Bone
saws are just too small
The revelation that the Trump administration secretly authorized several U.S. companies to sell nuclear technology and assistance to Saudi Arabia is generating alarm over ongoing negotiations about a broader deal that critics worry could eventually lead to a nuclear-armed Saudi Arabia.
The Daily Beast and Reuters reported
Wednesday that Energy Secretary Rick Perry had approved at least six Part 810
authorizations, which "allow companies to do preliminary work on nuclear
power ahead of any deal but not ship equipment that would go into a
plant."
Those reports provoked
concerns from lawmakers that the development of nuclear reactors in Saudi
Arabia, with crucial assistance from the American government and companies,
could potentially enable the key U.S. ally—and serial human rights abuser—to also pursue a
nuclear weapon.
"This is
incredibly dangerous," Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.) tweeted Thursday with a
link to the Daily Beast article. "We must do everything
we can to make sure the Saudi regime cannot develop nuclear weapons."
Worries over a
nuclear-armed Saudi Arabia have been mounting since Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman (MBS) said on CBS's "60
Minutes" last year that "Saudi Arabia does not want to acquire any
nuclear bomb, but without a doubt if Iran developed a nuclear bomb, we will
follow suit as soon as possible."
While Iranian leaders
also insist they do not want a nuclear weapon, President Donald Trump has
continued to ratchet up regional tensions since last year, when he ditched the international deal designed to
prevent Iran from acquiring one, despite assurances from U.N. watchdogs that
nation was complying with the agreement.
Amid the new reports and rising concerns about nuclear weapons, Perry testified before the Senate Armed Services Committee on Thursday.
Pointing to concerns
about the administration's nuclear talks with Saudi Arabia and potential legal
violations—which whistleblowers recently brought to the House Committee
on Oversight and Reform—Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) grilled Perry on the
Department of Energy's (DOE) compliance with federal rules.
Following the
committee hearing, DOE issued a statement—which Perry tweeted at Warren—clarifying that he has
actually signed seven Part 810 authorizations for Saudi Arabia.
The statement emphasized that "a Part 810 authorization does not authorize the transfer of nuclear material, equipment, or components," and so far, "no enrichment or reprocessing technology has been authorized to Saudi Arabia."
The statement emphasized that "a Part 810 authorization does not authorize the transfer of nuclear material, equipment, or components," and so far, "no enrichment or reprocessing technology has been authorized to Saudi Arabia."
Part 810
authorizations do not require congressional oversight, but they are often open to public review.
However, according to DOE, "the specifics of these authorizations have not been made public because the companies determined that the authorizations contain proprietary business information."
However, according to DOE, "the specifics of these authorizations have not been made public because the companies determined that the authorizations contain proprietary business information."
After Perry's testimony, Sen. Ed Markey (D-Mass.), who has criticized the administration for its nuclear talks with Saudi Arabia, vowed to introduce legislation requiring the DOE to make Part 810 authorizations available to Congress.
"We must ensure that Saudi Arabia never ends up with the American technology or materials to make a nuclear bomb." —Sen. Ed Markey
"This
administration has shown no qualms about going around Congress to assist
authoritarians and promote private interests over public ones," Markey
said. "We must ensure that Saudi Arabia never ends up with the American
technology or materials to make a nuclear bomb."
Saudi Arabia,
already infamous for its poor track record on
human rights, has faced heightened scrutiny since the murder of Washington Post contributor Jamal Khashoggi at the Saudi consulate in Turkey last
year.
Despite the CIA's conclusion that MBS likely ordered the hit on Khashoggi—whose body was potentially dismembered with a bone saw and then incinerated—Trump and key members of his administration maintain cozy relations with the Saudi regime.
Despite the CIA's conclusion that MBS likely ordered the hit on Khashoggi—whose body was potentially dismembered with a bone saw and then incinerated—Trump and key members of his administration maintain cozy relations with the Saudi regime.
Asked Thursday by Sen.
Tim Kaine (D-Va.) whether he had signed the Part 810 authorizations before or
after Khashoggi was killed in October, Perry said he did not know but would get
back to the senator with the details.
Both Perry and U.S.
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, in his testimony before House Foreign Affairs
Committee on Wednesday, claimed that any deal with Saudi Arabia would include
safeguards to ensure the kingdom doesn't build a nuclear weapon.
However, some
lawmakers remain skeptical. Rep. Brad Sherman (D-Calif.) toldPompeo, "If you cannot trust a regime
with a bone saw, you should not trust them with nuclear weapons."
"If you cannot trust a regime with a bone saw, you should not trust them with nuclear weapons." —Rep. Brad Sherman
Last month,
Sherman—along with Markey, Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.), and Rep. Ted Yoho
(R-Fla.)—introduced legislation that would
increase congressional oversight of any wider nuclear deals, called 123
agreements.
As DOE explained, a
123 agreement "allows the Nuclear Regulatory Commission to license the
export of nuclear material, equipment, and components from the U.S."
Congress already reviews such deals and can block them with joint resolutions
of disapproval passed by veto-proof majorities, but the bill would require
congressional approval for any 123 agreement with Saudi Arabia.
After news broke about
the secret authorizations for Saudi Arabia this week, some experts suggested
the authorizations could be part of a wider effort to work around a 123
agreement with the country.
Richard Nephew, former
director for Iran on the National Security Council, told ThinkProgress it is
"absolutely normal" for the DOE to issue authorizations without an
agreement, but these authorizations make him feel "uneasy,"
"nervous," and "suspicious" because "there are now
indications that they [the administration] weren't approaching this entire
issue the right way... it suggests an attempt to end run the 123
agreement."
Thomas Countryman,
former assistant secretary of state for international security and
nonproliferation, told the outlet, "It does seems clear that the
administration has not acted consistently with either the spirit or the letter
of the Atomic Energy Act, in failing to notify the Congress of the 810
approvals, and failing to brief Congress on the course of the 123 negotiations
with Saudi Arabia."
Earlier this month,
Rubio and Sen. Bob Menendez (D-N.J.) requested the Government Accountability
Office (GAO) probe the administration's nuclear talks with Saudi Arabia, along
with any other negotiations by the executive branch since December of 2009.
The Financial Times reported Tuesday that the GAO agreed to
launch an investigation.