Tehran / Riyadh / Ankara / Cairo – As talks over Iran’s nuclear program stall yet again and uranium enrichment reaches near-weapons-grade levels, international observers are sounding the alarm over a potentially unstoppable chain reaction: if Iran develops a nuclear weapon, which countries will follow?
This “nuclear domino theory” is no longer just academic—it’s a real concern shaping policy in capitals from Riyadh to Ankara.
For decades, Iran has maintained that its nuclear ambitions are strictly peaceful. However, its enrichment of uranium up to 60% purity—just short of weapons-grade—has brought it to the brink of becoming a “threshold nuclear state.”
If Tehran crosses the line and tests or deploys a weapon, it would:
And perhaps most importantly, it would send a powerful message to its neighbors: nuclear weapons work.
Saudi Arabia has publicly warned that it will match Iran “immediately” if Tehran acquires a nuclear weapon. The Kingdom is:
“We cannot live under a nuclear-armed Iran without ensuring our own security,” a Saudi security advisor told Al Arabiya in 2024.
Saudi Arabia has both the financial resources and international partnerships to rapidly pursue a bomb if needed, especially if it feels the U.S. security umbrella is no longer reliable.
Turkey is officially a supporter of nuclear non-proliferation—but President Erdoğan has publicly questioned why some countries can have nuclear weapons while others cannot.
Turkey possesses:
If Iran and Saudi Arabia both move toward nuclearization, Turkey may join to preserve regional parity, especially amid tensions in the Eastern Mediterranean and NATO uncertainty.
Egypt is a longtime regional power that once pursued nuclear weapons in the 1960s. While it has focused on domestic challenges in recent years, its military capacity and nuclear research history put it in a strong position to restart a latent program.
If multiple Middle Eastern states go nuclear, Egypt may revive its deterrence capabilities to maintain relevance in the Arab world.
A nuclear Iran triggering a domino effect in the Middle East would be the greatest challenge the NPT has faced since its creation. It would:
“The moment Iran tests a bomb, the world enters a new phase of instability,” said Dr. Lisa Becker, director of the Stockholm Peace Research Institute.
If Iran becomes a nuclear-armed state, it won’t be the end of the story—it will be the beginning of a new chapter in nuclear history. One where regional rivalry, distrust, and strategic insecurity drive multiple nations to seek the ultimate deterrent. And once the first domino falls, stopping the chain may be impossible.
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