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Vienna: Western powers urged the UN nuclear agency on Monday to deny Iran's request for help with a plant that could yield plutonium for atom bombs, but Washington voiced no objection to seven other projects presented by Tehran.
The International Atomic Energy Agency's 35-nation governing board has repeatedly asked not to pursue the
Arak heavy water reactor project.
Tehran has vowed to complete it and applied for IAEA expertise to ensure it meets safety standards.
Although IAEA approval of such requests is usually routine, Western board members said the Arak case must be rejected due to 's record of evading IAEA non-proliferation inspections and its defiance of UN demands to stop enriching uranium.
"Given past board decisions, continued questions about Iran's nuclear programe and the risk of plutonium being diverted to use in a weapon, the United States joins with others who cannot approve this (Arak) project," Gregory Schulte, U.S. ambassador to the IAEA, told the weeklong board session.
Finnish Ambassador Kirsti Helena Kauppi, speaking on behalf of the EU, said technical expertise should be withheld from
Arak as it "would involve a significant proliferation risk".
Iran denies intent to derive plutonium from Arak, saying it would produce only radio-isotopes for medical uses, replacing a smaller light-water reactor that predates 's 1979 Islamic revolution and is said by
Tehran to be obsolete.
Developing nations locked horns with Western counterparts at the meeting, saying that a rejection of
Tehran 's request would set a politicised precedent for withholding technical aid from them for peaceful atomic energy programmes.
Diplomats said most board members wanted to avoid a divisive vote that was likely to lose and blame on Western bullying.
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