nakdimon, First Strike, 59. 18Ibid., 156.
13
stopping Saddam Hussein’s nuclear programs. These efforts failed to accomplish the overall task of dissuading Iraq from going nuclear. The art of statecraft lies in manipulating international pressure to obtain an objective without resorting to violence. Israel employed these schemes and processes for seven years before resorting to a military solution. Many actions happened from 1974 to 1981 that will never be known, but certainly, the most visible confirm the attempts and more importantly, the methods Israel used.19 Thus, this list is not all-inclusive, but it does cover the preponderance of means used to persuade Saddam Hussein to abandon his nuclear ambitions.
1.
Overt Methods
The primary overt method Israel used to influence international opinion was the media. Israel also used academic routes to present the threat,20 but the most effective was through newspapers and magazines. While charting the timeline for overt actions two specific events stand out: the first is the January 1976 revelation of the potential Iraqi nuclear capability by the London Daily Mail; the second is the July 1980 Israeli cabinet decision to invoke a media campaign globally.21 January 10, 1976 London Daily Mail wrote, “‘Iraq is soon liable to achieve a capacity for producing nuclear weapons. One of the most unstable states in the Arab world would be the largest and most advanced in the Middle East.’ The paper added that France would be powerless to impose effective control over the use to which the Iraqis would put it.” May 1977 Eliyahu Maicy, Paris correspondent for Ha’aretz uncovered a
19There are four books in English on this subject. First Strike, Two Minutes over Baghdad, Bullseye One
Reactor, and Raid on the Sun. Each one has strengths and weaknesses the others do not. By far the best work on the overt, covert, and diplomatic work done before the strike is Shlomo Nakdimon’s First Strike. This book is a translated version from the original in Hebrew, Tammuz in Flames. A newer version, in Hebrew, is in print. The new version does not use fictitious names and elaborates on details the first could not. It is not currently in English, so it will not be included. This chapter will also not introduce the varied conspiracy theories that follow a subject such as this. Instead, it will focus on known quantities/actions to determine success or failure of those actions. 20Very similar to the way this thesis is presented. The author went to Israel and accomplished interviews and this thesis presents new information received in Israel, but while spreading the new information, the thesis is also an academic route to present information for Israel. 21From: Nakdimon, First Strike. page 63,79,114,115,115,125,126,131,132,133,and 147.
14
‘conspiracy of silence’…France violated the French constitution on banning French (of Israeli descent) workers inside France based on Iraqi pressure. 1977-1978 “Media revelations, domestic and foreign, forced the French government to admit that it did intend to supply Iraq with enriched uranium.” March 1980 “Prodded by a barrage of Israeli reminders, the United States made an indirect attempt to induce the Italians to pull out of the project. Information leaked to the New York Times and the Washington Post by U.S. intelligence agencies recorded that Italy was selling advanced nuclear equipment to Iraq, as well as training Iraqi engineers and technicians at its nuclear centers.” March 20, 1980 A London newspaper reported: Next year, Iraq will be capable of manufacturing a nuclear bomb-with the assistance of France and Italy. France provides the enriched uranium, Italy: the know-how and technology.” Summer 1980 Osiraq was a matter of life and death to the Israeli and “in the summer of 1980 Israel gave a public declaration of intentions, although it was not an official one July 1980 “U.S. media published a startling declaration by President Carter: The United States would not attempt to impose it views upon states with a nuclear capability-such as France- with regard to the Mideast.” July 7, 1980 “At a cabinet meeting, committee members “called for a propaganda campaign to alert public opinion in the world at large and in France in particular.” July 15, 1980 In an interview with the German Die Welt, the director general of the Prime Minister’s office said, “Israel cannot afford to sit idle and wait till an Iraqi bomb drops on our heads.” July 20, 1980 “The first public mention of a possible Israeli air strike at al-Tuwaitha. That day’s Boston Globe cited observers discussing a worst case scenario to predict that Israel could launch a pre-emptive strike to put 15
the reactor out of commission.” September 1980 “Israel’s campaign against the Iraqi nuclear program had hitherto been conducted behind closed doors. But the international media were given various signals of Israel’s resolve to deny Iraq a military nuclear option.” Table 1. 2. Overt Israeli actions against Iraqi Nuclear Program
Covert Methods
Any group or nation attempting covert action by its very nature does not advertise its intentions or results. Normally, the results are attributed to a particular group after lengthy classified investigation. However, this does not mean that nation or group actually accomplished the task. Undoubtedly, Israel accomplished many covert actions while attempting to prevent an Iraqi nuclear weapon. Some listed below may be their handiwork, while others may not be tied to Israeli action.22
April 6, 1979
The “French Ecological Group” claims responsibility for exploding both reactor cores in La-Seyne-sur-Mer. The French authorities never caught the group, but European authorities attributed the strike to the Israeli Secret Service, Mossad.
June 13, 1980
Yehia al-Meshad was murdered in his hotel room in Paris. The only witness was Marie-Claude Magal, a French prostitute. She, too, was murdered less than one month later. The scientist was in France to oversee the delivery of the first shipment of nuclear material for Iraq. The international media pointed fingers immediately at Mossad, but French authorities were unconvinced.
July 25, 1980
Iraq’s Ambassador to France revealed an Israeli plan to strike Iraq’s nuclear reactor in an effort to sabotage Iraqi nuclear efforts. He condemned this planning harshly stating Iraq’s nuclear efforts were for peaceful purposes only.
August 7, 1980
Three bombs exploded at the Italian company SNIA Techint, the
22From: Nakdimon, First Strike, page 101,120,122,123,137, and 181.
16
company responsible for manufacturing the hot separation labs Iraq needed to produce weapons material from spent uranium rods. August and September 1980 Multiple threatening letters were sent to scientists and technicians involved anywhere in the process of enabling Iraq’s nuclear capability. The Committee to Safeguard the Islamic Revolution signed all of the letters. January 20, 1981 London Daily Mail reported the Iraqi government caught and executed ten suicide attackers before they accomplished their mission inside Osiraq. Additionally, investigators found and dismantled two tenpound bombs before any damage was done to the reactor complex. Regardless of who was truly responsible for this group, Israel received credit for the attack. Table 2. 3. Covert Israeli actions against Iraqi Nuclear Program
Diplomatic Means
Israel exerted seven years of diplomatic pressure on nations around the world in the attempt to prevent Iraq from getting the Osiraq reactor. France was the primary recipient of a majority of the diplomatic pressure from Israel. Israel also approached Italy and West Germany on the issue. The most important part of Israel’s diplomatic effort is the sheer number of attempts Israel made to convince France to abandon its support of Iraq.23
April 2930,1975
“The Israeli Foreign Minister, Yigal Alon, paid a working visit to Paris as the draft Franco-Iraqi agreement reached its final stages of completion…In his talks with the three main pillars of the French administration, Pres. Giscard, Premier Chirac and Foreign Minister Jean Sauvagnargues, Alon conveyed Israel’s concern over the possibility of Iraq’s misuse of the nuclear technology and fuels whose purchase it was negotiating with France. They all gave the official French position, though not a party to the NPT, France would continue
23From: Nakdimon, First Strike, page 56,63,66,75,83,88,96,99,138,144,152,174,180.
17
to behave as though its signature were appended to the treaty.” January 13, 1976 Israeli Director General for West European Affairs to French Ambassador Jean Herly to clarify French contacts with Iraq on nuclear affairs. January 27, 1976 Israeli Knesset member Dr. Yehuda Ben Meir voiced concerns over Iraq’s dealings with France and France’s acceptance of Iraqi offerings. Especially in light of the fact that the Soviet Union refused to supply Iraq with weapons grade uranium. March 30, 1977 July 15, 1977 The new French Foreign Minister, Louis de Guiringaud visited Israel and discussed the Iraqi project with similar reassurances to Israeli. Israeli Ambassador to Paris Gazit called on France to give Caramel fuel to Iraq, but France resisted the idea claiming the fuel was untested and not the fuel Iraq originally negotiated. January 13, 1978 Gazit again visits Guiringaud to slow down plans for delivery until the Caramel fuel can be tested and substituted for delivery to Iraq. Again, the Frenchman declared this was impossible, as the Caramel fuel was not the fuel Iraq originally negotiated. October 19, 1978 January 1979 Gazit again visits Guiringaud to question the weapons grade uranium issue and ask when France would deliver it to Iraq. Foreign Minister Moshe Dayan visits French President Giscard and Premier Raymond Barre. Barre placated Dayan about Iraqi intentions, claiming Hussein and Hafez al-Asad had given up the idea of destroying Israel. July 28, 1980 Israeli Foreign Minister Yitzhak Shamir met with French Ambassador to Israel, Jean-Pierre Chauvet. Shamir told Chauvet, “Israel holds France exclusively responsible for the results liable to arise from operation of the reactor and misuse of the nuclear fuel.” Chauvet argued, “Acquisition of nuclear arms would be lunacy on the part of Iraq. After all, Israel’s Jewish and Arab populations are intermingled, and anyone dropping a nuclear bomb on Israel ran the risk of annihilating many thousand of Arabs. 18
August 1980
Dr Meir Rosenne, the new Israeli Ambassador to France visited the French Premier about the Iraqi nuclear contract. He received the same answers as those before him
September 1980
Israeli Foreign Minister Shamir visits France’s UN delegate FrancoisPoncet during the UN meeting in New York. Bolstered by the recent Iraqi attack on Iran, Israel expected France to withdraw from the supply of weapons grade fuel. The meeting with the French delegate, however, proved worthless. “Shamir sensed that European cynicism left Israel with no choice other than the one it had repeatedly adopted in the past: to take its fate into its own hands
November 1980
Shamir again met with Francois-Poncet and days later with President Giscard. Both of these meetings “were a well-nigh precise rerun of everything said at previous meetings.”
January 1981
Labor party leader, Shimon Peres met with French President Giscard. This meeting found no new information favorable to Israel. Giscard told Peres, “The best thing for Israel is a military pact with the United States. Thereby, your security will be guaranteed by the world’s number-one superpower.” Peres replied, “Israel does not want to be an American, or a European protectorate.”
Iran February 1977
Israeli Foreign Minister Yigal Alon met with a top-ranking Iranian official who served as the Iranian liaison for Israel. The two countries did not have any officially sanctioned diplomatic ties. The Iranian official knew Iraq was working with the French to develop a nuclear reactor that could also allow Iraq to produce nuclear weapons. However, the official would not join Israel in alerting the international community due to fear of highlighting Iranian plans to do the same thing.
Iran July 10, 1977
Israeli Foreign Minister, Moshe Dayan meets with the same Iranian official to inquire if Iran is concerned at all with Iraq developing nuclear weapons. The official passed on Dayan’s comments to the Shah. 19
Iran Dec 27, 1977
Dayan met with the Shah of Iran to brief him on the progress of Israel’s peace negotiations with Egypt. Other Iranian government officials informed Dayan of Iraqi nuclear intentions. Iraqi officials reassured Iranians that any nuclear weapon was meant for Israel not Iran.
