Israel
Israel is widely believed to possess both a civilian and military nuclear capability.

Overview from The Nuclear Threat Initiative:

"Israel is the sixth nation in the world, and the first in the Middle East, to develop and acquire a nuclear weapons capability. Israel initiated its nuclear program in earnest in the mid-to-late 1950s, and by late 1966, it had completed the R&D phase of its first nuclear weapon device. Since 1970, Israel's status as a nuclear weapon state (NWS) has become an accepted international fact.

However, Israel's behavior as a NWS has been distinctly different from the behavior of the five official members of the nuclear club that have signed the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT)—the United States, Russia, France, China, and the United Kingdom; and India and Pakistan, which have not signed the NPT. While these nations have publicly declared their nuclear status, Israel, to this day, has never confirmed or denied its nuclear status and remains outside the NPT. Since Prime Minister Levi Eshkol pledged in the mid-1960s that "Israel will not be the first nation to introduce nuclear weapons to the Middle East," all his successors have adhered to this opaque declared policy, and this policy has become known as Israel's policy of "nuclear opacity" or ambiguity.

Israel is now an advanced NWS, in both quality and quantity of its arsenal. Estimates as to the size of Israel's nuclear arsenal vary and range from 100 to over 200 warheads."



Immediately related elementsHow this works
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Nuclear Politics Â»Nuclear Politics
Perspectives? Â»Perspectives?
States Â»States
(1) States with civilian and military nuclear capability Â»(1) States with civilian and military nuclear capability
Non NPT members Â»Non NPT members
Israel
Israel's deliberate ambiguity over its nuclear policy Â»Israel's deliberate ambiguity over its nuclear policy
Cost-benefits of joining the NPT? Â»Cost-benefits of joining the NPT?
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