Via Al Monitor
Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi said Tuesday that his 
government will not be offended if Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi 
spends only a few hours in Iran later this week. In an interview with Al-Monitor and Time Magazine on the sidelines of a conference
 of the 120-member Non-Aligned Movement (NAM), Salehi said the mere 
“presence” of an Egyptian leader in Iran after decades of estrangement 
between Iran and Egypt would be a “landmark.” Salehi repeated Iranian 
offers to help resolve the crisis in Syria — offers that the Barack 
Obama administration has rejected. The soft-spoken foreign minister, who
 got his PhD in physics from MIT before the 1979 Iranian revolution and 
previously served as Iran’s representative to the International Atomic 
Energy Agency, also said he remains optimistic that a “win-win” solution
 can be found to Iran’s nuclear confrontation with the US and much of 
the international community despite the current apparent deadlock in 
talks between Iran and the five permanent members of the UN Security 
Council plus Germany (P5+1).

 
 
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