TEHRAN - Iran has completed a new phase in its
Arak heavy-water reactor plant, a presidential official said on Saturday,
referring to part of Iran's atomic programme which the West fears is aimed at
producing bombs.
The official said President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad would give a speech later in
the day "announcing that the heavy-water project has become operational".
Iran is building a heavy-water nuclear reactor at Arak, 120 miles (190 km)
southwest of the capital Tehran. The plant's plutonium by-product could be used
to make atomic warheads.
Western nations accuse Iran of seeking to master technology to produce
nuclear weapons. Iran, the world's fourth largest oil exporter, insists its aim
is only for electricity.
A small group of correspondents from foreign news organisations were being
taken with Iranian journalists to Arak to attend the president's speech.
A senior Iranian nuclear official earlier this week said Iran would start up
the heavy-water production part of the project but not the reactor. He had said
this part of the project was not a proliferation risk.
"The product of this project provides for cooling and depleting systems of
the reactor, that can be used in various industries," the official had told
Reuters.
He said heavy water had no military use so supervision by the U.N. nuclear
watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), was not obligatory.
One Western diplomat agreed that the heavy-water portion could not be
diverted to military uses but said that such an announcement coming amid the
current standoff over Iran's nuclear programme would not be a constructive step.
The West's main concern is Iran's programme for enriching uranium, a process
that can be used to make fuel for nuclear power stations or material for bombs.
The U.N. Security Council has demand Iran stop this work by August 31 or face
possible sanctions.
In its reply to an incentives offer backed by six world powers aimed at
encouraging Iran to halt enrichment, Iran hinted it might be ready to consider
halting the work as a result of talks but not as a precondition, which the
package proposed.
The reply seemed tailored to divide the four Western powers and Russia and
China who agreed to the deadline on August 31.
The United States has said the six powers will move quickly to adopt
sanctions if Iran disregards the deadline. Britain, Germany and France have been
less conclusive in public.
Russia and China, both trade partners of Iran, have been unwilling and could
veto sanctions in the Security Council.