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The World Next Week: Egypt Votes (Again), Iran Talks (Some More), and G20 Leaders Gather (in Mexico)

<p>A campaign poster in Cairo depicts Egyptian presidential candidate Mohammed Morsi. (Ammar Awad/courtesy Reuters)</p>
A campaign poster in Cairo depicts Egyptian presidential candidate Mohammed Morsi. (Ammar Awad/courtesy Reuters)

By experts and staff

Published

Experts

The World Next Week podcast is up. Bob McMahon and I discussed the Egyptian presidential run-off election, the P5+1 nuclear talks with Iran, and the start of the G20 and Rio+20 summits.

The highlights:

For more on the topics we discussed in the podcast check out:

The Egyptian Presidential Run-off Election. Al-Arabiya notes that Mohammed Morsi has an early lead among Egyptian expats in the run-off vote. The New York Times says that Ahmed Shafiq recently blamed the Muslim Brotherhood for attacks on protestors in Tahrir Square last year. The Washington Post writes on Hosni Mubarak’s deteriorating health condition since his conviction on June 2. Bloomberg reports that Egypt’s parliament has chosen a panel to draft a new constitution. Foreign Affairs says that the run-off between Morsi and Shafiq represents a return to old guard politics.

The P5+1 Nuclear Talks with Iran. The Christian Science Monitor reports on both sides’ frustrations as the talks approach. AFP writes on Iran’s criticisms of the European Union, and its assertion that world powers should “accept our demands.” Bloomberg explains why Iran’s decision to convert some uranium to metal plates may be good news. Reuters notes that Iran has agreed to discuss a P5+1 proposal on changes to its nuclear program. The Associated Press reports on Iran’s denial of allegations that it destroyed parts of a military base in order to cover up evidence of nuclear testing.