Italy July 1980
After Moshe Dayan resigned from Begin’s cabinet, Yitzhak Shamir took over as Foreign Minister. He quickly sent a handwritten letter to the Italian Foreign Minister, Emilio Colombo in hopes of convincing Colombo and Italy to refrain from helping Iraq’s nuclear advance any further. “It is of the gravest when nuclear capability is endowed to a regime which achieved power by force, and which is constantly sustained by its fierce antagonism toward the Israeli people.”
W. Germany Summer 1979 W. Germany Sept 4, 1980
Foreign Minister Dayan contacted West Germany to persuade them not to produce any components for the Iraqi reactor complex. Israeli Ambassador to Bonn, Yohanan Meroz contacted West German Chancellor Helmut Schmidt in the attempt to have West Germany intercede on Israel’s behalf to the French. Schmidt labored over the decision, but eventually decided not to intervene. He stated, “France’s promises must suffice. I do not see what can be done now.”
Table 3. 4.
Israeli Diplomatic actions with France, Germany, Iran, and Italy Lack of Results in United States
Israeli diplomats worked hard to convince U.S. decision makers to act on their behalf. Israel requested American diplomatic assistance mostly against Iraqi aggression and French reticence. Israel spent almost as much time trying to convince U.S. policymakers of the pending danger as they did persuading France to forego its illconceived nuclear proliferation plans with Iraq. Two events caused Israel to lose faith in American proliferation efforts. After initially vowing to take a hard-line nuclear proliferation stance, President Carter reversed plans in July 1980. He claimed his administration would not interfere with other nuclear-equipped countries and their Mideast affairs. Also in 1980, U.S. policymakers decided to continue unfruitful
20
diplomatic approaches with France instead of backing direct Israeli pressure on Iraq. The marked pressure of responsibility weighs different as a superpower concerned with systemic problems than as a regional power concerned with survival.24 October 1975 Israeli Prime Minister Rabin urged U.S. Secretary of State, Henry Kissinger, to obstruct the French nuclear negotiations with Iraq on Israel’s behalf. Kissinger claimed that he did try to intervene but to no avail. Winter 1976 Internal debate raged in France over whether or not to supply Iraq with military grade uranium or bend to the Carter Administration’s demands to use Caramel fuel. Regardless of the internal fighting, France decided to press on with delivery of weapons grade uranium. February 1977 Disappointed in Iran, Israel now pinned its hopes principally upon the United States, which had, since 1975, conducted a most vigorous campaign against dissemination of military nuclear technology. In view of the vigorous U.S. anti-proliferation campaign, it was only natural for the United States to attempt to talk Paris into renegotiating its agreement with Iraq.” The Carter administration, elected in November 1976, vowed to take a hard-line stance on nuclear proliferation. Election promises pledged sweeping international actions against countries promising nuclear technology for sale. The United States slowed down the delivery of uranium and reactors to France and Germany. This slow-down was designed to reflect U.S. policymaker’s disapproval of France’s deals with Pakistan and Iraq. Next, the administration encouraged France to supply only Caramel fuel (uranium enriched only 20-25 percent) to Iraq. March 1980 U.S. media sources criticize Italy and France over selling advanced nuclear equipment to Iraq. July 16, 1980 Israel Ambassador to the United States met with Secretary of State, Edmund Muskie to inquire on the status of U. S. diplomatic pressure on
24From: Nakdimon, First Strike, page 59,73,75,115,125,126,131,135,147,154,174,175,186.
21
France vis-à-vis the Iraqi nuclear reactor. Whatever actions were taken proved fruitless in stopping France’s cooperation with Iraq. Additionally, President Carter made a public declaration that also did not help Israel: “the United States would not attempt to impose its views upon states with a nuclear capability-such as France-with regard to the Mideast.” July 17, 1980 U.S. Ambassador Samuel Lewis visited Prime Minister Begin regarding Iraqi nuclear weapons. Begin urged Lewis to bring the matter to the attention of the White House. Lewis urged Begin to “put his trust in President Carter. “No president has been so concerned and so active in trying to stop the spread of nuclear weapons. I am certain if he can find a way to stop the French, he will do so.” July 22, 1980 Israeli Ambassador Evron informed U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Saunders that France again rejected America efforts to intercede on behalf of Israel. Evron and Israel suspected Washington of putting little effort into the developments in Iraq July 24, 1980 Ambassador Lewis informs Begin his concerns are on the desk of the President and Secretary of State. December 1980 Results of President Carter’s influence on France and informing incoming Reagan administration of Israel’s concerns. “Was either effective? In both cases, the answer appears to be negative. There must have been some slipup in the transition from one administration to the next. Carter was to explain the omission by pointing out that “Reagan appointed his Secretaries of State and Defense ‘at the last moment’; consequently, there was no one to receive the information.” December 1980 “Washington claimed to be under no illusions as the gravity of the danger to be expected from Iraq’s possession of nuclear weapons; however the Administration held it preferable to pursue diplomatic approaches to France and Italy, rather than countenance direct Israeli pressure upon Iraq which, the Americans feared, could place obstacles before Mideast peace efforts.” 22
April 1981
Secretary of State, Alexander Haig went to visit Prime Minister Begin and Foreign Minister Shamir in Israel. Haig confirmed Israel’s worst fears: The United States had been unable to stop or delay French and Italian efforts to equip Iraq with a nuclear reactor and hot cell. According to President Carter, “They-France and Italy-are sovereign states, just like Israel. We have intervened with France and Italy-but in vain.” Table 4. Israeli Diplomatic Results in the United States
In October 1980, Israel held two critical cabinet meetings. On 14 October, Begin was in favor of military action, but desired more meetings with French and American diplomats. Shortly thereafter, Israeli Ambassador Evron informed Begin that Iraq now possessed 30 kilograms of weapons grade uranium. Begin’s next cabinet meeting was an emergency meeting and he was convinced of the action to take. According to Nakdimon, “Begin now urged the Cabinet to adopt a decision in principle, as recommended by a majority of the ministerial team, in favor of destroying the reactor.”25 Begin’s decision now was simply a matter of when to strike the reactor.
D.
CONCLUSION After the 1973 war, Israel’s strategic outlook was insecure. The presence of
potential Iraqi nuclear weapons only exacerbated the insecurity. When Israel considered the known behavior of Saddam Hussein, now hot on the trail of nuclear weapons, it concluded submissiveness was not an option. Israel elected to attack the Iraqi nuclear reactor by overt, covert, and diplomatic means first. This attack started in 1974 and concluded when Begin decided to switch the attack to military means. In 1981, Israel proved it lived by the Begin doctrine. Once Israeli policymakers saw the other methods’ ineffectiveness, they elected to strike.
25Nakdimon, First Strike, 160.
23
THIS PAGE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK
24
III.
THE ATTACK
The Israeli strike on Osiraq ranks among the most important aerial bombardments of the twentieth century. Every nation seeking to acquire nuclear weapons took notice, especially those in the Middle East. This strike added fuel to a region already ablaze with turmoil. According to Jason Burke, “In 1979…several massive events shook the Muslim world: a peace deal between Israel and Egypt, the Islamic Revolution in Iran, the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, and the occupation of the grand mosque at Mecca by a radical Wahhabi group.”26 In 1981, Israel’s strike was yet another unsettling event in a region still marred by conflict. This chapter examines how Israel attacked Osiraq, and why the means and timing Israel chose for this attack are important. The chapter first examines Israeli political pressures influencing the attack timing. Next, it examines the alternatives Israel had to carry out this strike and the problems involved in each choice. Finally, the chapter describes Israel’s tactical execution of the attack and its immediate strategic impact. The chapter concludes that Israel was the only country in the region that had the means to accomplish this demanding strike and chose the timing of the strike primarily in response to domestic political pressures.
A.
SETTING THE STAGE
Israel can take virtually no action without significant ramifications beyond its borders. It must constantly weigh domestic political demands against regional threats and U.S. Middle East policies. Israel had no shortage of international and domestic political constraints as it contemplated, planned, and executed the strike on Osiraq. Mired by the first Intifada, growing tensions in Lebanon, surface-to-air-missiles in the Beka’a valley, the volatile Egyptian peace process, and facing enormous inflation domestically, Israeli policymakers found each decision crucially interconnected. Israel faced Knesset elections in 1981 amidst these building security concerns.
26Jason Burke, Al-Qaeda : Casting the Shadow of Terror (London: I. B. Tauris, 2003), 54.
25
1.
Prime Minister’s Role in Foreign Policy
Israeli Foreign Policy is usually opaque and reactive. Driven by a myriad of factors, the primary author of Israeli Foreign Policy is the Prime Minister. According to Lewis Brownstein, “Since the establishment of the state in 1948, Israeli foreign policy decision making has tended to be highly personalized, politicized, reactive, ad hoc, and unsystematic.”27 The Prime Minister’s relative power within the Israeli coalitional government is the prevailing feature on foreign and security matters. The Prime Minister’s control is a function of personality, political authority vis-àvis other Israeli political elites, public confidence and publicly perceived security environment. Brownstein implies the formative years of Prime Minister David BenGurion established the dominant role of the Prime Minister in Israel’s foreign policy formulation. “Improvisation was the rule because it was the only choice. There can be no question that the memory of those years and of the monumental successes…resulted in a collective memory on the part of the leadership. It would be difficult to overemphasize the influence of those years on the pattern of Israel’s decision-making in foreign policy.”28 Consequently, Israeli foreign policy ebbs and flows primarily with Prime Ministerial decisions. The Prime Minister’s decisions are responsive to his coalitional government. Therefore, domestic political factors within Israel drive foreign policy, counter to Brownstein’s theory. However, the Prime Minister is the pre-eminent member of the policy elite with the foremost say on the direction of foreign policy, but his power extends only as far as the Knesset allows. According to Juliet Kaarbo, “Executive power is concentrated in the prime minister and the cabinet. While legitimacy lies with the parliament and the cabinet must maintain the confidence of the legislative assembly, the power to initiate and carry out policy making is to be found in the cabinet.” For parliamentary democracies Kaarbo contends, “Power and resources are more fragmented
27Lewis Brownstein, “Decision Making in Israeli Foreign Policy: An Unplanned Process,” Political
Science Quarterly 92, no. 2 (Summer 1977): 260.
28Ibid.: 267.
