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Explainer: What to know about Dimona, Israel’s nuclear site – World


Explainer: What to know about Dimona, Israel’s nuclear site – World

In a war already redrawing the region’s red lines, with the death toll from the US-Israeli attacks on Iran reportedly having surpassed 1,000, Tehran has brought one of the Middle East’s most sensitive strategic sites into the escalation equation: Israel’s Dimona nuclear site.

A senior Iranian military official told the Iranian website Iran Nuances, later reported by Iran’s semi-official ISNA news agency, that if the US and Israel pursue a “regime change” scenario in practice, Tehran’s “final effective missiles will target the Dimona nuclear reactor and all regional energy infrastructure,” adding: “This is a scenario we have already prepared for.”

Iran has retaliated with waves of drone and missile strikes targeting Israel as well as Gulf countries hosting US military assets, raising fears of a wider regional war.

The warning has reignited questions that often remain muted in regional crises: what is Dimona, why is it seen as the backbone of Israel’s nuclear capability, and how does its secrecy shape the politics of deterrence in a region already consumed by war.

It sits deep in the Negev Desert in southern Israel, away from major population centres, around 13 kilometres (8 miles) from the city of Dimona and about 90 kilometres (56 miles) from Jerusalem.

Israel renamed the facility in 2018 after former prime minister Shimon Peres, who is widely credited inside Israel with key contributions to developing the country’s nuclear program.

The site’s layout underscores its heavily protected nature.

According to available details, the facility consists of 10 buildings spread across roughly 36 square kilometres (14 square miles), ringed by electrified fencing, patrol roads, and anti-aircraft missile batteries.

It also includes eight underground laboratories dating back decades, with around 2,700 scientists and technicians believed to work there.

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