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Trump Approves Secret Sale of Nuclear Tech to Saudi Arabia

Trump Approves Secret Sale of Nuclear Tech to Saudi Arabia
folder_openMiddle East... access_time5 years ago
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By Staff, Agencies

The administration of US President Donald Trump approved six authorizations that allow American companies secretly provide Saudi Arabia with nuclear technology or technical assistance, according to an official document.

The document, issued by the Department of Energy and seen by Reuters on Wednesday, stated that the firms had requested the US government to keep their approvals secret.

“In this case, each of the companies which received a specific authorization for [Saudi Arabia] have provided us written request that their authorization be withheld from public release,” the department’s National Nuclear Security Administration wrote in its document.

Meanwhile, an official from the department stressed that the requests contained proprietary information and that the authorizations had gone through a multi-agency approval process.

According to Reuters, an informed source, who spoke on condition of anonymity, also said that the authorizations let companies do preliminary work on nuclear power ahead of any deal but not ship equipment that would go into a plant.

In a congressional hearing on Wednesday, Representative Brad Sherman urged Secretary of State Mike Pompeo to release the names of the companies that received the authorizations, accusing Trump’s administration of attempting to evade Congress on sharing nuclear power with Riyadh.

“One thing that is in our interest is to prevent Saudi Arabia from getting a nuclear weapon,” he said. “What I’ve seen in this administration recently... is an effort to evade Congress and to some extent evade your department and provide substantial nuclear technology and aid to Saudi Arabia while [Riyadh] refuses to abide by any of the controls we would like to see regarding reprocessing, enrichment.”

Meanwhile, many US Congress members are concerned about the provision of nuclear technology to Saudi Arabia, a destabilizing force under the Salman clan.

A month earlier, a congressional committee revealed in a report that the Trump administration was trying to bypass Congress to transfer sensitive nuclear power technology to Saudi Arabia.

Iran’s Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif at the time decried the US “hypocrisy” over the planned nuclear sale to the Saudi regime.

Last March, Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman said that the kingdom would be quick to develop nuclear weapons if Iran did so.

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