The Middle East’s nuclear technology clock starts ticking
By James M. Dorsey
The Middle East’s nuclear technology clock is ticking as
nations pursue peaceful capabilities that potentially leave the door open to
future military options.
Concern about a nuclear arms race is fuelled by uncertainty
over the future of Iran’s 2015 nuclear agreement, a seeming US willingness to
weaken its strict export safeguards in pursuit of economic advantage, and a
willingness by suppliers such as Russia and China to ignore risks involved in
weaker controls.
The Trump administration
was mulling loosening controls to facilitate a possible deal with Saudi
Arabia as Israeli Prime Minister Benyamin Netanyahu prepared, in an address
this week to a powerful Israeli lobby group in Washington, to urge US President
Donald J. Trump to scrap
the Iranian nuclear deal unless the Islamic
republic agrees to further military restrictions and makes additional political
concessions.
Israel has an undeclared nuclear arsenal of its own and
fears that the technological
clock is working against its long-standing military advantage.
The US has signalled that it may be willing to accede to
Saudi demands in a bid to ensure that US companies with Westinghouse in the
lead have a stake in the kingdom’s plan
to build by 2032 16 reactors that would have 17.6 gigawatts (GW) of nuclear
capacity.
In putting forward demands for parity with Iran by getting the
right to controlled enrichment of uranium and the reprocessing of spent fuel
into plutonium, potential building blocks for nuclear weapons, Saudi Arabia was
backing away from a 2009
memorandum of understanding with the United States in which it pledged
to acquire nuclear fuel from international markets.
“The trouble with flexibility regarding these critical
technologies is that it leaves the door open to production of nuclear
explosives,” warned nuclear
experts Victor Gilinsky and Henry Sokolski in an article Bulletin of the Atomic
Scientists.
While Israeli opinion is divided on how the US should
respond to Saudi demands, Messrs Trump and Netanyahu’s opposition to the
Iranian nuclear accord has already produced results that would serve Saudi
interests.
European signatories to the agreement are pressuring Iran to
engage in negotiations to limit its ballistic missile program and drop its
support for groups like Lebanon’s Shiite Hezbollah and Houthi rebels in Iran.
Iran has rejected any renegotiation but has kept the door open to discussions
about a supplementary agreement. Saudi Arabia has suggested it may
accept tight US controls if Iran agreed to a toughening of its agreement
with the international community.
The Trump administration recently allowed
high-tech US exports to Iran that could boost international oversight of
the nuclear deal. Deputy Secretary of State John Sullivan signed a waiver that
allows a Maryland-based company to export broadband networks, satellite dishes
and wireless equipment to Iran for stations that monitor nuclear explosions in
real time.
Iranian resistance to a renegotiation is enhanced by the
fact that Europe and even the Trump administration admit that Hezbollah despite
having been designated a terrorist organization by the US is an undeniable political
force in Lebanon. "We…have to recognize the reality that (Hezbollah) are
also part
of the political process in Lebanon,” Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said
on the eve of a visit to Beirut.
A US willingness to go easy on demanding that Saudi Arabia
adhere to tough safeguards enshrined in US export control laws, widely viewed
as the gold standard, would open a Pandora’s box.
The United
Arab Emirates, the Arab nation closest to inaugurating its first nuclear
reactor, has already said that it would no longer be bound by the safeguards it
agreed to a decade ago if others in the region were granted a more liberal
regime. So would countries like Egypt and Jordan that are negotiating contracts
with non-US companies for construction of nuclear reactors. A US backing away
from its safeguards in the case of Saudi Arabia would potentially add a nuclear
dimension to the already full-fledged arms in the Middle East.
The Washington-based Institute for Science and International
Security (ISIS) cautioned last year in a report that
the Iranian nuclear agreement 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 (Iranian
agreement’s) major nuclear limitations starting after year 10 of the deal or
sooner if the deal fails.”
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. Saudi Arabia has in recent
years significantly expanded graduate programs at its five nuclear research
centres.
“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 report said.
Saudi officials have repeatedly insisted that the kingdom is
developing nuclear capabilities for peaceful purposes such as medicine,
electricity generation, and desalination of sea water. They said Saudi Arabia
is committed to putting its future facilities under the supervision of the
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).
Vietnam constitutes a precedent for application of less
stringent US safeguards. The US settled for a non-binding Vietnamese statement
of intent in the preamble of its agreement that Vietnam had no intention to
pursue fuel cycle capabilities.
Tailoring Saudi demands of parity with Iran could be
addressed, according to former senior US non-proliferation official Robert
Einhorn, by sequencing
controls to match timelines in the Iranian nuclear agreement. This could
involve:
-- establishing a bilateral fuel cycle commission that,
beginning in year 10, would jointly evaluate future Saudi reactor fuel
requirements and consider alternative means of meeting those requirements,
including indigenous enrichment;
-- creating provisions for specific Saudi enrichment and
reprocessing activities that would be allowed if approved on a case-by-case
basis by mutual consent and would kick in in year 15;
-- limiting the period after which Saudi Arabia, without
invoking the agreement’s withdrawal provision, could end the accord and
terminate its commitment to forgo fuel cycle capabilities if it believed the
United States was exercising its consent rights in an unreasonably restrictive
manner.
Saudi foreign minister Adel al-Jubeir recently raised the
stakes by declaring that the kingdom was engaged
in talks with ten nations about its nuclear program, including Russia and
China, nations that impose less stringent safeguards but whose technology is
viewed as inferior to that of the United States.
To strengthen its position, Saudi Arabia has added Pillsbury
Winthrop Shaw Pittman, an international
law firm specialized in energy regulation, to its army of lobbyists and
public relations firms in Washington, in a bid to ensure it gets a favourable
agreement with the United States.
“Allowing Moscow to gain a nuclear foothold in Saudi Arabia
would deal a serious blow to U.S. regional influence and prestige,” warned the Washington-based
Arabia Foundation’s Ali Shihabi.
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, Shifting Sands, Essays on Sports and
Politics in the Middle East and North Africa, and
the forthcoming China
and the Middle East: Venturing into the Maelstrom
very informative artice
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