MOSCOW,
May 27 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) - Russia reiterated
Tuesday, May 27, its determination to complete the construction of
Iran's first nuclear power plant despite mounting American pressures
to scrap the project.
Russia
"is insisting on the construction of the Bushehr plant, and is
confident that the launch of its first bloc will be completed on
time," said Russian Atomic Energy Minister Alexander Rumyantsev.
He
stressed during a meeting with Iran's deputy atomic energy minister
Asadollah Saburi: "We will continue to fulfill our commitments
despite the fact that our views in this respect do not correspond with
those of Washington."
Rumyantsev
added that Iran's atomic energy minister Gholam-Reza Aqazadeh would
visit Moscow in June.
His
comments came less than a week before a key summit in Saint Petersburg
between Russian President Vladimir Putin and his U.S. counterpart
George W. Bush, reported Agence France-Presse (AFP).
American
officials said Russia's cooperation with Iran - to which Washington
strongly objects - will top the agenda of the summit, slated for June
1.
In
February, the United States renewed accusations that Iran was using
its Bushehr light-water reactor to secretly advance a nuclear weapons
program and called once again on Russia to stop cooperating on the
project.
Iran
revealed the same month it was building an array of facilities to
exploit uranium deposits which would make it self-sufficient in
nuclear fuel.
"Iran's
objectives are very clear and peaceful," Iranian Foreign Ministry
spokesman Hamid-Reza Assefi said.
And
even while going ahead with the Bushehr project, Russian Deputy
Foreign Minister Georgy Mamedov said Tuesday he had expressed concerns
about Iran's military program during talks with its ambassador
Gholamreza Shafei.
"There
was special attention paid to the present subject of the
non-proliferation of weapons of mass destruction," the Russian
foreign ministry said in a statement following Mamedov's meeting with
Shafei.
The
statement, said Mamedov "expressed concern about the existence of
some serious questions that have not been cleared up by Iran
concerning its nuclear program."
He
added that Moscow was keenly awaiting a report on Iran's nuclear
activities that is due to be published by the U.N.'s nuclear watchdog,
the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) in mid-June.
Russia
still insists on that its nuclear aid to Iran is for purely civilian
purposes, but admitted last month that it was concerned that Tehran
may be enriching uranium with a view to developing nuclear weapons.
Rumyantsev
conceded that "there has been a correction in the construction
schedule," but did not specify when the first Bushehr bloc may go
on line.
Iran
has come under heated American pressures for allegedly harboring
members of Al-Qaeda, blamed by the United States for the 9-11 attacks.
Richard
Myers, chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, told NBC television's
Today program on Monday, May 26, that: "We have to eliminate the
safe havens where the terrorists are and Iran of course has some of
the al-Qaeda members.
"The
reports are that al-Qaeda has been in Iran off and on for some time,
particularly after our actions in Afghanistan," Myers claimed.
But
Tehran immediately hit out at the accusation and asserted it was not
holding any "important leaders" of the network.
"Al-Qaeda
members have been arrested in Iran, but the persons imprisoned are not
important leaders of al-Qaeda," Asefi said.
U.S.
President George W. Bush has labeled Iran along with Iraq and North
Korea as the "axis of evil".