February 14, 2023 | The Dispatch

Saudi Nuclear Ambitions Could Upend the Middle East

And there are steps the U.S. can take to ward them off.
February 14, 2023 | The Dispatch

Saudi Nuclear Ambitions Could Upend the Middle East

And there are steps the U.S. can take to ward them off.

Excerpt

For more than a decade, Saudi Arabia has built up nuclear infrastructure for the stated purpose of diversifying its domestic energy mix and serving as a future global nuclear supplier. And officials have long spoken of the need to acquire a nuclear deterrent if Iran builds its own such weapons. At a mining conference in January, Saudi energy minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman al-Saud declared that Riyadh intends to master the full nuclear fuel cycle, including enrichment of uranium. He said the kingdom would pursue “the production of yellowcake, low enriched uranium and the manufacturing of nuclear fuel both for our national use and of course for export.”

The Saudis have no current need for the nuclear material, and they could meet any future requirements at a lower price with imported fuel rather than domestic enrichment.

Andrea Stricker is deputy director of the nonproliferation and biodefense program and a research fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD). Follow her on Twitter @StrickerNonproFDD is a nonpartisan research institute focusing on national security and foreign policy.

Issues:

Issues:

Gulf States Iran Iran Global Threat Network Iran Nuclear Israel Nonproliferation

Topics:

Topics:

Iran Middle East Riyadh Saudi Arabia