&w=3840&q=100)
Does Israel have nuclear weapons?
The conflict with Iran is shedding light on Israel's nuclear arsenal – the only nation in West Asia to have such weapons – and a secret programme to unleash them in case it faces extinction. But what do we know about Israel's nuclear arsenal? And what is the Samson Option? read more
Israel is widely known to have nuclear weapons, though the details of its arsenal remain scarce.
Now, the Israel-Iran conflict is shedding light on Tel Aviv's nuclear arsenal – the only such country in West Asia to have such weapons – and a secret programme to unleash them in case it faces extinction.
But what do we know about Israel's nuclear programme? And about the Samson Option?
Let's take a closer look:
What do we know?
Israel has been wanting a nuclear bomb since its founding in 1948.
This was a direct result of the Holocaust – and the desire of the Jewish state to be in control of its own destiny.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
Read Israel Iran conflict live updates
Three men began Israel's pursuit of the bomb – its first Prime Minister Ben Gurion, scientist Ernst David Bergmann and civil servant Shimon Peres (who himself would later become Prime Minister of Israel).
It was Ben Gurion who helped establish the reactor at Dimona – where Israel's nuclear weapons program is still widely believed to be located.
The French are believed to have assisted Israel in building the nuclear reactor – known as the IRR-2 research reactor at the Negev Nuclear Research Center – which provided the plutonium for its nuclear weapons program.
It remains unclear when Israel conducted its first nuclear test.
The country is thought to have had nuclear weapons since the 1960s.
The country is thought to have built its first nuclear bomb in complete secrecy – lying even to its staunch ally the United States.
Israel first claimed that the center was a textiles factory. Afterwards, they claimed it was a civilian research center that did not have chemical reprocessing plant needed to make a nuclear weapon.
Israel is believed to have build or tried to build its first crude nuclear devices during the May 1967 crisis – which came before the Six-Day War.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
Israel launched strikes against Iran early June 13, hitting its nuclear programme and targeting its long-range missile capabilities. File image/Reuters
The US government by 1975 became convinced that Tel Aviv possessed nuclear weapons.
Israel has for decades maintained a position of strategic ambiguity when it comes to its nuclear arsenal – known as 'Amimut'.
This means it neither confirms nor denies it has one.
'We won't be the first to introduce nuclear weapons into the Middle East', Netanyahu claimed in 2011 – echoing what Peres earlier said – despite all evidence to the contrary.
Israeli officials and those in the know are also loathe to talk about the program openly.
This is because the Israeli state takes an extremely severe attitude towards whistleblowers.
Take the example of Mordechai Vanunu, a former nuclear technician who revealed the secrets of Israel's nuclear program to the world in an interview with the Sunday Times.
Vanunu was abducted by the Mossad from a foreign country and forcibly taken back to Israel – where he spent nearly two decades in captivity – eleven of those years in solitary confinement.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
Israel remains the only country in West Asia to have nuclear weapons.
Estimates about its arsenal greatly vary.
Some say it has between 75 and 400 nuclear weapons.
Others place that number between 100 and 200.
Israel has not signed the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.
Nor does it of come under the purview of the International Atomic Energy Agency.
The Samson Option
Israel also has what it calls the Samson Option.
This is a means of last resort if Israel is on the brink of extinction.
It is a reference to the Biblical hero Samson, who was endowed with supernatural strength.
The story of Samson and Delilah – who beguiled him to reveal the secret of his strength (his hair) only to cut it off in his sleep – is a well-known fable.
Samson, now absent of his strength, was taken captive by his enemies, the Philistines, and blinded. Samson, who prayed to God for his strength to return one last time during his time in servitude, then brought down the pillars of the temple of Dagon – causing it to collapse and kill himself and all his enemies.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
The term Samson Option itself entered the lexicon after award winning journalist Seymour Hersh wrote a book about 1991.
Entitled The Samson Option: Israel's Nuclear Arsenal and American Foreign Policy, the book, for which Hersh consulted with Israeli and US intelligence officials, revealed many important details about Israel's nuclear programme and its strategic doctrine.
