Interview With Iran Foreign Minister Video and Transcript Press TV has conducted an exclusive interview with Iran’s Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif September 15, 2013 Information Clearing House - Unfortunately it seems to me that the United States seems to be living in the 19th century when the use of force was a prerogative of states, it is not. http://youtu.be/EEU9U15emss -TranscriptPress TV: As mentioned in our prelude there, Mr. Mohammad Javad Zarif is in the studios and we would like to first welcome him. Thank you so much for taking the time out to talk to us, I am sure you have a very busy schedule. Talking about a busy schedule, you have been in your office for 36 days, I counted the number of days, and you had to meet with a major challenge, and that was the possible US-led military strike on Syria. It appears that the US, which is on hold right now, was in a rush to go into this war, with this military intervention, why do you think that was? Zarif: Let me first thank you for giving me this opportunity. I think a number of groups and people inside the United States, and some interest outside the United States, wanted to put the president of the US, whom I believe was reluctant to start a war, into a trap, a trap which he had unfortunately laid down for himself, and that was to get him involved in a war in order to address a hypothetical issue of the use of chemical weapons by the government of Syria. I say a hypothetical issue because there was and still is no proof that the use of chemical weapons was perpetrated by the government. Let me say that Iran, as a victim of chemical weapons, condemns any use of chemical weapons, regardless of the victims or the culprits, but we believe that nobody has the right to take the law into their own hands, that is, the United States doesn’t have any legal claim to act at the same time as the prosecutor, judge, and unfortunately the executioner, in dealing with these issue, particularly in light of the US’s own record of supporting a regime, that of Saddam Hossein, that used chemical weapons not only against Iranian soldiers and civilians but against his own people in Halabja, and these are not just allegations, but proven time and again by the United Nations teams of investigation. Now we have a UN team in Syria that visited Syria, and that team has not produced a report yet, and if it does, it did not have the mandate, unfortunately, to determine responsibility and the situation is far from clear. Now let us hope that with the new arrangement, we will start the process of moving chemical weapons out of this region in its totality. We believe that our region [the Middle East] has enough difficulty, is in enough turmoil, not to be engulfed in a war in which chemical weapons and other weapons of mass destruction are used, and that is why Iran has been pushing for a region free from weapons of mass destruction in the Middle East. Now let me make one more point. The use of chemical weapons is a crime, we believe it is a crime against humanity, but we believe that also the use of force, the threat of use of force, is also a criminal offense in international law. Unfortunately it seems to me that the United States seems to be living in the 19th century when the use of force was a