Abstract
One of the relatively minor security organizations in the Israeli Ministry of Defence, the MALMAB – tasked with protecting Israel's well-known policy of nuclear ambiguity – has gone beyond the usual criminal process established by the rule of law to the grey area of interrogating and even harassing people who seemed to not abide by its strict policies, thus highlighting the tension between legal rules and non-legal sanctions exercised in the name of national security. This article analyses three different cases connected to the issue of nuclear ambiguity, while aiming to debate the sensitive issue, prominent in every democracy, of the limits and balance of security versus democracy.
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