Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif denied Saturday that his country would interfere with the upcoming US presidential election, stressing that the ayatollah regime did not have a preferred party or candidate.
In an interview to air Sunday on NBC's "Meet the Press," Zarif also accused the US of initiating a cyberwar with his country and warned that "any war the United States starts it won't be able to finish."
Follow Israel Hayom on Facebook and Twitter
The interview took place in New York, which Zarif visited last week to attend meetings at the United Nations. NBC provided a partial transcript on Saturday.
When "Meet the Press" moderator Chuck Todd noted that US intelligence included Iran among the countries attempting to interfere with the US election, Zarif responded, "We don't have a preference in your election to intervene in that election."
"We don't interfere in the internal affairs of another country," Zarif said later. "But there is a cyberwar going on."
The Iranian official cited Stuxnet, a computer virus that is widely believed to be a joint creation of the US and Israel and is blamed for disrupting thousands of Iranian centrifuges in an effort to damage its nuclear program.
"The United States started that cyberwar, by attacking our nuclear facilities in a very dangerous, irresponsible way that could've killed millions of people. You remember Stuxnet?" Zarif said.
He added: "So there is a cyberwar ... and Iran is engaged in that cyberwar. But any war that the United States starts, it won't be able to finish."