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#9 - RW 260
Voice of America
June 4, 2003
Russia Faces Delicate Balancing Act in Stance Toward Iranian Nuclear Program
Lisa McAdams
Moscow
Russian officials are taking a tougher stand on Iran's nuclear program. They
are expressing concerns about its true intent and urging Iran to sign an
additional protocol to the nuclear non-proliferation treaty.
The United States has called for Iran to allow international inspections,
fearing it is using Russian technology and expertise to develop a secret nuclear
weapons program - a charge Iran and Russia have denied.
Reports from this week's G-8 Summit in France said Russia had promised to
stop selling nuclear material to Iran. Russian officials will not confirm that,
and they say their nuclear cooperation with Iran will continue.
But Russian President Vladimir Putin indicated twice during the week that the
Russian and U.S. positions on Iran are closer than they might seem.
As recently as one month ago, Russian officials were asking for proof that
Iran was using its atomic energy program as a cover to develop nuclear weapons.
Deputy Foreign Minister Alexander Losyukov told visiting Undersecretary of
State John Bolton that very sound evidence was needed to prove claims by the
International Atomic Energy Agency that Iran possessed material that could be
used to enrich uranium to weapons grade. At the same time, Mr. Losyukov admitted
that there were still some uncertainties about Iran's nuclear program.
The Moscow Director of the Washington-based Heritage Foundation, Yevgeni
Volk, says it appears those uncertainties have moved to center stage. He also
characterized the shift in Russia's position on Iran as significant, but
flexible, and he said it is at least in part designed to repair Russian-U.S.
relations damaged by Russia's opposition to the war in Iraq.
"I believe that in order to reconcile George W. Bush of the United
States after Russia's nasty behavior regarding Iraq, and in order to get
Congress[ional] approval to remove [the] Jackson-Vanik amendment, now Russia
shows its constructive attitude toward Iran. But later on, it can change by
saying that there is no evidence about Iran's [nuclear] military
ambitions," Mr. Volk said.
The Jackson-Vanik amendment to which Mr. Volk refers was passed in 1974 and
links bilateral trade issues to freedom of emigration, in particular Jewish
emigration, from the Soviet Union.
At the Moscow office of the Washington-based Center for Defense Information,
director Ivan Safranchuk agrees that Russia's current position on Iran is
"delicate."
"Right now there are some questions about Russian-Iranian relations
which [President] Putin is not ready to answer. And that is why I would suggest
this means that he will try to preserve the status quo as it is now, without
huge changes. [Additional] shifts in his position are possible because we have
contradictions in Russian-Iranian relations," he said.
Mr. Safranchuk notes there have been urgent appeals by the United States for
Russia to end its technology sales to Iran on the grounds that the transfers add
significantly to Iran's ability to develop nuclear weapons. He said Russia would
very much like to get the one billion dollars that is the value of its main
nuclear contract with Iran, construction of a nuclear plant at the Iranian town
of Bushehr on the Persian Gulf. But he said Russia does not want to risk its
relations with the United States over the deal.
Mr. Safranchuk also notes that Russia has said it will trade in nuclear
material only with nations that adhere to international protocols. But he said
that does not necessarily signal an irreversible change in Russian policy toward
Iran.
Aside from the value of Russia's nuclear deals with Iran, another factor
limiting President Putin's ability get tough, as President Bush would like, is
support for Iran in the Russian political and military establishment.
Yevgeni Volk of the Heritage Foundation said because this is a parliamentary
election year in Russia, President Putin may find it politically difficult to
move any closer to the U.S. position on Iran. "The Russian nuclear complex
is very powerful and very interested in continuing nuclear cooperation with Iran
and, indeed, it will be of course a very serious obstacle on the way to
implementation of the statement by Russian President Vladimir Putin. I mean the
Atomic Energy Ministry of course will do its best to lobby its interests, and
its multi-billion dollar deals with Iran to continue construction of Bushehr,
and I believe it will not be an easy task for Mr. Putin to fulfill his
promise," Mr. Volk said.
President Putin and other Russian officials appear to believe the best
solution is for Iran to abide by the rules of the International Atomic Energy
Agency. Russian Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov recently said as much.
"We believe it would be a very important step to remove the concerns of
the international community as regards nuclear programs in Iran," he said.
Iran has so far refused such requests. But for the short term, Russian
officials, like Mr. Ivanov, said they are expecting Iran to take steps to ease
fears about its nuclear program in time for a meeting of the IAEA's board of
governors on June 16. If Iran does not take those steps, Russian officials will
have a difficult decision to make on whether to defy the United States and
continue helping Iran with its nuclear program.
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