Special report: Iran Nuclear
Crisis
MOSCOW, Oct. 31 (Xinhua) -- Russia has no information
indicating Iran's nuclear program is for military purposes but Tehran should act
quickly to clarify lingering questions about its nuclear work, a top official
said on Tuesday.
"Russia has no information indicating that Iran is
pursuing a non-peaceful program," Russian Security Council Secretary Igor Ivanov
told a news briefing, the Interfax news agency reported.
He urged Iran "not to drag out the clarification of
questions" the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) has regarding its
nuclear program.
The IAEA "has unfortunately been unable to get clear
answers to quite a few questions related to Iran's previous nuclear programs,
which had been implemented without this organization's awareness," Ivanov said.
The United States is seeking to impose sanctions on
Iran through the UN Security Council on the grounds that Tehran is developing a
nuclear-weapons program under the garb of a civilian-use program. Iran, however,
says its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes only.
Russian President Vladimir Putin told his Iranian
counterpart Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in a telephone conversation on Monday that
Moscow favored further talks on Iran's nuclear program.
Britain, China, France, Germany, Russia and the
United States offered a package in June offering incentives and multilateral
talks to Iran in exchange for a freeze on its uranium enrichment work.
Tehran has said that it wants talks with the major
powers, but will not suspend its nuclear work as a prerequisite.
Iran, which failed to meet a UN Security Council
deadline for suspending its enrichment work by Aug. 31, said on Friday it had
fed gas into a second cascade of centrifuges at a uranium enrichment
facility.