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US lawmakers urge Rubio to seek tough standards in any Saudi nuclear power pact

ReutersMar 18, 2026 6:53 PM

By Timothy Gardner

- A dozen Democratic U.S. lawmakers on Wednesday urged Secretary of State Marco Rubio to push for "gold standard" non-proliferation protections in any agreement with Saudi Arabia on sharing nuclear power technology.

The administration of Republican President Donald Trump told leaders of some congressional committees in November in an initial report that it is pursuing a civil nuclear pact with Saudi Arabia that does not include non-proliferation safeguards the U.S. has long said would ensure the kingdom does not develop nuclear weapons.

Many Democrats and some Republicans, including Rubio when he served in the Senate, have insisted that any agreement include guardrails, including that Saudi Arabia not enrich uranium or reprocess spent nuclear fuel, potential pathways to weapons.

Trump's report to Congress said that a draft U.S.-Saudi pact, known as a 123 Agreement, puts the U.S. industry at the heart of Saudi civil nuclear development, ensuring non-proliferation safeguards are in place.

But it opens the way for Saudi Arabian enrichment as it refers to "additional safeguards and verification measures to the most sensitive areas of potential nuclear cooperation" between the U.S. and Saudi Arabia, including enrichment and reprocessing.

"We urge you to immediately reconsider these plans and seek an agreement that meets the 'gold standard,' consistent with the

longstanding bipartisan consensus on this issue," the lawmakers, including U.S. Senators Ed Markey of Massachusetts and Jeff Merkley of Oregon, said in a letter to Rubio.

The State Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the de facto ruler of Saudi Arabia, has said the kingdom would seek to develop nuclear weapons if regional rival Iran did so.

The Trump administration could soon submit a 123 Agreement to Congress, though the timing is unclear with the war with Iran over its nuclear program. Unless both the Senate and the U.S. House pass resolutions opposing the agreement within 90 days after submission, it would allow Saudi Arabia a civil nuclear program.

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