The United States is
purchasing 32 tons of a key component in the development of atomic weapons from
Iran, in a bid to help Tehran implement provisions in the landmark nuclear
deal produce weapons-grade plutonium.
The plan was The U.S. Energy and State departments confirmed Friday the purchase of heavy water, which can be used toannounced
as U.S., Iranian and other officials met in Vienna to discuss implementation of
the nuclear agreement, known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, or
JCPOA.
Earlier, Iran sold
low-enriched uranium to Russia to help implement the deal.
Word of the U.S.
purchase came ahead of a Friday meeting between Secretary of State John Kerry
and Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif on the sidelines of the U.N.
climate change signing ceremony in New York.
Iran has complained that
it has not been getting the sanctions relief it deserves under the nuclear deal
because of restrictions imposed by financial institutions.
Heading into the talks,
Kerry said the U.S. has not and will not stand in the way of business permitted
in Iran since the nuclear agreement was implemented in January.
“Unfortunately, there
seems to be some confusion among some foreign banks, and we want to try to
clarify that as much as we can,” he said.
'Difficult path'
Zarif said Iran
continued to have differences with the U.S.
“We hope that the
statement made today by Secretary Kerry will begin to open the difficult path
that has been closed because of concern that banks had about the U.S. approach
towards implementation,” he said.
Earlier Friday, the
heavy water purchase drew immediate criticism from some U.S. lawmakers,
including House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Ed Royce, who has expressed
ongoing concerns about the possible ramifications of the nuclear deal.
"Once again, the
Obama administration is handing Iran's radical regime more cash," Royce
said.
"Far from curbing
its nuclear program, this encourages Iran to produce more heavy water to sell,
with a stamp of U.S. approval," he added.
The State Department
said the U.S. would not lose sight of its concerns about Iran’s provocative
actions, such as its recent ballistic missile tests.
“No one is blind to
Iran’s unhelpful activities in the region,” said Elizabeth Trudeau, the
department's press relations director.
“This [heavy water
purchase] was a commercial transaction. It was allowable. It fills a need here
in the United States,” she added in a Friday briefing.
U.S. officials say the
purchase will cost about $8.6 million. They described the transaction as
"limited in scope" and said it would be routed through
"third-country financial institutions." A senior State
Department official said the U.S. has not ruled out future purchases
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