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ID167085
Title ProperUnited States, the Israeli Nuclear Program, and Nonproliferation, 1961–69
LanguageENG
AuthorJackson, Galen
Summary / Abstract (Note)As was evident from the intense reaction to Donald Trump’s comments during the 2016 presidential campaign about nuclear proliferation, many analysts believe that the United States has consistently given the goal of nonproliferation a top priority since the beginning of the nuclear age. That conviction, in turn, plays a major role in policy debates among experts in this area. In this article, I show that nonproliferation does not necessarily take precedence over other important US geopolitical interests through a close examination of American policy toward the Israeli nuclear program during the 1960s. Although nonproliferation goals certainly came into play, US officials repeatedly gave priority to other key objectives and, to a real extent, even believed that Israel’s nuclearization could hold certain strategic advantages. This finding, of course, has important theoretical implications for the basic question of whether international politics still works essentially as it did in the pre-nuclear era, as well as for policy debates over nuclear proliferation.
`In' analytical NoteSecurity Studies Vol. 28, No.2; Apr-May 2019: p.360-393
Journal SourceSecurity Studies Vol: 28 No 2
Key WordsUnited States ;  Israeli Nuclear Program ;  Nonproliferation, 1961–69


 
 
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