By Charlotte Lawson
Friday, April 07, 2023
The United States’ two most influential Middle Eastern
partners are diverging in their responses to Iran’s burgeoning nuclear
capabilities as U.S. attempts to rein in the Islamic Republic flounder. While
Israel prepares for the possibility of a military showdown, Saudi Arabia
appears poised to make amends with its longtime regional foe while eyeing an
atomic arsenal of its own.
Saudi Arabia’s foreign minister met
with his Iranian counterpart Thursday in Beijing to sign a Chinese-brokered
agreement to reopen their respective embassies and resume flights
between their two countries after cutting diplomatic ties in 2016. They also
pledged non-aggression and a mutual respect for one another’s sovereignty in
their first meeting in seven years. Although there’s no indication they touched
on Iran’s recent nuclear advances Thursday, they reportedly discussed the issue
in talks before signing the deal.
Saudi Minister of State for Foreign Affairs Adel
al-Jubeir said in
January Iran had “an obligation to give up” its nuclear program, but the Saudis
also want to keep the door open for their own nuclear program. The Islamic
kingdom has repeatedly asserted its own right to control the nuclear fuel
cycle, refusing to preemptively limit its ability to enrich uranium and
reprocess spent nuclear fuel. This approach is in part due to Saudi Arabia’s
desire to break its dependence on oil by utilizing domestic uranium reserves
for a civilian nuclear program, but Saudi leaders have also openly
pledged to build a nuclear weapon if Iran does.
“[Saudi Arabia] has warned that if Iran obtains a nuclear
weapon then this would push the whole region to a nuclear arms race,” Faisal J.
Abbas, editor-in-chief of the Saudi Arabia-based Arab News, said in
an interview.
Iranian weaponization may be close at hand. U.S. Joint
Chiefs of Staff Chairman Mark Milley cautioned
last month that Iran could produce enough nuclear material for one bomb in two
weeks. His warning followed an
inspection by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), the
United Nations’ atomic watchdog, which detected “particles” of uranium enriched
up to 83.7 percent—just below the 90 percent threshold generally considered
weapons grade. It also reported Iran had amassed 192 pounds of uranium enriched
to 60 percent—which, spun to 90 percent, would be just enough for a single
weapon.
At its current pace, Iran will reportedly
have enough uranium enriched to 60 percent to produce 10 weapons by
the end of the year. “Only countries making bombs” enrich to such a level, IAEA
head Rafael Grossi has said.
But it would still take Iran 18 to 24 months to develop a nuclear-capable
warhead after weaponizing, experts
estimate.
Amid these advances, the Biden administration is reportedly
floating an interim agreement to restore parts of the 2015 Joint
Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), which dismantled parts of Iran’s nuclear
program in exchange for sanctions relief and international monitoring. But both
Israel and Saudi Arabia opposed the 2015 agreement, arguing the now-defunct
deal allowed Iran to continue enrichment while building out its economy and
destabilizing the region. Iran’s violent suppression of anti-government
protests and weapons sales to
Russia further complicate the diplomatic pathway.
For Israel, Iranian enrichment poses an existential
threat.
Israeli officials told Axios last
month that any Iranian enrichment above 60 percent could trigger a military
strike on Iran’s program. Israel has been signaling the possibility for years,
but Iran’s current enrichment levels may be upping the urgency in Jerusalem.
“Israel doesn’t have the margin for error that Saudi Arabia has,” Jason
Brodsky, policy director of United Against Nuclear Iran, told The
Dispatch. “There are different threat perceptions, but they both recognize
Iran as an enemy.”
Israel’s defense establishment must also contend with
Iran’s reported efforts to obtain advanced air defenses. U.S. and Israeli
officials told Bloomberg last
month that Iran’s prospective purchase of Russian S-400 surface-to-air missile
systems—which are more effective at shooting down stealth fighters than its
current S-300s—could narrow the time window for an aerial attack on
Iranian nuclear facilities.
“The only thing that has ever stopped rogue nations from
developing nuclear weapons is a credible military threat or a credible military
action,” Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said in
February. “The longer you wait, the harder that becomes. We’ve waited very
long.” Grossi, head of the IAEA, warned
last month that such a strike would be “illegal” and “a violation of the
UN charter.”
But beyond international law, Israel would face
logistical challenges in carrying out an effective attack. Israeli officials
have reportedly been trying to speed
up the delivery of four Boeing-made KC-46A tankers from the U.S., which
would allow Israeli fighter jets to refuel midair and facilitate strikes on
Iran. Their estimated delivery date is 2025.
“Both sides are testing each other’s responses. This is
poking and prodding and testing the resolve of the adversary,” said Jonathan
Schanzer, senior vice president for research at the Foundation for Defense of
Democracies. “But the Israelis have made it clear that there will be
consequences if Iran goes all the way.”
Given the enormous task of conducting successful strikes
on Iran’s nuclear sites—which are spread throughout the large country and often
built deep underground—Israel’s best bet is to vie for American support in such
a campaign. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin reaffirmed the
U.S. commitment to never allow Iran to acquire a nuclear weapon during his
visit to Israel last month, and President Joe Biden has repeatedly warned that
every option is on the table for preventing such an outcome.
“As advanced as Israeli military technology is—and it’s
extremely advanced—there are certain things that only the U.S. military is in
possession of and there are certain capabilities and resources that only the
U.S. can offer,” said Oren Kessler, a Tel Aviv-based analyst. “Israeli leaders
would prefer, even if they don’t say so, that the U.S. lead a military strike.
I think Israeli leaders often feel that the American political leadership
shares their concerns, but perhaps not the sense of urgency that Israel feels
being so close and so threatened by Iran.”
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