Saudi Nuclear Deal Raises Stakes for Iran Talks
Fears of Mideast arms race
heighten as Riyadh secures nuclear deal with South Korea
By Jay Solomon and Ahmed Al Omran in
the Wall Street Journal
WASHINGTON—As U.S. and Iranian
diplomats inched toward progress on Tehran’s nuclear program last week, Saudi
Arabia quietly signed its own nuclear-cooperation agreement with South Korea.
That agreement, along with recent
comments from Saudi officials and royals, is raising concerns on Capitol Hill
and among U.S. allies that a deal with Iran, rather than stanching the spread
of nuclear technologies, risks fueling it.
Saudi Arabia’s former intelligence
chief, Prince Turki al-Faisal, a member of the royal family, has publicly
warned in recent months that Riyadh will seek to match the nuclear capabilities
Iran is allowed to maintain as part of any final agreement reached with world
powers. This could include the ability to enrich uranium and to harvest the
weapons-grade plutonium discharged in a nuclear reactor’s spent fuel.
Several U.S. and Arab officials have
voiced concerns about a possible nuclear-arms race erupting in the Middle East,
spurred on by Saudi Arabia’s regional rivalry with Iran, which has been playing
out in Syria, Iraq, Lebanon and Yemen in recent months.
“The proliferation of nuclear
technologies is a nightmare the White House would like to discount rather than
contemplate,” said Simon Henderson of the Washington Institute for Near East
Policy, a Washington think tank. “This is more than just an imaginary threat.”
The memorandum of understanding
between Saudi Arabia and South Korea includes a plan to study the feasibility
of building two nuclear reactors worth $2 billion in the Arab country over the
next 20 years, according to Saudi state media.
Current and former U.S. officials
said there is particular concern about Saudi Arabia’s decadeslong military
alliance with Pakistan, a nuclear-armed state with a history of proliferating
military technologies.
A number of senior Arab officials
have warned the White House in recent months the Saudi government could seek
Pakistan’s aid in developing nuclear technologies—or even buy an atomic bomb—if
it sees an agreement with Iran as too weak. Saudi officials have told
successive U.S. administrations they expect to have Pakistan’s support in the
nuclear field, if called upon, because of the kingdom’s massive financial
support for the South Asian country.
“The Saudis privately say they can
get help from Pakistan,” said Robert Einhorn, a former senior State Department
official in the Clinton and Obama administrations, who took part in
negotiations with Iran. “I’ve never seen evidence, though, that there is a
formal understanding.”
A U.S. diplomatic cable from
December 2007, published by WikiLeaks, quoted Pakistan officials saying it was
“logical for the Saudis to step in as the physical ‘protector’ ” of Sunni
countries in response to the threat posed by Iran, a Shiite-majority nation.
Saudi Arabia, unlike Egypt, another Arab power, has the finances to develop a
nuclear-weapons arsenal, the Pakistanis argue.
“Pakistan and Saudi Arabia are
friends of last resort,” said Husain Haqqani, a former Pakistani ambassador to
the U.S., now at Washington’s Hudson Institute. “And while there is nothing in
the public domain to document Saudi Arabia’s and Pakistan’s cooperation, it
wouldn’t be something beyond the breadth of the relationship.”
Members of the Saudi royal family
and government have been critical of the Obama administration’s negotiations
with Iran that are aimed at concluding a deal to constrain Tehran’s nuclear
program by a late March deadline.
U.S. officials say Tehran will be
allowed to maintain the technologies to produce nuclear fuel as part of any
agreement, though in a limited capacity and under strict international
monitoring. The enrichment of uranium can be used by a country both to create
fuel for a nuclear reactor, but also the fissile core of an atomic bomb.
Administration officials said they
are in close consultations with Saudi Arabia and other leading Arab states
about the Iran diplomacy. “Given Iran already has the technical capability, our
goal has always been to get to the one-year breakout time and cut off the four
pathways under a very constrained program,” said a senior U.S. official. “That
is much less of a proliferation risk than not getting to a negotiated agreement
where we do all those things.”
Secretary of State John Kerry visited
Riyadh last week and met the foreign ministers of the six Arab states who make
up the Gulf Cooperation Council.
