Iran's Rouhani says does 'not seek war with any country'
WASHINGTON - Reuters
In this photo released by the official website of the office of the Iranian Presidency, Iranian President Hasan Rouhani speaks during an interview with state television at the presidency in Tehran, Iran, Tuesday, Sept. 10, 2013. AP photo
Iranian President Hassan Rouhani, in a television interview, said his
country is not seeking war and that Iran wants the Middle East to have
"rule by the will of the people."
His comments came during the
second part of an interview with NBC News that aired on Thursday, just
days before he travels to New York for an appearance at the United
Nations.
Rouhani, asked about Israel, said: "What we wish for
in this region is rule by the will of the people. We believe in the
ballot box. We do not seek war with any country. We seek peace and
friendship among the nations of the region."
In an earlier part
of the interview that aired on Wednesday, Rouhani said Iran would never
develop nuclear weapons and that he had "complete authority" to
negotiate a nuclear deal with the United States and other Western
powers.
The interview may signal Rouhani's efforts to improve
relations with the West after years of hostility. He also appeared to
support the growing wave of pro-democracy uprisings sweeping across the
region.
But some questions, especially about Iran's stance toward Israel, remained unanswered.
Rouhani's predecessor, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, had infamously said the Holocaust was a myth.
Rouhani
declined to say whether he also believed that. "What is important to
Iran is that countries, people in the region grow closer and prevent
aggression and injustice," he told NBC's Ann Curry.
He also
appeared to support lifting Iran's Internet censorship, saying: "We want
the people, in their private lives, to be completely free."
"In
today's world, having access to information and the right of free
dialogue and the right to think freely is a right of all peoples,
including Iranians," he said. "The people must have full access to all
information worldwide."
As part of that effort, the government plans to set up a commission for citizen's rights in the near future, he said.