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Iran, Israel and the pitfalls of the global nuclear regime


What Happened

  • The ongoing US-Israeli military campaign against Iran has reignited global debate about the inherent double standards within the international nuclear non-proliferation regime.
  • Israel, which possesses an estimated 80–90 nuclear warheads, remains outside the NPT and maintains a policy of "nuclear opacity" — neither confirming nor denying its nuclear arsenal — while facing no international penalties.
  • Iran, an NPT signatory subject to IAEA inspections, has faced decades of sanctions and military threats over its nuclear program.
  • European nations are reconsidering their dependence on the US nuclear umbrella under the Trump administration, with some exploring independent nuclear deterrence options.
  • Analysts warn that the conflict could trigger a new wave of nuclear proliferation, with multiple states reassessing whether acquiring nuclear weapons is necessary for regime survival and security.

Static Topic Bridges

Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT)

The NPT was opened for signature in 1968 and entered into force in 1970. It rests on three pillars: nuclear disarmament, non-proliferation, and peaceful uses of nuclear energy. The treaty defines five Nuclear Weapon States (NWS) — the US, Russia, the UK, France, and China — as those that tested nuclear devices before 1967. All other signatories are Non-Nuclear Weapon States (NNWS), who commit not to develop nuclear weapons and to accept IAEA safeguards.

  • 191 states are parties to the NPT, making it the most widely adhered-to arms control treaty.
  • Article VI obliges NWS to negotiate in good faith toward nuclear disarmament — critics argue this commitment has never been fulfilled.
  • Four states remain outside the NPT: India, Pakistan, Israel, and South Sudan (North Korea withdrew in 2003).
  • India regards the NPT as discriminatory because it permanently codifies inequality between weapon states and non-weapon states based on an arbitrary 1967 cutoff date.

Connection to this news: The conflict has placed the NPT's structural inequality in sharp relief — Iran, a treaty member under inspections, faced military strikes, while Israel, a non-member with an undeclared arsenal, faces no comparable pressure.


Israel's Nuclear Opacity and the NPT Asymmetry

Israel follows a doctrine known as "nuclear opacity" or "nuclear ambiguity" (Hebrew: amimut), maintaining a deliberate policy of neither confirming nor denying possession of nuclear weapons. This posture has been tacitly accepted by Western powers for decades, particularly the United States. The result is a structural asymmetry in the non-proliferation regime: Israel benefits from a de facto exemption that no other non-NPT nuclear state enjoys under international law.

  • Israel has never signed the NPT; it has no legal obligation to declare or dismantle nuclear weapons.
  • The US under successive administrations pledged not to publicly acknowledge Israel's nuclear arsenal, even while pressing Iran and others on non-proliferation.
  • This double standard is now "on open display," as analysts from the Arms Control Association noted in early 2026.
  • Independent estimates place Israel's arsenal at approximately 80–90 warheads.

Connection to this news: The US-Israel military campaign against Iran's nuclear program — while Israel itself maintains an undeclared arsenal outside any treaty framework — is widely cited as evidence that the non-proliferation regime is enforced selectively, undermining its legitimacy.


IAEA Safeguards System

The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), established in 1957 and headquartered in Vienna, serves as the verification body for the NPT. All NNWS party to the NPT must conclude a Comprehensive Safeguards Agreement (CSA) with the IAEA, permitting inspectors to verify that nuclear material is not diverted from civilian to weapons use. The Additional Protocol (adopted 1997) strengthens this by requiring states to declare a broader range of nuclear-related activities and allowing wider-scope inspections.

  • Iran signed its NPT safeguards agreement in 1974 and signed the Additional Protocol in December 2003.
  • Iran provisionally applied the Additional Protocol under the 2015 JCPOA (Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action) but suspended implementation in February 2021 after US sanctions were reimposed.
  • The IAEA cannot provide military protection — its role is verification, not enforcement; enforcement requires UN Security Council action, where P5 vetoes can block measures.

Connection to this news: Iran's status as an NPT signatory under some degree of IAEA monitoring contrasts sharply with Israel's complete absence from the safeguards framework, highlighting how the regime's verification tools are applied unevenly.


Nuclear Deterrence and Proliferation Cascades

Nuclear deterrence theory holds that states acquire nuclear weapons primarily to deter existential threats. The collapse of trust in extended deterrence — particularly in US security guarantees — can trigger "proliferation cascades," where multiple states independently pursue nuclear weapons. The current conflict has elevated concerns that Iran, South Korea, Japan, and certain European states may recalculate the value of independent nuclear deterrence.

  • North Korea's 2003 NPT withdrawal and subsequent nuclear tests demonstrated that the treaty lacks effective enforcement mechanisms against a determined state.
  • The 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine and nuclear threats weakened confidence in security guarantees (Budapest Memorandum of 1994 offered assurances but not binding defence commitments to Ukraine).
  • In 2026, the Arms Control Association identified Iran as the most likely near-term candidate to exit the NPT or develop weapons in violation of treaty obligations.
  • Proliferation cascades are considered among the highest-risk scenarios in nuclear security studies.

Connection to this news: If Iran — attacked despite NPT membership and while under some IAEA monitoring — concludes that nuclear weapons are the only reliable deterrent, it could set a precedent that accelerates proliferation globally.


Key Facts & Data

  • NPT opened for signature: 1968; entered into force: 1970
  • NPT parties: 191 states (as of 2025)
  • Non-NPT nuclear states: India, Pakistan, Israel, North Korea (withdrew 2003)
  • Israel's estimated nuclear arsenal: 80–90 warheads (independent estimates; unconfirmed)
  • IAEA Additional Protocol adopted: May 1997
  • Iran signed Additional Protocol: December 2003; suspended implementation: February 2021
  • JCPOA signed: July 2015 (US withdrew May 2018; partially revived January 2016 implementation)
  • US-Israel strikes on Iran began: 28 February 2026
  • Casualties reported (as of Day 15): at least 1,444 killed, 18,551 injured in Iran