July/August 1995, pg. 31
Special Report
As South Africa Integrates, Israel Cutting Military
Ties
By Tim Kennedy
The close link between the nuclear arms programs in Israel and
South Africa has existed for over 30 years. Starting in the mid-1960s,
South Africa was Israel's principal supplier of strategic materials
and fissile material, particularly a uranium ore known as yellowcake.
Beginning in 1963, Israeli nuclear scientists (drawing on expertise
supplied by France since the late 1950s) helped the apartheid government
of South Africa create an atomic bomb.
Ties between Israeli and South African nuclear bomb programs intensified
after the 1967 Six-Day War, when Israel was informed by French President
Charles De Gaulle that Tel Aviv could no longer rely on France for
technical support and know-how.
Investigative journalist James Adams' book on Israel's nuclear
arms program, The Unnatural Alliance, reports that in 1968
Ernst David Bergmann, former head of the Israeli Atomic Energy Commission,
delivered a speech in Johannesburg, and spoke of the "common
problem" facing Israel and South Africa: "Neither of us
has neighbors to whom we can speak and to whom we are going to be
able to speak in the near future. If we are in this position of
isolation, perhaps it might be best for both countries to speak
to each other."
Almost from the beginning of the defense alliance between Israel
and South Africa, there was a symbiosis that exceeded the contribution
each country could make to their respective arms programs. Both
countries had been officially branded by the United Nations as "pariah"
states for their official racial policies (South Africa for its
apartheid laws; Israel for its Zionism). Both countries saw themselves
as European settlers standing against a hostile indigenous population.
Israel also needed a place to test its newly created nuclear weapons.
Though Israel's Negev Desert was a suitable place to conceal its
Dimona nuclear weapons facility, it was not large enough to discreetly
detonate an atomic bomb. According to published sources, the CIA
is confident that one of its surveillance satellites observed the
first above-ground test of an Israeli nuclear device on Sept. 22,
1979 over the South Indian Ocean.
South Africa also depended on Israel for technical support of its
conventional weapons programs. Several of South Africa's most commonly
exported combat rifles are based on the "Galil" 5.56mm
semi-automatic rifle through a licensing agreement with Israel Military
Industries. Much of the artillery, mortars, air-dropped ordnance,
hand grenades and landmines exported by South Africa was also developed
with Israeli technical know-how.
However, South Africa's space program has been the greatest beneficiary
of this cooperative relationship. Guidance, telemetry, targeting,
and other sophisticated electronics on board South African long-
and intermediate-range missiles were made in Israel or based on
advanced American missile technology whichin the opinion of
the U.S. Government Accounting OfficeIsrael acquired illegally
from the Pentagon.
South Africa's nuclear program had Israeli fingerprints
all over it.
The weapons-development partnership between Israel and South Africa
began to go sour five years ago. This downturn in the relationship
began in September 1990, when the CIA declassified several reports
which revealed that South Africa had performed extensive research
on nuclear weapons, and, by 1985, had sufficient fissile material
on hand to create an atomic blast.
Political observers believe the timing of the release of the declassified
documents was not accidental. Nuclear experts have long considered
South Africaalong with India, Israel and Pakistanas
a member of the nuclear club that does not admit to having nuclear
weapons, but "probably" possesses them. The disclosure
of the CIA assessment was tantamount to the U.S. government demanding
that South Africa lay its nuclear cards on the table.
South African President Frederik de Klerk, facing rising political
opposition and hoping to end U.S.-imposed trade sanctions stemming
from his government's apartheid policies, unexpectedly acknowledged
that his country indeed once possessed six nuclear bombs. But de
Klerk said the bombs had been developed during the presidency of
his predecessor, P.W. Botha, and had been destroyed in 1989.
"South Africa's hands are clean," de Klerk told a special
meeting of his parliament in March 1993. "We are concealing
nothing...The government has decided to provide full information
on South Africa's past nuclear program" to the U.N. International
Atomic Energy Agency.
According to sources at the Pentagon, de Klerk's surprise announcement
sent leaders in the Tel Aviv government scrambling for cover. The
reason: South Africa's nuclear programfiguratively and literallyhad
Israeli fingerprints all over it. To distance themselves, Israel
began a methodical phasing out of the joint Israeli-South African
nuclear program.
Israeli Distrust of Mandela
The election of Nelson Mandela as South Africa's president in early
1994 accelerated the dissolution of this defense alliance. Sources
at the Pentagon report that the Israelis' distrust of Nelson Mandela's
African National Congress (ANC) government prompted them to call
an end to all sensitive cooperative relationships with South Africa,
including the sharing of military intelligence and the sale of law
enforcement equipment.
Sources reveal that Israel's decision to sever its ties totally
with South Africa stems from Israeli fears that many members of
Mandela's government were educated or received their military training
in countries politically opposed to Israel. The Israelis believe
there is a strong possibility such South African officials would
hand over Israeli military secrets to these hostile countries.
Sources at the Pentagon say that Israel indeed has significantly
scaled back its defense and intelligence missions in South Africa,
and has ordered several of its state-supported military industries
to close their offices in Cape Town and Johannesburg.
One Pentagon source told the Washington Report that Israel
is particularly fearful that South Africa's new chief of its National
Defense Forces Service Corps, Lt. General Lambert Moloi, may pass
its military secrets to an unfriendly country because of his basic
military training in Morocco, and his subsequent education in Russia
and Cuba.
Many defense observers find irony in Tel Aviv's retreat from its
defense alliance with South Africa. "The flow of defense technology
and know-how in our military partnership with Israel was pretty
much a 'one-way street,'" said a U.S. army officer who has
been associated with security assistance programs with Israel. "We
gave them the best we hador their spies took it from usand
we understood that Israel's theft of our defense technology was
part of the price we had to pay for having a strategic ally in the
region. Now Israel's military partners are trying to steal their
defense technology, and the Israelis are beginning to understand
that this is a lousy way for people to treat their friends."
Tim Kennedy, an analyst based in Washington, DC, writes about
defense technology and foreign affairs. |