According to Hersh and Israeli historian Avner Cohen, Ben Gurion, Peres, Levi Ashkol, and Moshe Dayan are said to have come up with this term in the 1960s.
Under this option, Israel would launch an all-out nuclear assault on the civilian centers of its non-nuclear rivals – in contravention of international law.
'The Samson Option is not designed to deter a nuclear adversary from a first strike or counter strike—Israel is the only nuclear-armed state in the region. Rather, its purported purpose is to ensure Israel's survival. Under the Samson Option, nuclear weapons would be deliberately used against a non-nuclear adversary as a last resort to prevent an Israeli defeat,' Kelsey Davenport, director of nonproliferation policy at the Arms Control Association, told Progressive Magazine.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
With inputs from agencies
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Indian Express
23 minutes ago
- Indian Express
No word since last call 2 days, Chhattisgarh parents worry about daughter, her family in Iran
Chhattisgarh prisons department employee Kasim Raza (60) last spoke to his daughter, who lives with her husband and children in Iran, on Wednesday. She told him she was scared and wanted to come back to India amid the escalating Israel-Iran conflict. Since that call, there has been no communication from her. Raza's 29-year-old daughter, Eman, lives in the Iranian city of Qom. Her husband, Madhya Pradesh native Ejaz Zaidi (34), is pursuing maulviyat (traditional Islamic education) in Iran. They have two sons aged five and three. Qom is the city where several Indian students from the Iranian capital of Tehran, which has faced multiple strikes from Israel, have been moved to. While this gave the Raza family some hope that the city is relatively calm, the fact that there has been no communication from their daughter since Wednesday has left them worried. 'The last phone call we got from Eman was on Wednesday, when she said she was scared, that she wanted to come back to India, and that things were not going well in Iran. She and her mother were crying on the phone. I will soon submit a letter to the Indian government through the state government requesting them to make arrangements to get my daughter and her family back home,' Raza told The Indian Express from their home in Raipur. Raza last saw his daughter in 2023, when she had come to India for 45 days and stayed with her parents for a couple of weeks. Raza's wife, Shaheen, said, 'Our son-in-law was to come to India on June 13 for Muharram, but his flight got cancelled due to the ongoing conflict. We saw news that internet has been suspended (in Iran) for safety. We are unable to contact them, so we believe the internet is not working there. This is the first time we are facing such an issue. I got very scared when my grandson told me, yaha pe war chal rahi hai (a war is going on here). They do not understand what a war is!'


Indian Express
23 minutes ago
- Indian Express
Delhi must underline for Washington the grave dangers of Asim Munir's vision of Pakistan
In 2018, in his first term, US President Donald Trump had spelt out, in his typically blunt style, the sense that Rawalpindi and Islamabad had taken advantage of Washington: 'The United States has foolishly given Pakistan more than 33 billion dollars in aid over the last 15 years, and they have given us nothing but lies & deceit, thinking of our leaders as fools… they give safe haven to terrorists'. This week, he said: 'I love Pakistan'. It would be simplistic to view the unprecedented lunch meeting at the White House between Trump and General Asim Munir — the first time a military leader who is not head of state in Pakistan has been accorded the honour — as a major u-turn. Indeed, India-US ties have been steadily deepening over the last three decades, based on a convergence of economic and strategic interests and shared values, even as the US-Pakistan relationship has grown more volatile. That said, the current moment in international relations is one of flux and Delhi must tread carefully. The Pahalgam attack underscored the grave national security threat that Pakistan-sponsored terrorism continues to present for India. With Operation Sindoor, Delhi has made it clear to both Rawalpindi and the world that it will pierce the shield of 'proxies' and not give in to Pakistan's nuclear blackmail. India has raised the costs of terror in order to ensure that such attacks on its soil are not carried out with impunity. Communicating the new normal it has etched with Pakistan after Pahalgam to its friends abroad is Delhi's challenge. To be sure, Delhi cannot control who Trump chooses to engage, and for what reasons. Pakistan's geography — it shares a 900-km border with Iran — may make it an attractive tactical partner for the US in the current Israel-Iran war. There is speculation that Pakistan's rolling out the red carpet for the privately-owned US cryptocurrency firm, World Liberty Financial (WLF), may have helped ingratiate Munir to the White House — Donald Trump Jr has close ties with WLF. A White House spokesperson has claimed that Munir has proposed Trump for the Nobel Peace Prize for his self-proclaimed role — firmly denied by India — in the post Op Sindoor cessation of hostilities. For India, though, the question is less why the Munir-Trump meeting, and more about how to ensure that the red lines it has laid down are respected, including by the US. Just a fortnight before terrorists killed 26 people in Pahalgam after confirming their religion, Munir had reiterated some of the nastiest tropes of the two-nation theory. He called Kashmir Pakistan's 'jugular vein', and reduced the complex and layered identities of the Subcontinent's people to their religion. It is now for Delhi — diplomatically, through the appropriate channels — to remind Washington that Pakistan's Field Marshal is a fundamentalist with an army at his disposal. Delhi has done well so far in standing its ground and making it clear that it will not compromise on its national interest: Even if belatedly, it issued a clear denial of President Trump's claims about mediating the ceasefire. Now, it must underline for Washington the danger that Munir's vision of Pakistan poses for stability in the region and for global order — and why Delhi has drawn some hard red lines.

Mint
24 minutes ago
- Mint
Iran-Israel conflict: Donald Trump warns Iran has ‘two weeks' to avoid US strikes
US President Donald Trump warned escalating tensions on Friday, giving Iran a "maximum" of two weeks to avoid potential American air strikes. His remarks come as Israel asserts it has already delayed Iran's presumed nuclear ambitions by at least two years. Trump also dismissed European diplomatic efforts, saying it would be "very hard" to ask Israel to halt its ongoing military actions, according to a report by AFP. A series of blasts were heard in Tehran on Friday as Israel kept up the massive wave of strikes it says is aimed at stopping Iran from developing nuclear weapons -- an ambition Tehran has denied. 'According to the assessment we hear, we already delayed for at least two or three years the possibility for them to have a nuclear bomb,' Israel's foreign minister Gideon Saar said in an interview published Saturday. Saar said Israel's week-long onslaught will continue. "We will do everything that we can do there in order to remove this threat," he told German newspaper Bild. As Trump mulls the prospect of joining the war on Israel's side, top diplomats from Britain, France and Germany met their Iranian counterpart Abbas Araghchi in Geneva and urged him to resume talks with the United States that had been derailed by Israel's attacks. French Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot said "we invited the Iranian minister to consider negotiations with all sides, including the United States, without awaiting the cessation of strikes, which we also hope for." But Araghchi told NBC News after the meeting that "we're not prepared to negotiate with them (the United States) anymore, as long as the aggression continues." Trump was dismissive of European efforts, telling reporters, "Iran doesn't want to speak to Europe. They want to speak to us. Europe is not going to be able to help in this." Trump also said he's unlikely to ask Israel to stop its attacks to get Iran back to the table. "If somebody's winning, it's a little bit harder to do," he said. Any US involvement would likely feature powerful bunker-busting bombs that no other country possesses to destroy an underground uranium enrichment facility in Fordo. On the streets of Tehran, many shops were closed and normally busting markets largely abandoned on Friday. Since Israel launched its offensive on June 13, targeting nuclear and military sites but also hitting residential areas, Iran has responded with barrages which Israeli authorities say have killed at least 25 people. A hospital in the Israeli port of Haifa reported 19 injured, including one person in serious condition, after the latest Iranian salvo. More than 450 missiles have been fired at the country so far, along with about 400 drones, according to Israel's National Public Diplomacy Directorate. We will do everything that we can do there in order to remove this threat. Iran said on Sunday that Israeli strikes had killed at least 224 people, including military commanders, nuclear scientists and civilians. It has not updated the toll since.