The White House says a deal with
Iran will place the first significant restraints on Iran’s nuclear program,
which has been on the verge of producing weapons-grade uranium. They said the
U.S. is seeking to guarantee Tehran remains at least a year away from having
enough fissile material for a single nuclear weapon.
Saudi Arabia’s agreement with South
Korea—signed last week during a visit by President Park Geun-hye—marked
Riyadh’s latest push to develop civilian nuclear power.
In 2010, Saudi Arabia established
the King Abdullah City for Atomic and Renewable Energy, commonly known as K.A.
Care, to develop alternative energy sources as the kingdom attempts to
diversify its energy mix. Both the late King Abdullah and Saudi Arabia’s new
monarch, King Salman, have pledged to move their country away from a dependence
on oil.
K.A. Care, a government agency, says
on its website that it aims to generate 17.6 gigawatts of electricity using
nuclear power by 2032, through up to 16 new reactors.
“Saudi Arabia will only deploy the
most advanced and thoroughly tested technologies paying maximum attention to
safety, security and safeguards of the highest international standards when
installing its planned nuclear reactors,” K.A. Care says on its website.
In recent years, Saudi Arabia has
also signed nuclear cooperation agreements with China, France and Argentina.
Riyadh and Buenos Aires formed a
joint-venture company, called Invania, specifically focused on developing nuclear
power. Saudi Arabia and the U.S. have also held talks on signing their own
agreement that would allow American companies to sell nuclear reactors and fuel
to the Arab state. But these negotiations stalled due to the tough terms the
Obama administration has been trying to enforce, according to officials
involved in the diplomacy.
The White House signed a
nuclear-cooperation agreement with the United Arab Emirates in 2009 that
explicitly bans the country from developing the technologies needed to enrich
uranium and reprocess spent reactor fuel. The deal was seen as a major step in
advancing U.S. efforts to stop the spread of these dual-use technologies.
Saudi Arabia, however, has so far
balked at accepting similar terms. “We’ve been pressing them to agree not to
pursue a civilian fuel cycle, but the Saudis refuse,” said Gary Samore, who was
the White House’s top official working on nuclear issues during President
Obama’s first term.
Current and former U.S. officials
stressed Saudi Arabia would face significant technical and legal barriers if it
attempted to either buy or develop the technologies required to produce
weapons-usable fuel.
Saudi Arabia isn’t believed to have
significant numbers of nuclear scientists. And American allies, such as South
Korea and France, are prohibited from selling enrichment and reprocessing
equipment to Riyadh because of their own cooperation agreements with
Washington.
Saudi Arabia would also likely face
stiff Western sanctions if it attempted to amass equipment seen as usable in
developing atomic weapons.
“Saudi Arabia lacks the technologies
and bureaucratic wherewithal” to develop the nuclear fuel cycle “any time in
the foreseeable future,” wrote Colin Kahl, Vice President Joe Biden’s national security adviser, in a
paper he published in 2013, before joining the White House.
Pakistan, in this context, could
emerge as Saudi Arabia’s most important strategic ally, said U.S. and Arab
officials.
Riyadh and Islamabad have developed
close military and economic ties over the past four decades: Pakistan has
previously deployed soldiers inside Saudi Arabia to bolster the kingdom’s
defenses. And the Saudis have provided Pakistan with billions of dollars in
financial aid both through subsidized energy shipments and direct budgetary
support.
Pakistan has a history of selling
nuclear technologies. The black market network developed by the Pakistani
scientist Abdul Qadeer Khan was shut down in the early 2000s after it was
discovered selling centrifuge equipment to Libya, Iran and North Korea.
Saudi officials declined to comment
through their embassy in Washington. Pakistan’s government denied any nuclear
cooperation with Riyadh. “These are all speculative media reports. No such discussions
took place and the Saudi government has no such expectations from us,” said a
government representative.
Current and former U.S. officials
said they remained skeptical that Pakistan would directly sell or transfer
atomic weapons to Saudi Arabia in response to the perceived threat of Iran. But
they said they couldn’t discount Islamabad deploying some of its weapons in the
kingdom, or establishing a nuclear-defense umbrella.
No comments:
Post a Comment