Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office on Saturday denied a report that he is exerting heavy pressure on members of Israel’s Atomic Energy Commission not to oppose uranium enrichment in Saudi Arabia, as part of a potential deal that would see the two nations normalize relations.
Channel 12 earlier aired the claim, without citing sources for it.
“The report…is incorrect,” the Prime Minister’s Office said in a laconic statement.
US support for a Saudi civilian nuclear program is a key demand by Riyadh for the agreement, though security officials in both Israel and the US have expressed concern over the prospect of enrichment on Saudi soil.
Channel 12 said nuclear experts in Israel are stressing the need for very close American oversight over the process if it is agreed, and that there must be assurances from the US as to what the consequences would be if the Saudis later deviate from the agreements.
Netanyahu has told top nuclear and security experts in Israel to cooperate with US negotiators on a proposal for a “US-run uranium enrichment operation” in Saudi Arabia unnamed Israeli and US officials told
“On the nuclear issue, we’ve seen completely eye to eye right from the start. On what we cannot do and what it is we might be able to do,” an unnamed senior Israel official told the newspaper on the view from Washington and Jerusalem on the negotiations with Riyadh.
Experts told the Journal that while there are potential remote shutdown mechanisms that could be put in place in a nuclear facility, or systems that could speed up centrifuges until they break, there were no guarantees such arrangements would be failsafe.
In exchange for normalizing ties with Israel, Saudi Arabia is also asking the US for a major mutual defense pact, significant arms deals and Israeli concessions to the Palestinians.
Opposition Leader Yair Lapid said Thursday that he would welcome a normalization deal between Israel and Saudi Arabia, but warned that an agreement must not enable Riyadh to gain a path to acquiring nuclear weapons.
“A normalization agreement with Saudi Arabia is a welcome thing. But not at the cost of allowing the Saudis to develop nuclear weapons. Not at the cost of a nuclear arms race throughout the Middle East,” Lapid said in a statement.
Foreign Minister Eli Cohen dismissed such concerns, saying there was no need to rush to judgment prematurely.
“There are many details for that kind of agreement,” he told Army Radio. “But Israel’s security takes precedence above everything. We want peace, but also security.”
Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman on Fox News Wednesday warned against a nuclear arms race in the Middle East, but said that Riyadh would have to obtain a nuclear weapon if Iran does.
Netanyahu said in US TV interviews Friday that a normalization deal between Israel and Saudi Arabia was “likely” but that the current window of opportunity would be open for only the next few months.
He noted that there were “major issues” with the proposal that uranium enrichment be permitted on Saudi soil, but told CNN that if the various core components of an accord were resolved, the agreement would garner “a groundswell of support, on the right, on the left and from the international community.”
If the obstacles can be overcome, he added, “I’ll carry my coalition, and the country with it.”
Jacob Magid contributed to this report.
As The Times of Israel’s political correspondent, I spend my days in the Knesset trenches, speaking with politicians and advisers to understand their plans, goals and motivations.
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