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Nuclear Saudis? ‘All options on the table’ Co-operate with Zionists

ArsalanKhan21

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This Saudi regime currently ruling Arabia has gone berserk over Iran Nuclear deal and are cooperating with Zionazis.

​Nuclear Saudis? ‘All options on the table’ over Iran deal, Riyadh’s ambassador to UK warns — RT UK

Nuclear Saudis? ‘All options on the table’ over Iran deal, Riyadh’s ambassador to UK warns
Published time: June 08, 2015 16:46
Edited time: June 08, 2015 17:53

Arms, Iran, Israel, Middle East, Nuclear, Saudi Arabia, UK, War
Saudi Arabia is ready to acquire nuclear weapons if diplomatic talks aimed at halting Iran’s nuclear ambitions break down, the Saudi ambassador to the UK has said.

Prince Mohammed bin Nawwaf bin Abdulaziz al-Saud said the oil-rich Gulf kingdom hoped negotiations being led by US President Barack Obama would result in a “watertight” deal with Iran.

However if does not happen, then “all options are on the table,” he said.

Riyadh accuses Iran of destabilizing the region by funding Houthi rebels in Yemen, the site of a current proxy conflict between the two Middle Eastern powers.

Prince Mohammad’s threat came in an interview with The Telegraph published Monday.

Negotiations between Iran and the P5+1 – the US, UK, France, China and Russia (the five permanent members of the UN Security Council) and Germany – are due to close at the end of June.

Diplomats are pressing Iran to stop key parts of its uranium enrichment program in return for an easing of sanctions that have crippled the Iranian economy.

Prince Mohammad told The Telegraph: “We have always expressed our support for resolving the Iranian nuclear file in a diplomatic way and through negotiation.”

We commend the American president’s effort in this regard, provided that any deal reached is watertight and is not the kind of deal that offers Iran a license to continue its destabilizing foreign policies in the region. The proof is in the pudding.

The Saudi ambassador said the kingdom hopes Iran will offer assurances it will not pursue nuclear weapons.

But if this does not happen, then all options will be on the table for Saudi Arabia.”

Iran’s nuclear program poses a direct threat to the entire region and constitutes a major source and incentive for nuclear proliferation across the Middle East, including Israel,” he added.

Saudi Arabia is believed to have funded up to 60 percent of Pakistan’s nuclear program, on the condition it could buy warheads at short notice.

If the Gulf state were to activate the deal, it would see Saudi Arabia become the first nuclear power in the Arab world.

The Saudi kingdom already has the fourth highest military expenditure in the world, surpassing Britain, which is in fifth place.

Its ongoing military onslaught in Yemen has seen it deploy 150,000 troops, while fighter jets have conducted devastating bombing raids on the small Arab state.



The ambassador’s warning over Iran comes after a senior Saudi official met with an Israeli diplomat in Washington to discuss their shared opposition to Tehran last week.

Retired Saudi major general Anwar Eshki and former Israeli ambassador Dore Gold held a press conference together at the Council on Foreign Relations.

We’re both allies of the United States. I hope this is the beginning of more discussion about our common strategic problems,” Gold said.
 
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These sheikhs have no brains at all damn!!!
Don't give em nukes guys. :hitwall::hitwall::hitwall:

Judging by the fact that they kill people over different sects, how long will it be before Saudis start firing nukes at Shia dominated regions and most importantly Iran?

I concur. In fact every person should have one in their garage.

@Superboy all ready has one. He hides it in his room in the attic.
 
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Saudi's better first deal with barefoot Houthis then talking about all options ...

Why Saudi Arabia can’t get a nuclear weapon

Of the many unnerving aspects of the future of the Middle East, a nuclear arms race would top the list. And to feed that unease, Saudi Arabia has been periodically dropping hints that, should Iran’s nuclear ambitions go unchecked, it might just have to get nuclear weapons itself. This week, the Saudi ambassador to London made yet another explicit threat, warning that “all options will be on the table.”

Oh, please! Saudi Arabia isn’t going to build a nuclear weapon. Saudi Arabia can’t build a nuclear weapon. Saudi Arabia hasn’t even built a car. (By 2017, after much effort, the country is expected to manufacture its first automobile.)

Saudi Arabia can dig holes in the ground and pump out oil but little else. Oil revenue is about 45 percent of its gross domestic product, a staggeringly high figure, much larger than petro-states such as Nigeria and Venezuela. It makes up almost 90 percent of the Saudi government’s revenue. Despite decades of massive government investment, lavish subsidies and cheap energy, manufacturing is less than 10 percent of Saudi GDP.

Where would Saudi Arabia train the scientists to work on its secret program? The country’s education system is backward and dysfunctional, having been largely handed over to its puritanical and reactionary religious establishment. The country ranks 73rd in the quality of its math and science education, according to the World Economic Forum — abysmally low for a rich country. Iran, despite 36 years of sanctions and a much lower per capita GDP, fares far better at 44.

And who would work in Saudi Arabia’s imagined nuclear industry? In a penetrating book, Karen Elliott House, formerly of the Wall Street Journal, describes the Saudi labor market: “One of every three people in Saudi Arabia is a foreigner. Two out of every three people with a job of any sort are foreign. And in Saudi Arabia’s anemic private sector, fully nine out of ten people holding jobs are non-Saudi. . . . Saudi Arabia, in short, is a society in which all too many men do not want to work at jobs for which they are qualified; in which women by and large aren’t allowed to work; and in which, as a result, most of the work is done by foreigners.”

