Saudi Arabia wants nuclear programme, US weapons 'in exchange for Israel normalisation': report
18 June, 2023
Saudi Arabia has reportedly made demands for a
US-Saudi partnership for a nuclear programme, US guarantees to defend Riyadh
from potential attacks and greater access to US weaponry, should Washington be
successful in brokering a deal with Israel.
https://www.newarab.com/news/riyadh-wants-nuclear-programme-israel-ties-report
Saudi Arabia could
make demands for US approval of a civilian nuclear programme as a condition for
normalisation with Israel,
a US report said on Saturday.
The New York Times claims
that Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, Saudi Arabia’s de facto ruler, made such
demands to US Secretary of State Antony Blinken during
his trip to Riyadh earlier this month.
The Crown Prince may also seek greater access to US
weapons and a guaranteed defence pact with Washington in exchange for Israeli
normalisation, which the US has been attempting to broker in recent years.
Blinken reportedly briefed Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu on bin Salman's terms in a 40-minute phone call following
the meeting, in what was described as a "turn" in the Biden
administration’s attempts to mediate between Tel Aviv and Riyadh by two
officials, NYT said.
Blinken's trip, where economic cooperation with the Gulf kingdom was
discussed, was the latest in a series of visits by top US officials to both
Saudi Arabia and Israel in recent months, as a means to facilitate talks
between the two and improve its once-frosty relations with Riyadh.
Despite such demands, both the US and Israel have
expressed reluctance to Saudi Arabia’s demands for a nuclear programme.
Such a request would require approval from the US
Congress, where some members of Joe Biden’s Democratic Party are likely to vote
against it, due to their less-than-positive attitude towards Riyadh, NYT said.
Meanwhile, Netanyahu,
who was re-elected as prime minister for the third time following the Israeli
elections late last year, could face strong opposition from the national
security establishment should he consent to a Saudi nuclear programme, the
report added.
In addition to such requests, officials told the US
newspaper that normalisation between Saudi Arabia and Israel would require
"concrete gestures" and "real accommodations" for
Palestinians who suffer under Israeli occupation, though no further details
were given.
Despite hints towards normalisation, Riyadh has
continued to echo a long-standing Arab League stance that such a move with
Israel would only occur should an independent Palestinian state be
created.
Meanwhile, Netanyahu has
expressed great enthusiasm on the matter since becoming premier. In December
last year, he told Saudi broadcaster Al-Arabiya that
normalisation "would change our region in ways that are
unimaginable".
Both Netanyahu and bin Salman, also known as MbS, have
reportedly spoken on the phone twice in recent weeks,
according to a report by The Jerusalem Post in May, where
normalisation was "discussed" but "no progress was made".
A potential Saudi-Israeli rapprochement would be the
latest in a string of Arab states establishing diplomatic relations with Israel
amid the Donald Trump-brokered Abraham Accords.
Morocco, Bahrain and the UAE normalised ties with
Israel in 2020. Sudan also followed suit.
A National Security Council representative told
the NYT that Joe Biden’s Middle East policy includes
"expanding and strengthening" the controversial Accords,
as well as efforts to help "establish diplomatic relations between Tel
Aviv and Riyadh".
Such a move triggered almost-unanimous uproar in much
of the Arab world and among Palestinians, who described the move as a
"stab in the back" for their cause as Israel continues to illegally occupy the Palestinian
territories and besiege the Gaza Strip
while inflicting violence against Palestinians.
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