Likening
Iran’s leader to Adolf Hitler, Saudi Arabia’s crown prince warned in a US
television interview that if Tehran gets a nuclear weapon, his country will
follow suit.
“Saudi
Arabia does not want to acquire any nuclear bomb, but without a doubt, if Iran
developed a nuclear bomb, we will follow suit as soon as possible,” Saudi Crown
Prince Mohammed bin Salman said in an excerpt of the interview that aired
Thursday on “CBS This Morning.”
The
32-year-old Prince Mohammed said he has referred to Iran’s supreme leader
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei as “the new Hitler” because “he wants to expand.”
“He wants to
create his own project in the Middle East, very much like Hitler who wanted to
expand at the time,” Prince Mohammed said.
“Many
countries around the world and in Europe did not realize how dangerous Hitler
was until what happened, happened. I don’t want to see the same events
happening in the Middle East.”
The
interview is scheduled to run on CBS’s “60 Minutes” show on Sunday, two days
before the crown prince’s scheduled White House meeting with US President
Donald Trump.
His comments
come amid concerns over nuclear proliferation in the Middle East and just days
after the kingdom put an atomic energy program on a fast track.
Although
intended to reduce Saudi Arabia’s dependence on oil, analysts warn the capacity
to produce atomic energy could open a pathway to nuclear development for
military purposes.
A 2015
nuclear agreement has placed curbs on Iran’s nuclear program, but Trump has
expressed a desire to scrap it, making its future uncertain.
The Saudi
cabinet says its nuclear program will be in “full compliance with the principle
of transparency” and meet nuclear safety standards “in accordance with an
independent regulatory and supervisory framework.”
The country
has accelerated plans to build 16 nuclear reactors over the next two decades,
according to officials and analysts, at a cost of around $80 billion.
Saudi Energy
Minister Khaled al-Faleh said in October that the nuclear program would start
by building two reactors, each producing between 1.2 and 1.6 gigawatts of
electricity.
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