U.S. and UAE forge nuclear-cooperation deal
The agreement, the first of its kind between the U.S. and an Arab nation, entails providing an Arab country with U.S. nuclear technology. Critics cite the United Arab Emirates' ties with Iran.
Reporting from Beirut — The United States and the United Arab Emirates have hammered out a nuclear-cooperation deal that would bring U.S. atomic technology and know-how to a site less than hundred miles off Iran's shores, an envoy from the Persian Gulf monarchy confirmed today to state media.
The deal, if implemented, would be the first of its kind involving the U.S. and an Arab country, experts said. The agreement, in part, could placate Arab countries that are pining to obtain nuclear technology to balance Iran's controversial uranium-enrichment program while dissuading them from developing dual-use technologies on their own that could be reconfigured for weapons production.
"We are confident that the agreement highlights the transparency of the civilian nuclear energy program the UAE is embarking on and should be lauded as the gold standard of nuclear-cooperation agreements," Yousef Otaiba, the emirates' ambassador to the U.S., told the official Emirates News Agency today.
He said the agreement "sets a new standard in ensuring the highest standards of safety, security and nonproliferation."
But others are skeptical. Critics of the deal, first acknowledged by unnamed U.S. officials cited by the Wall Street Journal late last week, worry about Iran's cozy ties with the UAE, which acts as a transit point for billions of dollars in goods that make their way from the West and Asia to Iran.
The UAE, which includes the freewheeling city-state of Dubai, also has been accused in the past of serving as a money-laundering station. Pakistani nuclear weapons scientist A.Q. Khan used a Dubai company to secretly sell sensitive atomic components to Iran, Libya and North Korea. Arms-control expert David Albright, of the Institute for International Science and International Security, likened the UAE to a "nuclear smugglers' hub."
"I think it's a little premature for cooperation unless the UAE makes certain steps," which include adjusting trade policies with Iran, setting up a stringent regulatory system and signing on to additional intrusive inspections, said Albright, whose Washington think tank issued a report Nov. 12 through its website, www.isis-online.org, warning of a coming boom in Middle East nuclear technology.
Some Washington lawmakers also have eyed the deal with suspicion. Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R-Fla.) introduced legislation this month that would require the White House to verify that the emirates have completely stopped serving as a conduit for banned goods and services to Iran for at least a year before providing it any nuclear technology.