None of this is to suggest that the kingdom is in danger of collapse. Far from it. The regime’s finances are strong, though public spending keeps rising and oil revenue has been declining. The royal family has deftly used patronage, politics, religion and repression to keep the country stable and quiescent. But that has produced a system of stagnation for most, with a gilded elite surfing on top with almost unimaginable sums of money.

Saudi Arabia’s increased assertiveness has been portrayed as strategic. In fact, it is a panicked and emotional response to Iran, fueled in no small measure by long-standing anti-Shiite bigotry. It is pique masquerading as strategy. In October 2013, after having spent years and millions of dollars campaigning for a seat on the U.N. Security Council, it abruptly declined the post at the last minute, signaling that it was annoyed at U.S. policy in its region.

Its most recent international activism, the air campaign in Yemen, has badly backfired. Bruce Riedel, a former top White House aide, says that damage to civilians and physical infrastructure “has created considerable bad blood between Yemenis and their rich Gulf neighbors that will poison relations for years. Yemenis always resented their rich brothers, and now many will want revenge.” He notes that the air campaign is being directed by the new defense minister, the king’s 29-year-old son, who has no experience in military affairs or much else.

But couldn’t Saudi Arabia simply buy a nuclear bomb? That’s highly unlikely. Any such effort would have to take place secretly, under the threat of sanctions, Western retaliation and interception. Saudi Arabia depends heavily on foreigners and their firms to help with its energy industry, build its infrastructure, buy its oil and sell it goods and services. Were it isolated like Iran or North Korea, its economic system would collapse.

It is often claimed that Pakistan would sell nukes to the Saudis. And it’s true that the Saudis have bailed out Pakistan many times. But the government in Islamabad is well aware that such a deal could make it a pariah and result in sanctions. It is unlikely to risk that, even to please its sugar daddy in Riyadh. In April, Pakistan refused repeated Saudi pleas to join the air campaign in Yemen.

So let me make a prediction: Whatever happens with Iran’s nuclear program, 10 years from now Saudi Arabia won’t have nuclear weapons. Because it can’t.
 
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Very strange these same people fund ISIS, Taliban and does not recognize Israel and then they plan together with Israel to fight Iran. Is it not that Saudi and Iran would be Umhaa (Brotherly) in an ideal world.

Hypocritical at best. I don't have anything against any part involved. Best of luck for this Game of Middle East Thrones. :enjoy:
 
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Israel can have nukes. US can have the second highest stockpile and be an occupation force in Afghanistan and Iraq. But Pakistans and Irans having nuclear weapons come under scrutiny. So I ask what gives America the right to have nukes?

Also I have to ask Saudi is worrying over an Iranian nuclear weapon but they are not worried about America and the other European countries. It does not fit "the center of the muslim world" to act in this way and weaken Islam by bickering with a fellow Islamic state. Iran and Saudi should put this rift behind them.
 
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Israel can have nukes. US can have the second highest stockpile and be an occupation force in Afghanistan and Iraq. But Pakistans and Irans having nuclear weapons come under scrutiny. So I ask what gives America the right to have nukes?

Also I have to ask Saudi is worrying over an Iranian nuclear weapon but they are not worried about America and the other European countries. It does not fit "the center of the muslim world" to act in this way and weaken Islam by bickering with a fellow Islamic state. Iran and Saudi should put this rift behind them.

At least Iran is honest about what it wants, Saudis are so damn double faced
 
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Saudi Arabia’s increased assertiveness has been portrayed as strategic. In fact, it is a panicked and emotional response to Iran, fueled in no small measure by long-standing anti-Shiite bigotry.
Exactly ! Saudis have gone berserk.
Where would Saudi Arabia train the scientists to work on its secret program? The country’s education system is backward and dysfunctional, having been largely handed over to its puritanical and reactionary religious establishment. The country ranks 73rd in the quality of its math and science education, according to the World Economic Forum — abysmally low for a rich country. Iran, despite 36 years of sanctions and a much lower per capita GDP, fares far better at 44.
Saudis do not study technical subjects and they take easy courses since they are guaranteed life-time high paying jobs. All Saudi nuclear scientists can be counted on fingers of one hand.
“One of every three people in Saudi Arabia is a foreigner. Two out of every three people with a job of any sort are foreign. And in Saudi Arabia’s anemic private sector, fully nine out of ten people holding jobs are non-Saudi. . . . Saudi Arabia, in short, is a society in which all too many men do not want to work at jobs for which they are qualified; in which women by and large aren’t allowed to work; and in which, as a result, most of the work is done by foreigners.”
More than 90% of employees non-Saudis who have no loyalty to Saudi regime.
 
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Saddened by this rubbish hope iran and ksa develop good relations and work for ummah not fight against each other our differences is our weakness and west feeds on our fights keep us against each other soo that there Lap dog israel could remain dominating in middle east
 
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Saddened by this rubbish hope iran and ksa develop good relations and work for ummah not fight against each other

Saudis have have funded extreme Salafi Wahhabi militant organizations in Pakistan that have started sectarian war against Shias in Pakistan. They are only interested in Wahhabism.
 
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Judging by the fact that they kill people over different sects, how long will it be before Saudis start firing nukes at Shia dominated regions and most importantly Iran?



@Superboy all ready has one. He hides it in his room in the attic.

No He hides it in DSI installed in his bathroom
 
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