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Iranian
President Hassan Rowhani attends a session of the Assembly
of Experts in Tehran
on September 3, 2013 (AFP/File, Behrouz Mehri)
|
WASHINGTON
— Barack Obama says he and Iran's new President Hassan Rowhani have exchanged
letters, and warned his reluctance to strike Syria had no bearing on US threats
of force to thwart an Iranian nuclear bomb.
The US
president, in an interview aired on ABC News Sunday, confirmed the outreach to
Rowhani for the first time, and said he believed the Syria chemical arms drama
showed that diplomacy could work if backed by threats of military action.
Obama was
asked on the ABC News "This Week" program whether he had reached out
to Rowhani, a moderate conservative elected in June.
"I
have. And he's reached out to me. We haven't spoken -- directly," Obama
said.
Asked by
interviewer George Stephanopoulos whether the contact was via letters, Obama
replied : "Yes."
The
president was careful to draw a distinction between US behavior over Syria
after freezing military action to negotiate a deal with Russia to secure the
regime's chemical arms, and Washington's approach to Iran as a nuclear showdown
reaches a critical point.
"I
think what the Iranians understand is that -- the nuclear issue -- is a far
larger issue for us than the chemical weapons issue," Obama said.
"The
threat against ... Israel, that a nuclear Iran poses, is much closer to our
core interests.
"A
nuclear arms race in the region-- is something that would be profoundly
destabilizing.
"My
suspicion is that the Iranians recognize they shouldn't draw a lesson -- that
we haven't struck (Syria) -- to think we won't strike Iran."
Obama said
that on the other hand, the lesson from the showdown over Syria's chemical
weapons, should show that "there is the potential of resolving these
issues diplomatically."
Washington
has repeatedly warned Iran that it has the option of military action, if
diplomacy and crippling sanctions do not convince the Islamic Republic to stop
short of building nuclear weapons.
Iran denies
that its nuclear program has a military use.
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