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Russia's FM: no proof that Iran ever had nuclear weapons program

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  • Russia's FM: no proof that Iran ever had nuclear weapons program

    Associated Press Worldstream
    December 5, 2007 Wednesday 12:15 PM GMT


    Russia's FM: no proof that Iran ever had nuclear weapons program

    By VLADIMIR ISACHENKOV, Associated Press Writer

    Russia's foreign minister said Wednesday there was no proof that Iran
    has ever run a nuclear weapons program, and praised Tehran for its
    readiness to cooperate with the United Nations nuclear watchdog.

    "Data that we have seen don't allow to say with certainty that Iran
    has ever had a nuclear weapons program," Lavrov said when asked to
    comment on the U.S. intelligence report saying that Iran suspended
    its efforts to develop nuclear weapons in 2003.

    He said he was referring to the intelligence data which Washington
    had provided to Moscow as part of a dialogue on Iran over the past
    few years.

    Lavrov indicated that the U.S. acknowledgment that Iran halted a
    suspected nuclear weapons bid in 2003 undermined Washington's push
    for a new set of U.N. sanctions against Iran.

    "We will assess the situation regarding a new U.N. Security Council
    resolution taking into account all these factors, including the
    public U.S. confirmation that there is no information about the
    existence of a covert nuclear weapons program in Iran," Lavrov told
    reporters after talks with his Armenian counterpart.

    "We have no information that such efforts had been conducted before
    2003, even though our American colleagues said it was so," Lavrov
    said.

    Russia and China, another important ally of Iran, have grudgingly
    approved two sets of limited U.N. sanctions against Iran over its
    refusal to suspend uranium enrichment. But the Kremlin has bristled
    at the U.S. push for tougher measures, saying they would only widen
    the rift.

    Lavrov said the International Atomic Energy Agency should continue
    its work in Iran to clarify all outstanding issues related to
    Tehran's nuclear program.

    "Naturally, we will need a full clarity," he said. "We support the
    IAEA's activities, which the IAEA and Iran have pledged to actively
    pursue. We support Iran's determination to do that ... and we will
    determine our future steps based on professional expert conclusions
    of the IAEA."

    On Tuesday, Russia's President Vladimir Putin told Iran's top nuclear
    negotiator, Saeed Jalili, that Tehran's nuclear program should be
    transparent and remain under control of the U.N. nuclear watchdog.

    Lavrov said that Putin urged Jalili to fully cooperate with the IAEA,
    answer all its questions and also meet international demands to
    freeze its uranium enrichment program.

    Russia has taken a careful stance on Iran, where it is building a
    $1US billion (euro680 million) nuclear reactor, seeking to preserve
    economic and political ties with Tehran without angering the West.
    During his trip to Iran in October, Putin promised that Russia would
    complete the Bushehr plant, but refused to say when it could begin
    operations.
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