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Iran Nuclear Reactor At Bushehr Power Plant Begins Fueling With Help From Russia

ALI AKBAR DAREINI   08/21/10 09:33 PM ET   AP

Iran Nuclear Reactor Bushehr
The reactor building of Bushehr nuclear power plant is seen just outside the city of Bushehr 750 miles (1,245 kilometers) south of the capital Tehran, Iran, Friday, Aug. 20, 2010. Russia's nuclear chief said Thursday that the planned startup of Iran's first nuclear power plant will demonstrate that Iran is entitled to peaceful use of nuclear energy under international supervision. Sergei Kiriyenko said at a meeting with Prime Minister Vladimir Putin that the uranium fuel will be loaded into the

BUSHEHR, Iran — Trucks rumbled into Iran's first reactor Saturday to begin loading tons of uranium fuel in a long-delayed startup touted by officials as both a symbol of the country's peaceful intentions to produce nuclear energy as well as a triumph over Western pressure to rein in its nuclear ambitions.

The Russian-built Bushehr nuclear power plant will be internationally supervised, including a pledge by Russia to safeguard it against materials being diverted for any possible use in creating nuclear weapons. Iran's agreement to allow the oversight was a rare compromise by the Islamic state over its atomic program.

Western powers have cautiously accepted the deal as a way to keep spent nuclear fuel from crossing over to any military use. They say it illustrates their primary struggle: to block Iran's drive to create material that could be used for nuclear weapons and not its pursuit of peaceful nuclear power.

Iran has long declared it has a right like other nations to produce nuclear energy. The country's nuclear chief described the startup as a "symbol of Iranian resistance and patience."

"Despite all pressure, sanctions and hardships imposed by Western nations, we are now witnessing the startup of the largest symbol of Iran's peaceful nuclear activities," Ali Akbar Salehi told reporters inside the plant with its cream-colored dome overlooking the Persian Gulf in southern Iran.

In several significant ways, the Bushehr plant stands apart from the showdowns over Iranian uranium enrichment, a process that can be used both to produce nuclear energy or nuclear weapons. It also could offer a possible test run for proposals to ease the impasse.

The Russian agreement to control the supply of nuclear fuel at Bushehr eased opposition by Washington and allies. Bushehr's operations are not covered by U.N. sanctions imposed after Iran refused to stop uranium enrichment. And last week, State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley said the Russian oversight at Bushehr is the "very model" offered Tehran under a U.N.-drafted plan unveiled last year.

That proposal – so far snubbed by Iran – called for Iran to halt uranium enrichment and get its supplies of reactor-ready material from abroad.

Western leaders fear Iran's enrichment labs could one day churn out weapons-grade material. Iran claims it has no interest in nuclear arms, but refuses to give up the right to make its own fuel.

Iran has some of the world's biggest oil reserves, but lacks refinery capacity to meet domestic demand and must repurchase fuel on international markets. Nuclear power is seen as both a goal to meet power needs and an important technological achievement for the Islamic government.

The French Foreign Ministry said the Russian deal shows Iran does not need to enrich uranium to benefit from civilian nuclear power.

"This clearly shows that the sanctions do not aim to deprive Iran of its right to develop nuclear energy for peaceful uses," said the French statement.

In London, a Foreign Office junior minister, Alistair Burt, said the loading of Russian fuel at Bushehr "demonstrates that Iran can have the benefits of nuclear power."

But conservative Iranian lawmaker Arsalan Faithipour struck a tone of defiance.

"The startup at Bushehr proved the ineffectiveness of sanctions," he said.

After years of delays in completing the plant, Moscow now claims that the project is essential to persuading Iran to cooperate with international efforts to ensure it does not develop the bomb.

Iran has said that monitors from the U.N. nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency, will have access to the fuel shipments at Bushehr, about 745 miles (1,200 kilometers) south of Tehran. Spent fuel contains plutonium, which can be used to make atomic weapons.

U.N. nuclear inspectors were on hand Saturday as the first truckloads of fuel were taken from a storage site to a "pool" inside the reactor. Over the next two weeks, 163 fuel assemblies – equal to 80 tons of uranium fuel – will be moved inside the building and then into the reactor core.

It will be another two months before the 1,000-megawatt light-water reactor – heavily guarded by soldiers and anti-aircraft batteries – is pumping electricity to Iranian cities.

Two weeks ago, two Iranian drones were sent over Bushehr to test of air defense capability. The drones were picked up, but were grounded before forces guarding the nuclear plant could open fire, Bushehr Provincial Gov. Mohammad Hossein Jahanbakhsh told The Associated Press.

