Arab states seek nuclear power

About a dozen nations making plans to keep up

By WILLIAM J. BROAD
AND DAVID E. SANGER
NEW YORK TIMES


 
Two years ago, the leaders of Saudi Arabia told international atomic regulators that they could foresee no need for the kingdom to develop nuclear power. Today, they are scrambling to hire atomic contractors, buy nuclear hardware and build support for a regional system of reactors.

Turkey is preparing for its first atomic plant. Egypt has announced plans to build one. Roughly a dozen states in the region have recently turned to the International Atomic Energy Agency in Vienna for help in starting their own nuclear programs.

While interest in nuclear energy is rising globally, it is unusually strong in the Middle East.

"The rules have changed," King Abdullah II of Jordan recently told the Israeli newspaper Haaretz. "Everybody's going for nuclear programs."

"One danger of Iran going nuclear has always been that it might provoke others," said Mark Fitzpatrick, a senior fellow at the International Institute for Strategic Studies, an arms analysis group in London. "So when you see the development of nuclear power elsewhere in the region, it's a cause for some concern."

Officials from 21 governments in and around the Middle East warned at an Arab summit in March that Iran's drive for atomic technology could result in the beginning of "a grave and destructive nuclear arms race in the region."

U.S. officials are seizing on such developments to build their case for stepping up pressure on Iran. President Bush has talked privately to experts on the Middle East about his fears of a "Sunni bomb," and his concerns that countries in the Middle East may turn to the only nuclear-armed Sunni state, Pakistan, for help.
 

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