Saudis in Talks on Nuke Loophole Agreement

More ominous activity from our friends and allies. From AP, with thanks to Twostellas:

VIENNA, Austria -- Saudi Arabia has quietly begun talks on a U.N.-sanctioned agreement that could curtail any outside probe of its atomic intentions -- a move that heightens concerns in a region already edgy about rival Iran's nuclear program.

The Saudis deny any plans to develop nuclear weapons, and diplomats close to the International Atomic Energy Agency told The Associated Press that the U.N. nuclear monitor has no firm evidence that would cast doubt on the Saudi assertions. Phone calls to the Saudi representative to the IAEA or the government in Riyadh for comment were not returned.

But the diplomats say that past Saudi nuclear interest is heightening worries, as is the timing of the efforts to sign on to the IAEA's small quantities protocol that would exempt the country from most of the agency's control authority.

Born of more trusting days, the agreement has been joined by dozens of countries, most of which have never experimented with nuclear weapons. But the protocol is now viewed with suspicion within the agency, after revelations of other loopholes that have allowed prewar Iraq, Iran, Libya and other countries to work secretly on known or suspected nuclear weapons programs.

The protocol frees countries from reporting the possession of up to 10 tons of natural uranium -- or up to 20 tons of depleted uranium, depending on the degree of enrichment -- and 2.2 pounds of plutonium. It also allows them to keep silent about work on nuclear facilities secret until six months before they are ready for operation. And once a protocol is signed, the country's word is normally not questioned....

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It would be hard to determine who is more dangerous and untrustworthy -- the Saudies or the Iranians. See below, a couple of recent "newstickers" translated by MEMRI:

April 19, 2005
Saudi Chief of Staff General Salih bin Ali Al-Muhayya said that his country is determined to expand military cooperation with Iran. (IRNA, Iran, 4/19/05)

April 19, 2005
Iranian presidential candidate Mohsen Mehralizadeh said: 'Despite the prejudice and sensational slogans, I think we have a good chance of resolving the problem with the U.S. … Iran has made mistakes in missing opportunities to resume relations with Washington in the past eight years .We should end the severance of diplomatic relations with the U.S.' (IRNA, Iran, 4/16/05)

April 19, 2005
Iranian reformist presidential candidate Dr. Mostafa Moin said that if he is elected he would stop Iran's uranium enrichment if it endangers Iran's national security. Moin also said he will make Iran a model of respect for human rights (Kayhan, Iran, 4/19/05, IRNA, Iran, 4/18/05)

In the end Pakistan could cover the moslem world with a nuclear umbrella.

Anyone got a clue about they still produce, in case how much ?

As far as im concerned , you cant trust any of these Muslim countries as their "holy" Koran teaches them that it is okay to lie to infidels....meaning the rest of the non-Muslim world