Barack Obama
U.S. President Barack Obama has spitefully and vindictively
declassified a top secret Israeli nuclear program out of revenge,
after he was exposed in the press for unethically tampering with
the Israel
national election, in a failed bid at getting Prime Minister,
Benjamin Netanyahu, kicked out of office.
The unprecedented disclosure was released by Obama’s
Department of Defense on his orders. The documents contain 386 pages
of documents exposing Israel‘s nuclear program in detail, while redacting secret
information about other nations, which proves it was done out of
spite. Is it really a good idea to spite one of America’s
allies. What will that accomplish. As the Judiciary Report has
maintained all week, President Obama is anti-Semitic [
President Obama Meddled In The Israeli Election Trying To Get
Benjamin Netanyahu Kicked Out Of Office (Video)].
STORY SOURCE
US Declassifies Document
Revealing Israel's Nuclear Program
First Publish: 3/25/2015, 8:00 PM - US Declassifies
Document Revealing Israel's Nuclear Program. Obama revenge for
Netanyahu's Congress talk? 1987 report on Israel's top secret
nuclear program released in unprecedented move. In a development
that has largely been missed by mainstream media, the Pentagon
early last month quietly declassified a Department of Defense
top-secret document detailing Israel's nuclear program, a highly
covert topic that Israel has never formally announced to avoid a
regional nuclear arms race, and which the US until now has
respected by remaining silent.
But by publishing the declassified document from 1987, the US
reportedly breached the silent agreement to keep quiet on
Israel's nuclear powers for the first time ever, detailing the
nuclear program in great depth. The timing of the revelation is
highly suspect, given that it came as tensions spiraled out of
control between Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu and US
President Barack Obama ahead of Netanyahu's March 3 address in
Congress, in which he warned against the dangers of Iran's
nuclear program and how the deal being formed on that program
leaves the Islamic regime with nuclear breakout capabilities.
Another highly suspicious aspect of the document is that
while the Pentagon saw fit to declassify sections on Israel's
sensitive nuclear program, it kept sections on Italy, France,
West Germany and other NATO countries classified, with those
sections blocked out in the document. The 386-page report
entitled "Critical Technological Assessment in Israel and NATO
Nations" gives a detailed description of how Israel advanced its
military technology and developed its nuclear infrastructure and
research in the 1970s and 1980s.
Israel is "developing the kind of codes which will enable
them to make hydrogen bombs. That is, codes which detail fission
and fusion processes on a microscopic and macroscopic level,"
reveals the report, stating that in the 1980s Israelis were
reaching the ability to create bombs considered a thousand times
more powerful than atom bombs. The revelation marks a first in
which the US published in a document a description of how Israel
attained hydrogen bombs.
The report also notes research laboratories in Israel "are
equivalent to our Los Alamos, Lawrence Livermore and Oak Ridge
National Laboratories," the key labs in developing America's
nuclear arsenal. Israel's nuclear infrastructure is "an almost
exact parallel of the capability currently existing at our
National Laboratories," it adds. "As far as nuclear technology
is concerned the Israelis are roughly where the U.S. was in the
fission weapon field in about 1955 to 1960," the report reveals,
noting a time frame just after America tested its first hydrogen
bomb.
Institute for Defense Analysis, a federally funded agency
operating under the Pentagon, penned the report back in 1987.
Aside from nuclear capabilities, the report revealed Israel at
the time had "a totally integrated effort in systems development
throughout the nation," with electronic combat all in one
"integrated system, not separated systems for the Army, Navy and
Air Force." It even acknowledged that in some cases, Israeli
military technology "is more advanced than in the U.S."
Declassifying the report comes at a sensitive timing as noted
above, and given that the process to have it published was
started three years ago, that timing is seen as having been the
choice of the American government. US journalist Grant Smith
petitioned to have the report published based on the Freedom of
Information Act. Initially the Pentagon took its time answering,
leading Smith to sue, and a District Court judge to order the
Pentagon to respond to the request.
Smith, who heads the Institute for Research: Middle East
Policy, reportedly said he thinks this is the first time the US
government has officially confirmed that Israel is a nuclear
power, a status that Israel has long been widely known to have
despite being undeclared...