Albuquerque Journal

Iraq seeks other nations’ help to build a nuclear reactor

Foreign minister says program is for peaceful purposes

- BY JENNIFER PELTZ

UNITED NATIONS — Iraq’s foreign minister is asking nuclear countries for help building an atomic reactor for peaceful purposes, saying the country has a right to use atomic power peacefully.

Ibrahim al-Jaafari made the request in his speech Saturday to the U.N. General Assembly’s annual meeting of presidents, prime ministers and monarchs. He called for assistance “to build a nuclear reactor for peaceful purposes in Iraq, to acquire this nuclear technology.”

Former Iraqi strongman Saddam Hussein’s previous efforts to build a nuclear reactor were met with an Israeli airstrike in 1981 and years of suspicion about his nuclear intentions. The U.S cited concerns that Saddam had weapons of mass destructio­n as the basis for invading Iraq in 2003, but none were ever found.

Al-Jaafari cited the Nuclear Nonprolife­ration Treaty’s provisions allowing countries to pursue peaceful nuclear energy projects. Iraq ratified the treaty in 1969.

Non-nuclear nations that signed it agreed to not pursue atomic weapons. In exchange, the five original nuclear powers — the U.S., Russia, Britain, France and China — promised to move toward nuclear disarmamen­t and to guarantee non-nuclear states access to peaceful nuclear technology for producing power.

It wasn’t immediatel­y clear how other nations would greet the request from oil-rich Iraq, which is emerging from a bloody, chaotic period after Islamic State extremists seized swaths of the country in 2014. They created a regime of atrocities, including mass killings, beheadings and rapes.

U.S.-backed Iraqi forces have now driven IS from most of the Iraqi territory it took, although the group still controls some pockets, as well as territory in Syria.

Al-Jaafari emphasized the improving situation in the country and asked for the internatio­nal community’s help in rebuilding areas reclaimed from the militants.

“We give great importance to freeing our society from the culture of hatred and murder that was disseminat­ed by (IS),” he said. “In order to counter these practices, we need the assistance of the internatio­nal community to provide services.”

Al-Jaafari also reiterated his government’s opposition to Iraqi Kurds’ planned independen­ce vote next week, saying officials “wish to preserve the unity of Iraq.”

Kurds are an ethnic group with population­s in Iraq, Syria, Iran and Turkey, and they have an autonomous region in northern Iraq. They have long aspired to statehood, and the referendum could be a significan­t step.

The central government views the vote as unconstitu­tional and divisive. Iraq’s top court has temporaril­y suspended the vote, and the country’s parliament has also voted to reject it.

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