Financial Times: Israel opposes the nuclearization of Saudi Arabia.
In a report, the English newspaper Financial Times today discussed the movement of Saudi Arabia towards benefiting from the benefits of establishing a nuclear power plant in this country.
In this report, the submission of proposals by China and France to build a nuclear power plant in Saudi Arabia is interpreted as Riyadh avoiding Washington, and it is stated that other countries such as Russia have also proposed to Riyadh to build a nuclear power plant, and it seems that the Saudi authorities They want to benefit from their experiences, away from their security and strategic alliances with America.
The Financial Times continues to write: Saudi Arabia has tried to cooperate with the United States in the past, but the fate of these efforts led to failure, especially during the presidency of Donald Trump, the White House officials made the establishment of a nuclear power plant in Saudi Arabia subject to They had normalized relations between Riyadh and Tel Aviv.
According to this English newspaper, during the recent consultations with the Saudi authorities on the normalization of relations with Riyadh, he noticed the insistence of the Saudi authorities on the need to include the right to enrich uranium in Saudi Arabia in exchange for the normalization of relations with Tel Aviv. He backed away from pursuing this issue and did not give a green light to the Saudi authorities in this regard.
Therefore, according to the report, Washington’s insistence on limiting Saudi Arabia’s nuclear power has made Riyadh officials think of establishing peaceful nuclear facilities independently of America and with the help of China, Russia, and France.
In the end, the Financial Times newspaper pointed out the conflict between the Zionist regime and Saudi Arabia’s achievement of the ability to enrich uranium even at a peaceful level and wrote: Tel Aviv is worried that Saudi Arabia will increase its capability beyond this level in the future!