Most observers who follow nuclear history agree on one major aspect regarding Israel's famous policy of nuclear ambiguity; mainly that it is an exception. More specifically it is largely accepted that the 1969 Nixon-Meir understanding which formally established Israel's policy of nuclear ambiguity and transformed it from an undeclared Israeli strategy into a long-lasting undisclosed bilateral agreement was in fact a singularity aimed at allowing Washington to turn a blind eye to the existence of an Israeli arsenal. According to conventional wisdom this nuclear bargain was a foreign policy exception on behalf of Washington an exception which reflected a relationship growing closer and warmer between the superpower leading the free world and its small Cold War associate. Contrary to the orthodox narrative this research demonstrates that this was not the case. The 1969 bargain was not in fact an exception but rather the first of three Cold War era deals on nuclear tests brokered by Washington with its Cold War associates the other two being Pakistan and South Africa. These two deals are not well known and until now were discussed and explored in the literature in a very limited fashion. <em>Bargaining on Nuclear Tests</em> places the role of nuclear tests by American associates as well as Washington's attempts to prevent and delay them at the heart of a new nuclear history narrative.<br>
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