22
FEBRUARY 2018
Victor
Gilinsky Henry Sokolski
Victor
Gilinsky is program advisor for the Nonproliferation Policy Education Center in
Arlington, Virginia. He served on the Nuclear Regulatory Commission under
Presidents Ford, Carter, and Reagan...
A
US-Saudi nuclear agreement is said to be in the works. The reported deal would allow Saudi Arabia to
buy US nuclear power reactors and—because of Saudi resistance to stricter
terms—would be “flexible” on Saudi uranium enrichment and on reprocessing of
spent reactor fuel. The trouble with flexibility regarding these critical
technologies is that it leaves the door open to production of nuclear
explosives.
More
disappointing, although perhaps not surprising, is that the proposed agreement
has the support of more than a few nuclear policy experts outside government. They make a
familiar argument regarding nuclear exports: If the United States insists on
stricter terms—terms that bar enrichment and reprocessing—the Saudis will turn
to Russia or China for nuclear technology, granting these countries greater
influence in the Middle East. The United States has been down this road before,
in the cases of Iran and India, and it didn’t turn out well. A permissive
US-Saudi nuclear agreement would be strategically dangerous for the United
States and the region. Congress should not approve such a deal.
What’s
driving the administration to cut such an agreement? Let’s set aside the Energy
Department’s claims that the Saudis need nuclear power plants and that
Westinghouse has a chance to get the business for the United States. First,
the Saudis have cheaper energy options—natural
gas and renewables. This is clear from the decision of the similarly
situated United Arab Emirates not to build more nuclear plants beyond four reactors
already planned or under construction. Second, Westinghouse—now bankrupt—has no
chance to get the business, and in any case it is no longer a US-owned company.
The Saudis, if they did go forward with developing nuclear energy, would do
business with the South Koreans, who are successfully completing a proven reactor design next door in the
United Arab Emirates.
If
buying American is not the key driver of this deal, what is? The Saudis,
to maintain the option of using in its plants US
parts whose export is controlled by law, want an umbrella agreement. But
they obviously have more in mind than nuclear energy. They compete with Iran
for influence in the Middle East, and they are obsessed with this rivalry. They
are convinced that they need to match Iran’s nuclear potential. That means
being within arm’s reach of a Bomb. These circumstances shouldn’t surprise
anyone, and in fact one of the main reasons to restrain Iran is precisely to
avoid such a scenario. If Saudi Arabia opts for nuclear weapons, Turkey and
Egypt may be close behind. Taking into account Israel’s nuclear arsenal, the
Middle East could turn into a nuclear cauldron.
The
scary part is that the prospect of Saudi Arabia matching Iran doesn’t faze the
deal’s promoters—indeed, some see it as an advantage. They detest President
Obama’s Iran deal so much that, in a permissive US-Saudi agreement, they see
any implicit threat to Iran as a positive feature. If the Saudis had the same
Bomb potential as Iran, they say, wouldn’t Iran then hesitate to go for a Bomb?
Possibly—but on the other hand, Saudi potential for nuclear weapons might
provoke Iran to build its own weapons. That would be the worst of all possible
worlds.
One
must also consider the longer-term consequences of allowing “flexibility” in a
nuclear deal with Saudi Arabia. Nuclear plants proposed for the Middle East, or
now being built, will last many decades. But will governments in the region
last that long? The Saudi kingdom—despite recent, overhyped steps toward
modernity such as allowing women to drive—is an anachronism. However firmly
entrenched the kingdom appears in the person of Crown Prince Mohammad bin
Salman, it could disappear overnight, as almost happened in the fundamentalist
attack on the Grand Mosque in 1979. Recall Washington’s experience with the
Shah of Iran, whom the United States saw as its best friend in the Gulf. The
United States was ready to sell the Shah two dozen reactors and even give him
access to fuel technology. None of that happened, but MIT set up a special
program to educate his nuclear engineers, some of whom are now central to Iran’s centrifuge enrichment activities.
Who will inherit the nuclear technology that may be acquired by Saudi Arabia?
A
more fundamental difficulty with the current discussions over the Saudi deal is
that the Washington consensus on the international role of nuclear power has
changed hardly at all since the days of Atoms for Peace, more than half a
century ago. But nuclear energy is no longer the world’s energy option of choice, and is
definitely not the gateway to an advanced economy, as it was once thought to
be. It’s just an expensive way to generate electricity. The United States, most
of Europe, and Japan—countries where elections matter—have pretty much given up installing large nuclear reactors. There
is nothing inevitable about nuclear power’s further acceptance in the rest of
the world. The political value of supplying it—which underlay Atoms
for Peace during the Cold War—is much diminished. But nuclear power’s weapons
potential is, if anything, more worrisome than ever. It does not make sense for
the United States to promote nuclear energy internationally.
China
and Russia continue their civil nuclear programs, but their wares are not
particularly attractive. Russia has made sales in Egypt and Turkey by offering
to own and operate plants throughout their lifetimes, and to provide generous
financing. It remains to be seen how that will work out. The
nonproliferation conditions that Russia and China impose are in certain
respects not inferior to those imposed by Washington. The Russians would
provide fresh reactor fuel and take back the spent fuel, which would obviate
any need for local reprocessing or enrichment. If the United States makes an
absolute goal of keeping Russian and Chinese nuclear activities out of Saudi
Arabia, as the Washington think tanks insist it must, then of course Washington
will have to go along with whatever terms the Saudis will accept. But that is
no way to conduct a negotiation.
The
right approach is for the United States to cooperate with Middle Eastern
countries, which sit on gas fields and don’t lack for sunlight, to develop
economically attractive energy alternatives to nuclear power. If Middle Eastern
nations still opt for nuclear power, the evidence of their genuine interest in
energy and not Bombs would be their willingness to agree to provisions barring
enrichment of uranium and separation of plutonium. Saudi Arabia’s neighbors in
the United Arab Emirates agreed to that, as well as to augmented international
inspections. In any US-Saudi nuclear deal, the United States should accept
nothing less. In view of the White House’s inclination to be “flexible,”
resistance will have to come from Congress, which needs to assert itself.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.