Iran insists its uranium enrichment work is for nuclear energy only
Iranian
President Hassan Rouhani says he wants to reach a deal with world
powers on Tehran's nuclear programme in three to six months.
He told the Washington Post he saw a resolution of the issue as a "beginning point" in easing US-Iran relations.
Mr Rouhani said he was fully empowered by Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Khamenei, to negotiate on the issue.
On Thursday, Iran will hold talks with the P5+1 group of world powers on Tehran's uranium enrichment programme.
In a rare encounter between US and Iranian officials, Foreign
Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif will meet US Secretary of State John
Kerry as well as diplomats from the UK, France, Russia, China and
Germany in New York.
Analysis
James Reynolds
BBC Iran correspondent
In recent years, the travelling brigade of nuclear negotiators
has seen much of the world. Air miles aside, they have achieved almost
nothing of substance. Diplomats have held talks in Geneva, Istanbul,
Baghdad, Moscow, and Almaty. The most recent meeting was in Kazakhstan's
biggest city in April 2013.
At times it has been hard to describe the nuclear talks as
actual negotiations. More accurately, they have often resembled parallel
monologues. But the P5+1 is about to meet a new Iranian team.
Iran's newly appointed Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad
Zarif, replaces Saed Jalili as chief negotiator. Mr Zarif will report
directly to Iran's President Hassan Rouhani - himself a former nuclear
negotiator.
President Rouhani has been in New York this week for the UN General Assembly, and has been giving interviews to US media.
However, Iranian media has accused CNN of mis-translating comments he made in answer to questions about the Holocaust.
According to text on the CNN website, Mr Rouhani said: "I am
not a historian personally and that when it comes to speaking of the
dimensions of the Holocaust as such, it is the historians that should
reflect on it.
"But in general, I can tell you that any crime or - that
happens in history against humanity, including the crime that the Nazis
committed towards the Jews, as well as non-Jewish people, is
reprehensible and condemnable, as far as we are concerned."
But Iran's Fars news agency said President Rouhani did not
use the word Holocaust in his comments and said CNN had "distorted" his
words.
'Everything is possible'
Asked about a timeframe for resolving the nuclear issue, President Rouhani told the Washington Post: "The only way forward is for a timeline to be inserted into the negotiations that is short.
"The shorter it is the more beneficial it is to everyone. If
it's three months that would be Iran's choice, if it's six months that's
still good. It's a question of months not years."
Despite years of hostility between the US and Iran, Mr
Rouhani said that if he and President Barack Obama got together they
would both be "looking at the future".
President Hassan Rouhani insists Iran poses no threat to the region
"The notes and letters and exchanges between us are in that direction, and they will continue," he said.
"We need a beginning point. I think that is the nuclear issue."
He added: "After resolution of the nuclear issue there are no
impossibilities in term of advancing other things forward. Everything
is possible after the settlement."
On Tuesday, Mr Rouhani told the UN General Assembly that he
was prepared to engage in "time-bound and results-oriented" talks on the
nuclear issue.
Iran has been negotiating with the five permanent members of
the UN Security Council, plus Germany, since 2006 about its nuclear
programme.
The West suspects Tehran is trying to develop a nuclear weapon, a claim strongly denied by Iran.
President Obama has welcomed the new Iranian president's more "moderate course".
He said the US wanted to resolve the nuclear issue
peacefully, but was determined to prevent Iran from developing a nuclear
weapon.
On Wednesday, Mr Zarif met French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius on the sidelines of the General Assembly.
He said they "had a good discussion about the start of nuclear talks and the talks that will take place tomorrow".
Iran's economy has been badly affected by years of sanctions imposed by the UN and Western countries over the nuclear issue.
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