Grant F. Smith, a senior US analyst, condemned the US military-economic aid to the Zionist regime, calling it illegal.
A senior US analyst emphasized Washington’s role in the Tel Aviv nuclear weapons program and stressed the need for a large US lobby not to talk about the Zionist regime’s nuclear arsenal.
“Israel’s atomic bombs make US aid (to the regime) illegal,” Grant F. Smith wrote in a note in Antivar.
“Peter Bainart published an article in the New York Times earlier this month that created a storm entitled ‘The United States Must Begin to Tell the Truth About Israel’s Nuclear Weapons,'” the analyst wrote on the American website.
“Bainart noted how the spread of US ‘elimination lies’ allows US policymakers and politicians to pretend that Israel does not have nuclear weapons. This, in turn, creates the false impression that Iran’s nuclear program could trigger a Middle East nuclear arms race. “Binart regrets how US deceptions about Israel’s nuclear arsenal undermine America’s alleged position as a non-proliferation hero.”
According to Smith, “What Binary apparently did not know was what apparatus would put the United States perfectly in line with the so-called ‘nuclear ambiguity’ in Israel, and why there is such an issue at all.”
“Many things have happened in the decades since Richard Nixon (former US President) promised Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meir that he would never discuss Israel’s nuclear weapons in public,” the memo said. U.S. Senators Stuart Simington and John Glenn found that Israel (with the help of some US proxies) supplied enough US-grade uranium in the 1960s from government contractor NUMEC to build twelve atomic bombs. Outraged that no action had been taken, the senators added to the complexity of the president’s “strategic ambiguity” by amending US foreign aid laws. “A nuclear non-proliferation treaty was made conditional on the signing of the treaty.”