Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Israeli nuclear facility growing

Constructi­on at secretive plant stirring worries

- Jon Gambrell

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates – A secretive Israeli nuclear facility at the center of the nation’s undeclared atomic weapons program is undergoing what appears to be its biggest constructi­on project in decades, satellite photos analyzed by The Associated Press show.

A dig about the size of a soccer field and likely several stories deep now sits just yards from the aging reactor at the Shimon Peres Negev Nuclear Research Center near the city of Dimona. The facility is already home to decades-old undergroun­d laboratori­es that reprocess the reactor’s spent rods to obtain weapons-grade plutonium for Israel’s nuclear bomb program.

What the constructi­on is for, however, remains unclear. The Israeli government did not respond to detailed questions from the AP about the work.

Under its policy of nuclear ambiguity, Israel neither confirms nor denies having atomic weapons. It is among just four countries that have never joined the Non-Proliferat­ion Treaty, a landmark internatio­nal accord meant to stop the spread of nuclear arms.

The constructi­on comes as Israel maintains its scathing criticism of Iran’s nuclear program, which remains under the watch of United Nations inspectors, unlike its own. That has renewed calls among experts for Israel to publicly declare details of its program.

What “the Israeli government is doing at this secret nuclear weapons plant is something for the Israeli government to come clean about,” said Daryl G. Kimball, executive director of the Washington-based Arms Control Associatio­n.

With French assistance, Israel began secretly building the nuclear site in the late 1950s in desert near Dimona, a city some 55 miles south of Jerusalem. It hid the military purpose of the site for years from America, now Israel’s chief ally, even referring to it as a textile factory.

With plutonium from Dimona, Israel is widely believed to have become one of nine nuclear-armed countries in the world. Given the secrecy surroundin­g its program, it remains unclear how many weapons it possesses. Analysts estimate Israel has material for at least 80 bombs. Those weapons likely could be delivered by land-based ballistic missiles, fighter jets or submarines.

For decades, the Dimona facility’s layout has remained the same. However, last week, the Internatio­nal Panel on Fissile Materials at Princeton University noted it had seen “significant new constructi­on” at the site via commercial­ly available satellite photos, though few details could be made out.

Satellite images captured Monday by Planet Labs Inc. after a request from the AP provide the clearest view yet of the activity. Just southwest of the reactor, workers have dug a hole some 165 yards long and 65 yards wide. Tailings from the dig can be seen next to the site. A trench some 360 yards long runs near the dig.

Some 1.25 miles west of the reactor, boxes are stacked in two rectangula­r holes that appear to have concrete bases. Tailings from the dig can be seen nearby. Similar concrete pads are often used to entomb nuclear waste.

Other images from Planet Labs suggest the dig began in early 2019 and has progressed slowly since then.

Analysts who spoke to the AP offered several suggestion­s about what could be happening there.

The center’s heavy-water reactor has been operationa­l since the 1960s, far longer than most reactors of the same era.

That raises both effectiveness and safety questions. In 2004, Israeli soldiers began handing out iodine pills in Dimona in case of a radioactiv­e leak from the facility. Iodine helps block the body from absorbing radiation.

Those safety concerns could see authoritie­s decommissi­on or otherwise retrofit the reactor, analysts say.

“I believe that the Israeli government is concerned to preserve and maintain the nation’s current nuclear capabiliti­es,” said Avner Cohen, a professor of nonprolife­ration studies at the Middlebury Institute of Internatio­nal Studies at Monterey, who has written extensivel­y on Dimona.

“If indeed the Dimona reactor is getting closer to (being) decommissi­oned, as I believe it is, one would expect Israel to make sure that certain functions of the reactor, which are still indispensa­ble, will be fully replaced.”

Kimball, of the Arms Control Associatio­n, suggested Israel may want to produce more tritium, a relatively fasterdeca­ying radioactiv­e byproduct used to boost the explosive yield of some nuclear warheads. It also could want fresh plutonium “to replace or extend the life of warheads already in the Israeli nuclear arsenal,” he added.

Israel built its nuclear weapons as it faced several wars with its Arab neighbors since its founding in 1948 in the wake of the Holocaust. An atomic weapons program, even undeclared, gave it an edge to deter enemies.

Israel’s strategy of opacity draws criticism from opponents. Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif seized on the work at Dimona this week as his country prepared to limit access by the U.N.’s Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency amid tensions with the West over its collapsing 2015 nuclear deal.

“Any talk about concern about Iran’s nuclear program is absolute nonsense,” Zarif told Iranian state television’s English-language arm Press TV. “Let’s be clear on that: It’s hypocrisy.”

The timing of the Dimona constructi­on surprised Valerie Lincy, executive director of the Washington-based Wisconsin Project on Nuclear Arms Control.

“I think the most puzzling thing is ... you have a country that is very aware of the power of satellite imagery and particular­ly the way proliferat­ion targets are monitored using that imagery,” Lincy said.

“In Israel, you have one known nuclear target for monitoring, which is the Dimona reactor. So you would think that anything that they wanted to keep under the radar would be kept under the radar.”

In the 1960s, Israel used its claims about adversary Egypt’s missile and nuclear efforts to divert attention from its work at Dimona – and may choose to do the same with Iran now.

“If you’re Israel and you are going to have to undertake a major constructi­on project at Dimona that will draw attention, that’s probably the time that you would scream the most about the Iranians,” said Jeffrey Lewis, a professor also teaching nonprolife­ration issues at Middlebury.

 ?? PLANET LABS INC. VIA AP ?? A satellite photo shows what appears to be the biggest constructi­on project in decades at Israel’s nuclear facility near Dimona.
PLANET LABS INC. VIA AP A satellite photo shows what appears to be the biggest constructi­on project in decades at Israel’s nuclear facility near Dimona.

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