"The decision had been to test the capability of the Bushehr air defense system. The reaction was appropriate and authorities were happy," he said.

The uranium fuel Russia has supplied for Bushehr is well below the more than 90 percent enrichment needed for a nuclear warhead. Iran is already producing its own uranium enriched to the Bushehr level – about 3.5 percent. It also has started a pilot program of enriching uranium to 20 percent, which officials say is needed for a medical research reactor.

Salehi said Iran will continue to enrich uranium to 20 percent, but had no intention to continuing the higher level of enrichment forever.

Iran raised more alarm in the West with its recent declaration of plans to build 10 new uranium enrichment sites inside protected mountain strongholds. It said it will begin construction on the first one in March in defiance of the U.N. sanctions.

"Today is a historic day and will be remembered in history," Salehi said at a news conference alongside the head of Russia's state-run nuclear corporation, Sergei Kiriyenko.

"The countdown to the Bushehr nuclear power plant has started," Kiriyenko said. "Congratulations."

Russia signed a $1 billion contract to build the Bushehr plant in 1995 but has dragged its feet on completing the work. Moscow had cited technical reasons for the delays, but analysts say Russia used the project to try to press Iran to ease its defiance over uranium enrichment.

Iran has announced plans to build other reactors and says designs for a second rector in southwestern Iran are taking shape.

___

Associated Press writers Jennifer Quinn in London, Angela Doland in Paris and Brian Murphy in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, contributed to this report.

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BUSHEHR, Iran — Trucks rumbled into Iran's first reactor Saturday to begin loading tons of uranium fuel in a long-delayed startup touted by officials as both a symbol of the country's peaceful i...
BUSHEHR, Iran — Trucks rumbled into Iran's first reactor Saturday to begin loading tons of uranium fuel in a long-delayed startup touted by officials as both a symbol of the country's peaceful i...
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09:11 PM on 09/03/2010
Check this out:

Bushehr fuelling coverage

Press TV

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YdaQMUWyrWA

Fo.x News

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xdfO4e-kbBk&feature=related
02:57 PM on 08/29/2010
Bit hit in clerical circles in Iran these days...http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wuEhhPbAAdA
04:29 PM on 08/23/2010
This made me feel all warm and fuzzy: "Bushehr nuclear power plant will be internationally supervised, including a pledge by Russia to safeguard it against materials being diverted for any possible use in creating nuclear weapons. "

.......until I remembered Russia's record in safeguarding its own nuclear material.
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09:42 PM on 08/23/2010
there is no threat of prolifiration here. This is just a power station.
08:24 AM on 08/23/2010
Wow, that Obama appeasement strategy is working out great. Ditto the reset with Russia. We gave up missile sites to protect allies (which pissed them off) only to have Russia give nuclear material to out enemy. Thanks, Obama.
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Guytar
I'm sorry that I made you cry
11:22 AM on 08/23/2010
Why do you think that Iran is your enemy?
12:11 PM on 08/23/2010
This construction of this reactor predates Obama's presidency by about a decade and a half.
03:05 AM on 08/23/2010
Tribal warfare-Iran as enemy-of-the-month club for the Military Industrial complex.
Wall Street greedtards have painted themselves into a corner with their disgraceful conduct.
Even after stealing trillions from American taxpayers and helping to collapse the world economy they have no contentment.
They project fear and negativity as tools to accumulate more
and distract Americans from taking back what they stole.
Obama cares more about his useless title and being in the Ivy league mafia club therefore is easy prey and has become a puppet to manipulators of tribal warfare.
Not smart- hence the onslaught of tribal warfare conditioning propaganda to distract Americans from the real enemies within who have been looting and speculating our national treasury into oblivion. Thomas Jefferson would spit in Bush, Clinton, Obama's face.
MLK would be weeping at the sick joke Obama has become.
10:03 AM on 08/24/2010
Jet108, Fanned and Faved,#1!...

although I still want to believe Obama wants to do right, he's in way over his head. He's probably often reminded of JFK.... Then again, I'm sure he knew what he was getting himself into...
01:19 AM on 08/23/2010
The taj is a nuke plant?
08:55 PM on 08/22/2010
Russia and China. I guess Obama's strategy in the International World has really made an impact. I wonder if Hilary will disassociate herself even further from the Weak Commander In Chief? Her 2:00AM Political Advertisement was "spot on". I can only Hope that Hilary will not take the VP position for 2012 but make another run herself.
04:27 PM on 08/23/2010
So agreed!
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Gomorrah
06:35 PM on 08/22/2010
China is helping Pakistan increase their nu clear weapons. so I could care less if IRan goes nu clear.
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JaxReader
Charity is no substitute for justice withheld.
05:12 PM on 08/22/2010
Whether your conservative or liberal, the facts are the same.

