US-Saudi nuclear talks: A barometer for whither the Middle East?
Source: YourNewsWire.com
By James M. Dorsey
Talks
aimed at transferring US nuclear technology to Saudi Arabia serve as an
indicator of where the Saudi-Iranian rivalry is heading as well as the strength
of the informal Saudi-Israeli alliance against Iran. The possible transfer
could spark a new arms race in the Middle East and constitutes one explanation
why Saudi responses to President Donald J. Trump’s recognition of Jerusalem as
the capital of Israel were muted and limited to rhetorical statements.
Mr. Trump’s decision was perhaps most challenging for the
Saudis, who as custodians of Islam’s two holiest cities, would have been
expected to play a leading role in protecting the status of the city that is
home to the faith’s third holiest site. Saudi Arabia was represented at this
week’s summit
of Islamic countries in Istanbul that recognized East Jerusalem as the
capital of Palestine by its foreign minister, Adel al Jubeir, rather than the
king, crown prince or another senior member of the ruling family.
The difficulty for the Saudis is not only their close cooperation
with Israel, willingness to increasingly publicly hint at what long was a secret
relationship, and their position as the US’ closest friend in the Arab world, who
reportedly was willing to endorse a US
Israeli-Palestinian peace plan in the making that would fail to meet the
minimum demanded by Palestinians and Arab public opinion.
With Mr. Trump backing Saudi efforts to counter Iranian
influence in a swath of land stretching from Asia to the Atlantic coast of Africa
despite mounting US criticism of the kingdom’s conduct of its military
intervention in Yemen, Riyadh has a vested interest in maintaining its close
ties to Washington. While having been put in an awkward position, international
condemnation of Mr. Trump’s Jerusalem move has also increased Saudi leverage.
Mr. Trump’s support for Saudi Arabia as well as his
transactional approach to foreign policy that aims to further US business
interests holds out the promise of tipping the Middle East’s military balance
of power in favour of the kingdom.
In the president’s latest effort, his administration is weighing
allowing Saudi Arabia to enrich uranium as part of a deal that would ensure
that bids by Westinghouse
Electric Co. and other US companies to build nuclear reactors in the
kingdom are successful. Past US reluctance to endorse Saudi enrichment and
reprocessing of uranium has put purveyors of US nuclear technology at a
disadvantage.
Saudi Arabia
agreed with the US in 2008 not to pursue enrichment and reprocessing but
has since backed away from that pledge. “They wouldn’t commit, and it was a
sticking point,” said Max
Bergmann, a former special assistant to the undersecretary of state for
arms control and international security.
Testifying to Congress in November, Christopher
Ford, the US National Security Council’s senior director for weapons of
mass destruction and counterproliferation, refused to commit the Trump
administration to the US restrictions. The restrictions are “not a legal
requirement. It is a desired outcome.” Mr. Ford said. He added that the 2015 international
agreement with Iran that severely restricts the Islamic republic’s nuclear
program for at least a decade, made it more difficult for the United States to
insist on limiting other countries’ enrichment capabilities.
Saudi Arabia plans to construct 16 nuclear power reactors by
2030 at a cost of an estimated $100 billion. Officially, Saudi Arabia sees
nuclear power as a way of freeing up more oil for export in a country that has
witnessed dramatic increases in domestic consumption and contributing to
diversification of its economy. It would also enhance Saudi efforts to ensure parity
with Iran in the kingdom’s ability to enrich uranium and its quest to be the
Middle East’s long-term, dominant power.
Saudi Arabia has large uranium deposits of its own. In preparation
of requesting bids for its nuclear program, Saudi Arabia in October asked the
US, France, South Korea, Russia and China for preliminary information. In
addition to the United States, the kingdom has in recent years concluded a number
of nuclear-related understandings with China as well as with France, Pakistan,
Russia, South Korea and Argentina.
Mr. Trump’s apparent willingness to ease US restrictions
services his campaign
promise to revive and revitalize America’s nuclear industry and meet
competition from Russia and China. Saudi contracts are crucial for Westinghouse,
a nuclear technology pioneer whose expertise is used in more than half of the
world’s nuclear power plants. Westinghouse declared bankruptcy in March because
of delays in two US projects.
