The Japan Times - Peres: architect of Israel nuclear programme as well as peace

EUR -
AED 3.860465
AFN 79.356727
ALL 99.164814
AMD 419.328633
ANG 1.894752
AOA 961.1683
ARS 1099.635905
AUD 1.66332
AWG 1.894476
AZN 1.790918
BAM 1.960944
BBD 2.122707
BDT 128.21632
BGN 1.954343
BHD 0.396104
BIF 3063.743464
BMD 1.051027
BND 1.417404
BOB 7.264849
BRL 6.196649
BSD 1.051348
BTN 90.637749
BWP 14.491875
BYN 3.440592
BYR 20600.127582
BZD 2.111799
CAD 1.507136
CDF 2990.17196
CHF 0.951232
CLF 0.037394
CLP 1031.804051
CNY 7.614733
CNH 7.612436
COP 4393.429148
CRC 530.481395
CUC 1.051027
CUP 27.852213
CVE 111.672024
CZK 25.084233
DJF 186.788917
DKK 7.462926
DOP 64.69112
DZD 142.072606
EGP 52.856989
ERN 15.765404
ETB 132.958976
FJD 2.420673
FKP 0.865612
GBP 0.841694
GEL 3.011234
GGP 0.865612
GHS 15.979662
GIP 0.865612
GMD 76.203499
GNF 9097.689371
GTQ 8.126316
GYD 219.953815
HKD 8.184778
HNL 26.812105
HRK 7.756104
HTG 137.336323
HUF 407.856292
IDR 16988.588888
ILS 3.762036
IMP 0.865612
INR 90.578078
IQD 1376.845262
IRR 44248.233595
ISK 146.334883
JEP 0.865612
JMD 165.39384
JOD 0.745708
JPY 163.741064
KES 136.111981
KGS 91.912708
KHR 4230.383711
KMF 492.199893
KPW 945.924343
KRW 1504.066856
KWD 0.323769
KYD 0.876186
KZT 544.523142
LAK 22901.876898
LBP 94172.012169
LKR 313.569531
LRD 205.081668
LSL 19.318276
LTL 3.10341
LVL 0.635756
LYD 5.165838
MAD 10.523974
MDL 19.555015
MGA 4950.337145
MKD 61.551803
MMK 3413.69443
MNT 3571.389578
MOP 8.435507
MRU 41.909739
MUR 48.715495
MVR 16.196722
MWK 1825.634118
MXN 21.286979
MYR 4.600874
MZN 67.171527
NAD 19.318271
NGN 1631.982442
NIO 38.688697
NOK 11.752798
NPR 145.019015
NZD 1.838874
OMR 0.404597
PAB 1.051328
PEN 3.900891
PGK 4.21383
PHP 61.282267
PKR 292.974147
PLN 4.21337
PYG 8318.582785
QAR 3.826829
RON 4.976827
RSD 117.140143
RUB 102.795806
RWF 1461.978442
SAR 3.942151
SBD 8.87755
SCR 15.492528
SDG 631.667534
SEK 11.475054
SGD 1.414172
SHP 0.865612
SLE 23.862165
SLL 22039.508862
SOS 600.665732
SRD 36.89634
STD 21754.135176
SVC 9.19913
SYP 13665.451965
SZL 19.318263
THB 35.298779
TJS 11.459596
TMT 3.689104
TND 3.339642
TOP 2.461614
TRY 37.499784
TTD 7.149618
TWD 34.391742
TZS 2676.965911
UAH 44.065687
UGX 3878.061735
USD 1.051027
UYU 45.7099
UZS 13647.584874
VES 59.080272
VND 26359.755089
VUV 124.780026
WST 2.943745
XAF 657.672736
XAG 0.034229
XAU 0.000379
XCD 2.840453
XDR 0.810017
XOF 658.472142
XPF 119.331742
YER 261.814579
ZAR 19.350767
ZMK 9460.507259
ZMW 29.200762
ZWL 338.430239
  • SCS

