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Iran has 'credibility gap,' IAEA says

A view of Iran's first nuclear power plant is seen after it was opened by Iranian and Russian engineers in Bushehr, Iran, south of Tehran on August 21, 2010. Russia said it will safeguard the plant to prevent material from the site from being used to make nuclear bombs. UPI/Maryam Rahmanianon
A view of Iran's first nuclear power plant is seen after it was opened by Iranian and Russian engineers in Bushehr, Iran, south of Tehran on August 21, 2010. Russia said it will safeguard the plant to prevent material from the site from being used to make nuclear bombs. UPI/Maryam Rahmanianon | License Photo

BERLIN, Jan. 11 (UPI) -- Progress is needed on nuclear transparency issues from Iran as the world community knows too little about its activity, the IAEA director said.

Western allies claim Iran is using a civilian nuclear program to hide a more controversial weapons program. Tehran, which sits on some of the largest oil and gas deposits in the world, maintains its program is for peaceful purposes.

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Yukiya Amano, the head of the International Atomic Energy Agency, told German news magazine Der Spiegel that he was frustrated by Iran's lack of transparency.

"We still know too little about Tehran's nuclear activities," he was quoted as saying. "And we still don't have answers to all of our questions, which is why we make it clear that Tehran has to cooperate with us more effectively."

He said he deplored the fact that Iran wasn't working more closely with the IAEA, which he said could develop trust with the international community. Iran, however, was still ignoring calls to halt its uranium enrichment activity.

Amano said he wasn't ready to state that Iran was moving closer to a nuclear weapon, but noted there was a "credibility gap" when it came to reporting its nuclear work to the international community.

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