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The Jewish Press
Why Israel Must Not Allow Iran To Acquire Nuclear Weapons
By: Louis Rene Beres
August 16, 2006
With mounting evidence that Hizbullah-fired rockets can cause Israel
considerable damage, one point should stand out glaringly above all others:
Under no circumstances should Iran be allowed to reach the stage at which
it could launch nuclear weapons. In the presumed absence of effective
constraints by the so-called international community, Israel now has not
only the right – but also a distinct obligation – to act preemptively
in its own essential defense.
My readers will recognize that I have been hammering this particular strategic
and legal argument on these pages for some time. After all, the core concern
of Project Daniel was precisely the Iranian nuclear menace. Now, however,
we have compelling proof positive of this concern’s correctness.
If Israel can be made to suffer horribly from relatively small rockets,
how could it be expected to endure even a singly volley of Iranian missiles
tipped with atomic warheads? An Iranian nuclear attack against Israel,
animated by deep and irremediable religious hatreds, could destroy more
Jews in a cursed instant than were murdered in a thousand years of pogroms.
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No rules of civilized human behavior can be counted upon to thwart the
unquenchable Iranian impulse to genocide against Israel. Less than half
the size of a large county in California, the Jewish State faces a primal
medieval enemy that does not even pretend to observe international law.
Unless Israel and/or the United States act promptly in self-defense, both
countries could soon be held hostage to Iranian nuclear blackmail.
Let us be candid. The U.S. won't do it. As for Israel, it would surely
be taking enormous political and military risks by striking first. Yet,
the costs to Israel of not striking first in self-defense, are apt to
be far greater. Without a doubt, these unimaginable costs could include
complete annihilation.
International law is not a suicide pact. No country can be required to
cooperate in its own extermination. Leaving Iran to the predictably “tough
sanctions” of the United Nations could quickly transport Israel
to the very margins of national survival.
Not all states are the same. Israel is not Iran. Israel does not declare
itself at war with Iran or even with any Arab state. Israel holds nuclear
weapons quietly, unthreateningly, without bravado – and only to
prevent its catastrophic destruction by enemy aggression. It is altogether
inconceivable that Israel would ever resort to such weapons as an initial
move of war. A nuclear Iran, however, could at some point consider atomic
first-strike attacks upon Israel with plainly genocidal intent. After
all, they say so openly – every day.
What does Israel have to fear? Twenty-five years ago I published the first
of seven books that described the expected consequences of a nuclear war.
These nightmarish effects were drawn largely from a major report by the
National Academy of Sciences in 1975. They included large temperature
changes; contamination of food and water; disease epidemics in crops,
domesticated animals and humans due to radiation; shortening of growing
seasons; irreversible injuries to aquatic species; widespread and long-term
cancers due to inhalation of plutonium particles; radiation-induced abnormalities
in persons in utero, at the time of detonations; and a vast growth in
the number of skin cancers and increasing genetic diseases.
Overwhelming health problems would afflict the survivors of any nuclear
attack upon Israel. These problems would extend beyond the consequences
of prompt burn injuries. Retinal burns would occur in the eyes of persons
far from the explosions. Israelis would be crushed by collapsing buildings
and torn to shreds by flying glass. Others would fall victim to raging
firestorms. Fallout injuries would include whole-body radiation injury,
produced by penetrating, hard gamma radiations; superficial radiation
burns produced by soft radiations; and injuries produced by deposits of
radioactive substances within the body.
After an Iranian nuclear attack, even a “small” one, those
few medical facilities that might still exist in Israel would be taxed
well beyond capacity. Water supplies would become altogether unusable.
Housing and shelter could be unavailable for hundreds of thousands, perhaps
even millions of survivors. Transportation would break down to rudimentary
levels. Food shortages would be critical and long-term.
Israel's complex network of exchange systems would be shattered. Virtually
everyone would be deprived of the most basic means of livelihood. Emergency
police and fire services would be decimated. All systems dependent upon
electrical power could stop functioning. Severe trauma would occasion
widespread disorientation and psychiatric disorders for which there would
be absolutely no therapeutic services.
Normal human society would cease. The pestilence of unrestrained murder
and banditry would augment plague and epidemics. Many of the survivors
would expect an increase in serious degenerative diseases. They would
also expect premature death, impaired vision and sterility. An increased
incidence of leukemia and cancers of the lung, stomach, breast, ovary
and uterine cervix would be unavoidable.
Many balanced relationships in nature, would be upset by the extensive
fallout. Israelis who survive the nuclear attack would have to deal with
enlarged insect populations. Like the locusts of biblical times, mushrooming
insect hordes would spread from the radiation-damaged areas in which they
arose.
Insects are generally more resistant to radiation than humans. This fact,
coupled with the prevalence of unburied corpses, uncontrolled waste and
untreated sewage, would generate trillions of flies and mosquitoes. Breeding
in the dead bodies, these insects would make it impossible to control
typhus, malaria, dengue fever and encephalitis.
Throughout Israel, tens or even hundreds of thousands of rotting human
corpses would pose the largest health threat. The survivors would envy
the dead.
This is only the tip of the iceberg; indeed, it is a vast understatement
of what could be expected. Interactions between individual effects of
nuclear weapons would make matters far worse. It follows that Israel must
never allow a still openly genocidal Iran to acquire nuclear weapons.
Although any Israeli defensive strike would encounter staggering operational
difficulties, this is one of those times in which the expected costs of
doing nothing would be much, much greater.
Project Daniel, my readers will recall, authoritatively advised that Iran
be prevented from going nuclear whatever the cost. Israel, we indicated
to Prime Minister Sharon, can never coexist with a nuclear Iran. Never.
If there is any overriding lesson to be learned from Israel’s current
operations in Lebanon, it is the absolute moral, legal and historical
correctness of anticipatory self-defense by Jews in the face of a planned
Iranian genocide.
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