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Russia to finish Iran nuclear plant but won't deliver missiles

Russia said it will soon make a long-delayed Iran nuclear power plant fully operational. The move was part of a deal within Russia to finish the plant while canceling a controversial sale of an advanced missile system to Tehran.

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Igor Korotchenko, a Russian analyst connected to the arms industry, argued that Russia could lose up to $13 billion in future weapons sales to Iran by canceling the S-300 deal.

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However, after some delay, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin acknowledged that the S-300 was covered by the new UN sanctions regime.

"Those who favor a 'reset' of relations with the US have won, at least for now, but they had to give something to the other guys," says Mr. Strokan. "So, the answer is to go ahead and complete Bushehr. It's a civilian nuclear power plant, which will be under tight supervision of the International Atomic Energy Agency, and doesn't pose any proliferation risk. It also may be a small way to try and save our relations with Iran, which have been nearly destroyed by Russia's decision to back the new sanctions declaration," he says.

An angry Iran

Iran reacted furiously to Moscow's abandonment of its long-held opposition to tougher sanctions.

In a July speech, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad complained that Moscow was now reading from "a US-authored script," and suggested that Kremlin leaders were "liars and cowards" for deserting Iran.

Last week, Iran's Fars News Agency, which has ties to the country's Revolutionary Guard, claimed that Iran had obtained two S-300 missiles from Belarus and two others from another unspecified source.

Belarussian officials denied the report.

The construction of the nuclear plant at Bushehr was begun in 1975 by several German companies. They withdrew following a US embargo on high-technology supplies to Iran after the 1979 Islamic Revolution and Tehran's subsequent siege of the US Embassy. In 1998, Rosatom signed a $1 billion contract to build a 1,000-MW Russian-designed light-water reactor, which has been compared to installing a Russian engine into a German car.

"It's been obvious since the Russian delegation at the UN insisted in June that no sanctions regime would include Bushehr, that the plant was going to get completed soon," says Yevgeny Satanovsky, president of the independent Institute of Middle East Studies in Moscow. "It's not the main problem, anyway. The main threat to Israel and regional peace doesn't come from Bushehr, it comes from the Iranian regime."

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