Analysis Urges Israel to Refine Nuclear Deterrence as Iran Retains Enrichment and Missile Capacity
Updated
Updated · Arutz Sheva · Jun 28
Analysis Urges Israel to Refine Nuclear Deterrence as Iran Retains Enrichment and Missile Capacity
3 articles · Updated · Arutz Sheva · Jun 28
Summary
Israel faces persistent nuclear risk from Iran even after the Switzerland memorandum, with the analysis arguing Tehran is unlikely to surrender control of highly enriched uranium or its expanding ballistic-missile arsenal.
The report says Israeli planners should prepare for deliberate, accidental and inadvertent nuclear escalation, including risks from hacking, computer malfunction and miscalculation in a crisis with little historical precedent.
It urges Jerusalem to move from long-standing “deliberate nuclear ambiguity” toward selective nuclear disclosure to strengthen deterrence and achieve escalation dominance without raising existential danger.
Iran-backed proxies including Hezbollah and the Houthis, along with possible spillover involving North Korea, Pakistan, Sunni Arab states or Turkey, could widen the threat beyond a direct Israel-Iran confrontation.
For the foreseeable future, the analysis says Israel and the United States must coordinate more closely on nuclear risk management because any false peace that leaves enrichment and missile production intact would not remove the threat.
After 12 days of intense fighting between Iran and Israel, military actions by Israel against Iran’s nuclear and missile programs, with the U.S. brokering a resolution, led to a ceasefire on June 24. This temporarily halted hostilities and ended the immediate conflict, but left critical questions about Iran’s nuclear capabilities unresolved. The confrontation caused significant human losses, with Iran reporting over 600 deaths and Israel 28. While fighting has stopped, the aftermath remains uncertain, as the region faces ongoing risks and unresolved issues surrounding nuclear transparency and future stability.