Xequecal wrote:
But this is exactly what I mean by a lack of trust. If they have strong evidence that a US citizen in the US is plotting terrorism against them, why not just turn them in to the US government? Resorting to assassination just tells the US that you don't trust them to handle such problems.
Maybe they don't trust us to handle such problems. There's people in the U.S. who would put political pressure ont he government and perhaps even manipulate the trial to get someone plotting terrorism against Israel off, because of sympathy to the Palestinians/Arabs/whoever.
In any case, they haven't said at any point that they will try to assassinate anyone; only that they wouldn't hesitate to if they had to. That doesn't meant that they wouldn't try to work with us; in fact they probably would. Why use limited resources when you can use another country's justice system to handle the matter? You're leaping to the conclusion that because they are willing to assassinate people that they intend to actually do so. I don't know of any such event; the only similar event anywhere that I can think of was the assassination of Gerald Bull, allegedly by the Mossad, and he was working on SCUDs and Iraq's supergun, and I didn't see anyone outside Israel exactly going out of their way to put a stop to that.
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Also, you don't have to be plotting anything to be a target. Imagine being a certain type of French nuclear engineer in late 70s/early 80s when France was building Iraq a nuclear reactor. Even if you had no connection to the program, there was a good chance they'd decide to kill you simply because you were French and because of what you knew.
And? Then the French government can take it up with Israel. Don't want Israel to assassinate your engineers? Don't build Saddam a reactor, or else be prepared to take Israel to task for it. This isn't indictive of any particular problem with Israel other than the fact that its neighbors have a bad habit of attacking it, either directly, or, after losing 4 times, through proxies. You seem to forget that in the time period you're talking about Israel had fought 2 wars within the last 10-15 years against external invasion in 1972 and that Saddam Hussein had publicly announced that the reactor was a step in acquiring nuclear weapons.
I'd also like to know what French scientist you're referring to, since the only scientist I could find assassinated in France that was involved in that project was an Egyptian.
OsirakQuote:
Osirak, also spelled Osiraq, (French: Osirak; Iraqi: Tammuz 1, اوسيراك), was a French-supplied 40 MW light-water nuclear materials testing reactor (MTR) in Iraq. It was constructed by the Iraqi government at the Al Tuwaitha Nuclear Research Center, 18 km (11 miles) south-east of Baghdad in 1977. It was damaged by an Iranian air strike in 1980 during the Iran–Iraq War, then crippled by Israeli aircraft in 1981 in a surprise attack code-named Operation Opera, which was intended to prevent the regime of Saddam Hussein from using the reactor for the creation of nuclear weapons. In September 1975, then-Vice President Hussein had declared publicly that the acquisition of the French reactor was the first step in the production of an Arab atomic weapon.[1]
The facility was completely destroyed by American aircraft during the 1991 Gulf War.
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The Israeli government was deeply concerned at this purchase. Despite Iraqi claims that the plant was for peaceful use, it was an unusual choice — an MTR design is useful for countries with established nuclear reactor construction programs, being used to test and analyse the effects of neutron flux upon metals used in reactor components. However, MTR is not particularly useful to countries which have no established reactor programs, unless they are interested in transmuting U238 to Pu239 to make a bomb, via the high neutron flux characteristic of an MTR.[6]
NTIQuote:
10 September 1975
Saddam Hussein travels to Paris to meet with French Prime Minister Jacques Chirac to negotiate the export of the two Tammuz research reactors to Iraq in a deal sweetened by cheap Iraqi oil. Prior to his trip to Paris, Hussein tells the Lebanese news magazine Al Usbu Al-Arabi that the agreement is "the first concrete step toward the production of the Arabic atomic weapon" and that Iraq should be helped to obtain nuclear weapons in order to balance the Israeli nuclear arsenal.
— "Iraq's Nuclear Weapons Program: From Aflaq to Tammuz," nuketesting.enviroweb.org/ hew/ Iraq/ IraqAtoZ.html; Khidhir Hamza with Jeff Stein, Saddam's Bombmaker: The Terrifying Inside Story of the Iraqi Nuclear and Biological Weapons Agenda (New York, NY: Scribner Press, 2000), p. 105
The fact of the matter is that Israel's main obligation is not to protect the sensibilities of the citizens of other countries, and their refusal to do so is not indictive of a problem with Israel in terms of its international attitude. It's indictive of Israel's short history which is an almost constant story of either overt or covert external attack or the threat thereof, and its limited population and land with which to maneuver.
Israel is certainly not immune from charges of mistakes, ill-considered actions, or occasional atrocities, but the fact that it has appeared as a bully only because of the ineptitude of its enemies.