Washington's politics on nuclear security in the Middle East has never been viewed in a historical context, but in the Israeli context of blaming the victim.
The United States became, in 1898, the first Zionist country in the world after the ideology was brought into the country by a Jew who attended the introduction of Zionism in Basel, Switzerland, in 1897.
In 1938, German chemists Otto Hahn and Fritz Strassmann discovered nuclear fission. Hitler showed no interest in this achievement, as it didn't fit into his agenda, but drew attention from the German Ashkenazi migrant, Albert Einstein, who warned Washington. That prompted the Americans to launch the Manhattan Project in 1942. At that time, the United States wasn't seeking ways to end the Second World War in Asia. They sought three years later, in 1945, with the first genocide in modern history by dropping two nuclear bombs on Japan's civilian population, one on Nagasaki and one on Hiroshima.
The US is the real inventor and the introducer of nuclear militarization, not Germany, which triggered the nuclear arms race this way.
The American failure to prevent the Israelis from starting the production of their first nuclear warhead in the early 1960s, and the nuclear policy that has been pursued since then, particularly when AIPAC began to exert far-reaching influence in the Capitol, has only made the United States (more) complicit, if not a participant in the Israeli nuclear rivalry the Israelis started with the introduction of the Menachem Begin doctrine in 1968.
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