Sinister Putin Scheme Spirals With Kidnapping at Nuclear Plant

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Sinister Putin Scheme Spirals With Kidnapping at Nuclear Plant
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This is just the latest hostile action Moscow has reportedly taken in its efforts to control the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant, which was seized early on in the war in Ukraine.

But the safety of the plant is all but certain. Early this monthcut off the plant’s power, which could have jeopardized the plant’s cooling processes used to prevent a meltdown. The plant switched to emergency diesel generators to avert catastrophe.

Grossi met with Russian President Vladimir Putin Tuesday in St. Petersburg to discuss safety and security protocols that can be established at the plant. He is also slated to meet with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky later this week in Kyiv, his office said. "I can neither boycott or play along, I have to do the right thing and the right thing in this case is first of all to look after the security, the safety and the well-being of the staff and, when it comes to the contractual changes that may be coming as a result of the announcement, that is something that I will have to be discussing in Russia,”The IAEA did not return a request for comment about whether Grossi and Putin discussed the latest kidnapping and concerns about Rosatom this week.

“Russian state companies and nuclear state company Rosatom is actually like one of the arms of the military because they use it to control our nuclear power plants… [and] paying huge amounts of money for Russian nuclear fuel, for uranium, for nuclear technologies, and all this money, they go into Russian budget and then allocates to the war effort,” Krynytskyi told The Daily Beast.

Reliance on Russian uranium won’t be disappearing overnight, even though U.S. Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm has said that becoming independent of Russia in this arena is a “national security” imperative. But the reality is that the enrichment capacity in the United States isn’t ready to meet demand that Russia currently fills, Dan Leistikow, a vice president at Centrus Energy Corp., a company working on constructing an enrichment facility in the United States, told The Daily Beast.

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