Iran stressed the peaceful nature of the country's nuclear activities ahead of another round of talks with world powers to pave way for a comprehensive agreement on its controversial nuclear drive. Iran's nuclear program is undoubtedly peaceful and the West knows about it, Iranian President Hassan Rouhani was quoted as saying by Iran Daily on Monday. "The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) conducted thousands of hours of inspections in Iran's nuclear program and found no indication of diversion to weapons-grade activities," Rouhani said. "All of them (Western powers) have no doubt that the nuclear science in this country follows a peaceful course," Rouhani said ahead of an expert-level meeting on the country's nuclear program. On Monday, it was announced here that expert-level nuclear talks to discuss the details of a possible comprehensive agreement on Iran' s nuclear issue will start in the Austrian capital Vienna on Wednesday. The talks, which follow a senior-level meeting in February, will last for three days until Friday, said Hamid Baeidinejad, the director general for political and international affairs at Iran's Foreign Ministry, who also heads Iran's expert-level nuclear negotiating team. The delegation from the P5+1 group -- Britain, China, France, Russia, the United States plus Germany -- would be led by Stephen Clement, an aide to EU High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy Catherine Ashton, Baeidinejad said according to Iran's Press TV. Tehran is a signatory to Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and has not violated it, Rouhani said. "If Iran was after producing weapons of mass destruction (WMDs), it was easier to build chemical and biological arms," he said, adding that building WMDs has not been in Iran's defensive doctrine and his country considers making them as its "red line." Rouhani also said Iran's religious beliefs and moral principles do not allow the Islamic republic's nuclear activities to be diverted to weapons-grade programs. Even if there were no NPT or other treaties, these beliefs would never allow Iran to get closer to the production of WMDs, he added. In addition, Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad-Javad Zarif said Sunday that a comprehensive deal between Iran and the P5+1 group over the country's "peaceful" nuclear program is reachable. However, such an outlook requires the other party to be committed to the Joint Plan of Action inked in Geneva earlier, which will make "a comprehensive solution possible within six months." Lifting all sanctions against Iran will help Tehran and world powers reach a final agreement regarding the issue, Zarif said. In the nuclear talks, "what is important is boosting the Iranians' confidence and respecting their rights" by the P5+1 group, Zarif said at joint press conference with visiting Spanish Foreign Minister Jose Manuel Garcia-Margallo. His country will also "remove the logical concerns" of the P5+1 group over its nuclear program, he said. "The measures implemented by Iran and further commitment it has undertaken, represent a positive forward, but much remains to be done to resolve all outstanding issues," the chief of the UN nuclear watchdog Yukiya Amano said on Monday. Seven practical measures agreed by Iran and the IAEA, including managed visits to a uranium extraction mine and a yellowcake facility, have to be implemented by May 15, said Amano. Iran's IAEA envoy Reza Najafi also called the cooperation between his country and the IAEA a positive development, believing it would be supported by all IAEA members. To ensure Iran's nuclear program is exclusively peaceful, the IAEA and the P5+1 group are on the two diplomatic tracks with Iran, striving to resolve the issue through negotiations. IAEA was still short of 1.6 million euros (around 2.2 million U. S. dollars) to implement a strengthened investigation of Iran's nuclear program, Amano said, adding that his agency needed the money to take the verification role related to the Joint Plan of Action, an interim deal signed between Iran and six major powers in Geneva last November. Under the deal Iran agreed to freeze part of its nuclear activities in exchange for a relief in the West's sanctions on its economy. On Feb. 20, after three days of intensive negotiations, the two sides announced a timetable for their talks toward a comprehensive deal and agreed for expert-level meetings to get into the issues in more details and define a framework for the negotiations.