26
and are divided along policy or ideological party lines.”29 The Prime Minister must constantly weigh driving security matters against his resident authority within the coalition government. 2. Israeli Political Pressures
Prime Minister Menachem Begin drove Israeli Foreign Policy starting in 1977. His Likud party came to power in Israel after several smaller political parties won enough seats in the 1977 Knesset elections to overthrow the Labor majority. Rabin lost due to allegations of corruption, political in-fighting and mediocre policy decisions. Zachary Lockman states, “[Begin’s] new talent and new policies were to replace the stagnations and entrenched machinery of the Labor Party bureaucracy which had dominated Israel for decades.”30 Begin gained the confidence of the National Religious Party based on his uncompromising foreign policy stance. Israeli Foreign Policy in 1981 reflected the hard-line attitude of Prime Minister Begin. Indeed, Begin kept his hard-line policy direction throughout his time in office. He could remain relatively sheltered in his foreign policy for several reasons. According to Brownstein, “Israel has no independent ‘think tanks’ or councils where academics and government officials can come together to exchange views.”31 In addition, the Likud party had virtually none of the academic communication links the Labor party possessed. Nor, did the Likud party foster any interaction among academia and government decisionmakers. The cabinet remained moderately sheltered and the Prime Minister was one-step further secluded than his cabinet. Hence, Menachem Begin deserved his reputation as an autocratic leader who rarely sought advice from his cabinet. 3. Domestic Political Timing of the Attack
Domestic political factors within Israel affected many Foreign Policy directives. Although Begin kept his hard-line policy posture, he could not act with impunity. According to Melvin Friedlander, “because Begin enjoyed only a narrow majority in the Knesset those right-wing groups and their representatives in the cabinet possessed a
29Juliet Kaarbo, “Power and Influence in Foreign Policy Decision Making: The Role of Junior Coalition
Partners in German and Israeli Foreign Policy,” International Studies Quarterly 40, no. 4 (Dec 1996): 503.
30Zachary Lockman, “Israel at a Turning Point,” MERIP Reports, no. 92 (Winter 1980): 3. 31Brownstein, “Decision Making in Israeli Foreign Policy: An Unplanned Process,” 275.
27
virtual veto over government decisions.”32 A junior party, the National Religious Party, established foreign policy as an area of influence under its coalitional agreement with Begin and the Likud party. This junior party demonstrated its power in 1979 during negotiations with Egypt. According to Kaarbo, “the autonomy talks were the second part of the Camp David Peace Treaty. The junior party…in coalition with Likud was successful at getting hard-line conditions adopted for these talks in May 1979 and subsequently deadlocking them.”33 Therefore, domestic political factors were the primary influence on Israeli foreign policy Israel had a Knesset election scheduled for November 1981. The Labor party, lead by Shimon Peres, was gaining ground on Begin’s Likud party. Prime Minister Begin faced difficulties from unrest in Lebanon, dissatisfaction over the Palestinian issue, and a severe economic crisis. Inflation in Israel was over 120 percent during 1980. According to Zachary Lockman, “The Begin government, on the advice of such luminaries as Milton Friedman, has revised long-standing Labor policies that subsidized consumer goods, protected local industry, encouraged exports and controlled currency exchanges.”34 This economic predicament combined with the increasing frustration over security issues did not bode well for the Likud party. In May 1981, Begin lagged behind Labor party leader Shimon Peres in voter polls. Although the Labor party offered no significant change to policies enacted by Begin, public opinion saw Menachem Begin as ineffective. His political capital was in decline and a military action could bolster his hard-line reputation. In late 1980, Lockman guesses, “Begin might choose to gamble on a major military adventure, perhaps against the Syrians and Palestinian forces in Lebanon. Other scenarios are also possible.”35 Indeed, Begin readied plans for striking Osiraq as pressure of the Knesset election mounted. Begin’s desire to solidify his political position by a strike on Osiraq coincided with a strong opinion on Israeli defense measures. Indeed, from the outset of his tenure as Prime Minister, Begin revealed concern over the Iraqi nuclear program. However,
32Melvin A. Friedlander, Sadat and Begin : The Domestic Politics of Peacemaking (Boulder, Colo.:
Westview Press, 1983), 310.
33Kaarbo, “Power and Influence in Foreign Policy Decision Making,” 526. 34Lockman, “Israel at a Turning Point,” 4. 35Ibid.: 6.
28
Begin held strong memories of atrocities done to the Jews from World War II. Shlomo Nakdimon states, “But above all, what shaped Begin’s course, and his personal philosophy, was the Holocaust — that national calamity in which his own father and mother perished, as did most of his family.”36 He saw the Iraqi nuclear program as another potential means to destroy the nation. In late 1977, Begin issued clear guidance within his cabinet that no belligerent states in the region could threaten Israel with nuclear weapons. 4. The Political Costs of Osiraq
A strike against Osiraq would serve multiple purposes. A successful strike could sway voters to view Begin as a decisive man of action willing to buck world opinion to protect Israel. Additionally, a strike destroying another potential holocaust device before it could be unleashed on Israel matched Begin’s personal philosophy. If the strike was a failure, Begin stood no chance at retaining his role as Prime Minister. Furthermore, Begin believed Peres would opt for diplomatic means over action against Iraq. Shimon Peres was close friends with French President Francois Mitterrand, who opposed French involvement in Iraqi nuclearization. Four years of diplomatic exertion to prevent France from delivering a nuclear reactor to Iraq, however, yielded only failure. In addition, Begin believed Peres would not risk launching the strike even if diplomatic efforts fell short. Prime Minister Begin, therefore, saw this state of affairs as solely his responsibility. It was his job to protect Israel’s right to exist, but time was running out – for him and for Israel. The strike on Osiraq came about in this background of intense domestic political pressure and steady Iraqi nuclear advance. The domestic political payoffs for Begin offered significant rewards compared to the risks. Thus, Israeli domestic political pressure acted as Begin’s primary impetus for ordering the strike.
36Nakdimon, First Strike, 82.
29
B.
CHOICES…CHOICES The government of Israel possessed several means of attacking the Osiraq reactor.
Prior to June 1981, Israeli policymakers primarily used diplomatic pressure to preempt construction of the Iraqi reactor. They pressured many nations, but mainly France and Italy to prevent them from supplying Iraq with the Osiris-type reactor and the fuel to run it. Italy also supplied technical training to Iraqi scientists and a specially designed shielded laboratory called a hot cell to extract plutonium and handle radioactive material. The hot cell was a particularly telling purchase. It allows technicians to extract and harvest bomb-grade fuel. It could have no other purpose for Iraqi technicians. Israel’s diplomatic coercion was its first line of defense against an Arab bomb, and it failed. 1. International Legal Factors
The implications of the strike were legally intimidating. According to McKinnon, “The Israelis expected Iraq to charge that any military action would be illegal, a violation of international law, and would therefore be considered an act of aggression.”37 However, the Iraqi regime never signed a peace agreement with Israel and refused to recognize Israel as a nation. Iraqi decisionmakers repeatedly confirmed their policy of aggression towards the “Zionist entity.” Thus, Israeli policymakers considered the strike legal based on the wartime status of the two countries. Other International law attorneys claim the strike legality based on Israel’s right to anticipatory self-defense. Anticipatory self-defense is defined as the entitlement to strike first when the danger posed is instant, overwhelming, leaving no choice of means and no moment for deliberation.38 Several decisionmakers to claim the strike was legal due to the overwhelming nature of nuclear weapons. Anthony D’Amato, a well-respected International Law Professor at Leighton University, however, claims neither of these reasons made the Israeli strike legal. Israel had no right to a legal strike in an illegal war (as D’Amato claims the shaky relationship between Israel and Iraq was at the time of the strike).
D’Amato also notes that Article 51
37Dan McKinnon, Bullseye One Reactor (Shrewsbury: Airlife, 1988), 88. 38Anthony D’Amato, “Israel’s Air Strike against the Osiraq Reactor: A Retrospective,” International and
Comparative Law Journal 10, no. 259 (Dec 1996): p. 261.
30
of the United Nations Charter (the provision that includes the self-defense clause) only allows action “if an armed attack occurs.”39 D’Amato declares the strike was legal because Israel acted for the international community as a surrogate on the attack. If international law is designed “to create the precondition for peace and human rights,”40 then the law provides the international community a right to act upon any aggressive state willing to use nuclear weapons as blackmail. Israel’s action against Iraq gave the world relief from this potential global Iraqi threat. Regardless of the legal reasoning, Israel pressed ahead undaunted by the repercussions that would follow the attack. 2. Risk versus Reward
Israeli planners weighed the risks and rewards of each method of attack on Osiraq. Once overt, diplomatic, and covert intelligence operations failed to produce results, Israeli policy makers had two basic military choices for destroying the Osiraq reactor: a military raid with Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) commandos in the lead or a precision aerial strike with the Israeli Air Forces (IAF) in the lead. In 1977, Begin and his cabinet contemplated an attack against Iraq. At that time, Defense Minister Ezer Weizman approached Israeli Air Force Chief of Staff, David Ivry with a proposal: plan and practice a long-range aerial attack of greater than 650 nautical miles.41 Weizman, a pilot and father of the modern Israeli Air Force, knew the IAF could complete the mission. Ivry worked hard to prove his mentor correct. Using the most advanced platform the IAF possessed, the F-4, Ivry foresaw great risk but a mission that was not impossible. Ivry had several missions flown to determine the true distance an appropriately loaded F-4 would fly.42 The risk appeared great in 1977, but still within the realm of possible.
39Ibid. 40Ibid.: p. 262. 41Personal Interview with Retired IAF Chief of Staff, General David Ivry 1 August 2004. 42Personal Interview with Retired General Avraham Barber, 1 August 2004. General Barber flew the F-4
and helped verify the F-4’s inability to fly the long route. It would take a refueling over hostile territory to stretch the F-4’s range. The risk increased incrementally with additional aircraft and the necessity of these aircraft to refuel.
31
3.
Decision Against Commando Raid
The Israeli military had several commando teams available to attack Osiraq. Israel’s military was familiar with complex commando operations. In 1976, Israeli commandos completed a complex raid on Entebbe, Uganda, freeing trapped Israeli hostages. However, a raid deep into Iraq would face significantly different challenges than the Entebbe raid. IDF planners focused on the three main parts of a Special Forces operation: the insertion, the operation, and the extraction. Insertion and extraction were difficult due to Osiraq’s location greater than 1000 kilometers from Israel and surrounded by open desert. This would require a combination of large helicopters, heavy airlift, light-attack helicopters, and a multitude of logistics components. The operation at the reactor also would have serious risks. Israeli planners expected casualties among their commandos, the Iraqi guards, and a large number of international scientists in Osiraq.43 At a minimum, well over 200 people would participate in a ground raid.44 Additionally, maintaining complete secrecy with many participants would be difficult. Planners concluded the risks of launching a multifaceted ground raid would far outweigh its benefits and Israeli policy makers would not accept such a narrow margin of success. 4. Decision on Air Strike
Israeli planners concluded the best option was to assign the IAF with a precision strike mission directly against the core of the reactor. According to Amos Perlmutter, “The total destruction of the nuclear reactor would in that case be achieved at the lowest risk to human lives and the smallest damage to Israel in terms of world public opinion.”45 The IAF Planning Branch gathered all available information on the Osiraq reactor. This tasking gave Colonel Aviem Sella, chief of the planning branch, the opportunity to prove airpower’s central role in security of the small state. In 1980, the IAF had approximately 650 airplanes, most of which were second and third generation fighter aircraft.46 Based on number and type, the IAF was the third best Air Force in the world and arguably, the most experienced in modern tactical jet warfare. In the late 1970s, the Israeli government
43Personal Interview with Retired IAF Chief of Staff, David Ivry, 1 August 2004. 44Perlmutter, Handel, and Bar-Joseph, Two Minutes over Baghdad, 86. 45Ibid. 46Second and Third Generation fighter aircraft exhibit more advanced avionics, engines, and weapons
respectively. An example of first generation jet fighters is the F-86/F-100. Second generation: MiG21/23/F-4 and Third Generation: F-15/16.
