That too was a good article from the Guardian. Unfortunatley, it undermines the claim that SA can buy nukes "off the shelf" from Pakistan and reduces it to Israeli propaganda. From the BBC report quoted in the Gaurdian...
The "Nato decision-maker" bit looks interesting but is somewhat undermined a bit later in the TV version by the revelation that the intelligence is thought to have originated in Israel.
The trouble is lots of intelligence reports originate in Israel and some are probably true, but the timing of this one, while talks on the Iranian nuclear programme are underway, is fairly convenient.....
Mark Fitzpatrick,...non-proliferation expert at the state department and now at the International Institute for Strategic Studies had this to say....The second part is probably false: I doubt that Pakistan is ready to send nuclear weapons to Saudi Arabia. Pakistan's reputation suffered greatly the last time they assisted other countries with nuclear weapons technology (i.e., the sales by A.Q. Khan, with some governmental support or at least acquiescence, to North Korea, Iran and Libya)....
David Albright, the head of the Institute for Science and International Security, broadly agrees..... Would Pakistan give them [nuclear weapons]? There would be real punishments for that and they would want to avoid those. For Saudi Arabia to take possession it would mean withdrawing from the NPT [nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty]. Any US military sales would have to stop. That could not be ignored. Only in a very dire situation in which Iran has a nuclear weapon and is being confrontational, could you imagine something like this. ...."
I seriously doubt the Saudi's would or could get nukes off the shelf.
Here's another article about the Saudi's endorsing the Iran deal....
...Saudi Arabia released a cautious statement Monday endorsing the nuclear “framework” agreement reached last week between Iran and six world powers.
“The council of ministers,” a top governing body within the Saudi system, “expressed hope for attaining a binding and definitive agreement that would lead to the strengthening of security and stability in the region and the world,” read the statement, first published by the Saudi state news agency..."
Saudi Arabia cautiously endorses Iran deal - Adam B. Lerner - POLITICO