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However, there has been no direct confirmation from official military or government sources to suggest that there is an imminent plan to use nuclear weapons in the conflict.
The relationship between Israel and Iran has long been one of strategic hostility, involving covert attacks, covert warfare, airstrikes on regional allies, as well as intelligence and cyber warfare.
The relationship between Israel and Iran has long been one of strategic hostility, involving covert attacks, covert warfare, airstrikes on regional allies, as well as intelligence and cyber warfare.
This has fueled a wealth of unofficial information that is amplified by social media during times of heightened tensions.
Security analysts say that nuclear threats are often used as a “scare language” or a means of demonstrating military might rather than a real plan of action.
Security analysts say that nuclear threats are often used as a “scare language” or a means of demonstrating military might rather than a real plan of action.
They argue that nuclear weapons are usually reserved as a last resort (deterrence), not a tool for direct attack in regional conflicts.
Moreover, experts in international diplomacy say that the United States is unlikely to authorize the use of nuclear weapons in the context of the Iran crisis, as such a move could have major regional and international repercussions. Instead, the world's major powers usually push for diplomacy and tension management to avoid a chain of major wars.
Overall, the reports appear more like a flurry of information than evidence of a real military plan. The expert debate continues to insist that the greatest risk currently lies in conventional warfare, covert attacks, and not the use of nuclear weapons.
Moreover, experts in international diplomacy say that the United States is unlikely to authorize the use of nuclear weapons in the context of the Iran crisis, as such a move could have major regional and international repercussions. Instead, the world's major powers usually push for diplomacy and tension management to avoid a chain of major wars.
Overall, the reports appear more like a flurry of information than evidence of a real military plan. The expert debate continues to insist that the greatest risk currently lies in conventional warfare, covert attacks, and not the use of nuclear weapons.
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