I don’t actually think they were weeks away, but don’t you think they would be working on the other parts in parallel? It’s not like they are going to end up with an arsenal worth of weapons grade uranium then suddenly remember that there are other steps.
No, they’re not working on the other parts as far as we know, and it’s not exactly something you can do in a garage
They could get the high explosives easy enough, but you need a strong and precisely made casing to make sure you’re launching everything together to make it as angry as possible for a split second. You also need someone who understands the engineering well enough to actually do it, particularly without testing
And all that to get the bomb… A bomb they’d basically have to drive in. They don’t have icbms, the missiles they do have are often intercepted, and they don’t have a plane that could get past nearly anyone’s air defense.
And at the end of the day, they could just lie and say they have it… The fact the intelligence community doesn’t think they’re working on the rest of the bomb matters just as much as the ability to make one
Does Israel have nukes? Who knows… So many rumors have gone around about them having them that it’s just accepted as true
Do Russia and China have working nukes? What about India and Pakistan? Do the US nukes even still work? No one is sure
It also just doesn’t really matter… The only people who actually would ever need their nukes to work are the French, because their nuclear doctrine includes a warning shot
they’re not working on the other parts as far as we know
I agree, but we wouldn’t know. Iran is a modern world power that’s perfectly capable of doing things in secret that don’t fit in a garage.
We know with certainty that Iran has enriched a stockpile of 60% uranium. That’s not sufficient to say that nuclear capabilities are imminent, but it’s enough to say that they have long term goals in that direction. (Which makes perfect sense, and should not itself be provocative).
You also need someone who understands the engineering well enough to actually do it, particularly without testing
The US did it 75 years ago with no instruction book. Iran’s population is about the same as the US’s was at the time, and they have the benefit of all those years of manufacturing advancements. It’s borderline racist to assume this would be a problem for them.
They don’t have icbms
They have IRBMs, and Israel has been far from 100% successful at shooting them down. That’s with heavier payloads that have to reach the ground before detonating. Their IRBMs also include a small number of more modern systems that are nearly impossible for Israel to shoot down.
they could just lie and say they have it
Like in high school? “I swear, she used her tongue and everything!”. I’m not so sure that’s going to buy them much leverage. (Which would be the real point of having them.)
Do Russia and China have working nukes? What about India and Pakistan? Do the US nukes even still work? No one is sure.
I don’t think there is any plausible doubt about any of those but Russia. Even Russia is still certain to have some functional nukes. The only doubts are about how many. Also, Fission bombs have a really long shelf life. It’s fusion bombs that require tons of ongoing and expensive maintenance.
The US did it 75 years ago with no instruction book. Iran’s population is about the same as the US’s was at the time, and they have the benefit of all those years of manufacturing advancements. It’s borderline racist to assume this would be a problem for them.
The US did it, with most of the world’s best scientists and engineers in all related fields, in a huge research compound in the middle of the most defensible continent on an infinite budget
More importantly, the US could test at will. Iran can’t test their work without starting a war.
I could go through the other points, but I don’t think you understand the game theory elements of mutually assured destruction well enough to have that talk yet…
But you sum it up, the nukes themselves don’t matter, literally, they don’t matter at all. The threat of potential nukes is what matters, and that’s why multiple countries spend billions to maintain a nuclear triad
I don’t actually think they were weeks away, but don’t you think they would be working on the other parts in parallel? It’s not like they are going to end up with an arsenal worth of weapons grade uranium then suddenly remember that there are other steps.
No, they’re not working on the other parts as far as we know, and it’s not exactly something you can do in a garage
They could get the high explosives easy enough, but you need a strong and precisely made casing to make sure you’re launching everything together to make it as angry as possible for a split second. You also need someone who understands the engineering well enough to actually do it, particularly without testing
And all that to get the bomb… A bomb they’d basically have to drive in. They don’t have icbms, the missiles they do have are often intercepted, and they don’t have a plane that could get past nearly anyone’s air defense.
And at the end of the day, they could just lie and say they have it… The fact the intelligence community doesn’t think they’re working on the rest of the bomb matters just as much as the ability to make one
Does Israel have nukes? Who knows… So many rumors have gone around about them having them that it’s just accepted as true
Do Russia and China have working nukes? What about India and Pakistan? Do the US nukes even still work? No one is sure
It also just doesn’t really matter… The only people who actually would ever need their nukes to work are the French, because their nuclear doctrine includes a warning shot
I agree, but we wouldn’t know. Iran is a modern world power that’s perfectly capable of doing things in secret that don’t fit in a garage.
We know with certainty that Iran has enriched a stockpile of 60% uranium. That’s not sufficient to say that nuclear capabilities are imminent, but it’s enough to say that they have long term goals in that direction. (Which makes perfect sense, and should not itself be provocative).
The US did it 75 years ago with no instruction book. Iran’s population is about the same as the US’s was at the time, and they have the benefit of all those years of manufacturing advancements. It’s borderline racist to assume this would be a problem for them.
They have IRBMs, and Israel has been far from 100% successful at shooting them down. That’s with heavier payloads that have to reach the ground before detonating. Their IRBMs also include a small number of more modern systems that are nearly impossible for Israel to shoot down.
Like in high school? “I swear, she used her tongue and everything!”. I’m not so sure that’s going to buy them much leverage. (Which would be the real point of having them.)
I don’t think there is any plausible doubt about any of those but Russia. Even Russia is still certain to have some functional nukes. The only doubts are about how many. Also, Fission bombs have a really long shelf life. It’s fusion bombs that require tons of ongoing and expensive maintenance.
The US did it, with most of the world’s best scientists and engineers in all related fields, in a huge research compound in the middle of the most defensible continent on an infinite budget
More importantly, the US could test at will. Iran can’t test their work without starting a war.
I could go through the other points, but I don’t think you understand the game theory elements of mutually assured destruction well enough to have that talk yet…
But you sum it up, the nukes themselves don’t matter, literally, they don’t matter at all. The threat of potential nukes is what matters, and that’s why multiple countries spend billions to maintain a nuclear triad