Israel's nuclear weapons program is believed have developed 100 to 200 nuclear warheads, but officially maintains a policy of "nuclear ambiguity" with support from the United States.
The result has been what Indians call "nuclear ambiguity," meaning a weapons program that is never publicly acknowledged.
Israel maintains a policy known as "nuclear ambiguity" (also known as "nuclear opacity").
On 7 January 2010, Vanunu published a video message to the media regarding his most recent arrest and Israel's "impotent" nuclear ambiguity.
Under its policy of "nuclear ambiguity," Israel does not confirm or deny its nuclear capacity.
But to this day, it refuses to confirm or deny that, under its policy of "nuclear ambiguity."
Maybe this is where Israel's posture of "nuclear ambiguity" originates!
Israel acknowledges the existence of the site, but refuses to either confirm or deny its suspected purpose in a policy known as nuclear ambiguity.
Israel has maintained a policy of nuclear ambiguity for years, refusing to confirm or deny reports that it has up to 300 nuclear weapons.
Israel maintains a policy of what it calls "nuclear ambiguity".