32
spent over 50 percent of its defense budget modernizing the IAF. Sella and the IAF took the Osiraq raid as the opportunity to justify the air force’s budget allocation. By 1980, the IAF had several different airplanes it could employ against Osiraq. Israel possessed the A-4N Skyhawk, the KFIR C-2, the F-4 Phantom, the F-15 Eagle, and the F-16 Fighting Falcon.47 The Skyhawk and the C-2 were Israel’s primary air-toground delivery platforms. However, they lacked the range to reach Osiraq without refueling. They also lacked speed for an effective egress from the target. The Phantom barely had the range to reach the target and would risk two lives (pilot and weapons systems officer) during the sortie. However, it was Israel’s only means of delivering precision weapons on target at the time. The Eagle and Falcon were Israel’s newest aircraft and the only third generation fighters in the region at the time of the strike. These airplanes could fly the sortie without refueling. Furthermore, both had advanced Inertial Navigation Systems allowing them to fly long distances without the need for groundbased navigation aids. The IAF had the right tools to accomplish the mission. 5. Employment Considerations
Operation Babylon, the code name for the Osiraq strike, was a simple, wellplanned operation. The IAF Planning Branch chose non-precision weapons delivered by third generation aircraft to strike Osiraq. In choosing this option, the IAF planners kept focus on their primary task: absolute destruction of the Osiraq nuclear reactor. Their choice of weapon and delivery platform ensured the best odds of meeting this objective. Their ability to remain focused on a specific mission is the critical part of the Israeli planners’ professionalism. Israeli planners rejected several tactical options based on the overall goals of the operation. For example, the F-4 Phantoms’ standoff weapons could minimize potential losses by not exposing Israeli aviators to enemy Anti-Aircraft Artillery (AAA) and Surface to Air Missiles (SAMs) surrounding Osiraq. If inclement weather obscured the reactor, however, the ability to guide the precision munitions to the target would decrease. The resulting strike would be less effective than a non-precision weapon delivered by a professional aviator in a smart machine. Given Israeli sensitivity
47Lockheed Martin built the F-16s used in the raid on Osiraq for the Iranian Air Force. Ironically, Israel
received these F-16 Falcons because the Iranian revolution dismembered the US-Iran Foreign Military Sales agreement.
33
to loss of life, it is remarkable military planners were given this option by government officials. Therefore, Israeli military and government planners made the choices that gave the mission the best chance of success. C. LAUNCH THE FLEET! Israel was the only nation in the region with the ability to plan, practice, and execute this mission. Israeli tacticians were planning the mission even before the arrival of its second squadron of F-16s, which would be equipped with under-wing fuel tanks.48 To be successful, each phase of the mission called for detailed maps, navigation routes, weather data, aircraft performance charts, bomb fuse timing, release angles, target area flows, and contingency plans. This meticulous planning began in 1977, four years prior to the attack. 1. The Plan
The plan for Operation Babylon remained a secret even from those practicing for the mission. All were aware of the fuel and time constraints of the secret mission without knowing the actual target.49 Other than cabinet members Begin consulted on the decision, only a handful of military members knew the complete details of the mission. Initially, only three of the men in the F-16 formation knew Osiraq was the target. Details about the pilots in the F-15 formation remain classified. However, it is safe to assume less than a handful of pilots knew of the actual target. In this manner, Israeli decisionmakers limited the risk of spilling secrets that could potentially endanger the strike’s success. According to Amos Perlmutter, “It is estimated that at least 80-100
48External tanks attach under the wing and fuselage to extend the range of the aircraft. Once the pilot
depletes the fuel in these tanks, they are jettisoned to decrease the overall drag of the aircraft. This effectively doubles the range of a fighter. 49Personal Interview with Retired Colonel Dov “Doobi” and Michal Yoffe at their home in Israel, 5 August 2004. Early books on the subject claim Ilan Ramon, Zeev Raz, and Amir Nachumi were the only pilots who knew of the target. Ramon was responsible for the fuel planning and Raz and Nachumi were the flight leaders. However, Doobi Yoffe, whose mother was the stenographer for Menachem Begin also knew. And, Yoffe also confided in his wife, Michal. Michal Yoffe was Ezer Weizman’s daughter. After Ezer Weizman resigned from the cabinet, he was not privileged to the details of the strike’s timing. However, his daughter knew these details and could not share them with her father. She spent three tense days with her parents as Yoffe was flying the mission. Only after the mission did she tell her father. The newest book on the subject, Raid on the Sun, by Rodger Claire further expands on these facts.
34
people knew in advance of the intention to destroy the Iraqi nuclear reactor at some time and that a smaller number had knowledge of the precise day in advance once it was finally decided.”50 In this manner, the secrecy surrounding Operation Babylon secured the chance Israeli fighters would begin their attack as a surprise. 2. Practice…Practice…Practice
Pilots involved in the strike practiced over nine months before the actual attack. Israel is a small country approximately 210 nautical miles from North to South and approximately 45 nautical miles from East to West. According to McKinnon, “Most combat flights in Israel are less than an hour long. It is 68 miles to Damascus from Ramat David, so long flights just are not part of the Israeli fighter pilot’s regimen. It took a lot of retraining in the skills of max-endurance flying for an Israeli pilot to convince himself to remain airborne for nearly three hours.”51 The low-level route to the target would take more than 90 minutes. However, the true stress lay beyond the extraordinary length of the sortie. The pressure point in the mission was the target run and the crucial pull up to safe-arming altitude. At this point, the pilots exposed the jet to ground fire, yet had to concentrate solely on aiming the jet for weapon delivery. The two-thousand pound bombs used to destroy the Osiraq reactor had slightly delayed fusing to increase the cratering effect against the reactor dome.52 The explosion of this type bomb extends vertically 2800 feet and horizontally 3400 feet within nine seconds of impact. Israeli safe-arming altitude was 3800 feet. This meant any bomb released below this altitude would come off the jet unarmed since it held high potential to destroy the airplane that just dropped it. The key to hitting the reactor successfully was the rapid shift from climbing flight (to get above safe-arming altitude) to nose-low stabilized on the target. According to McKinnon, “The Israeli pilots practiced and practiced and practiced so they could handle the mission so swiftly that their apex was less than 5000 feet above the ground and they could virtually drop the bombs with their eyes closed.” Moreover, to
50Perlmutter, Handel, and Bar-Joseph, Two Minutes over Baghdad, 101. 51McKinnon, Bullseye One Reactor, 109. 52Israeli F-16s used the Mark 84, 2,000-pound bomb, or Israeli equivalent, for the strike. The IAF started
with USAF safety measures in altitude and timing and subsequently reduced these numbers as practice warranted. See McKinnon chapter 14 and 16.
35
practice visual identification of a target, McKinnon states, “They all practiced dive-bomb targeting on an Israeli radar dome site in the Negev. It realistically portrayed the reactor dome.”53 This practice allowed Israeli pilots to limit their exposure in the target area and quicken the intervals between their attacks. After more than nine months of practice, the IAF was prepared for Operation Babylon. 3. Execution
Operation Babylon launched from Etzion Air Base. Starting on Friday 5 June, Israel staged six F-15s and eight F-16s at Etzion Air Base in the southeast part of the Sinai desert. These airplanes staged into Etzion early to avoid suspicion. Monday was Shavuot holiday and most Israelis expected limited military operations during the holiday break. The pilots flying in Operation Babylon stayed together 5-7 June in makeshift quarters waiting to carry out the mission. The briefing outlined intricate details of the flow of the mission. It covered every conceivable contingency operation, including how to handle ejection over Iraq. Months of practice made the tactical details of the mission seem mundane. IAF commander Major General David Ivri and IDF Chief of Staff General Raphael Eitan attended the brief to support the mission first hand. After the brief, the pilots stepped to their aircraft.
53McKinnon, Bullseye One Reactor, 115.
36
F-15s for Radio Relay
F-15 CAP for Egress F-15s with ECM Pods
– ute Ro kts 0 ike Str nd 36 6s a F- 1 feet 100
Strike Package flew directly over King Hussein’s Yacht
Figure 2.
God’s Eye View of the Strike
The level of professionalism displayed by each member of the strike team reinforced the reputation of the IAF. The ingress to the target lasted one hour and thirtythree minutes. The aircraft flew in a relatively close formation at approximately 360 knots and 100 feet above the desert floor. No radio calls or radar emissions, which could tip enemy outposts to the coming attack, came from the formation of F-15s and F-16s. At the briefed locations, the F-15s split into two-ship formations, turned on their radars and climbed to cover the F-16s. Approaching the initial point, where the F-16s would make final preparations to strike the target, the final two F-15s climbed away from the strike formation and turned on their radars and external electronic counter-measure pods. These aircraft served the dual purpose of protecting the F-16s from hostile aircraft as well as hostile search radars.54 Shortly thereafter, the F-16s spread their formation out for
54Personal interview with Retired IAF Chief of Staff, David Ivry 1 August 2004. Other accounts of the
strike do not note this fact. Other works describing the strike match most other information Mr Ivry described during the interview. However, the external ECM (electronic countermeasures) carried by the last two-ship of Israeli F-15s coincide with other details recorded by Iraqis during the strike. In Saddam’s
37
proper target spacing. Each two-ship arrived over the reactor as the explosion from the last formation subsided. In less than two minutes, Israeli F-16s dropped more than fourteen metric tons of ordnance around the center of the sixty-foot reactor. According to Perlmutter, “In all, sixteen Mk84 iron bombs were dropped on the reactor. The accuracy of the bombing, considering the IAF used no smart bombs, was astonishing. All but two were direct hits within thirty feet from the center of the target.”55 The strike on Osiraq unfolded precisely as Israeli tacticians planned. The battle damage assessment revealed the success of the mission. Israel most likely used in-flight video tape recorders (VTRs) to assess the reactor’s destruction.56 According to McKinnon, the tapes from aircraft number seven and eight reveal the reactor dome completely caved in and a destroyed cooling pool.57 However, Perlmutter claims a specially equipped F-15 flew by the reactor after the bombing on a special reconnaissance pass to verify the damage. Regardless of how Israel verified the damage, the Israeli fighters destroyed the Osiraq reactor.