This government in Iran came about through US intervention, promoted by BP (Anglo Persian Oil company, and England. The Iranian people had a constitutional revolution and wanted to strengthen the power of democratically elected representatives and decrease the strength of the monarchy (who was instilled as a western puppet, so that BP and england could take Iran's oil reserves, and the US would be assured it couldn't go to communist countries.) If it wasn't for the US through the CIA and England through BP, Iran's government would have been a democratic allie for hte US in the middle east.

I more so feel sorry for the Iranian people who are still oppressed, and still want the democracy and freedom they have been fighting for since 1905. This government is a horribly corrupt and oppressive theocracy, whose real power lies in the Revolutionary Guards who also control the Basij.

Some liberals who have understandably jaded by the US's warmongering, tend to side with the oppressive government as a means to prevent war. Some conservatives, think that America has done no wrong, and we should definitely attack Iran, although we have no empirical evidence as to why we should. Other people however, understand that Iran's government is oppressive and dangerous, but realize that the solution is not war, change in the government must come from the Iranian people, and our best strategy is to make our support of Iranians known.
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JaxReader
Charity is no substitute for justice withheld.
05:13 PM on 08/22/2010
To learn more about the history of the west and Iran, research "Anglo Persian Oil Company, Mossadegh, Persian Constitutional Revolution, Green Revolution"
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
blaster8
10:44 PM on 08/22/2010
Lets not paint too rosy a picture here. After you do those searches, do another search; "shah Iran corruption". They were a loooooooong way away from democracy like we know it.
btw, it's really silly to just pick out today's bad guys (BP) and make them into something more than they were back then.
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danceswithtrees
04:45 PM on 08/22/2010
Obama From the Audacity of Hope: "I will stand with the Muslims should the poitical winds turn ugly" He is NOT with us!
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tominnyc
04:21 PM on 08/22/2010
Can't President Ahm-Mad-In-The-Head be deleted? (Hello drones?)

Does he have Iran with a flying nuclear war device or just a power plant?
02:25 AM on 08/23/2010
Do you envy his cojones..... you better off to stick to your virtual games... boy.
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02:07 PM on 08/22/2010
It wouldn't be so bad having nuclear capabilities if the man wasn't so crazy and politicians over there are crooked, like the Ayatollah!
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LeftLeanWing
RightKickFoot
02:31 PM on 08/22/2010
Ahmahdinejad is just the TV Spokes Model...... The Mullahs and Ayatollah are NOT the guiding force behind this....

The Power lies within the Republican Guard Forces.... they have been allowed to grow very very strong and are behind all foreign policy decisions... Ahmadinejad is just their mouthPiece
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Zutroy
03:25 PM on 08/22/2010
You are right. For a long time I took the fact that the Supreme Leader was above everything constitutionally at it's face. So when Ahmadinejad shot his mouth I've never bothered to pay attention since he isn't the actual leader of the country.

Apparently it is much more complex than that, and the clique that has Ahmadinejad as president isn't necessarily beholden to the Supreme Leader. This was proven by the fact that the last election was apparently rigged.

If the clerics and guards were ever monolithic, what would be the point of rigging an election that they vetted candidates for?
01:52 PM on 08/22/2010
The unfortunate part of this is, that while nuclear energy is in many ways better than petroleum, it is still a limited resource and over-reliance on it just postpones more meaningful research investment in renewable resources like solar, tidal, wind, etc.
02:32 PM on 08/22/2010
That's your opinion of what's unfortunate about Iran firing up it's nuclear reactor? That it postpones more meaningful research into renewable energy? Wow...
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tominnyc
04:19 PM on 08/22/2010
so what's yours other than "wow" beavis?
04:50 PM on 08/22/2010
I try not to let my life be governed by paranoia and insecurity. You should try it sometime.
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Guytar
I'm sorry that I made you cry
01:51 PM on 08/22/2010
Congrulations to Iran and Russia for Bushehr at August 2010.
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dbmetzger
01:37 PM on 08/22/2010
Iran Fuels First Nuclear Power Plant
The launch of Iran's first nuclear power plant has sparked fears of rising tension in the Middle East.
http://www.newslook.com/videos/243622-iran-fuels-first-nuclear-power-plant?autoplay=true