JERUSALEM - With the purchase of two more German-made Dolphin submarines
capable of carrying nuclear warheads, military experts say Israel is sending a
clear message to Iran that it can strike back if attacked by nuclear weapons.
 In this image released
by the Israeli Defense Force the crew of Israel's Dolphin submarine, stand
on deck during a ceremony Sunday, July 25, 1999 between Crete and Cyprus
in the Mediterranean Sea, commemorating the 69 crew members of the Israeli
submarine Dakar which sank here in 1968. With the purchase of two more
German-made Dolphin submarines, Israel is sending a clear message to Iran
that it can strike back if attacked by nuclear weapons, military experts
said Thursday, Aug. 24, 2006. [AP] |
The purchases come at a time when Iran is refusing to bow to growing Western
demands to halt its nuclear program, and after Iranian President Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad has called for Israel to be "wiped off the map."
The new submarines, built at a cost of $1.3 billion with Germany footing
one-third of the bill, have diesel-electric propulsion systems that allow them
to remain submerged for longer periods of time than the three nuclear
arms-capable submarines already in Israel's fleet, the Jerusalem Post reported.
The latest submarines not only would be able to carry out a first strike
should Israel choose to do so, but they also would provide Israel with crucial
second-strike capabilities, said Paul Beaver, a London-based independent defense
analyst.
Israel is already believed to have that ability in the form of the Jericho-1
and Jericho-2 nuclear-capable ballistic missiles, which are buried so far
underground they would survive a nuclear strike, he said.
"The Iranians would be very foolish if they attacked Israel," Beaver said.
German officials have said the contract for the new submarines was signed
July 6, and the Jerusalem Post reported this week the subs will be operational
shortly.
Israel, operating on a policy of nuclear ambiguity, has never confirmed or
denied whether it has nuclear weapons. It is believed, however, to have the
world's sixth-largest stockpile of atomic arms, including hundreds of warheads.
Iran so far has resisted calls by the U.N. Security Council to halt uranium
enrichment, which can produce, among other things, the material for atomic
bombs. The council set an Aug. 31 deadline that is accompanied by the threat of
sanctions.
The dispute over Tehran's nuclear program revolves around Iran's insistence
it wants to master the technology simply to generate electricity. Critics say
Iran wants to make nuclear weapons.
The Dolphin submarine could be one of the best deterrents, Beaver said. The
technology on the subs makes them undetectable and gives them defensive
capabilities in the case of attack, he said.
"They are very well-built, very well-prepared, lots of interesting equipment,
one of the best conventional submarines available," Beaver said. "We are talking
about a third string of deterrence capabilities."
Michael Karpin, an expert on Israel's atomic weapons capabilities who
published a book on the issue in the United States, said nuclear-armed
submarines provide better second-strike capabilities than missiles launched from
airplanes.
"Planes are vulnerable, unlike nuclear (armed) submarines that can operate
for an almost unlimited amount of time without being struck," Karpin said.
"Second-strike capabilities are a crucial element in any nuclear conflict."
In Germany, members of two opposition parties criticized the deal. Winfried
Nachtwei, national security spokesman for the Greens, said the decision was
wrong because Germany had obtained no guarantee the submarines would not be used
to carry nuclear weapons.
"This red line should not be crossed," Nachtwei was quoted as saying by the
newspaper Taz. "Otherwise it is a complete renunciation of Germany's policy of
non-proliferation."
David Menashri, an Israeli expert on Iran, said Tehran is clearly determined
to obtain nuclear weapons and "the purchase of additional Dolphin submarines by
Israel is a small footnote in this context."
What also makes Tehran dangerous, Beaver said, is that it may not understand
the consequences of carrying out a nuclear strike.
"They (Iran) have a belligerent leadership and that's why Israel is prudent
in ensuring that it has that deterrent capability," Beaver said. "What they (the
submarines) are is a very good insurance policy."