Figure 3.
A HUD Image Showing the Initial Explosion of the Osiraq Reactor
Bombmaker, Khidhir Hamza, noted severe electronic interference moments prior to the Israeli strike. For the most technical account of the strike read McKinnon’s work, Bullseye One Reactor. 55Perlmutter, Handel, and Bar-Joseph, Two Minutes over Baghdad, 125. 56After: “Osiraq and Beyond,” Air Force Magazine, August 2002. 57Personal Interview with Colonel Retired Dov “Doobi” Yoffe on 5 August 2004. Israel used the HUD film of number six, Col Iftach Spector, to verify Osiraq’s destruction. Spector was the only IAF pilot to miss the target. He misidentified the dome on his roll in to the target and subsequent maneuvering brought his aircraft perilously close to the dome as the delayed fuses of the first four aircraft detonated. Fortunately, his aircraft filmed the explosion as he corrected his flight path. Although his bombs missed, he provided valuable information for Israel with his HUD film. The HUD film of number seven and eight reflect this damage also, but not as vividly as Spector’s film.
38
4.
Reinforced IDF Dominance
Criticism of the strike covers important details, but neglects the most critical factor shaping this Israeli success. They each overlook the root cause of success: Israeli tacticians employed each weapon system in a well-suited mission. The IAF used the F15, designed for long-range detection and air superiority, in its optimal role: protecting strikers as they dropped their munitions. Similarly, the IAF used the F-16 in its optimal role as a strike fighter against heavily defended targets. Israel was the only nation in the region that possessed these aircraft and tactical knowledge about their optimal use. News of the strike came out of Israel on 8 June 1981 and had immediate domestic and regional implications. Begin received the political boost he envisioned. It also disheartened Israel’s enemies and reinforced the perception of IDF dominance. The strike also produced immediate international ramifications. Both the United Nations (UN) and the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) condemned Israel strongly for the strike. Only U.S. involvement forced these agencies to stop short of punitive actions. Israel’s Osiraq strike was a resounding vote of no confidence on IAEA safeguards. According to Shai Feldman, “Whatever else might be said about the Israeli attack on the Osiraq nuclear reactor near Baghdad, we now know that there is at least one effective anti-proliferation policy in the world.”58 Menachem Begin and Israel predicted harsh responses from the international community. They interpreted every condemnation short of punishment as leaders “going through the motions”59 of international diplomacy.
5.
Domestic Perceptions
The strike emboldened the Israeli population and carried Menachem Begin to a Knesset election victory. According to Shai Feldman, “Primarily, its brilliant execution enhanced the credibility of Israeli deterrence. The 7 June operation was a further indication of Israel’s superior military capabilities.”60 The biggest dilemma the strike alleviated was the short-term likelihood for a nuclear equipped Iraq. Thus, as an
58Shai Feldman, Israeli Nuclear Deterrence : A Strategy for the 1980s (New York: Columbia University
Press, 1982), 130.
59McKinnon, Bullseye One Reactor, 190. 60Feldman, Israeli Nuclear Deterrence : A Strategy for the 1980s, 126.
39
immediate strategic impact, the strike strengthened Israel’s military standing, bought time vis-à-vis the Iraqi nuclear program, and boosted Begin’s domestic political position. D. CONCLUSION Israeli decisionmakers planned the Osiraq strike to obtain short-term gains, but the long-term consequences are now unappealing. According to Perlmutter, “The shortterm price Israel had to pay for the operation was rather minimal. In early June 1982, Begin, Sharon, Eitan and other supporters of the raid could look back at the decision and conclude that the events of the passing year had proved it to be highly justified.”61 Domestically, Begin gained substantial political capital within Israel. In addition, the strike set Iraqi nuclearization back by ten years. However, long-term implications may counter these short-term benefits. According to Feldman, “The raid increased the Arabs’ motivation to accelerate their efforts in the nuclear field. Such acceleration is regarded by the Arabs as a form of resistance to Israel’s perceived intention to maintain nuclear superiority indefinitely.”62 In the future, Israel might not have the military capability to accomplish another Osiraq. In essence, the strike on Osiraq was a one-time counterproliferation operation for Israel and the global community.
61Perlmutter, Handel, and Bar-Joseph, Two Minutes over Baghdad, 172. 62Feldman, Israeli Nuclear Deterrence : A Strategy for the 1980s, 141.
40
IV.
EFFECTS AND AFTERMATH
This chapter identifies the deterrent effects of the Israeli strike on the Osiraq reactor and assesses the political impact of the preventive raid on the Iraqi nuclear weapons program. The chapter first examines Israeli political actions following the strike and analyzes Israel’s perception of the mission. Then it reviews empirical results of the strike from the Iraqi perspective, as well as political factors facing the Iraqi government after the strike. Finally, the chapter identifies the repercussions of preventive military strikes to provide policymakers lessons related to future preventive military actions.
A.
SETTING THE STAGE
Tactically, the strike on Osiraq was a brilliant success. However, Israeli leaders needed confirmation of the reactor’s destruction. Several avenues existed to validate battle damage. The foremost means was the amount of secondary explosions reported by the aviators after their bombs hit the target. Next was the Video Tape Recordings (VTR) of the F-16’s Heads-Up-Display (HUD), which showed the bomb impacts. Israel normally had the means to receive classified U.S. satellite imagery, which would allow verification of the strike, but U.S. imagery was restricted after the attack became public. Months later, when Israel finally received U.S. satellite imagery, it verified that 14 of the 16 bombs dropped on the Tammuz reactor struck within 30 feet of the center of the reactor structure.63 Achieving tactical surprise for all 14 Israeli fighter aircraft was a success in its own right. Striking the target with seven of eight aircraft, however, exceeded the Israeli leaders’ expectations.
1.
Domestic Factors in Israel
Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin perceived the strike as vital to shield Israel from Saddam Hussein’s growing military capability. Begin believed the Iraqi leader was a new “Hitler.” The Prime Minister referred to Hussein as the “Butcher of
63Perlmutter, Handel, and Bar-Joseph, Two Minutes over Baghdad, 124-5.
41
Baghdad.”64 In 1979, Iraq’s military had an army of 190,000 men, 2,200 tanks, and over 400 attack aircraft. These conventional forces were formidable, yet Iraq was building chemical, biological, and nuclear weapons. Although Hussein was threatening Iran during this time, Begin saw Hussein as the foremost regional threat facing Israel. Thus, he justified his decision to strike based on the threat a nuclear equipped Iraq posed to Israel. News of the mission’s success produced celebration at the Prime Minister’s house.65 Domestic political considerations, more than the Iraqi threat, obligated Begin to order the strike. At the time of the strike, Begin was both Prime Minister and Defense Minister. Pushing for Begin’s retirement, Defense Minister Ezer Weizman planned to succeed the Prime Minister at the Herut Party conference of 1979.66 However, Begin maintained his position and further consolidated his power within the party. This forced Weizman to resign his position as Defense Minister. Improving his domestic political support was critical for Begin as a decision on the fate of Osiraq drew near (initially the strike was to happen in October 1980).
When word on the strike spread among Israeli policymakers, however, “the October decision was no longer the property of a select few.”67 Labor party members were urging political caution on the hope diplomatic relations with France would yield results. High-ranking military advisors and intelligence officials also were opposed to the necessity of military action. In a secret memo to the Prime Minister, Shimon Peres, the Labor Party leader, stated, “I speak as a man of experience…what is intended to prevent can become a catalyst.”68 To these advisors the preponderance of evidence suggested Iraq would not have enough material
64Amos Perlmutter, The Life and Times of Menachem Begin, 1st ed. (Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday,
1987), 361.
65Perlmutter, Handel, and Bar-Joseph, Two Minutes over Baghdad, 125. 66Personal Interview with Retired Colonel Doobi Yoffe and his wife, Michal, 5 August 2004. Michal
Yoffe is Ezer Weizman’s daughter. Most political accounts claim Ezer Weizman left his position in the Begin government over a budget dispute with the Prime Minister. Others guess that Weizman disagreed with Begin’s handling of the Peace Accords with Egypt. However, this interview uncovered the real reason was a desire to be the next Prime Minister of Israel. If Weizman left the government, perhaps he could induce a vote of no-confidence on the faltering Begin leadership. Begin was an astute politician and garnered support to counter the threat. Beyond the desire for power, Weizman believed Begin was too callous toward the peace process with Egypt. Early in the Camp David talks, Weizman convinced Moshe Dayan, frustrated at Egyptian hard-line bargaining, to stay the course of peace. In this manner, Weizman unlike Begin, embraced the chance for Israel to gain peace with Egypt above domestic political considerations. 67Perlmutter, The Life and Times of Menachem Begin, 362-5. 68Ibid., 364.
42
to field a nuclear weapon until 1985 at the earliest. Begin saw the critical part of the equation not in terms of uranium but in domestic political capital.
2.
Knesset Elections
The Likud party controlled the Knesset during June 1981, but elections were scheduled later that year. According to Perlmutter, “Begin saw the reactor as a clear and present danger. He also knew that it represented a political weapon which could be used against him in more ways than one.”69 Begin limited the decisionmakers on the strike to three: himself, Finance Minister Ariel Sharon, and Foreign Minister Yitzhak Shamir. Sharon and Shamir held similar strong opinions on Israel’s defense vis-à-vis Iraq. Begin warned his cabinet about taking action against the reactor lightly. Ordering a strike of this magnitude was a high-stakes international and domestic political gamble. If the strike failed the Likud and Begin would certainly lose the election, but most importantly, Iraq would still have a viable nuclear program. Conversely, even if the strike succeeded the Israeli population might see the raid as only a political ploy taken to bolster Begin in the polls. Therefore, regardless of the strike’s outcome, the result politically was far from secure. Most politicians take action designed to keep them in power. But, Begin later stated, “If we had not done this, if we had not acted, I would never have forgiven myself.”70 The Likud party won the following election and consolidated power. The Labor party attempted to spin the Osiraq attack as a political display, yet a professional poll taken the week of the strike showed a five percent increase in Begin’s approval rating. Governmental support also increased to its highest levels since Begin took office. Perlmutter states, “The contest was no longer between Likud and Labor but between Begin and Peres…the 1981 elections centered on a personality contest: Peres won the TV debate – but Begin won the votes.”71 The resulting elections favored Likud by 46 seats to 40 for Labor in the 120-seat Knesset. The other seats went to lesser parties. , Many of these lesser parties (National Religion, Shinui, and Shas parties) however, backed Likud during this time. Begin’s government used action to voice its position
69Ibid., 365. 70Ehud Ya’ari, “Hi Eastward,” Monitin September 1985, 27. 71Perlmutter, The Life and Times of Menachem Begin, 370.
