Reports: Startup of Iran’s Russian-built nuclear reactor delayed until next year
By Steve Gutterman, APMonday, November 16, 2009
Reports: Iran’s Russian reactor startup delayed
MOSCOW — Moscow on Monday dashed Iranian hopes that a Russian-built nuclear reactor will be switched on this year, a blow to Tehran amid persistent tension over its nuclear program.
Officials in Russia and Iran had previously announced plans to switch on the reactor at the southern port of Bushehr this year, giving Iran its first operating nuclear power plant decades after construction started.
Iranian lawmakers criticized Russia for stepping back from that timetable. One called it unacceptable and urged Russia to set a firm date for starting the reactor, which Moscow appears to be using as a lever in nuclear diplomacy with Iran.
“We expect serious results by the end of the year, but the launch itself will not happen,” Russia’s state-run RIA Novosti news agency quoted Russian Energy Minister Sergei Shmatko as saying. ITAR-Tass and Interfax had similar reports.
According to the reports, Shmatko blamed the delay on technical issues, but analysts say Moscow has used the project to press Tehran to ease its defiance over its nuclear program.
Iran says the program is purely peaceful, while the U.S. and allies claim Tehran is working to develop nuclear weapons. Russia also says Iran must not acquire nuclear weapons, but it has close ties with Tehran and has used its position as a veto-wielding permanent U.N. Security Council member to water down Western-backed sanctions.
Shmatko’s remarks came a day after President Barack Obama pushed for continued pressure on Iran and its nuclear program. During talks with his Russian counterpart Dmitry Medvedev in Singapore Obama said that “time is running out” for Iran to sign on to a deal with the International Atomic Energy Agency.
Since September, Medvedev has suggested Russia could support further sanctions against if it did not open its nuclear program to inspections to prove it was not trying to build a bomb. He spoke in similar terms Sunday, avoiding the word sanctions but saying “other options remain on the table” if Iran does not meet its obligations.
Shmatko said construction is proceeding as planned at Bushehr and that Russia “is certain that it will fulfill its commitments to Iran,” according to RIA Novosti.
But his remarks raised hackles in Iran, already angry over Russia’s foot-dragging on fulfilling a 2007 contract to provide S-300 surface-to-air missiles to Tehran — another deal seen as a Russian lever in relations with Iran.
The semiofficial Mehr news agency quoted the head of Iran’s parliamentary committee on national interests and foreign policy, Alaeddin Boroujerdi, as saying that “this hasty expression by (the) Russian energy minister does not look normal.”
He urged Iranian nuclear officials to react to the remarks.
“Russia’s promise-breaking is not acceptable for us at all,” the official IRNA news agency quoted another committee member, Ismail Kowsari, as saying. He was quoted as saying Russia had postponed the plant’s inauguration several times and called on Moscow to give an exact date for the startup.
Construction of the Bushehr plant started in the 1970s but was abandoned after Iran’s 1979 Islamic Revolution. Russia pledged to build it in a $1 billion deal sealed in the mid-1990s.
Associated Press Writer Nasser Karimi contributed to this report from Iran.
Tags: Barack Obama, Eastern Europe, Energy, Europe, Foreign Policy, Iran, Middle East, Moscow, North America, Nuclear Weapons, Russia, Tehran, United States, Utilities, Weapons Of Mass Destruction