A deal that would lift US restrictions in return for
acquiring US technology could enmesh Saudi Arabia in bitter domestic political
battles in Washington evolving around alleged Russian interference in the
election that brought Mr. Trump to office. Controversial Trump campaign aide
and short-lived national security advisor Michael
Flynn sought to convince Israel to accept the kingdom’s nuclear program as
part of his efforts to promote Russian nuclear interests in the Middle East.
Mr. Trump’s willingness, against the backdrop of uncertainty
about his readiness to uphold US adherence to the 2015 agreement with Iran, could
unleash an arms race in the Middle East and North Africa. Mr. Trump recently
refused to certify to Congress that Iran was compliant with the agreement.
Dropping restrictions on Saudi enrichment could not only
fuel Saudi-Iranian rivalry that has wreaked havoc across the region, but also
encourage other recipients of US nuclear technology to demand similar rights.
The United Arab Emirates and Egypt have accepted restrictions on enrichment in
their nuclear deals with US companies as long as those limitations were imposed
on all countries in the Middle East.
Saudi Arabia has long been suspected of having an interest
in ensuring that it would have the ability to develop a military nuclear
capability if ever deemed necessary. For decades, Saudi cooperation with
nuclear power Pakistan has been a source of speculation about the kingdom’s
ambition.
Pakistan’s former ambassador to the United States, Husain
Haqqani, asserted that Saudi Arabia’s close ties to the Pakistani military and
intelligence during the anti-Soviet jihad in Afghanistan in the 1980s gave the
kingdom arms’ length access to his country’s nuclear capabilities.
“By the 1980s, the Saudi ambassador was a regular guest of
A. Q. Khan” or Abdul Qadeer Khan, the controversial nuclear physicist and
metallurgical engineer who fathered Pakistan's atomic bomb,” Mr. Haqqani said
in an interview.
Similarly, retired Pakistani Major General Feroz Hassan
Khan, the author of a semi-official history of Pakistan’s nuclear program, has
no doubt about the kingdom’s interest.
“Saudi Arabia provided generous financial support to
Pakistan that enabled the nuclear program to continue, especially when the
country was under sanctions," Mr. Khan said in a separate interview. Mr.
Khan was referring to US sanctions imposed in 1998 because of Pakistan’s
development of a nuclear weapons capability. He noted that at a time of
economic crisis, Pakistan was with Saudi help able “to pay premium prices for
expensive technologies.”
The Washington-based Institute for Science and International
Security (ISIS) said in a report
earlier this year that
it had uncovered evidence that future Pakistani “assistance would not involve
Pakistan supplying Saudi Arabia with a full nuclear weapon or weapons; however,
Pakistan may assist in other important ways, such as supplying sensitive
equipment, materials, and know-how used in enrichment or reprocessing.”
The report said it was unclear whether “Pakistan and Saudi
Arabia may be cooperating on sensitive nuclear technologies in Pakistan. In an
extreme case, Saudi Arabia may be financing, or will finance, an unsafeguarded
uranium enrichment facility in Pakistan for later use, either in a civil or
military program,” the report said.
The report concluded that the nuclear agreement with Iran dubbed
the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) had “not eliminated the
kingdom’s desire for nuclear weapons capabilities and even nuclear weapons…
There is little reason to doubt that Saudi Arabia will more actively seek
nuclear weapons capabilities, motivated by its concerns about the ending of the
JCPOA’s major nuclear limitations starting after year 10 of the deal or sooner
if the deal fails,” the report said.
Rather than embarking on a covert program, the report
predicted that Saudi Arabia would, for now, focus on building up its civilian
nuclear infrastructure as well as a robust nuclear engineering and scientific
workforce. This would allow the kingdom to take command of all aspects of the
nuclear fuel cycle at some point in the future.
“The current situation suggests that Saudi Arabia now has
both a high disincentive to pursue nuclear weapons in the short term and a high
motivation to pursue them over the long term,” the Washington Institute said.
Dr.
James M. Dorsey is a senior fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School of International
Studies, co-director of the University of Würzburg’s Institute for Fan Culture,
and co-host of the New Books in
Middle Eastern Studies podcast. James is the author of The Turbulent World of Middle East Soccer blog, a book with the same title as well
as Comparative
Political Transitions between Southeast Asia and the Middle East and North
Africa,
co-authored with Dr. Teresita Cruz-Del Rosario and Shifting Sands, Essays on Sports and
Politics in the Middle East and North Africa.
Comments
Post a Comment