According to the authors, military coordination with Israel's Arab
neighbors, especially Egypt, accompanied the Soviet naval buildup for
direct military intervention. Such coordination, which had been
solidified by the nuclear guarantee that the Soviets gave Egypt in
February 1966 [p. 54], led to "the Egyptian measures that provoked war
with Israel in 1967, including the eviction of the United Nations
Emergency Force (UNEF) from the Sinai Peninsula and the closure of the
Tiran straits." Both "were 'inspired' by the Soviet military." [pp.
68-69]
The Soviet Union instigated the war, because, in December 1965, "the
Soviets received an unambiguous message from an authoritative Israeli
source that Israel was developing an atomic bomb and intended to arm
itself with such a weapon." According Ms. Ginor and Mr. Remez, "the
main news for Moscow must have been not the Israeli intent but the fact
that it had
not yet been realized, and that a window of opportunity still existed to prevent its fruition" [p. 47]
Given Moscow's (heretofore unknown) strategic objective, "the Soviet
leadership…preferred to act when and where a US response seemed less
probable. One way to reduce this probability, the Soviets correctly
perceived, was by ensuring that Israel would strike first, thus
incurring international condemnation and US disapproval. And finally,
Israel was to be attacked on an issue in which it was at serious odds
with the United States: its nuclear program, at a moment when
Washington was almost as apprehensive as Moscow about the prospect of
Israel acquiring nuclear weapons." [p. 26]
Moscow's nefarious plan was thwarted by Israel's devastating preemptive
strike on June 5, 1967, which destroyed the Arab air forces and, thus,
convinced Moscow that "its intervention could no longer guarantee an
Arab victory but might risk a clash with the United States...The Soviet
operation was suspended, implemented only in minor part, and renewed,
this time for deterrent effect and with some success, on 10 June after
Israel attacked Syria." [p. 12]
Wow! Quite a story! Nevertheless, the authors are not without evidence
to support their revisionist interpretation of Soviet perfidy. There
exists, for example, the written account of a former Soviet naval
officer, Captain Khripunkov, who claims, "on the first day of the
Six-Day War…he was ordered to prepare and lead a 30-man 'volunteer'
force for a landing on the Israeli coast." [p. 2]
Moreover, there's the collection of Soviet Foreign Ministry papers,
edited by Vitaly V. Naumkin and published in 2003. It contains the 23
February 1966 document, which reveals that on 13 December 1965 "one of
the leaders of the Israel Communist party, Comrade Sneh, informed the
Soviet Ambassador in Tel Aviv about his conversation…with the adviser
to the prime minister of Israel, Gariel, in which the later declared
Israel's intention to produce its own atomic bomb." [pp. 36-37]
The authors also have uncovered a "Finnish document" indicating that
the Soviet Union already had drafted a note (naming Finland as its
protective power in Israel after breaking diplomatic relations with
Israel) that appears to have been written before Israel had launched
its 5 June 1967 preemptive strike. They interpret the document to mean
that 'the USSR's premeditated moves included a break of diplomatic
relations with Israel after the latter was to be provoked into a first
strike against Egypt."
Finally, the authors uncovered evidence to demonstrate "that a Soviet marine landing did take place in the 1967 war." [p. 176]
Armed with such fresh pieces of evidence, the authors looked at some
old evidence in a new light. Thus they took seriously the bellicose
remarks by Marshal Grechko and other Soviet figures; remarks that
earlier students of the war dismissed as "rhetorical hyperbole," [p.
71] And they concluded that the Soviet naval buildup in the Eastern
Mediterranean was in support of an operational mission - but with a
significant caveat: "Unless the Soviets over-estimated American and
Israeli intelligence capabilities, their deployment appears to have
been intended for operational use rather than deterrence." [p. 55]
Yet, as if these revisionist tales of Soviet perfidy were not
sufficiently breathtaking, for good measure the authors advance their
hypothesis that the aircraft which successfully carried out two
provocative over flights of Dimona's nuclear reactor were not MIG-21s,
as Michael Oren and others had suggested, but experimental MIG-25
"Foxbats." Thus, the book's title.
But then they go too far and, thus, completely undermine their
all-too-tidy, but thinly stretched, case by offering "a seductive but
unsubstantiated scenario" in which the evil "Soviets deliberately lured
the Israelis into attacking" [p. 185] the USS
Liberty.
It was this outrageous and gratuitously anti-Soviet assertion that
compelled me to reexamine just how thinly stretched their evidence for
Soviet perfidy in June 1967 actually was.
Last month, while
visiting with Russian scholars in St. Petersburg who specialize in
Russian-American relations, I had the opportunity to discuss the
allegations made in
Foxbats over Dimona
with Ambassador Yuli Vorontsov. A distinguished, erudite gentleman,
with years of honorable and exceptional diplomatic service to his
credit -- both to the Soviet Union and Russia -- Ambassador Vorontsov
also possesses a gift for humorous understatement.
Thus, when I asked him to comment about the claims made in
Foxbats over Dimona,
Ambassador Vorontsov soberly asserted that he possessed no first-hand
knowledge, one way or the other, about the allegations made in the
book. Then, assuming the dignified demeanor of a diplomat who would
have heard about such things, he added (something to the effect of):
"But it sounds like a marvelous fantasy!"
And so it seems.
Walter C. Uhler is an independent scholar and freelance writer
whose work has been published in numerous publications, including The
Nation, the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, the Journal of Military
History, the Moscow Times and the San Francisco Chronicle. He also is
President of the Russian-American International Studies Association
(RAISA).