|
#8 - RW 271
Russia engages US in new war of words over Iran
MOSCOW (AFP) Aug 28, 2003
Moscow and Washington launched a new war of words Thursday over Russia's
construction of Iran's first nuclear power plant, as officials here stressed the
project was irrelevant to the Islamic state's military ambitions."It is
impossible to derive raw material for nuclear weapons from the material that we
will be supplying to Iran -- even US experts agree with this," said Viktor
Kozlov, who heads the AtomStroiExport company which is building the Bushehr
plant.
Iran has dogged Russian-US relations for years and is likely to surface again
at next month's Camp David summit between presidents George W. Bush and Vladimir
Putin -- just as it did during their last meeting in Saint Petersburg on June 1.
Senior Russian officials accused Washington of actually worrying about
competition in the lucrative nuclear power plant construction market rather than
about Iran's potential nuclear ambitions.
"The Americans are not concerned about the proliferation of weapons of
mass destruction -- they just want to limit Russia's role on the nuclear energy
market," said Radzhab Safarov, a presidential adviser on Iranian affairs.
Meanwhile the atomic energy ministry said in a statement that Washington had
offered no proof of how the Bushehr project could help Iran build a nuclear
bomb.
"In order for Russia to tear up this agreement (with Iran), we need to
be presented with firm evidence -- both logistical and political -- and none has
come so far," the atomic energy ministry said.
The deal is worth some 800 million dollars (734 million euros) to Russia.
The United States on Wednesday renewed longstanding opposition to Russia's
nuclear cooperation with Iran ahead of next month's meeting of the International
Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) that will address the Iranian program.
The State Department said no nation -- including Russia -- should be
assisting Iran in its nuclear efforts until Tehran agrees to allow snap
inspections of its installations by the IAEA which has raised concerns about the
scope of the program.
"Until Iran satisfies the IAEA's questions and fully addresses the
concerns of the international community... we believe that no country should be
engaging with Iran in nuclear cooperation, and that would include Russia,"
deputy spokesman Philip Reeker said.
Reeker's comments came one day after the top US arms negotiator left Moscow
empty-handed after two days of talks on the issue.
Moscow next month is expected to sign an agreement with Tehran that would
ensure that all spent nuclear fuel provided for the Bushehr reactor is returned
for reprocessing to Russia.
Russia views this as a key agreement which should allay Western concerns
about the possibility of Iran developing nuclear weapons from Bushehr's
material.
"I find it strange that the Americans, who for years have been insisting
that we sign such an agreement, today are urging us not to hurry and sign the
additional protocol," Kozlov of AtomStroiExport said in a Moscow Echo radio
interview.
"I do not think that Iran can ever develop a nuclear weapon... because
of all of the IAEA controls and because of all the international attention given
to the issue," he said.
CDI Russia Weekly #271 ~ Contents Next
|