G8 leaders acknowledge Russia's position on Iran - Medvedev's aid RIA Novosti, PUBLISHED June 27, 2010 Russian President Dmitry Medvedev explained in details Russia's position on Iran, including its opposition to new unilateral sanctions against the Islamic Republic, to participants at the G8 summit in Canada, Medvedev's aid has said. "Russia managed to get its position on Iran across [to participants in the summit]. The G8 partners acknowledge our position," Arkady Dvorkovych told Russian journalists on Saturday. Russia considers it necessary to "combine sanctions against Iran... stipulated by a relevant UN Security Council's resolution with simultaneous diplomatic actions aimed at involving Tehran in concrete talks on its nuclear program," he said, adding the G8 leaders support this approach. The UN Security Council approved on June 9 the fourth round of economic sanctions against Iran over its controversial nuclear activities, including tougher financial controls and an expanded arms embargo. Following the resolution, the United States and the European Union also announced that they were imposing new sanctions on Iran. Medvedev has criticized the decisions by saying unilateral sanctions may only aggravate the current situation and inflict damage upon the dialogue with Tehran. Western powers suspect Iran of attempting to build nuclear weapons under the guise of peaceful energy generation. Tehran has strongly denied the allegations, saying it needs enriched uranium to produce medical isotopes. Earlier this month, the Iranian parliament passed a bill directing the government to scale down its cooperation with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) following the imposition of the sanctions. Iran's nuclear chief Ali Akbar Salehi said on Wednesday that the country had produced 17 kilograms of 20%-enriched uranium and could produce as much as it needed. Turkey and Brazil have brokered a deal in which Iran is to swap its uranium in Turkey for fuel to use in a Tehran research reactor. Other news: The Temelin tender promises to be the most fun of all tenders for the construction of nuclear facilities. Russia signs deal with Ukraine on finishing Khmelnytsky NPP The project will cost $5-6 billion. The funds would be allocated by Russia. Russia, France strike nuclear cooperation deal The agreement was signed between Sergei Kiriyenko and Bernard Bigot. |
Hero of the day Obama nuclear summit: A minor success Further proof of this fact was provided by Obama Nuclear Security Summit held in Washington on April 12-13. However, this goal is unlikely to be achieved in four years. INTERVIEW
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