    -0.0650

    11.535

    -0.56%

  • GSK

    0.2050

    34.255

    +0.6%

  • NGG

    -0.2200

    60.49

    -0.36%

  • BTI

    0.8000

    37.85

    +2.11%

  • RIO

    0.5600

    62.12

    +0.9%

  • CMSC

    0.0730

    23.558

    +0.31%

  • AZN

    0.6950

    69.295

    +1%

  • BCC

    -1.4570

    126.993

    -1.15%

  • BP

    0.0500

    31.54

    +0.16%

  • RBGPF

    -0.9200

    61.28

    -1.5%

  • CMSD

    0.1600

    24.03

    +0.67%

  • RYCEF

    0.0000

    7.55

    0%

  • JRI

    -0.0100

    12.54

    -0.08%

  • BCE

    0.3260

    23.546

    +1.38%

  • RELX

    -0.4400

    48.95

    -0.9%

  • VOD

    0.0000

    8.4

    0%

Peres: architect of Israel nuclear programme as well as peace
Peres: architect of Israel nuclear programme as well as peace

Peres: architect of Israel nuclear programme as well as peace

Shimon Peres, who died Wednesday aged 93, is famed for his peace efforts with the Palestinians but his role as architect of Israel's nuclear programme may prove his more lasting legacy.

Text size:

When still in his 30s during the 1950s, Peres played a key part in Israel's pursuit of a nuclear capability at the urging of Israel's first prime minister David Ben-Gurion.

He reached a secret agreement with France that led to the building of a nuclear reactor at Dimona in Israel's Negev desert, which went critical around 1962.

Israel is now considered to be the Middle East's sole nuclear-armed power, although it has never confirmed it, maintaining a policy of ambiguity.

It is estimated to have produced enough weapons-grade plutonium at Dimona to arm between 100 and 200 nuclear warheads, according to the US-based Nuclear Threat Initiative.

Peres, who was president and twice prime minister, was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1994 for his role in negotiating the Oslo accords with the Palestinians, but he saw no contradiction between that achievement and his nuclear programme efforts.

"Dimona helped us to achieve Oslo," he told Time magazine in an interview in February.

"Because many Arabs, out of suspicion, came to the conclusion that it's very hard to destroy Israel because of it, because of their suspicion.

"Well if the result is Dimona, I think I was right. Anyway, we’ve never threatened anybody with nuclear bombs, and we’ve never tested it."

Peres was put in charge of the nuclear programme by Ben-Gurion while director general of the defence ministry.

The prime minister had made the programme a priority, driven in part by the Holocaust and the 1948 war with neighbouring Arab states that accompanied Israel's creation, historian Avner Cohen wrote in his book "Israel and the Bomb."

"Peres's boundless energy and political skills became the necessary ingredient in realising Israel's nuclear hopes," he added.

- 'One of the ablest' -

Ephraim Asculai, a senior research fellow at Israel's Institute for National Security Studies, said Ben-Gurion had enormous trust in Peres.

He saw him as "one of the ablest persons in the country and one who could carry out the mission."

Peres enlisted France's help for the secret programme, and even the United States, now Israel's most important ally, was kept out of the loop.

In a documentary aired on Israeli television in 2001, Peres acknowledged that France agreed to provide Israel with "a nuclear capability" as part of the secret negotiations that led to their invasion of Egypt alongside Britain during the Suez Crisis of 1956.

It was only years later, in 1969, that Israel reportedly reached an understanding with Washington under which Israeli leaders would refrain from making any statement about the country's capabilities and would carry out no nuclear test.

In exchange, the United States avoided exerting any pressure on the issue.

Israel has still not signed the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who was a political rival of Peres, made reference to the elder statement's involvement in the nuclear programme in a tribute after his death on Wednesday.

"As a champion of Israel's defence, he strengthened its capacities in many ways, some of them still unacknowledged to this day," he said.

While Peres and other Israeli leaders have credited the country's policy of nuclear ambiguity with protecting it from hostile neighbours and helping it leverage peace agreements, others have been critical.

Opponents say Israel's suspected arsenal has been a constant spur for its regional rivals to try to develop their own as a deterrent.

Last year's nuclear deal between the major powers and Israel's arch-foe Iran was aimed at ensuring it could not do so.

Israel has continued to keep a tight lid on its nuclear programme.

Former nuclear technician Mordechai Vanunu was jailed in 1986 for disclosing the inner workings of the Dimona nuclear plant to Britain's Sunday Times newspaper.

Snatched in Rome by agents of the Mossad intelligence agency and smuggled to Israel, Vanunu spent more than 10 years of his sentence in solitary confinement.

Even after his release in 2004, he remained subject to a raft of restraining orders, including a ban on speaking to the foreign media.

M.Fujitav--JT