43
clearly on nuclear weapons proliferation in the region. The election results illustrate the general Israeli approval of the Osiraq attack.
3.
International Factors After the Strike
international political ramifications were significant for Israel, but did no lasting damage. Other than Iraq, Egypt stood the most to lose from the Israeli attack. Egypt strongly reprimanded the Israeli attack, but it could not afford to be “weak” toward the Zionist entity. In reality, Egypt could not afford the perception among other Arab nations it had abandoned the Palestinians. In this case, Israel stretched the loosely held boundaries between itself and Egypt by striking three days after the conclusion of the Sadat-Begin summit of Ophira.72 The Egyptian press raged against the Israeli attack. In addition, Egypt cancelled joint Israeli-Egyptian delegations discussing commercial ventures and agricultural planning altogether. Likewise, many European nations joined the international community in condemning the strike, but took no action to penalize Israel. The Israeli strike hurt France, in particular. The technology transfer from France to Iraq was lucrative and over one-quarter of Iraq’s $3.5 billion defense spending went to France. During the strike, Iraq used French and Soviet equipment in its air defenses and use of these systems did not stop the attack. Further highlighting their equipment’s inability in combat against U.S. military equipment would not increase global estimation in their value. After the attack, France’s flow of material and technology to Iraq would slow but would not cease and diplomatic channels with Israel never closed. The United States joined the global outcry against the attack, but took no longterm action against Israel. The United States took three short-term actions against Israel. After issuing a strong verbal condemnation against the strike, the Reagan administration suspended the delivery of four F-16s to Israel. The State Department and Congress also officially initiated an investigation of the legality of the Israeli raid vis-à-vis the Arms Export Control Act. This act limits Israel’s employment of United States military hardware only to defensive acts. The media within the United States was extremely
72Shai Feldman, “The Bombing of Osiraq Revisited,” International Security 7, no. 2 (September 1982):
138.
44
outspoken against the raid, however. All of the attention paid to Osiraq quickly took a lesser spotlight in July 1981 as Israel bombed Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO) headquarters in Beirut.
4.
IAEA Aftershocks
The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) initially drafted a resolution calling for Israeli removal from the IAEA. However, according to Shai Feldman, “The draft was opposed by the American delegation which argued ‘that punitive action against Israel would do great harm to the agency and to global nonproliferation.”73 The result was a resolution recommending Israeli IAEA suspension. This suspension passed but did not punish Israel significantly. Israel expected much worse. In essence, Israel’s strike on the Osiraq reactor was a long distance vote of “no confidence” in IAEA safeguard measures. To the IAEA, this represented a possible Pandora’s Box, with other threatened nations taking up arms to strike the nuclear facilities of their enemies. Due to United States intervention, the IAEA did not expel, nor did it apply devastating new sanctions against Israel. The Israeli attack forced the IAEA to interact with the UN Security Council. For the two regimes, this interaction was a significant transformation in the international order. According to David Fischer, “the Board sent a report to the Security Council after the Israeli bombing…however, it was the Gulf War ten years later that brought the IAEA for the first time into direct consultation with the Council.”74 The first report condemned Israel: ten years later the IAEA called for the complete dismantling of Iraq’s nuclear facilities. As non-proliferation became critically important for international regimes, the IAEA looked back on actions in 1981 as a starting point. Israel’s vote of no confidence made a lasting contribution to the effectiveness of the international nonproliferation regime.
73Ibid.: 136. 74David Fischer, History of the International Atomic Energy Agency: The First Forty Years (Vienna: The
Agency, 1997), 432.
45
5.
United Nations Resolutions
The United Nations (UN) published a Security Council Resolution censuring Israel for the attack. However, this Resolution called for no punitive action against Israel since the United States again resisted such actions. Surprisingly, Iraq did not force a UN vote to expel Israel when it had the chance. According to Ghassan Bishara, “Iraq’s willingness to extricate the United States from a terribly embarrassing vote against the rest of the Security Council members is still puzzling.”75 If Iraq forced an embarrassing veto on the U.S. Ambassador, however, it would alienate Washington’s Arab allies as well as the United States in the process. Such an action would not portray Saddam Hussein to other Arabs as a potential pan-Arab leader, as he so strongly desired. Another reason Iraqi delegates did not force the U.S. delegation to veto was the relative warmth of the relationship with the United States at that time. The United States required a regional Arab ally, and Iraq, deep into the war with Iran, needed aid from the United States. Shai Feldman states the results, “The Iraqi–U.S. cooperation in drafting the post-operation U.N. Security Council Resolution was a natural consequence of this requirement.”76 Thus, Israel managed to escape with a very meager reprimand considering the gravity of its actions against Osiraq.
B.
BOMB DAMAGE
Damage to the Tammuz 17 reactor complex at Tuwaitha was significant. Verifiable information about BDA open to international scrutiny was, at best, sketchy from the Government of Iraq. Unclassified reports indicate Iraq had two French nuclear reactors, one Russian nuclear reactor, and several reprocessing facilities at Tuwaitha.77 There were several technical laboratories surrounding Osiraq, the largest of the French reactors. Osiraq, named after the Egyptian god of the dead, was the only Iraqi reactor capable of significant plutonium production. After the Israeli attack, Osiraq was no longer capable of producing plutonium.
75Ghassan Bishara, “The Political Repercussions of the Israeli Raid on the Iraqi Nuclear Reactor,” Journal
of Palestine Studies 11, no. 3 (March 1982): 68.
76Feldman, “The Bombing of Osiraq Revisited,” 129. 77David Albright and Mark Hibbs, “Iraq’s Nuclear Hide-and-Seek,” Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists 47, no.
7 (Fall 1991): 18.
46
Figure 4. 1.
After Effects of Osiraq Reactor
Physical Results at the Osiraq Reactor
Iraq lost incredible nuclear assets in the Israeli strike on Osiraq (Figure 4).78 Khidhir Hamza was a senior Iraqi scientist trained in America at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He was a nuclear weapons designer in the Iraqi scientific community. His office was in the Tuwaitha complex. Hamza states the results of the Israeli strike: “The place was a disaster. The reactor dome was completely gone. The reactor cavity, kind of a swimming pool where the fuel rods were cooled, was cratered beyond any hope of repair. The uranium, however, was safe.”79 Yet, there were larger problems than the physical destruction of the reactor. Primarily, Iraqi scientists were now unable to use plutonium in developing the necessary fissile material for a bomb. The next most available route was to enrich uranium through a centrifuge process. This process was more time consuming and wrought with expensive, sophisticated, and scarce scientific
78After: Chapter 12. “Nuclear Weapons,” in Strategic Assessment: Engaging Power for Peace
(Washington, D.C.: National Defense University, March 1998).
79Khidhir Abd al-Abb as Hamzah and Jeff Stein, Saddam’s Bombmaker : The Terrifying inside Story of the
Iraqi Nuclear and Biological Weapons Agenda (New York: Scribner, 2000), 129.
47
material. The Osiraq reactor alone had cost the Iraqi government $300 million dollars to purchase from the French government. Iraq was now funding two wars, one against the Iranians and the other against nuclear non-proliferation.
2.
Immediate Strike Implications
The strike on Osiraq punished Iraq more in time than financial penalties. Milan Vego states, “Battlefields wax and wane in combat, but lost time is irreplaceable.”80 Iraqi scientists began courting French officials in the effort to purchase Osiraq in the early 1970’s. The official purchase did not occur until 1974. Safeguarding radioactive material and manufacturing highly technical equipment take enormous quantities of time. Thus, Tuwaitha was not operational until five years after purchase. According to Feldman, “There is no doubt that Osiraq’s destruction slowed the pace of Iraq’s nuclear program. Even if Iraq could replace its loss with an identical reactor, which now seems likely, some 3 to 4 years will have been gained.”81 Eight Israeli F-16s destroyed five years of work in less than 90 seconds. On 8 June 1981, Iraq was once again years away from obtaining a nuclear weapon. After the strike on Osiraq, Iraqi scientists faced new obstacles in constructing a nuclear weapon. They were only able to obtain “Caramel” fuel; a lower grade radioactive material enriched only 7-10 percent and used singly for experiment reactors.82 Yet, the strike on Osiraq did not destroy all of Iraq’s enriched Uranium. However, the scientists with expertise to use this Uranium were the most difficult piece to replace. Iraqi scientists, studying abroad, sought shelter from Saddam Hussein and refused to return to Iraq. Those who remained took the risk of losing their lives when traveling internationally. Yehia al-Meshad was murdered while in Paris attempting to buy enriched Uranium from the French government. The French police attributed the murder to robbery but Iraqi scientists suspected Israel’s intelligence community as the culprit.83 Regardless of who accomplished this, fear slowed the Iraqi scientific community significantly.
80Milan N. Vego, Operational Warfare (Rhode Island: Naval War College, 2000), 47. 81Feldman, “The Bombing of Osiraq Revisited,” 125. 82Ibid.: 117. 83Hamzah and Stein, Saddam’s Bombmaker, 133.
48
3.
Domestic Factors in Iraq
Domestically, Saddam Hussein faced political ramifications from the strike, but none that jeopardized the government. The Iraqi population was largely unaware of what Tuwaitha held. More importantly, the war with Iran offered a public diversion. Saddam Hussein’s Ba’athist government formed around the inspiration of a strongman ruling an equally strong-willed people. Thus, much of Hussein’s political legitimacy focused on the leader’s strength in conflict. Yet, the Iraqi government did not launch a media attack immediately decrying the illegitimacy of the raid as they did in the Gulf War and Operation Iraqi Freedom. Instead, Israel was the first to announce the strike. Uri BarJoseph states, “Under these circumstances it was quite clear that the official Israeli announcement concerning the surprise attack came as the second shock for Saddam Hussein’s regime.”84 Politically, the attack appeared to Hussein as a setback in prestige and resulted in a 72-hour blitz against Zionism from Radio Baghdad. Bar-Joseph continues, “It was still interesting to note that Saddam Hussein himself kept quiet for ten days after the raid. As leader of the Iraqi people, he probably knew that some other reaction apart from the propaganda campaign against Israel was needed.”85 Iraq, however, was in no position to oppose Israel militarily.
4.
