Iran's President Hassan Rouhani said today that Israel was "upset and angry" with signs of an emerging new relationship between the Islamic republic and the West.
Yesterday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told a UN summit his country was ready to act alone to halt Iran's alleged efforts to build a nuclear bomb.
"We don't expect anything else from the Zionist regime," Rouhani told reporters after a cabinet meeting.
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Iran's new president was referring to his outreach last week on a visit to the UN General Assembly in New York, where he offered constructive dialogue with the West in a bid to ease tensions.
In his UN speech, Rouhani said Iran would never seek a nuclear weapon and was ready to negotiate with world powers on ending a decade-long showdown over Tehran's nuclear ambitions.
His charm offensive culminated in a landmark 15-minute phone call with US President Barack Obama.
But Netanyahu told the same UN forum that sanctions hurting Iran's economy must be strengthened as the Tehran regime was hell-bent on building a nuclear bomb.
"Israel will not allow Iran to get nuclear weapons. If Israel is forced to stand alone, Israel will stand alone," he said.
Iran's armed forces chief of staff Hassan Firouzabadi today rejected the Israeli threat of military action as an "act of desperation" by a "warmonger".
Firouzabadi, a hardline military figure, also appeared to back Rouhani's diplomatic initiative.
"Islamic Iran will be the winner in this case for its revolutionary stance of heroic flexibility," he said referring to remarks by Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei that such tactics were sometimes necessary in dealing with foes.
Khamenei is the ultimate authority in the Islamic republic and has final say on all key affairs, including foreign policy and the disputed nuclear programme.
Iran and world powers are expected to meet in Geneva in mid-October to restart nuclear negotiations, with Tehran seeking to lift harsh US and EU economic sanctions.
Today, Rouhani expressed hope for the talks. "I think if the Geneva talks are successful, the efforts of many hardliners and those who want to go to extremes or even those after war will be halted," he said
"I hope the talks will be successful.