View of a road sign directing towards the city of Dimona, close to Israel's nuclear power plant on 22 April 2021 [AHMAD GHARABLI/AFP/Getty Images]
The skies over Tehran and Natanz may still carry the lingering haze of joint U.S.-Israeli operations. Yet the world, filtered through the dominant voice of Western media, continues to be fed a singular narrative: the latent danger of Iran’s uranium enrichment, perpetually described as being “one step away” from a nuclear warhead. Amid the noise of economic sanctions, United Nations Security Council resolutions, and preemptive military strikes that have devastated Iran’s civilian-military infrastructure, there exists a deafening silence surrounding the Middle East’s most tangible arsenal of weapons of mass destruction: Israel’s nuclear stockpile. In reality, the region’s security architecture is not threatened by a nuclear capability that might exist in the future, but by one that has existed for more […]

This article was sourced from Middle East Monitor.

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