Arab Responses
Arab sentiment against the Israeli attack was evident but did not convert into military action against Israel. The Iran-Iraq war divided Arab sentiment in the early 1980’s, but once again, the Israeli strike unified the Arab world against the ‘Zionist entity.’ Syria had much to gain from destruction of Iraqi nuclear weapons. Iraq’s Ba’ath party has always labored against Syrian Ba’athists. However, Syria vehemently declared Arab solidarity of action against Israel. Likewise, Saudi Arabia publicly condemned the Israeli strike calling for Arab unity. In addition, King Khalid offered to contribute funds to rebuild the Iraqi reactor. According to Uri Bar-Joseph, “It [the attack] was seen as an insult to the whole Arab world. This was the genuine feeling and perception of every Arab. The image of the Israeli pilot as Superman – similar to the one that existed
84Perlmutter, Handel, and Bar-Joseph, Two Minutes over Baghdad, 142. 85Ibid., 144.
49
following the Six Day War – had also been reinforced upon the Arabs.”86 Egyptian President Anwar Sadat also publicly condemned Israel. Fresh from the peace accords with Begin, he needed to limit his isolation from the Arab community. According to Feldman, “Egypt attempted to return to inter-Arab activity by-among other things-aiding Iraq in its war with Iran. Thus, some military aid had been extended by Cairo to Baghdad.”87 Privately, all Arab states recognized Iraqi aims at hegemony and saw a nuclear-equipped Iraq as a destabilizing force in the region. The Arab nations needed a nuclear-equipped state to offset Israel’s nuclear ability, but did not want Iraq to be that state. The global uproar against the Israeli attack resulted in some compensation for Iraq. In the early 1980’s, the Reagan administration was in search of a regional ally (other than Israel) to replace Iran. In turn, Iraq was desperately in need of equipment and funding during the conflict with Iran. The Osiraq attack acted to stop Iraq’s nuclear proliferation, but simultaneously open diplomatic avenues for the United States. Every meeting with United States officials reinforced Saddam Hussein’s stature and prestige to Iraqi citizens and brought some form of reimbursement. However, global aid and Arab solidarity could not replace the time and money Iraq lost during the strike.
C.
THE VALUE OF PREVENTIVE STRIKES
The overarching question remains: did Iraq lose all interest in obtaining a nuclear weapon after the Osiraq strike or did they redouble their nuclear efforts? The strike devastated Iraq’s nuclear program, decimated the regime economically, and hardened Saddam Hussein’s desire to become the leader of a nuclear nation. In his case study review, Patrick Morgan links deterrence to controlling conflicts by using appropriate threats and indicates that in spite of taking the correct deterrence steps, a motivated challenger can attack. The motivation of the challenger is a decisive issue in the level of success a deterrent relationship will have. Peter Lavoy indicates that a deterrence association between states can be offensive as well as defensive in nature. “The case
86Ibid., 169. 87Feldman, “The Bombing of Osiraq Revisited,” 138.
50
studies show that many new actors plan to use unconventional deterrents both to support the status quo and to change it.”88 Iraq clearly desired nuclear weapons as an unconventional deterrent against the Zionist entity. Thus, in this thesis deterrence includes offensive actions such as preventive strikes and allows the examination of motivating factors in both Israel and Iraq.
1.
Short Term Value
The policy of the Government of Iraq was a direct reflection of Saddam Hussein’s private desires. His regime implemented his policy without question. Khidhir Hamza mentions his unflinching obedience to illogical orders due to the deadly consequences of disobedience. According to Morgan, “No wonder it was difficult to deter Iraq…the trouble was the coalition promised to damage Iraq’s economy and society…that was entirely ‘bearable.’ The way to deter Iraq was to have promised to kill him [Saddam Hussein] or remove him from power – the only things he really cared about.”89 Power and regional hegemony motivated the Iraqi leader. In this manner, much of Iraq’s coarse foreign policy was a reflection of its dictator’s desire for power. Saddam Hussein’s attempt to obtain nuclear weapons was a natural extension of his need for influence. The Israeli strike on Osiraq occurred before the reactor went critical. Thus, the bomb grade Uranium was still available to Iraqi scientists. According to Khidhir Hamza, they salvaged 25 kilograms from the rubble. Within six years after the strike, Hamza estimates Iraq had twelve thousand scientists and technicians working to develop a nuclear weapon. Economically, following the strike, Iraq poured an estimated ten billion dollars into its, now buried, nuclear facilities scattered throughout Iraq. These scientists were able to work relatively uninterrupted for 4 years before Desert Storm hampered their efforts. They developed viable shaped charges, manufactured their own explosive caps, and cast their own Uranium sphere. Although Iraqi scientists accomplished significant milestones in design technology, they lacked an enriched core
88Lewis A Dunn, Peter R. Lavoy, and Scott D. Sagan, “Conclusions,” in Planning the Unthinkable, ed.
Peter R. Lavoy, Scott D. Sagan, and James J. Wirtz (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2000), 235.
89Patrick M. Morgan, Deterrence Now (Cambridge, UK ; New York: Cambridge University Press, 2003),
267.
51
able to sustain a significant explosion.90 It was only a matter of time before Iraqi scientists obtained this fissile material. However, Desert Storm interrupted this attempt and further thwarted the Iraqi dictator’s plan for nuclear weapons. Thus, the Israeli strike on Osiraq delayed Iraq’s nuclear development, but did not dissuade Hussein’s search for “the bomb.” In attempting to dissuade Iraq, the Israeli government did not view Hussein as irrational. An intelligence dossier on Hussein correctly reported him as a power-hungry, calculating risk-taker. Lavoy states, “The common assumption is that we [the deterrers] are rational, they [the challengers] are constrained by culture.”91 Israel chose to restrain Saddam Hussein by attacking one of his instruments of power. While this action did not discourage Hussein from his desire for nuclear weapons, it did buy time for Israel in the conflict. One condition of successful deterrence is having a proper perspective of the challenger. While the Israeli preventive strike on Osiraq served several short-term goals for Israel, it had long-term repercussions for the world.
2.
Long Term Value
The Israeli preventive strike solidified a long-term change in the deterrence landscape. The strike was the first example in the Middle East of a precision aerial attack on another nation’s nuclear facilities. This Revolution in Military Affairs (RMA) opened new realms of possibility based on a modern air force’s capability. According to Morgan, “Why is this a revolution? The best answer is that it should greatly affect the way force can be used. Force has usually been a blunt instrument.”92 Morgan claims nations with precision strike ability will now find deterrence much more appealing. This is incorrect. Precise force is still force. Military action should be the last resort any statesman chooses, due to its life and death nature. As quick and surgical as any precision strike appears prima facie, the long-term effects lie within the deterrence relationship of the states and not the effects of the weapons. Eliot Cohen states: “The days of Osiraq-type raids on a single, easily located, and above-surface nuclear facility are over. Secrecy, camouflage, deception and dispersion will make preemption a far
90Hamzah and Stein, Saddam’s Bombmaker, 334-5. 91Dunn, Lavoy, and Sagan, “Unthinkable,” 254. 92Morgan, Deterrence Now, 217.
52
more extensive and uncertain operation than ever before.”93 Osiraq was a one-time good deal for the Israelis. The lessons since Osiraq prove Cohen correct so far. The long-term effects of any surprise attack will produce the following results: “harder” targets and more staunchly antagonistic enemies. This does not mean this author condemns military strikes to serve the state’s purpose. On the contrary, a military strike should be devastating and used when a nation is prepared to follow with additional military action. Domestic political aspects often override significant international political factors. This was the case with Israel in June 1981. Every intelligence indicator Begin received indicated Israel had time to mitigate Iraq’s nuclear reactor by other than military means. Begin saw the attack as a political launching pad and his ideological responsibility to the people of Israel. Concerning domestic issues Morgan states, “there is recurring evidence that governments, elites, and leaders are often barely moved by general deterrence threats that they ought to take into account. Often short-term thinking, not attuned to larger implications and potential consequences of what they are considering, drives them. They seem caught up in domestic political or ideological preoccupations.”94 Strategically, Israel has a lack of Geostrategic depth and extreme sensitivity to loss of Israeli lives. A nuclear weapon in the hands of a staunch, determined enemy provoked strong reactions in Begin’s government. Morgan also states, “Top decision makers rarely understand the military preparations made to deal with crises, resulting in force postures unsuitable for deterrence situations.”95 Such was not the case in Israel, Begin and his trusted advisors were all very familiar with the Israeli Defense Force’s capabilities. The ideological and domestic political factors drove Begin for an early June strike. 3. Asymmetric Effects
Military actions after a preventive strike require significant resolve by the deterrer. Historically, the Government of Israel has a poor record of accomplishment in deterrence. Morgan chose Yair Evron’s deterrence case study on Israel. Evron concludes, “Deterrence failed even though Israel was militarily superior, its resolve was clear, and it communicated threats clearly. The failures arose out of Arab domestic
93Heather Wilson, “Missed Opportunities: Washington Politics and Nuclear Proliferation,” The National
Interest Winter 1993/94 (December 1993).
Quoted from an Interview with Cohen
94Morgan, Deterrence Now, 115. 95Ibid., 146.
53
political pressures and the impact of crisis on Arab decision making.”96 Later in the case study Morgan confirms, “Nuclear weapons are not irrelevant but not dominant.”97 The first lesson in the aftermath of Osiraq is nuclear weapons were nice (and expensive) distracting mechanisms with little significant effect. By striking Osiraq Israel demonstrated its resolve to deny nuclear weapons in Arab nations in accordance with its policy. However, the nature of this attack is “bearable” according to Morgan. It did not threaten the full sovereignty of Iraq. Thus, Saddam Hussein continued developing nuclear weapons clandestinely. Morgan states the second deterrent principle, “Where the threat is less than destruction of the regime, it is possibly ‘bearable’ so deterrence is less likely to work consistently and may have to be sustained by fighting, perhaps repeatedly.”98 The last principle is a corollary of the second; that the challenger must be willing to employ the threat on the deterrer in order to prove credibility. Thus, most deterring nations limit the threat in order to facilitate credibility. This succeeds in making the deterrence “bearable.” Morgan states this last lesson, “deterrence will more often involve not just threats but force and will be less likely to work quickly, requiring repeated applications of force in repeated confrontations. This will make deterrence expensive, difficult, and hard to sustain over a long period, markedly eroding its effectiveness against opponents determined to outlast it.”99 The Osiraq reactor disappeared in 90 seconds of bombing, but the remains haunt deterrence theory effectively today.
96Ibid., 147. 97Ibid., 165. 98Ibid., 276. 99Ibid., 223.
54
D.
CONCLUSION Preventive strikes are relatively simple to plan and execute. They make a global
statement immediately. However, the repercussions of these strikes are lasting and costly. Currently, the United States can see the truth of this implication daily. Policymakers eagerly looked for a precision Navy Tomahawk or TLAM to meet momentary political needs in the Middle East several years ago. Now the United States is seeing the long-term consequences. The conclusion of Planning the Unthinkable encourages United States decision makers to be prepared.100 A one-size-fits-all precision strike course of action will not produce good results.
