Hmm. OK.eion wrote:In this example, Egypt does not know for sure I have developed nuclear weapons. But more importantly, if they develop nuclear weapons to respond to my assumed nuclear advantage, I can claim my program was in response to theirs. For a country like Israel that relies on support from the west, this is vital. They must be seen as the victim at all times, as the responder, not the instigator.
What about Iran? They have no major backers, operate based on their own perceived interests, and don't really care about being seen as 'instigators' by foreign countries. Why is it their interests to have a rumored nuclear program and not a known one?
Absolutely, you have to know they'll work. But if you’re the first guy, you gain no advantage by telling the world you've cracked it. Did the US take out full page ads after Trinity? FUCK no.
![Banging my head :banghead:](./images/smilies/banghead.gif)
I'm not talking about the first guy to detonate a bomb- about whether the concept of nuclear bombs works. I'm talking about whether your specific bomb will work. That is not a trivial question, because nuclear bombs are complicated and having them work properly can be a matter of life and death for huge numbers of your people.
What you do not test, you cannot be sure of. This is a fundamental problem with the Israeli nuclear program (assuming it exists), and a major reason why every other nuclear power (the US, Russia, Britain, France, China, Pakistan, India, North Korea) have tested their nuclear bomb designs.
Or, in that case, if you did; we're still not sure there was an actual bomb.See also: The Vela Incident (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vela_Incident), or How to set off a nuclear bomb without anyone knowing you're the one who did.
The first nuclear power did exactly that. They even warned the people they were going to drop it on, though they probably had reasons to expect the warning not to be believed.The worst thing you can do as the first nuclear power is to tell the world you're now a nuclear power.
There's a problem: the US is also a nuclear power in Iran's sphere of influence; so is Pakistan and (arguably) Israel.That is why a sane, rational state, when it is the first nuclear power (actual or public) in its sphere of influence develops nuclear weapons, but tells no one. Rumors are not facts, and you can’t as an enemy state reveal what you know without revealing how you know.
Sorry that was so long.
The US occupies countries on both sides of Iran, has vastly superior conventional weapons, and nukes; we are well placed to strike them and cause massive damage even if we fail to successfully occupy the country. Israel and Iran are at the extreme limit of their mutual engagement range, especially with US forces in Iraq, but the two countries are engaged in a major proxy war and Iran has very good reasons to keep that war going. Iran and Pakistan... I don't know the history between them at all well, and the land around their common border is very remote, rugged, and lightly developed as I recall, but they're still a nuclear power.
So Iran wouldn't be the first nuclear power in its sphere of influence; it wouldn't even be the third.