Could a US-Saudi nuclear deal spark Middle East arms race?

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Deutsche Welle :
Last week, several media reports suggested that Saudi Arabia was on the verge of a “mega deal” with the United States.

Bombastic phrases like a “mega deal” or a “grand bargain” are being used because the agreement would bring the US and the Saudis closer in significant ways, including in a mutual defense pact and through cooperation on emerging technologies like artificial intelligence and a civilian nuclear program.

Such a deal was originally supposed to be closely tied to the normalization of Saudi Arabia’s relations with Israel.

However, with the Saudis insistent that any normalization include Israeli recognition of a path towards Palestinian statehood and the Israelis equally insistent that they don’t want that, normalization has been put on hold.

Instead, according to various reports published by the likes of Reuters, The New York Times, the UK’s Financial Times and The Guardian since the start of May, the “mega deal” between Saudi Arabia and the US is likely still going ahead – just without Israel.

The exact details are not known, but any deal is likely to involve cooperation on Saudi Arabia’s long-held ambitions for civilian nuclear energy, a way for the country to diversify away from oil.

Many analysts say this is among the most likely-to-happen aspects of a “mega deal” – and also among the most controversial.

The controversy stems from the fact that the Saudis are determined to enrich uranium on their own soil, Kelsey Davenport, director for nonproliferation policy at the Arms Control Association in Washington, told DW.

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The technology used for uranium enrichment produces fuel for civilian nuclear reactors but can also result in uranium suitable for nuclear weapons.

“Saudi Arabia is adamant on [this],” Kelsey said. “Riyadh will walk away from a nuclear cooperation agreement with Washington before it forgoes enrichment.”

Last September, Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman created international headlines when he said if Iran, his country’s regional rival, manages to get a nuclear bomb, then Saudi Arabia will need one, too.

As reports about a US-Saudi deal started coming out in early May, US Senator Edward Markey wrote to President Joe Biden.

“I fear that Saudi Arabia – a nation with a terrible human rights record – cannot be trusted to use its civil nuclear energy program solely for peaceful purposes and will instead enrich uranium and seek to develop nuclear weapons,” argued Markey, co-chair of his government’s nuclear weapons and arms control working group. Besides fears that the Saudis might end up with nuclear bombs, there are also concerns that simply permitting them to enrich uranium would set off a regional race.

“Allowing Saudi Arabia to acquire such capabilities could set a problematic precedent at the international level.

It could possibly encourage other countries in the region, such as Egypt or Turkey, to pursue similar nuclear capabilities, leading to a proliferation cascade in an already volatile Middle East,” Manuel Herrera, a researcher focused on nuclear non-proliferation at Istituto Affari Internazionali, an Italian think tank, wrote late last year.