Russia to Supply Nuclear Fuel to Iran

The Independent - 28 February 2005 
http://news.independent.co.uk/europe/story.jsp?story=615421 


Russia agrees to supply nuclear fuel to Iran 


By Anne Penketh, Diplomatic Editor 


Russia agreed a deal with Iran yesterday to provide nuclear fuel for the 
country's only nuclear reactor, enabling the plant to come on stream 
next year amid US fears that Tehran may be developing a nuclear weapon. 


The agreement, signed by the two countries' nuclear chiefs at the site 
of the Russian-built plant at Bushehr, in southern Iran, provides for 
the first consignment of enriched uranium to be dispatched to Iran from 
Siberia in the middle of next year. 


To allay US concerns, Russia has agreed to reprocess on its territory 
the spent fuel, which can be reprocessed to make bomb-grade plutonium. 
Speaking at Thursday's summit with the Russian President Vladimir Putin 
in Slovakia, President George Bush said both sides agreed "Iran should 
not have a nuclear weapon". 


However, a leading Republican on the Senate Armed Services Committee, 
Senator John McCain, strongly objected yesterday to the signing of the 
nuclear fuel deal, which had been expected for some time. He said Russia 
should not be invited to the G8 summit in Gleneagles in July. "This 
latest step of the Russians vis-a-vis the Iranians calls for sterner 
measures to be taken between ourselves and Russia. It has got to, at 
some point, begin to harm our relations," Mr McCain said on Fox News 
Sunday. 


But a nuclear expert said the move "should be welcomed. Russia is taking 
the spent fuel back home. It's going to prevent proliferation". 


Iran insists it is not bent on developing a nuclear weapon, and the 
Kremlin says it has seen no evidence of such a move. Neither has the 
International Atomic Energy Agency, the UN watchdog which has been 
monitoring Iran's nuclear programme intensively for the past two years. 


A senior Iranian official recognised earlier this month that Iran would 
risk devastating retaliation if it were to develop a nuclear bomb. That 
view has been echoed by the American diplomat who directed the State 
Department's Iran desk during the 1979 Iranian revolution. "I don't 
think they are really looking for nuclear weapons," said Henry Precht. 
"They realise they would be smashed by Israel or by us." 


Yesterday's development came on the eve of a governors' board meeting of 
the IAEA which will review progress on the Iran dossier. Although 
Mohamed ElBaradei, the agency's director general, will give an overview 
of the Iran case today, his deputy, Pierre Goldschmidt, is expected to 
confirm in his presentation tomorrow a report that Pakistan offered Iran 
the makings of a nuclear weapons programme in 1987. 


According to The Washington Post, the offer from the father of 
Pakistan's nuclear bomb, AQ Khan, resulted from a secret meeting between 
Pakistani and Iranian officials in Dubai. Tehran has now informed the 
IAEA that it turned down the offer, but according to the American paper 
it did acquire some more expensive items by shopping around elsewhere. 


A Western diplomat said the Pakistani offer was "the strongest 
indication to date that Iran had a nuclear weapons programme, but it 
doesn't prove it completely". 


The US has been threatening to report Iran to the UN Security Council 
for sanctions, and it remains to be seen how the US delegation will 
react to the latest revelation about Iran's earlier contacts with 
Pakistan. 


Mr Bush appeared to rule out referral to the Council when he said in 
Brussels last week that "we're in the early stages of diplomacy" on the 
issue. 


Three European countries, Britain, France and Germany, are taking the 
lead in negotiations with Iran, which has agreed to freeze its uranium 
enrichment programme in return for technological and trade concessions. 


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