100Peter R. Lavoy, Scott Douglas Sagan, and James J. Wirtz, Planning the Unthinkable : How New Powers
Will Use Nuclear, Biological, and Chemical Weapons, Cornell Studies in Security Affairs. (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2000), 257.
55
THIS PAGE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK
56
V.
A. INTRODUCTION
Conclusion
Israel is willing to enforce nonproliferation in spite of stepping beyond international standards and regimes. The attack on Osiraq did counter Iraq’s nuclear program in the decade following the strike. However, the strike also virtually guaranteed the need for future military action against Iraq. This chapter reviews a summary of research findings and offers policy recommendations for U.S. policy toward Israel and future counterproliferation actions.
B.
SUMMARY OF FINDINGS After the 1973 war, Israel’s strategic outlook was insecure. The presence of
potential Iraqi nuclear weapons only exacerbated the insecurity. When Israel considered the known behavior of Saddam Hussein, now in search of nuclear weapons, it concluded passivity was not an option. Israel elected to attack the Iraqi nuclear reactor by overt, covert, and diplomatic means first. This attack started in 1974 and concluded when Begin decided to switch the attack to military means In October 1980, Israeli decision makers held two critical cabinet meetings. On 14 October, Begin was in favor of military action, but desired further work in the diplomatic arena. At Begin’s next cabinet meeting, an emergency session, he was convinced of the action to take. He implored his cabinet to vote for the destruction of the reactor. Once Israeli policymakers saw the other methods’ ineffectiveness, they quickly elected to strike. After gaining approval, Begin’s decision was simply a matter of when to strike the reactor. In 1981, the timing was right and Israel proved it lives by the Begin doctrine. Israeli decisionmakers planned the Osiraq strike to relieve short-term pressure, but the long-term consequences are uncertain. The strike set Iraqi nuclearization back a decade, and domestically, Begin gained substantial political capital within Israel. However, continuing uncertainties may counter these short-term benefits. Two of these 57
uncertainties are an intense desire among most Arab states to counter Israeli military dominance by going nuclear and motivation for the prestige associated with being in the nuclear club. In the future, these factors may suggest military means to accomplish another preventive strike are significantly reduced as Israel copes with future nuclear proliferators who also learned lessons from the strike on Osiraq. In essence, the strike on Osiraq was a one-time good deal for Israel and the global community. The policy implications from a single military action taken over twenty-three years ago still apply today. Preventive strikes are simple to plan and execute compared to major military actions on the national strategy scale. Moreover, in spite of their simplicity, they make a global statement immediately. Media attention serves to highlight the importance of the problem. In the long-term however, a preventive strike such as Osiraq, may reinforce a state’s desire toward nuclear proliferation. Such was the case with Iraq. I have three findings. First, future preventive strikes against nuclear targets will be less successful. Other nations seeking a nuclear option also have learned valuable lessons from the strike on Osiraq: dispersal and redundancy of facilities. Thus, while a future strike may hinder nuclear plans momentarily, the time will not be measured in years unless followed with more strikes. Second, the media backlash after a strike will serve as an impetus to radicalize the proliferator’s motivation toward going nuclear. Third, decision makers should make every attempt to work within the confines of current global constructs for stability. Regimes such as the IAEA and U.N. require cooperation for strength. By working within international norms, nonproliferation may take longer than through other means, but it stands a chance to be far more effective in the end. C. POLICY RECOMMENDATIONS I have two policy recommendations. First, U.S. policymakers should recognize the consequences of diplomatic failure on the process of nonproliferation. Israeli decision makers attempted to counter Iraq’s nuclear plans diplomatically for seven years before concluding a military option was the only appropriate solution. Israeli policymakers justified the strike based on their perception of apparent U.S. vicissitude 58
toward Iraq’s nuclear proliferation. U.S. diplomats had many more tools at their disposal to allay Israeli fears that went unused. Currently, U.S. policymakers, in consensus with global partners, France, Germany, and the United Kingdom condemned Iran’s nuclear proliferation efforts and called for international action. The latest collaboration produced a joint statement encouraging Iran to stop its nuclear proliferation and open all facilities to IAEA inspection. While there was no automatic trigger for the IAEA to alert the U.N. Security Council if Iran failed to comply, the diplomatic pressure exerted through the regime was a good start. Coordinating activities between the IAEA and the U.N. Security Council is the best remedy to stop nuclear expansion. As the global hegemon, the next decision point for U.S. policymakers is balancing the weight of nonproliferation system management wisely against valuable alliance considerations. Decision makers should make every attempt to work within the confines of current global constructs for stability. If this means taking diplomatic and economic actions against proliferators or pushing Israel to abandon the Begin doctrine, then quick decisive action through IAEA or U.N. auspices with full United States backing are the best options. U.S. leaders must weigh the potential misperception between slow, steady pressure to reverse proliferation, and Israel’s view of state survival. If U.S. policymakers fail to take decisive action, Israeli decision makers may once again take preventive military action The second policy recommendation is a one-size-fits-all precision strike course of action will not produce good results. However, if U.S. decision makers see the need to explore the preventive strike option – on Iran or the DPRK- the factors covered in this thesis warrant consideration. The U.S. military is the best in the world at Global precision targeting on demand. Nevertheless, striking a target, regardless of the level of damage inflicted, does not alter the motivating factors behind its existence. Before, choosing a military option, leaders should confirm that all other options are exhausted and remain ineffective. Along with the initial strike, military planners should plan contingency follow-on strikes and outline triggers for when to launch these strikes. The strike on Osiraq proved deadly, but did not prevent Saddam Hussein’s Iraq from 59
rebuilding with vigor after the shock of the first strike subsided. Diplomats should arrange to coordinate incentives for stopping proliferation in conjunction with follow-on strike actions. These incentives may reduce the radical tendencies of a nuclear proliferator when leaders see the benefits of not going nuclear. Finally, regardless of the outcome of the November 2004 Presidential election, the next administration should continue pressuring Iran via the IAEA and U.N., continue working in consensus with global partners, and pay close attention for Israeli signs of independent military action. The Osiraq attack is the benchmark for military counterproliferation actions. The world will judge the success of future strikes in comparison to the Israeli military action of 1981. However, a better standard of success should be the dedication a nation devotes to nonproliferation via diplomatic means.
60
LIST OF REFERENCES
Albright, David, and Mark Hibbs. “Iraq’s Nuclear Hide-and-Seek.” Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists 47, no. 7 (Fall 1991).
Bishara, Ghassan. “The Political Repercussions of the Israeli Raid on the Iraqi Nuclear Reactor.” Journal of Palestine Studies 11, no. 3 (March 1982).
Brownstein, Lewis. “Decision Making in Israeli Foreign Policy: An Unplanned Process.” Political Science Quarterly 92, no. 2 (Summer 1977): 259-79. Burke, Jason. Al-Qaeda : Casting the Shadow of Terror. London: I. B. Tauris, 2003. Cohen, Avner. “The Lessons of Osirak and the American Counterproliferation Debate.” In International Perspectives on Counterproliferation, edited by Mitchell Reiss and Harald Muller, 73-102. Washington D.C.: Woodrow Wilson Center for International Studies, 1995. D’Amato, Anthony. “Israel’s Air Strike against the Osiraq Reactor: A Retrospective.” International and Comparative Law Journal 10, no. 259 (Dec 1996).
Dunn, Lewis A, Peter R. Lavoy, and Scott D. Sagan. “Conclusions.” In Planning the Unthinkable, edited by Peter R. Lavoy, Scott D. Sagan and James J. Wirtz. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2000. Feldman, Shai. “The Bombing of Osiraq Revisited.” International Security 7, no. 2 (September 1982).
———. Israeli Nuclear Deterrence : A Strategy for the 1980s. New York: Columbia University Press, 1982. Fischer, David. History of the International Atomic Energy Agency: The First Forty Years. Vienna: The Agency, 1997. Friedlander, Melvin A. Sadat and Begin : The Domestic Politics of Peacemaking. Boulder, Colo.: Westview Press, 1983. Hamzah, Khidhir Abd al-Abb as, and Jeff Stein. Saddam’s Bombmaker : The Terrifying inside Story of the Iraqi Nuclear and Biological Weapons Agenda. New York: Scribner, 2000. Inbar, Efraim. “Israeli National Security, 1973-96.” The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 555, no. 1 (January 1998): 62-81.
61
“Interagency Intelligence Assessment; Implications of Israeli Attack on Iraq.” In Declassified Government Intelligence Assessment via internet http://www.foia.cia.gov/, edited by Central Intelligence Agency, 9. Washington D.C.: CIA, 1981. [Last accessed 21 July 2004] Israel Weighs Strike on Iran (26 September 2003) [Internet]. JANE’S INTELLIGENCE DIGEST, 2003 [cited 15 April 2004]. Available from . [Last accessed 15 April 2004] Kaarbo, Juliet. “Power and Influence in Foreign Policy Decision Making: The Role of Junior Coalition Partners in German and Israeli Foreign Policy.” International Studies Quarterly 40, no. 4 (Dec 1996): 501-30. Lavoy, Peter R., Scott Douglas Sagan, and James J. Wirtz. Planning the Unthinkable : How New Powers Will Use Nuclear, Biological, and Chemical Weapons, Cornell Studies in Security Affairs. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2000. Lockman, Zachary. “Israel at a Turning Point.” MERIP Reports, no. 92 (Winter 1980): 36. McKinnon, Dan. Bullseye One Reactor. Shrewsbury: Airlife, 1988. Morgan, Patrick M. Deterrence Now. Cambridge, UK ; New York: Cambridge University Press, 2003. Nakdimon, Shelomoh. First Strike: The Exclusive Story of How Israel Foiled Iraq’s Attempt to Get the Bomb. New York: Summit Books, 1987. “Nuclear Weapons.” In Strategic Assessment: Engaging Power for Peace. Washington, D.C.: National Defense University, March 1998. “Osiraq and Beyond.” Air Force Magazine, August 2002. Perlmutter, Amos. The Life and Times of Menachem Begin. 1st ed. Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday, 1987. Perlmutter, Amos, Michael I. Handel, and Uri Bar-Joseph. Two Minutes over Baghdad. 2nd ed. London; Portland, OR: Frank Cass, 2003. Vego, Milan N. Operational Warfare. Rhode Island: Naval War College, 2000. Wilson, Heather. “Missed Opportunities: Washington Politics and Nuclear Proliferation.” The National Interest Winter 1993/94 (December 1993).
Ya’ari, Ehud. “Hi Eastward.” Monitin September 1985, 25-27.
62
INITIAL DISTRIBUTION LIST
1. Defense Technical Information Center Ft. Belvoir, Virginia Dudley Knox Library Naval Postgraduate School Monterey, California Major Peter Ford Las Vegas, Nevada
2.
3.
63