Thursday, November 7, 2013

Saudi-Arabia secretly finance the nuclear weapons programs of Pakistan

Saudi-Arabia secretly finance the nuclear weapons programs of Pakistan in Exchange for the possession of the atomic bomb, the BBC led the source said. The move could spark a nuclear arms race in a region which is unstable.

According to the BBC, Saudi-Arabia want atomic weapons to counter the nuclear ambitions of Iran from the opponent.

Saudi Arabia, a longstanding ally of the us in the region, increasingly worried about relationships are warm up between America and Iran in the past few months, despite guarantees from Washington that the u.s. will defend the interests of the Middle East allies. Although the US has not lifted the sanctions in Iran, but the negotiations on the nuclear program of the Islamic Republic are evolving, with the second round of negotiations began in Geneva (Switzerland) 2 minutes 7/11.

Saudi Arabia has invested in the nuclear program of Pakistan and the nuclear weapon for Riyadh was now ready to hand over, BBC News Agency on November 7, the news, quoted a senior NATO officials have access to the intelligence reports.

The handing of nuclear weapons from Pakistan--an ally of the United States of America-for Saudi-Arabia are speculation is likely to occur right now. Earlier, former Israeli military intelligence chief Amos Yadlin spoke at a news conference in Sweden back in October that if Iran acquired atomic bombs, "Saudi Arabia will not have to wait up to a month. They have paid for the bombs, they would go to Pakistan and get what they need to get the ", the BBC reported.

Gary Samore, who served as Adviser to combating nuclear proliferation of u.s. President Barack Obama until March 2013, or Saudi-Arabia believe they have "certain agreement" with Pakistan and that they plan to get nuclear weapons from the South Asian country.

Nuclear weapon ambitions of Saudi-Arabia there since the 1980s, when that country secretly bought dozens of CSS-2 ballistic missiles of China, which according to experts is not to be used as weapons.

Prince Sultan bin Abdulaziz al Saud, the Defense Minister of Saudi Arabia, visited Pakistan's nuclear facilities into 1999 and 2002 shows close defense ties between the two countries.

0 comments:

Post a Comment