Enriching uranium in Saudi Arabia

The Saudis are still waiting to resolve the differences between the congress and the White House.

Israel, the Congress, the Department of Energy and the White House are contributing to the problem of Saudi Arabia’s opposition to the non-enrichment of uranium, that is, to eliminate the possibility of Riyadh entering the club of nuclear technology owners. These talks determine the fate of an unprecedented deal, and could serve the Saudi demands for a regional power to counter Iran. The Kingdom right to enrich uranium will impact the security foundations in the Middle East.

In any case, possessing nuclear technology will give Saudi Arabia the edge of regional independence, and this will make Saudi foreign policy not necessarily consistent with the interests of the United States and Israel.

The Saudis have had ties to Arab, Palestinian, Egyptian, Jordanian and Lebanese experts to set up the enrichment facility.

Arnaud Lefevre

Arnaud Lefevre

Arnaud Lefevre is the Chief Executive Officer of Dynatom International. Arnaud is in charge of the international development of the business portfolio.
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