Source: VOA
U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is in
Russia for talks on a wide range of international issues, including how to
revive the Israeli-Palestinian peace process. On Thursday, she urged Russia to
delay starting up the nuclear plant that it built for Iran at the port city of
Bushehr.

View of Bushehr Nuclear Power Plant in Southern Iran
Iran says its nuclear program is strictly for peaceful purposes
Russia says the nuclear reactor it is building
for Iran will be ready to start operations by the middle of this year.
Moscow has been helping Iran build the Bushehr facility since 1995, but work
has been delayed several times.
Reporters asked Clinton about the Bushehr facility during an appearance with
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov.
"(But) we have consistently said that Iran is entitled to civil nuclear power.
It is a nuclear weapons program that it is not entitled to. And if it reassures
the world, or if its behavior has changed because of international sanctions,
then they can pursue peaceful civil nuclear power. In the absence of those
reassurances, we think it would be premature to go forward with any project at
this time, because we want to send an unequivocal message to the Iranians," she
said.
The U.S. and other western powers say Iran is pursuing nuclear technology in
order to produce nuclear weapons. Iran insists its nuclear operations are for
peaceful purposes.
Lavrov insisted the Bushehr facility eventually will open. "The project will be
finished. All of the technical issues related to Bushehr are reaching their
final stages and this plant will open and produce electricity," he said.
Russia has denied previous delays at Bushehr were related to ongoing concerns
about Iran's nuclear program.
Moscow says the plant will come under the supervision of the International
Atomic Energy Agency, and that Iran must return all used fuel rods to Moscow.
Earlier this month, Russian President Dmitri Medvedev said his country is ready
to consider new sanctions against Iran, if Tehran refuses to stop enriching
uranium.
On another matter, both Clinton and Lavrov indicated negotiators are close to
finalizing a new treaty to cut the nuclear arsenals of the their two countries.
The U.S. and Russia have been working for almost a year on a replacement for the
1991 Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty, or START. It expired last December.
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