US and Saudi Arabia sign a nuclear cooperation agreement
Washington said the United States and Saudi Arabia will sign a initial agreement to cooperate in Riyadh’s goals for the development of the civilian nuclear industry.
US Energy Minister Chris Wright told reporters during his visit to Saudi Arabia that Riyadh and Washington are in a way to reach an agreement to cooperate in the development of Saudi civilian nuclear program.
Meeting with Saudi Arabia’s Minister of Energy Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman yesterday, he did not mention the widespread agreement that former US President Joe Biden’s government was looking for. The deal included a civilian nuclear deal and security guarantees hoped to normalize relations between Saudi Arabia and the Zionist regime.
Wright, who traveled to Saudi Arabia for the first time in its regional tour of the Persian Gulf, also said that more details on the cooperation agreement between Riyadh and Washington in the energy field will be provided later this year.
“There will certainly be a” 1 “agreement,” he said. There are many ways to form an agreement that achieves both Saudi and American goals.
According to the Israeli newspaper, an agreement with Riyadh refers to Section 2 of the US Atomic Energy Act in 2008, allowing US government and companies to cooperate with Saudi royal institutions to develop civilian nuclear industry.
The US energy minister says the Saudi authorities did not agree with the requirements of the law. The agreement specifies the three criteria for prohibition that a country must observe to prevent the use of technology to develop nuclear weapons or transfer sensitive materials to others.
So far, there has been little progress in discussions, as Saudi Arabia did not want to sign an agreement that rejects the possibility of enrichment of uranium or fuel regeneration.
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